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Feminist essays, brilliant guests, juicy conversations.
Ep. 8: Bitch on Wheels
with Taina Brown

This week’s text:
“Bitch on Wheels” by Sylvia Rivera

This week’s guest:
Taina Brown is a justice-centered DEI consultant and co-host of the Messy Liberation podcast. She brings an academic and embodied lens to conversations about liberation, identity, and collective care.
Website: tainabrown.com
Podcast: messyliberation.com
Instagram: @thetaina

Discussed in this episode:

  • Sylvia Rivera’s legacy and speech context
  • Stonewall riots from a trans perspective
  • Marsha P. Johnson and Rivera’s activism
  • Respectability politics and performative feminism
  • White saviorism, allyship, and call-in vs. call-out
  • Suicide and mental health in the trans community
  • The role of anger in activism
  • Collective care and intersectionality

Resources mentioned:

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Ep. 7: We Should All Be Feminists
with Faith Clarke

This week’s text:
“We Should All Be Feminists” by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

This week’s guest:
Faith Clarke is a storyteller, strategist, and organizational culture expert who helps values-aligned leaders build liberatory workplaces through relationship-centered change.
Website: faithclarke.com
Podcast: Culture Work Collective Podcast
Instagram: @faithclarkewrites

Discussed in this episode:

  • Chimamanda’s evolving views on trans women and nuance in public dialogue
  • Patriarchy’s harm to men and the myth of neutrality
  • The prison of whiteness and how identity shapes oppression
  • Black women’s complicated relationship with feminism
  • Storytelling and culture-building as resistance
  • Shame, fear, and the backlash to DEI
  • Social Change Now framework by Deepa Iyer
  • Misogynoir and internalized misogyny

Resources mentioned:

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PROUD MEMBERS OF THE Feminist Podcasters Collective

Ep. 6: Love is Hard
with Heather Vickery

This week’s essay:
“Love as the Practice of Freedom” by bell hooks

This week’s guest:
Heather Vickery is a coach, speaker, podcast host, and joy-bringer. Her work centers around intentional living, courageous leadership, and aligning action with values. Heather brings radical honesty and warmth to everything she does—even when it’s tough love.
vickeryandco.com
Podcast: Was it Chance?
Instagram: @vickeryandco

Discussed in this episode:

  • What “love as liberation” really means in the context of political and personal resistance
  • The difference between kindness and niceness—and why love is often neither
  • How to balance boundaries with compassion without playing the “both sides” game
  • Love as an ethic, a choice, and a verb—not a passive feeling
  • How domination, control, and toxic positivity masquerade as “love”
  • Heather’s personal experience with self-love, queerness, and choosing relationships with intention
  • Parenting through a feminist love ethic: Holding boundaries as an act of care
  • Navigating the guilt of not doing “enough” while doing what’s possible with what you’ve got
  • Why white women talking about love must include interrogating privilege and practicing collective accountability

Resources mentioned:

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Ep. 5: Girlboss Feminism
with Paige Worthy

This week’s text:
“What No One Else Will Tell You About Feminism” by Lindy West

This week’s guest:
Paige Worthy (she/her) is a writer, editor, and brand messaging strategist for progressive entrepreneurs. Known for her spicy takes, thoughtful wordcraft, and zero tolerance for misogynist bullshit, Paige shows up in business and life as a truth-teller and cat-loving rage queen. She’s currently on sabbatical—joyfully making pottery, resisting capitalist productivity, and embracing rest as rebellion.
paigeworthy.com

Discussed in this episode:

  • What this essay gets right—and all the ways it misses the mark
  • Rage, burnout, and taking sabbaticals in a broken world
  • White feminism, exclusion, and the danger of ignoring intersectionality
  • Why catty jokes and sarcasm aren’t the revolution
  • How our feminism has evolved since “girl power” and Jezebel days
  • Why trying to “educate men” isn’t the job of feminists
  • The difference between calling in vs calling out—and when each makes sense
  • How to keep growing, even when learning out loud is scary
  • Substack, internet rage, and nostalgia for the blog era

Resources mentioned:

Ep. 4: Lessons from Nature
with Nancy Harris

This week’s text:
“Speaking of Nature” by Robin Wall Kimmerer

This week’s guest:
Nancy Harris is a leadership coach, forest therapy guide, and host of the Speaking of Nature podcast. She brings decades of experience in HR, inclusion work, and healing practices to her thoughtful and grounded conversations.

