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Though podcasts exploring queer culture are welcome all year round, I'm using Pride Month as a great excuse to shout out 12 incredible podcasts that also happen to be created by queer people. These shows aim to give voice to different aspects of the queer experience, exploring lesbian bars and asexuality, tackling trans hate, and reminding queer people (and everyone else) to love themselves unapologetically. June is all about celebrating all kinds of love, and I all kinds of love these podcasts.
Credit: Podcast logo
Jordan Gonsalves knew nothing about queer history when he was a gay kid growing up Catholic in conservative Texas. With But We Loved, he has created a show that will help ensure no queer kids today grow up under similar circumstances. He brings together multigenerational guests to talk about impactful moments in LGBTQ history, including the Stonewall Riots, AIDS crisis, and the fight for marriage equality. Every conversation is authentic, and introspective; Jordan is a fantastic interviewer and his guests are unfailingly engaging storytellers.
Credit: Podcast logo
Second Sunday is a podcast about Black queer people finding, keeping, and sometimes losing faith in the Black church. The show is part of the PRX Big Questions Project, and seeks to consider questions at the intersection of spirituality, culture, and identity. Youâll hear valuable adviceâand experience real, vulnerable storiesâabout the challenges and complexities of Black queer culture that will keep you thinking for days.
Credit: Podcast logo
Queer art has had an outsized influence on popular culture. On Queer the Music, Scissor Sistersâ frontman Jake Shears and his guests unearth the queer anthems that have dominated the dance floor, seeped into the mainstream, and impacted the LGBTQ community. Each show considers a song's history, and shines a light on the queer artists who made a mark on the world through their (sometimes risky) self-expression.
Credit: Podcast logo
Considering the enduring conservative climate in many parts of the U.S. (and, letâs face it, everywhere), talking about safe queer spaces remains important. Lost Spaces is a show that explores how queer spaces have helped shape peopleâs lives. It considers their importance, weighs the impact of their loss (when they are lost), and shares the beautiful stories that come out of them. Through candid interviews with varied guests, host K. Anderson breaks it all down.
Credit: Podcast logo
Thirty-five-year-old Aline has never been attracted to anyoneânot sexually, not romantically. On their podcast Free From Desire, launching June 7 and debuting at Tribeca, they tell us how difficult it was to realize and accept their asexuality and their aromantism in a society that prefers to center love and sex. This acceptance is what also allowed them to have a child via artificial insemination. From adolescence, to their first fascinations with relationships and sexuality, and arriving at single parenthood, Aline talks to us about how different stages in their life illustrate their experience of asexuality. Throughout the show, Aline talks to experts, sociologists, and even acquaintances and friends to discuss our societyâs relationship with sex and our preoccupation with traditional coupling.
Credit: Podcast logo
On Getting Curious, Jonathan Van Ness (of Gay of Thrones and Queer Eye for the Straight Guy) is curiousâŚabout everything. Every week he brings on experts in super niche subjects, from trash collection, to ancient beauty rituals, to cheesemaking, to the child welfare system. Each topic is one Jonathan is passionate about, and he doesnât hold back his squeals of excitement at everything his guests teach him. Even when focused on weighty subjects, these conversations are lightened by Jonathanâs sparkle, sense of humor, and ability to view anything and everything through a queer lens. I particularly love it when he talks about animalsâso check out the âPrairie Dogâ episode first.
Credit: Podcast logo
Nominated for Outstanding Podcast at the 2023 GLAAD Awards, LGBTQ&A sets up Jeffrey Masters with some of the most interesting and influential LGBTQ+ people in the world; past guests have included Laverne Cox, Janelle MonĂĄe, and Pete Buttigieg. Their conversations will help you brush up on queer history and keep abreast of how current events and affecting the queer community, providing you the necessary context needed to understand the challenges faced by less visible sexual and gender minorities navigating modern American culture.
Credit: Podcast logo
On The Queer Family Podcast, queer mom Jaimie Keltonâs has funny conversations with guests about how theyâve shaped their families, and how they show up in a world that wasnât necessarily designed for them. Each episode is a snapshot of the diverse ways families can work and thrive, confirming that queer families can be just as strong as any other. (Kids still have tantrums and refuse to eat their vegetables, no matter who their parents are.) The Queer Family Podcast normalizes the new ways people are choosing to build theri families in a world built for straight people.
