Mike Carey and Me in Bristol

As many of you will know, Mike Carey has a new book out: Fellside. Mike is doing a promotional event at Waterstones in Bristol on the evening of May 18th. I am delighted to have been asked to interview him. The event is free, but the store would like people to sign up on EventBrite so that they have some idea of numbers. It will be awesome.

And with any luck, as it is a Wednesday, I will have Mike on Ujima as well. That’s dependent on his travel arrangements, but hopefully we can make it work.

By the way, I’ve just bagged a great interview with Guy Gavriel Kay for the May 4th episode of Women’s Outlook.

Women in Broadcasting on Bristol 24/7

The nice people at Bristol 24/7 (in particular Pamela Parkes) have done an article on, and I quote, “Bristol’s brilliant women broadcasters”. Naturally it doesn’t include all of us: no Paulette, no Mary Milton, no Claire Cavanagh, Laura Rawlings or Alex Lovell. However, it does include a bunch of my colleagues from Ujima, and it includes me. If you want to have a read, and see me having a pop at a BBC institution, you can find the article here.

Today on Ujima – Feminism!

With LGBT History Month over and International Women’s Day not far off we switched gears on Women’s Outlook today and went 100% with a feminist agenda.

First up I was delighted to welcome back Sian Webb from Bristol Womens’ Voice. Sian and her team are organizing a festival day at M Shed on March 12th to celebrate International Women’s Day. They have rather more resources than I did for the LGBT History Festival, and have a really spectacular event planned. It is only one day, but they have three streams of programme and some really cool stuff. Further information is available here.

For the next hour I was joined by Jess Read of the Women’s Equality Party. I must confess that I’d been a bit nervous of these folks in the past because they seemed to have a bit of an air of White Feminism about them. However, Jess was very firm on the need for intersectionality, including acceptance of trans women. The discussion ranged over a wide variety of issues including how WEP would manage its non-partisan stance. It was really refreshing to have a politician in the studio who a) said that she didn’t want to be a politician, and b) said that her party’s aim was to put itself out of business.

You can find the Bristol branch of the Women’s Equality Party on Facebook. There is also a Bath branch which is somewhat nearer to me. You can find your local branch here, and I do believe that’s Ceri in the picture at the head of that page so I’m guessing it is a Bath branch photo.

In the final half hour I was joined by my friends Jo Hall and Roz Clarke to talk about the fabulous Fight Like A Girl anthology. The link to book for the launch event is here. It will be awesome, especially Fran Terminiello’s demonstration of the use of sharp, pointy things. Hopefully the panel I am chairing will be good too.

We may have mentioned a whole bunch of amazing women writers in the process, including Juliet McKenna, Kameron Hurley, Tansy Rayner Roberts, NK Jemisin, Glenda Larke, Mary Gentle, Gaie Sebold, Foz Meadows, Danie Ware and many more.

You can listen to the first hour of the show here, and the second hour here.

Jo will be back in the studio tomorrow morning to talk to Paulette about World Book Day on the Education Show.

The playlist for the show was as follows:

  • Sisters are doing it for Themselves – Eurythmics
  • Why? – Tracy Chapman
  • Independent Woman – Destiny’s Child
  • Let’s Talk About Sex – Salt n Pepa
  • Unstoppable – Liane La Havas
  • Stone Cold Dead in the Market – Maya Angelou
  • Horse and I – Bat for Lashes
  • Ghetto Woman – Janelle Monáe

Jess chose the third and fourth tracks. She’s a big Beyoncé fan. We managed to avoid coming to blows over whether Bey is more or less awesome than Janelle Monáe

Stuart Milk on Ujima

I’m sat in the bar of a Bristol hotel waiting for Stuart Milk. We were hoping for a little bit of downtime for him today. However, the Democratic primary race is in full swing back in the USA and as someone who campaigned strongly for Obama Stuart’s opinion is in demand. Stuff is happening in Asia too. I have no idea if Stuart is involved in Panasonic’s decision to back same-sex unions in Japan — he doesn’t share details of his work with me because it is often sensitive — but it would not surprise me. It is the sort of thing he helps make happen.

