(The Kitchen Sisters Present)

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(The Kitchen Sisters Present)
When I find myself slipping into that self-pittying feeling I get when not everything in the world bends in my favor, it’s helpful to have a week of podcasts like last week’s to listen to. Hearing about people who were strong enough to work at the first all female radio station in the 1950s or stand up as the first openly gay star of 1930s Hollywood can hush that whiny voice in my head pretty quickly. Click on the link for my full article on last week’s podcast highlights, which include a number of inspirational firsts.
Photo: The number 1 by Timothy Krause, available under a Creative Commons License
Got a Girl Crush: The Kitchen Sisters podcast about Lyneee Breedlove’s Homobiles
Homobiles has been called “Uber for Drag Queens,” but with a mission that is social, not financial.
The Kitchen Sisters (Davia Nelson & Nikki Silvia) are Peabody Award winning independent producers who create stories for NPR (most notably The Hidden World of Girls) and other public media and work to build community through their storytelling.
Homobiles is a non-commercial, volunteer, 24/7 ride service created by Lynnee Breedlove (formerly of the seminal dyke punk band, Tribe 8) for the “LGBTQRXT and transgender community and others around San Francisco who feel the need for safe, dependable rides, outside traditional services. “Moes getting hoes where they needs to goes,” is their motto. Homobiles is for people who feel at risk because they don’t conform to sexual or gender norms and have been targets of rudeness or shame or violence, says Lynne. Homobiles is a network of independent drivers who pilot their own cars, a non-profit organization that caters to this underserved, and sometimes harassed community in the San Francisco Bay Area. This community car service operates on donations. No one is turned away for lack of funds.
More:
The Kitchen Sisters
Homobiles
Rise Above: A Tribe 8 Documentary
Podcasts of the Week - 16 January 2015
99% Invisible - The Sizzle
Fugitive Waves - Sam Phillips and the Early Years of the Memphis Recording Service
Playland
The Lost Recordings of Tennessee Williams
During the 40s, Tennessee Williams made many improvised recordings at a penny arcade in the French Quarter called 'Playland.' These recordings were made on an early recording device, the Voice-O-Graf, and were found after his death in the home of Donald Windham.