Credit: Podcast logo
BEING Trans feels like a reality TV show for your ears. Through the course of six episodes, youâll meet Jeffrey, a transgender man and standup comic navigating a relationship with his partner Emma; Mariana, a trans woman from Guatemala who is tackling tough issues at a local LGBTQ center along with her coworker Kadence; Chloe, whoâs new to Los Angeles and new to dating as a trans woman; and Sy, whoâs figuring out their relationship and family dynamics with their husband Robert since coming out as non-binary and trans. Jeffrey, Mariana, Chloe, and Sy share the tiny, human moments in their livesâtriumphant and trying alikeâand giving you a small glimpse of what itâs like to wake up and go to bed every day as a trans person.
Credit: Podcast logo
The B.F.F. Podcast (thatâs âBlack Fat Femmeâ) gives voice to two of the leading queer, fat and Black change makers who are determined to prove that every single person has the right to love themselves unapologetically, even in a world where loving yourself often feels impossible. Jon and Joho feel like friends who will hold your hand and talk you through days that feel like a struggle. They interview (and pour shine on) guests who find joy in unexpected places, and they will make you feel shined on, too.
Credit: Podcast logo
Today trans people are facing extreme political, social, and physical violence on a daily basis, but that doesnât tell the full story of the trans experience. On TransLash, award-winning journalist Imara Jones gives trans people and allies a platform to fight back. Itâs a culture podcast that celebrates trans people: the way they live their lives and how they are changing the world. Each episode is a mixture of heavy topics balanced with moments of joy, full of equal parts heart and bad-assery.
Credit: Podcast logo
Set in present day Melbourne, Australia, Love and Luck is a fictional radio play podcast told through voicemails between two men, Jason and Kane, who fall in love even as they discover they have magical abilities. Itâs an positive story in sea of podcasts that go to dark and terrible placesâan inventive slice-of-life narrative that finds beautiful moments around every corner, with carefully produced sound, nuanced writing, and acting that will draw you in.
Credit: Podcast logo
The year is 2062, and North America is controlled by a totalitarian government with an insidious gay agenda...because everyone is gay. One teen holds the keys to rebellion, because he has a dark secret: heâs straight. Obviously Gay Future is a fiction show, but with its comedic tone and tightly written script, it makes a point about sexuality and power that will have you in stitches.
Credit: Podcast logo
Lesbian bars are disappearing from the world, and you can think of Cruising like a shrine to their memory. Three queer women, Sarah Gabrielli, Rachel Karp, and Jen McGinit, buckle into a Honda SUV to visit the bars that are standing, aiming for the longest lesbian bar crawl ever. (Youâd think this would be daunting, but there are seriously less than 25 of them remaining in the U.S.) The fact that this podcast is even possible tells a story about queer identity today. Does it mean that safe spaces for lesbians are no longer needed, or have they experienced a form of erasure? (Consider Henrietta Hudson, a former lesbian bar in New York City that now calls itself âa queer bar built by lesbians.â) Cruising strings together micro-stories of the people who were able to come out because of the safety these places offered them and the people who fought to create them.
Credit: Podcast logo
Itâs one thing to read about the history of gay rights, and another thing to hear spoken about by the people who made it. Making Gay History offers a peek into Eric Marcusâs decades-old audio archive of rare interviews that allow you to hear the voices of the people who were witnesses and champions in the struggle for gay rights. The audio is carefully curated and crafted into gripping pieces that paint Intimate, personal portraits
Credit: Podcast logo
On Gender Reveal, journalist and educator Tuck Woodstock takes a crack at answering the question: What the heck is gender, anyway? Theyâre not doing it alone. Through conversations with poets, drag artists, organizers, comedians, and more, they talk about the vast diversity of trans experiences through interviews with a wide array of trans, nonbinary, and two-spirit people.
Credit: Podcast logo
Comedian Ashley Gavin spent 10 years as a serial monogamist, but in Weâre Having Gay Sex, sheâs traded in her U-Haul and committed herself to notching enough casual hookups to exhaust a 20-year-old, and sheâs ready to tell us about every single tender kiss (and beyond.) Sheâs also enlisted her younger queer friends to help brush her up on the latest nuances in queer dating; itâs up to them to keep her from doing something embarrassing or getting canceled. Together, they interview hilarious guests from all over the sexuality spectrum about the âgayâ sex they had that week.