What I did do is get Stuart into my radio studio for almost 2 hours on Wednesday. That was yesterday, wasn’t it? I have trouble remembering what day it is at the moment. He was a bit late arriving as I had to leave him answering emails and make his own way to the studio while I got the show set up. We were joined by my producer, Paulette, who is a retired teacher, and by Lisa Middle who runs the local branch of the National Union of Teachers. The first half of the show was taken up with discussion of oppressive initiatives such as Proposition 6 in California (which Harvey Milk helped defeat) and Section 28 in the UK, both of which were intended to prevent children finding out the truth about same sex relationships. We also talked about what sort of government initiatives we needed to build a fairer society.

You can listen to the first half of the show here.

The second half of the show was given over to talking about Stuart, his uncle, and the great work that he and the Milk Foundation do around the world. We also talked about some of the people Stuart had met in his work, such a the Obamas, and Maya Angelou.

You can listen to the second half of the show here.

The playlist was all LGBT:

  • Diana Ross – I’m Coming Out
  • Little Richard – Tutti Frutti
  • Janelle Monae & Erykah Badu – QUEEN
  • Amada Lear – I Am What I Am
  • Labi Siffre – So Strong
  • Vinyl Closet – Jailhouse Rock
  • Tracy Chapman – Baby Can I Hold You Tonight?
  • Village People – YMCA

Radio 4 Does Women & Science Fiction

There are few things that can persuade me to listen to the BBC’s Radio 4, but this just might be one of them. Tomorrow (Thursday) at 11:30am they are airing a documentary called Herland which will feature ten female science fiction writers. They have an excellent line-up (though the blurbs do not inspire confidence). Thankfully the show has been put together by Geoff Ryman, who can be relied upon to know what he is talking about and avoid the sort of breathless nonsense that the BBC normally brings to coverage of SF.

Anyway, it will be on iPlayer, so if you are at work tomorrow morning and can’t listen you can catch up here. There’s also a taster in the form of a short clip involving someone who I expect to be a big star of the SF field in the future, Laurie Penny.

Well That’s Just Perfect

I have been looking around for some Bowie covers by black artists, because I want to play all Bowie on my next Ujima show and I don’t want to get in trouble for playing too much white music. Of course my absolute dream result would be to find one of my favorite Bowie songs covered by Janelle Monáe. So here it is.

Suggestions for other tracks to play are welcome. Please note that I do know about Seu Jorge and I have the We Were So Turned On album. I reckon I have a good excuse to play “Let’s Dance” too.

Today on Ujima: Pagan Festivals and Stuart Milk

We were a little light on guests for today’s show, it being that time of year, so I am especially grateful to Liz Williams and Trevor Jones for coming all the way from Glastonbury to be with me today. Most of you will know Liz as a science fiction writer, but you may not know that she and Trevor run the Cat & Cauldron witchcraft shop in Glastonbury. I had them on the show to talk about midwinter festivals. We covered a wide range, from the origins of Santa Claus to Roman Saturnalia and German Yule. My French colleague, Melody, was on hand to provide a European perspective.

You can listen to the first half of the show here.

At the start of the second hour I shamelessly used my place in charge of the microphone to send a Christmas message to Kevin. After that I played the interview with Stuart Milk that I recorded in London a couple of weeks ago. Thanks again to Dan Vo and his colleagues at Heavy Entertainment for the use of their studio.

If you want to see some of the things that will be happening in Bristol for LGBT History Month, check out the OutStories Bristol website. There will be lots more posts coming during January.

Melody and I were joined in the studio by Mary Milton who, amongst other things, is the Producer of ShoutOut, the LGBT radio show on BCFM (and now a host of other local community stations). In the final half hour we had a chat about the state of LGBT rights and what we we need to do to improve matters.

You can listen to the second hour of the show here.

