Queer 101

Pride House Media

Hosted by LGBTQ+ activist and world-renowned entertainer Miss Peppermint, alongside celebrated queer historian and author Hugh Ryan, this podcast is your weekly deep dive into the untold stories, pivotal moments, and extraordinary individuals who shaped LGBTQ+ history.Each episode, Pep and Hugh unravel the struggles, celebrate the triumphs, and explore the cultural revolutions that have defined queer identities throughout time. With heart, humor, and a dash of glamor, they guide you through centuries of rich, vibrant LGBTQ+ legacy.Whether you’re here to honor the past, better understand the present, or ignite change for the future, Queer 101 is your direct line to the stories that matter most.

  1. 21 AVR.

    When Anti-Trans Rhetoric Boomerangs: Jenner, Chappelle & the Laws They Fueled

    This week on Queer 101, Hugh and I are reacting in real time to headlines that say everything about the moment we’re in. Caitlyn Jenner went on Fox News to complain about being impacted by Trump-era passport policies affecting transgender people. Dave Chappelle suggested that right-wing anti-trans rhetoric may have “gone too far.” But here’s the question: Who helped normalize that rhetoric in the first place? It’s an off-the-cuff conversation about how anti-trans jokes, media narratives, and influencer commentary don’t just stay online — they get cited in courtrooms, echoed in legislatures, and turned into policy. We break down: • How anti-trans rhetoric spreads from comedy specials to legislation  • Why passport and ID restrictions create real safety risks for trans people  • The surge of anti-trans bills targeting sports, bathrooms, healthcare, and legal recognition  • How misinformation shows up in court cases and policy drafts  • The broader effort to erase trans people from public life  • Why some public figures are now walking back the very narratives they amplified This isn’t just about culture wars. It’s about consequences. When rhetoric becomes law, people’s lives are affected. We also talk about genocide prevention warnings, conservative groups openly stating their end goals, and what it means for our community right now. And on a joyful note — I share the news that I’ve been named a Grand Marshal of NYC Pride. 🌈 If you care about LGBTQ rights, trans rights, gender-affirming care, passport policy changes, or the future of queer visibility — this episode is for you. Now more than ever, showing up matters. GET INVOLVED! Follow us at: @peppermint247@hughoryan@pridehousemediaWrite to us at: questions@queer101podcast.com

    46 min
  2. 7 AVR.

    LGBTQ Rights, Body Autonomy & the Politics of Control

    Okay y’all — this is Part Two of our activism conversation, and we’re zooming out. Because what’s happening right now isn’t random. It’s coordinated. It’s strategic. And it’s about control. On this episode of Queer 101, we start with the headlines — like new Olympic policies impacting trans athletes and the return of invasive sex testing in women’s sports — but we don’t stay there. We use that moment as a window into something much bigger. What happens when governments and institutions start deciding who qualifies as a “real” woman?  Who gets healthcare?  Who gets citizenship?  Who gets protection? That’s where this conversation goes. We unpack how policies framed as “fairness” can quickly turn into widespread body policing — impacting not just trans people, but cis women and anyone who doesn’t fit narrow definitions of gender. When hormone levels and chromosomes become political tools, we all need to pay attention. And we talk about how fear-based narratives distort science, flatten nuance, and keep people reacting instead of thinking. But this isn’t just about sports. We connect the dots to: The broader wave of anti‑LGBTQ legislationHow capitalism and sponsorship culture silence dissentThe role of money in shaping politics and athleticsThe UN recognizing American chattel slavery as a crime against humanityWhich countries opposed that recognition — and why that mattersFood as a human rightBirthright citizenship debatesClass versus caste — and how systems decide who belongsBecause at the end of the day, this isn’t about one policy or one headline. It’s about who gets autonomy.  Who gets dignity.  Who gets to exist without being audited. I’m asking us to think bigger. To notice patterns. To recognize when “debate” is actually distraction. And to remember that solidarity has to extend beyond hashtags. This moment isn’t just about visibility.  It’s about power. Talk about it. Get involved! Get Involved. Check out these amazing organizations Gender Liberation Black Trans Liberation Free to Be Youth Foundation Follow us at: @peppermint247@hughoryan@pridehousemediaWrite to us at: questions@queer101podcast.com