Full story here:
But We Loved
Credit: Podcast logo
Jordan Gonsalves knew nothing about queer history when he was a gay kid growing up Catholic in conservative Texas. With But We Loved, he has created a show that will help ensure no queer kids today grow up under similar circumstances. He brings together multigenerational guests to talk about impactful moments in LGBTQ history, including the Stonewall Riots, AIDS crisis, and the fight for marriage equality. Every conversation is authentic, and introspective; Jordan is a fantastic interviewer and his guests are unfailingly engaging storytellers.
Second Sunday
Credit: Podcast logo
Second Sunday is a podcast about Black queer people finding, keeping, and sometimes losing faith in the Black church. The show is part of the PRX Big Questions Project, and seeks to consider questions at the intersection of spirituality, culture, and identity. Youâll hear valuable adviceâand experience real, vulnerable storiesâabout the challenges and complexities of Black queer culture that will keep you thinking for days.
Queer The Music
Credit: Podcast logo
Queer art has had an outsized influence on popular culture. On Queer the Music, Scissor Sistersâ frontman Jake Shears and his guests unearth the queer anthems that have dominated the dance floor, seeped into the mainstream, and impacted the LGBTQ community. Each show considers a song's history, and shines a light on the queer artists who made a mark on the world through their (sometimes risky) self-expression.
Lost Spaces
Credit: Podcast logo
Considering the enduring conservative climate in many parts of the U.S. (and, letâs face it, everywhere), talking about safe queer spaces remains important. Lost Spaces is a show that explores how queer spaces have helped shape peopleâs lives. It considers their importance, weighs the impact of their loss (when they are lost), and shares the beautiful stories that come out of them. Through candid interviews with varied guests, host K. Anderson breaks it all down.
Free From Desire
Credit: Podcast logo
Thirty-five-year-old Aline has never been attracted to anyoneânot sexually, not romantically. On their podcast Free From Desire, launching June 7 and debuting at Tribeca, they tell us how difficult it was to realize and accept their asexuality and their aromantism in a society that prefers to center love and sex. This acceptance is what also allowed them to have a child via artificial insemination. From adolescence, to their first fascinations with relationships and sexuality, and arriving at single parenthood, Aline talks to us about how different stages in their life illustrate their experience of asexuality. Throughout the show, Aline talks to experts, sociologists, and even acquaintances and friends to discuss our societyâs relationship with sex and our preoccupation with traditional coupling.
Getting Curious with Jonathan Van Ness
Credit: Podcast logo
On Getting Curious, Jonathan Van Ness (of Gay of Thrones and Queer Eye for the Straight Guy) is curiousâŚabout everything. Every week he brings on experts in super niche subjects, from trash collection, to ancient beauty rituals, to cheesemaking, to the child welfare system. Each topic is one Jonathan is passionate about, and he doesnât hold back his squeals of excitement at everything his guests teach him. Even when focused on weighty subjects, these conversations are lightened by Jonathanâs sparkle, sense of humor, and ability to view anything and everything through a queer lens. I particularly love it when he talks about animalsâso check out the âPrairie Dogâ episode first.
LGBTQ&A
Credit: Podcast logo
Nominated for Outstanding Podcast at the 2023 GLAAD Awards, LGBTQ&A sets up Jeffrey Masters with some of the most interesting and influential LGBTQ+ people in the world; past guests have included Laverne Cox, Janelle MonĂĄe, and Pete Buttigieg. Their conversations will help you brush up on queer history and keep abreast of how current events and affecting the queer community, providing you the necessary context needed to understand the challenges faced by less visible sexual and gender minorities navigating modern American culture.
The Queer Family Podcast
Credit: Podcast logo
On The Queer Family Podcast, queer mom Jaimie Keltonâs has funny conversations with guests about how theyâve shaped their families, and how they show up in a world that wasnât necessarily designed for them. Each episode is a snapshot of the diverse ways families can work and thrive, confirming that queer families can be just as strong as any other. (Kids still have tantrums and refuse to eat their vegetables, no matter who their parents are.) The Queer Family Podcast normalizes the new ways people are choosing to build theri families in a world built for straight people.