The playlist for the show was inevitably seasonal, though I did try to avoid most of the obvious choices. Having to play mostly black music helped a lot. I was especially pleased to be able to play Eartha Kitt. The full playlist was as follows:

  • Santa Baby – Eartha Kitt
  • Sun Goddess – Earth, Wind & Fire featuring Ramsey Lewis
  • Santa Claus is Coming to Town – The Jackson 5
  • Run Rudolph Run – Chuck Berry
  • All I Want for Christmas – Mariah Carey
  • So Strong – Labi Siffre
  • Winter Wonderland – Booker T and the MGs
  • Hot Stuff – Donna Summer

As Paulette is on holiday in Vietnam I’ll be hosting the show again next week. If anyone who lives in or around Bristol fancies being on, do get in touch. It is hard to find guests at this time of year.

On The Beeb

Yesterday while I was at Ujima I got a call from BBC Radio Bristol. They wanted to do a feature on trans people on today’s John Darvall show and asked if they could have me available by phone. Obviously I said yes. The resulting show can be found on iPlayer. I’m in the first half hour, if you want to fast forward through that.

It is always interesting doing trans stuff on the mainstream media. In most ways John did a really good job of trying to be respectful, use the right language and so on. That was a vast improvement on the “born in the wrong body” train wreck they had on the morning show a few weeks ago. However, nothing’s perfect, so here are a few pointers for future shows.

First up, if the show was inspired by Tara Hudson being released from prison, why was the focus on sexuality as well as gender? That just meant that we had to spend a lot of time disabusing listeners of the idea that sexuality and gender identity are somehow the same thing.

One thing I wish I’d been able to talk about, but didn’t get the opportunity to do so, is history. John, like most Westerners, is under the impression that trans people are something new. Nothing could be further from the truth. If you look at just about any other culture through history and around the world you’ll find societies that have a place for trans people in them. Pretending that human gender is binary is an idea that Europeans came up with a few hundred years ago, and then proceeded to export to the rest of the world as part of their colonialist adventurism.

Going back to Tara, we never really got to the bottom of what went wrong. There was very little discussion of Gender Recognition Certificates, and the fact that only a fraction of people who go through gender transition have one. It is so easy to go through most of your life without one, but any interaction with government where one’s legal gender is called into question immediately centers on the birth certificate, not all of the other ID that you have got changed. It is not just a prison issue either. If you have a GRC you can get a pension at the same age as any other woman. If you don’t you’ll be treated as a man. It is also possible (though it has never been tested in court) that the loopholes in the Equality Act that allow discrimination against trans women don’t apply to someone with a GRC.

Throughout the program both John and the news reports talked about how the government is currently reviewing the regulations for housing trans people in prisons. The impression given was that this is somehow a result of what happened to Tara, Vikki Thompson and Joanne Latham. That’s not true. The guidelines officially expired in March and the Ministry of Justice had been working on a new version when Tara’s case hit the headlines. They have, to date, refused to let anyone see the new draft. They have not involved any trans organizations in the creation of that draft. And they are planning to issue it just before Christmas. I think you can guess from that which direction the new guidelines are likely to take.

The one thing that got me really annoyed was the caller, Ben, who was put on right at the end of the first hour. Everyone else had been fairly supportive, but it is an old journalist trick to let one side have their say and then, right at the end, put on someone who spouts a pile of lies, and then cut leaving those lies uncontested.

It wouldn’t have been so bad if Ben had just confined himself to saying how trans people are tragic, ugly freaks, but he also actively promoted conversion therapy. There his comment crossed the line from being abusive to being dangerous, because conversion therapy kills people. There’s plenty of evidence to show that trying to bully people out of being gay or trans doesn’t work, and makes the patient unhappy, potentially suicidal. Worse, there are unscrupulous doctors who prey on religious parents and encourage them to brutalize their kids to prevent said kids “growing up gay”. Conversion therapy is illegal in California, and probably would be here too if the psychiatric profession wasn’t afraid that such a law would be twisted to prevent them from providing any treatment at all to trans people.

Thankfully the show had a long time left to run, and John came back to the topic later in the show. Fingers crossed most people who heard Ben also heard the follow-up to what he said.