Discussed in this episode:

  • What it means to center animacy in how we talk about the natural world
  • How objectifying language disconnects us from nature—and from each other
  • The ties between language, colonization, and capitalist extraction
  • Forest therapy as an antidote to burnout and disconnection
  • The grief of climate collapse and finding hope through interconnection
  • How nature models feminist values of reciprocity, humility, and care

Resources mentioned:

Ep. 3: Is Heterosexuality Compulsory?
with Lindsay Johnson

This week’s text:
“Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence” by Adrienne Rich

This week’s guest:
Lindsay Johnson, aka The Radical Connector, is a sales & visibility coach for misfit entrepreneurs building their businesses to the beat of their own drums.

Discussed in this episode:

  • What to do when important ideas come from problematic people
  • Cancel culture, nuance, and evolving past rigid thinking
  • The roots of compulsory heterosexuality in capitalism, colonialism, and white supremacy
  • Lindsay’s journey to understanding their non-binary identity
  • How proximity to power complicates identity and solidarity
  • The dangers of the incel pipeline and raising feminist boys
  • Queerness, gender, and neurodivergence as natural human expressions
  • The power and politics of the “lesbian continuum”
  • Choosing labels vs. living beyond them

Resources mentioned:

Ep. 2: Joy Is Revolutionary
with Jordan Maney

This week’s text:
“Joy” by Zadie Smith

Guest bio:
Jordan Maney is the Radical Joy Coach helping Black, brown, and queer folks reclaim their joy and rest without guilt.

Discussed in this episode:

  • Why Zadie Smith’s essay is “close but no cigar”
  • The bittersweet intersection of joy and grief
  • Is joy a struggle, a surrender, or a risk?
  • What ecstasy (the drug and the feeling) says about manufactured joy
  • The difference between pleasure, contentment, happiness, and JOY
  • Black Southern church traditions as containers for joy
  • The power of presence, noticing, and choosing joy in dark times
  • Why resisting despair is a revolutionary act of self-love
  • Concerts, croissants, and the art of letting yourself become joy

Resources mentioned:

Ep. 1: Abolition Can Mend Democracy
with Amelia Hruby

This week’s text:
“Abolition Can Mend Our Democracy” by Angela Y. Davis

This week’s guest:
Amelia Hruby is a feminist writer, podcaster, and producer. She’s the founder of Softer Sounds and host of Off the Grid.

Discussed in this episode:

  • Why prisons exist—and what they really teach us about “freedom”
  • Angela Davis’s vision of abolition beyond incarceration
  • Carceral logic in our schools, healthcare, diet culture, and even how we treat ourselves
  • Why spirituality, somatic healing, and forgiveness are necessary for abolition
  • Amelia’s personal journey with abolition, including becoming a prison pen pal
  • The myth of inherently “bad” people—and why we must believe in love after harm
  • How a society built on punishment requires us to reimagine democracy
  • What abolitionist practice can look like in our daily lives

Resources mentioned:

Season 1 Syllabus

1. Abolition Can Mend Our Democracy by Angela Y Davis 2. Joy by Zadie Smith 3. Compulsory Heterosexuality by Adrienne Rich 4. Speaking of Nature by Robin Wall Kimmerer 5. What No One Else Will Tell You by Lindy West 6. Love as the Practice of Freedom by bell hooks 7. We Should All Be Feminists by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie 8. Bitch on Wheels by Sylvia Rivera

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