BEING Trans
Credit: Podcast logo
BEING Trans feels like a reality TV show for your ears. Through the course of six episodes, youâll meet Jeffrey, a transgender man and standup comic navigating a relationship with his partner Emma; Mariana, a trans woman from Guatemala who is tackling tough issues at a local LGBTQ center along with her coworker Kadence; Chloe, whoâs new to Los Angeles and new to dating as a trans woman; and Sy, whoâs figuring out their relationship and family dynamics with their husband Robert since coming out as non-binary and trans. Jeffrey, Mariana, Chloe, and Sy share the tiny, human moments in their livesâtriumphant and trying alikeâand giving you a small glimpse of what itâs like to wake up and go to bed every day as a trans person.
Black Fat Femme
Credit: Podcast logo
The B.F.F. Podcast (thatâs âBlack Fat Femmeâ) gives voice to two of the leading queer, fat and Black change makers who are determined to prove that every single person has the right to love themselves unapologetically, even in a world where loving yourself often feels impossible. Jon and Joho feel like friends who will hold your hand and talk you through days that feel like a struggle. They interview (and pour shine on) guests who find joy in unexpected places, and they will make you feel shined on, too.
TransLash
Credit: Podcast logo
Today trans people are facing extreme political, social, and physical violence on a daily basis, but that doesnât tell the full story of the trans experience. On TransLash, award-winning journalist Imara Jones gives trans people and allies a platform to fight back. Itâs a culture podcast that celebrates trans people: the way they live their lives and how they are changing the world. Each episode is a mixture of heavy topics balanced with moments of joy, full of equal parts heart and bad-assery.
Love and Luck
Credit: Podcast logo
Set in present day Melbourne, Australia, Love and Luck is a fictional radio play podcast told through voicemails between two men, Jason and Kane, who fall in love even as they discover they have magical abilities. Itâs an positive story in sea of podcasts that go to dark and terrible placesâan inventive slice-of-life narrative that finds beautiful moments around every corner, with carefully produced sound, nuanced writing, and acting that will draw you in.
Gay Future
Credit: Podcast logo
The year is 2062, and North America is controlled by a totalitarian government with an insidious gay agenda...because everyone is gay. One teen holds the keys to rebellion, because he has a dark secret: heâs straight. Obviously Gay Future is a fiction show, but with its comedic tone and tightly written script, it makes a point about sexuality and power that will have you in stitches.
Cruising
Credit: Podcast logo
Lesbian bars are disappearing from the world, and you can think of Cruising like a shrine to their memory. Three queer women, Sarah Gabrielli, Rachel Karp, and Jen McGinit, buckle into a Honda SUV to visit the bars that are standing, aiming for the longest lesbian bar crawl ever. (Youâd think this would be daunting, but there are seriously less than 25 of them remaining in the U.S.) The fact that this podcast is even possible tells a story about queer identity today. Does it mean that safe spaces for lesbians are no longer needed, or have they experienced a form of erasure? (Consider Henrietta Hudson, a former lesbian bar in New York City that now calls itself âa queer bar built by lesbians.â) Cruising strings together micro-stories of the people who were able to come out because of the safety these places offered them and the people who fought to create them.
Making Gay History
Credit: Podcast logo
Itâs one thing to read about the history of gay rights, and another thing to hear spoken about by the people who made it. Making Gay History offers a peek into Eric Marcusâs decades-old audio archive of rare interviews that allow you to hear the voices of the people who were witnesses and champions in the struggle for gay rights. The audio is carefully curated and crafted into gripping pieces that paint Intimate, personal portraits
Gender Reveal
Credit: Podcast logo
On Gender Reveal, journalist and educator Tuck Woodstock takes a crack at answering the question: What the heck is gender, anyway? Theyâre not doing it alone. Through conversations with poets, drag artists, organizers, comedians, and more, they talk about the vast diversity of trans experiences through interviews with a wide array of trans, nonbinary, and two-spirit people.
Weâre Having Gay Sex
Credit: Podcast logo
Comedian Ashley Gavin spent 10 years as a serial monogamist, but in Weâre Having Gay Sex, sheâs traded in her U-Haul and committed herself to notching enough casual hookups to exhaust a 20-year-old, and sheâs ready to tell us about every single tender kiss (and beyond.) Sheâs also enlisted her younger queer friends to help brush her up on the latest nuances in queer dating; itâs up to them to keep her from doing something embarrassing or getting canceled. Together, they interview hilarious guests from all over the sexuality spectrum about the âgayâ sex they had that week.
Full story here: