44 episodes

A Decolonized Podcast for lovers on the margins, join your resident sexuality educator Ericka Hart and Deep East Oakland's very own Ebony Donnley, as we game give, dismantle white supremacy and kiki in the cosmos somewhere between radical hood epistemological black queer love ethics, pop culture, house plants and a sea of books.

Light an incense to this. #nigchampa #hrhw #theblackpoweredpodcast

To monetarily support Hoodrat to Headwrap Venmo @Ericka-Hart or PayPal: ericka@ihartericka.com

Hoodrat to Headwrap: A Decolonized Podcast iHartEricka

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.9 • 1.2K Ratings

A Decolonized Podcast for lovers on the margins, join your resident sexuality educator Ericka Hart and Deep East Oakland's very own Ebony Donnley, as we game give, dismantle white supremacy and kiki in the cosmos somewhere between radical hood epistemological black queer love ethics, pop culture, house plants and a sea of books.

Light an incense to this. #nigchampa #hrhw #theblackpoweredpodcast

To monetarily support Hoodrat to Headwrap Venmo @Ericka-Hart or PayPal: ericka@ihartericka.com

    Gettin' Free: A Juneteenth Collaboration

    Gettin' Free: A Juneteenth Collaboration

    Gettin’ Free! : A Juneteenth Collaboration brought to you by Sistas Who Kill: A True Crime Podcast. We know that history is told from the side of the colonizers but that leaves room for misinformation and false narratives.
    We are on a mission to change that.
    11 Black podcasts have come together to reclaim our history and tell it our way - flavor and all. Welcome to a chronological journey to get free. Learn where we’ve come, what we’ve overcome, and how much further we need to go. Let this be the soundtrack to your Juneteenth afternoon and evening, gather around with the family, play it at the function or kickback before the food come out or on the way to the juneteenth umoja festival somewhere or meditate on it in the silence and peace of solitude. How ever you choose to spend juneteenth, get into this Black education, history, mystery, intrigue and delight in being Black everyday.

    Sistas Who Kill
    IG: @SistasWhoKillPod

    22:16 Hoodrat to Headwrap
    IG: @ihartericka

    42:25 Black Millennial Marriage
    IG: @blackmillennialmarriage

    54:03 Journey to Launch
    IG: @JourneyToLaunch

    1:05:36 So what are you reading
    IG: @sowhatareyoureadingpodcast

    1:22:28 Chile, Please
    IG: @itshoneychile

    1:34:36 The Professional Silly Podcast
    IG: @itsprosilly

    1:47:00 Jokes on You
    IG: @JokesOnYouPod

    2:04:07 Black Fashion History
    IG: @blackfashionhistorypodcast

    2:15:31 Zora’s Daughters
    IG: @zorasdaughters

    2:26:35 Black True Crime
    IG: @blacktruecrimepodcast

    • 2 hr 37 min
    Why Ya'll Gagging Tho: Black Queer and Trans Origins of Club, House and Techno Ft. Deborah Conton

    Why Ya'll Gagging Tho: Black Queer and Trans Origins of Club, House and Techno Ft. Deborah Conton

    And disco and every other offshoot and derivative therein. Argue with my mom, who was there and could tell you. Black queer and trans people were forced to build space, shelter and sanctuary in the dancerie so we could all be free…follow us and Deborah Conton (@deeeebo_x)as she leads us through cultural memory, history, place and legacy. Part 2 coming soon!!

    Deborah Conton is an Atlanta native and Brooklyn resident actively involved in the club scene in Atlanta with many nights spent on the dancefloor, listening to Club Classics and House Music.
    She continues to create movement-based work for the Liberation of Black bodies. Her work led her to stage solo pieces for Movement Research (Judson Church), Performance Mix Festival, That's What She Said!, Sisterhood Summit, and the Center for Performance Research in Brooklyn via dance residency in 2020. She has also performed at Joe’s Pub and SummerStage, under the guidance of The Illustrious Blacks. She is part of a Brooklyn-based dance collective known as Afro Mosaic Soul. This collective threw events with Ian Friday and The Illustrious Blacks, known as Libation in New York City. She is also a part of the Dancing Black Bodies Project via Ladies of Hip Hop, which sheds light on Black Women in the club, Hip Hop, and other Black Social Dance movements.
    House Music was the catalyst that led her deeper into her spiritual practice. She is also a practitioner of Isese Lagba, a tradition based out of Nigeria and also an Ifà practitioner. This work has led her to do collective work under the moniker of Dee Spark Tarot and create an Oracle deck that expands outside of divination work and mentorship. She is also in the process of launching a Tarot Deck this upcoming Spring 2023.