    21 min
  3. 31 MARS

    Existence Is Resistance: Trans Visibility & Queer Activism Today

    This week on Queer 101, Hugh and I are marking International Trans Day of Visibility — not just as a celebration, but as a call to action. We start with some wins, because joy and recognition matter. Our Queer History Book Club is thriving. Caro De Robertis was just named a National Book Awards judge (as she should), and Tourmaline’s biography of Marsha P. Johnson is now a Lambda Literary Award finalist. We’re also shouting out new queer and nonbinary bookstores opening in Brooklyn. Our stories are being written, read, and protected. That’s powerful. But visibility isn’t just about being seen. It’s about being safe. It’s about being resourced. It’s about being free. So we dig into what queer activism actually means right now. It’s not just marches and megaphones. It’s art. It’s organizing. It’s infiltrating systems that weren’t built for us. It’s making sure working‑class queer and trans people have healthcare, housing, food, safety, and job security — not just rainbow branding once a year. We talk about rallies like Tax the Rich and the Doll Walk, and we look back at ACT UP to remember that activism has always been bold, strategic, and deeply intersectional. We connect history — from Oscar Wilde to today — and remind ourselves that queer existence has always disrupted systems of control. And then we get honest about what we’re facing. Anti‑trans policies — ID restrictions, healthcare bans, sports bans, Supreme Court cases — are not random. They’re connected. They’re about autonomy. About bodies. About who gets to decide who we are. We break down: The myth of trans athlete “advantage”Olympic bans and sex testing backlashDouble standards in football safetyHow sponsorships and capitalism silence activismFood and housing as human rightsBirthright citizenship parallelsClass versus caste — and why that matters to queer liberationBecause on International Trans Day of Visibility, we have to say this clearly: Visibility without protection is vulnerability.  Visibility without policy change is performance.  Visibility without action is not enough. We close by highlighting organizations doing real work — Gender Liberation, Black Trans Liberation, and Free to Be Youth — and by urging continued action beyond today. Trans people have always been here.  Queer people have always organized.  And our visibility has always been political. Get Involved. Check out these amazing organizations Gender Liberation Black Trans Liberation Free to Be Youth Foundation Follow us at: @peppermint247@hughoryan@pridehousemediaWrite to us at: questions@queer101podcast.com

    30 min
  4. 17 MARS

    This Is Not a Culture War: Trans Rights Under Siege

    This episode of Queer 101 is personal. Hugh and I start by talking about survival — because right now, that’s not dramatic. It’s real. Self‑promotion, community support, showing up for each other… these aren’t cute extras. They’re how we stay alive in a moment when anti‑trans policies are escalating in very coordinated ways. We break down what’s actually happening — from efforts to end gender‑affirming care for trans people in prison, to attacks on IDs and birth certificates, to bathroom bans, to provisions tied to the SAVE Act that Trump is pushing Congress to pass. People love to call these “culture war” issues. But let’s be clear: when you mess with someone’s documents, healthcare, or safety, that’s not culture. That’s material harm. I also say what I feel — that a lot of Democratic leadership and the consultant class seem afraid of anger. But anger is not the enemy. Anger is information. Anger can be fuel. The question is: are we organizing it? We shout out the few politicians who are actually showing up — like New York’s Eric Botcher — because accountability goes both ways. Then we zoom out. Hugh brings in the history of prisons — how they function as tools of control, forced labor, and a continuation of slavery. We talk about abolition not as a buzzword, but as a question of bodily autonomy. If trans liberation means anything, it has to include people behind bars. This episode is about connecting the dots.  Trans rights. Prison systems. Political strategy. Survival. And yes, we end with a call to action — call your senators to oppose the SAVE Act. Support the legal and grassroots groups helping trans folks get documents and care. Don’t just scroll. Do something. I’m not interested in being quiet.  I’m interested in us being free. Follow us at: @peppermint247@hughoryan@pridehousemediaWrite to us at: questions@queer101podcast.com

    32 min

Notes et avis

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À propos

Hosted by LGBTQ+ activist and world-renowned entertainer Miss Peppermint, alongside celebrated queer historian and author Hugh Ryan, this podcast is your weekly deep dive into the untold stories, pivotal moments, and extraordinary individuals who shaped LGBTQ+ history.Each episode, Pep and Hugh unravel the struggles, celebrate the triumphs, and explore the cultural revolutions that have defined queer identities throughout time. With heart, humor, and a dash of glamor, they guide you through centuries of rich, vibrant LGBTQ+ legacy.Whether you’re here to honor the past, better understand the present, or ignite change for the future, Queer 101 is your direct line to the stories that matter most.

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