    Venmo: @
    deborah-conton
    PayPal and Zelle: Deborah.Conton@gmail.com
    Cashapp: @deesparktarot1

    @deeeebo_x
    @deesparktarot - Divination and Spiritual work
    @afromosaicsoul - Dance collective I am a part of

    https://we.tl/t-hL0QKDgrUt - footage from House In The Park Atlanta, Labor Day 2021

    https://we.tl/t-QNVduDIITn - Praise dancing at Adult Skate, MJQ

    https://we.tl/t-hhitJQn2XC - Ash Lauryn spinning at Public Records

    https://we.tl/t-A0o0azE3iq - (First photo: Club Shelter party with Chicago DJ, Ron Trent spinning, 3rd photo from the Frankie Knuckles exhibit in 2021, Kerri Chandler and Merlin Bobb - nightlife legends, and a 2nd photo from House In The Park, Atlanta).

    White Racist Backlash Against Black Music During Disco Era:
    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2019/jul/19/disco-demolition-the-night-they-tried-to-crush-black-music

    Intro Music: BPTBH by Patience sings
    Outro Music : Apathy Happy by Benjamin Earl Turner

    • 49 min
    The Spiritual Experiences of Negros--Stolen: All "American" Music is Black Music Feat Patience Sings

    The Spiritual Experiences of Negros--Stolen: All "American" Music is Black Music Feat Patience Sings

    Or alt title: Stealing Negros Spiritual Experiences. And I don't know how many times we have to say this. Even the existence of such a thing as "American" music is dubious. Black people created all genres of music in the US and despite the global influence and unabashed imitation of our Black American cultural art forms, we've profited the least from their reach and much propaganda persists:

    Black music is NOT the "soundtrack to America"
    nor did it arise from a blend of styles from a "multi-ethnic" population
    and when you say every genre has "Black roots", that's just an unnecessarily genteel way of saying that we created all genres of music in this country.

    Join us and the inimitable @patiencesings as we talk negro spirituals, the afropessimisms of prayer warriors and the merits of Black music made for and by Black people.

    Patience Sings is a vocal prominent creative certified Reiki practitioner and writer native to Washington, D.C; Ever learning Afro-futurist, an advocate for fat Black folx, a champion for Black and Brown Youth and a proponent for Black mental health and healing through grief.

    Patience is most recently recognized as the "Scat" of the Peace & Bodyroll Duo BOOMscat, and CEO of Mojuba, a rental space and artist collective in Silver Spring MD.

    Patience is currently most proud of her collaborative work as an inaugural Cultural Work fellow at the Highlander Center for Education and Research, and for BOOMscat’s contribution to The Black Sound Lab at Dartmouth College and their Black Covid Care project.

    Support their work:

    Venmo: @patiencesings
    Cashapp: $patiencestaysinging
    Paypal: PayPal.me/Patiencesings
    https://www.peerspace.com/pages/listings/6323998c616b05000fda8301?utm_medium=ios&_branch_match_id=647184576935628039&_branch_referrer=H4sIAAAAAAAAA8soKSkottLXL0hNLSouSExO1UssKNDLyczL1ncvSHGNNAn2Ta5IAgA4Gn4%2FJgAAAA%3D%3D


    Intro Music: "Black People Tell Black History" by Patience!
    Outro Music: "Apathy Happy" by Benjamin Earl Turner
    References:
    Helen Baylor
    Kurt Carr
    Richard Smallwood
    Maurette Brown Clark
    I'll Fly Away by Hezekiah Walker
    Goin Up Yonder by Walter Hawkins

    • 1 hr
    Are US schools really desegregated if Black history is illegal? Feat. Liz Thompson

    Are US schools really desegregated if Black history is illegal? Feat. Liz Thompson

    Day 3: Black People Tell Black History feat Liz Thompson.

    69 Years after Brown v Board of Education and 59 years after 464,000 Black NYC public school students and teachers staged one of the largest protests in US history, led by Reverend Milton Galamison on Freedom Day, we are still questioning whether or not the US education system is still as racist and inequitable as ever (it is).

    Elizabeth (she/her) is a queer Creole-Ghanaian writer and educational equity researcher based in Washington, D.C. With over a decade of experience in student affairs, alumni relations, & development, Elizabeth’s background centers on engaging alumni from marginalized populations and the socio-historical impact of U.S. public school desegregation on Black students and educators. Elizabeth earned her B.A. and M.A. in English Literature from Hood College and George Washington University, respectively. She is a member of Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society and an alumna of the Public Leadership Education Network, a national, nonpartisan organization that prepares college women and marginalized gender groups for leadership in the public policy arena. Elizabeth currently serves as editor of Politics and Advocacy at @mixedmag, an online multimedia magazine dedicated to promoting creatives of color and celebrating multiethnic & multicultural voices.

    Venmo - @baaba-mensima
    CashApp- $lizthom86

    Intro Music: "Black People Tell Black History" by Patience Sings
    Outro Music: "Apathy Happy" by Benjamin Earl Turner

    • 47 min
    Intersex People Be Clapping Cheeks Too feat. Saifa Wall

    Intersex People Be Clapping Cheeks Too feat. Saifa Wall

    Day 2: Black People Tell Black History featuring the number one cheek-clapper-in-residence---activist, researcher and scholar Saifa Wall (@saifaemerges on IG) who is making Black history by highlighting the contributions, age old existence and movement building of Black intersex folks across the globe.

    Sean Saifa Wall (he/him/his) is a Black queer intersex activist and rising scholar. He is a Marie Skłowdoska-Curie fellow at the University of Huddersfield in England examining the erasure of intersex people from social policy in Ireland and England (intersexnew.co.uk). Saifa is also committed to racial equity and a radical vision of bodily autonomy for intersex folks. As co-founder of the Intersex Justice Project (intersexjusticeproject.org), a grassroots initiative by intersex people of color, he is determined to end harmful and invasive genital surgery on intersex children and advocate for affirming healthcare for all people with intersex variations. In addition to his activism, he is a trained somatic awareness practitioner and loving dad to his dog, Justice.

    Paypal: @seansaifa
    Venmo: @seansaifa-wall
    Cashapp: $saifaemerges

    Resources:
    https://www.instagram.com/reel/CkLSDctNN8Z/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

    https://twitter.com/SeanSaifaWall/status/1564294344772919302?s=20&t=VjIpM9E5aXjkaIEMSU3nwg
    (Here is the article that accompanies this tweet: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-medicines-fixation-on-the-sex-binary-harms-intersex-people1/)

    https://www.instagram.com/tv/CVftA6uA6tO/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

    https://www.instagram.com/tv/COLDuuTgb3b/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

    Intro Music: "Black People Tell Black History" by Patience Sings
    Outro Music: "Apathy Happy" by Benjamin Earl Turner

    • 44 min
    Living in the Last Days of Antiblackness and Transphobia feat. J Mase III

    Living in the Last Days of Antiblackness and Transphobia feat. J Mase III

    Day 1: Black People Tell Black History with J Mase III (@jmaseiii)

    In the beginning there was the Word and the Word was with God but it was also likely Black and it certainly wasn't just cisgender and straight.
    I'm sleep tho, in Jesus Name.

    J Mase III is a Black/Trans/queer poet & educator based in Seattle by way of Philly. As an educator, Mase has worked with community members in the US, UK, and Canada on the needs of LGBTQIA+ folks and racial justice in spaces such as K-12 schools, universities, faith communities and restricted care facilities. He is founder of awQward, the first trans and queer people of color talent agency.

    J Mase is author of And Then I Got Fired: One Transqueer’s Reflections on Grief, Unemployment & Inappropriate Jokes About Death as well as White Folks Be Trippin’: An Ethnography Through Poetry & Prose. He is head writer for the theatrical production Black Bois.

    He is co-director of the forthcoming documentary, the Black Trans Prayer Book and is finishing his latest solo work, Is Your God a Violent God? Finding a Theology for Survivors.

    This year he will be leading a series of workshops on Reparations Frameworks, called "All That DEI & Still No Reparations?" Find out more on IG & TikTok @jmaseiii and sign up for the mailing list on his site: www.jmaseiii.com

    How to support his work:
    My Cashapp is: $jmaseiii
    Venmo is : @JMase-Mase

    Intro music: "Black People Tell Black History" by Patience Sings
    Outro: Apathy Happy by Benjamin Earl Turner
    Excerpt: Reverend Valerie Spencer at the 2010 TransFaith Summit, courtesy of Diamond Stylz: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nmqg_jxzCOA

    • 54 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
1.2K Ratings

1.2K Ratings

bcmarq ,

Divinity in podcast form

Amazing, beautiful, so intentionally curated. White ppl and nonblack people, send them and all of their guests, all the monies now and always. Support QT Black folks —ALL YEAR LONG and not only for their labor but also for just existing in their joys and in rest.

Thankful for the peacefulness ,

How?

I say no

VietSchlong ,

Ask yourself why this is being pushed

Look behind the curtain, see who is doing it

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