All in all I thought it was a pretty good program. I get frustrated because there is so much misinformation out there that mainstream journalists just don’t want to tackle. But the media is what it is as sometimes we just have to be grateful for what we can get. It is rare to find someone who is prepared to try. So thank you, John, you were a big step forward.

Today on Ujima: Lovecraft, Planetfall, AIDS and Cinders

Today’s show on Ujima began with me interviewing local writer, Jonathan L Howard, about his new book, Carter & Lovecraft (which I reviewed here). We talked a fair amount about Lovecraft the man, about the World Fantasy Awards and the controversy surrounding the trophy, and about how and why Lovecraft might be relevant today.

Next up was Emma Newman. She couldn’t make it into the studio (too busy) so we did a pre-record over Skype. Emma and I talked mainly about Planetfall (which is excellent): about 3D printing, small isolated communities, mental illness and the need for diverse characters in books. We also talked a bit about Emma’s year of horror, about Tea & Jeopardy, and about the forthcoming Split Worlds live role-playing game and masked ball (tickets for which are available here).

You can listen to the first hour of the show here.

The second hour began with Sheila Ollis from The Brigstowe Project talking about the current state of the AIDS epidemic, both in Zimbabwe and among immigrant communities in Bristol. While it is good to know that AIDS is now survivable, it was clear from talking to Sheila that there is still a very long way to go, especially in communities were myths about the disease are still widely believed.

Finally I welcomed my colleague, Andreeja, and Nick Young from The Creative Youth Network. Nick is directing a modern re-imagining of Cinderella using the young people from CYN as his cast and crew. Andreeja, as well as working for Ujima, is the social media guru for CYN. Nick and I could probably have talked for a very long time about fairy tales, and I did send him away with a recommendation to read Cat Valente. Along the way we referred to this article in Bristol 24/7, and I had a bit of a rant about this particular show at the Hippodrome.

You can listen to the second hour of the show here.

The playlist for today’s show was:

  • Lucky Star – Labi Siffre
  • Tokyo – Lianne La Havas
  • Take the A Train – Duke Ellington
  • We were Rock n Roll – Janelle Monáe
  • Hound Dog – Big Mama Thornton
  • Together Again – Janet Jackson
  • Independent Woman Part I – Destiny’s Child
  • Unstoppable – Lianne La Havas

I was particularly pleased to play Big Mama Thornton. Her version of Hound Dog was #1 on Billboard for seven weeks in 1952, selling almost 2 million copies. But because that Presley guy covered it no one remembers her any more.

My next show is going to be on December 30th. I rather suspect that no one will want to be on it and I’ll just play music for two hours, but if anyone is keen to be interviewed let me know. I can do pre-records on Skype so it doesn’t matter where in the world you are.

On Mental Illness

Various things have conspired to make me think a lot about mental health issues this week, by far the most important of which is the sad news that David J Rodger, one of the authors who has read at BristolCon Fringe, took his own life on Sunday. I didn’t know David very well, though the one time I met him he seemed like a fascinating bloke whom I would have liked to know better. Other Bristol writers did know him better, and report that he had been struggling with depression for some time. There are some great obituaries online from Jo Hall and Tom Parker.

Depression is something that I know well. So is the mental unease that comes from gender dysphoria. These two combined might easily have killed me a little over 20 years ago. Instead, thanks to some good drugs, an improving medical climate for trans people, and people who loved me, I was able to embark on the journey that is gender transition.

For many people, however, mental health problems are something they feel that they can’t talk about, and perhaps can’t even ask for help over. Judging from what Jo and Tom say, David was one such person. Suicide is one of the leading killers of men, and I wish that there had been rather more talk about it last week on International Men’s Day, instead of all the MRA nonsense about the pain of being denied sex by uppity feminists.

I have just done an interview with the wonderful Emma Newman, part of which will feature on Women’s Outlook next Wednesday, and all of which I intend to put on Salon Futura in due course. Given the nature of the lead character in Planetfall, we talked about mental health issues, and the stigma surrounding them, quite a bit.

I greatly admire the courage Emma has in talking about her anxiety issues online. We are still very much in a world where any suggestion of weakness of that sort is liable to be held against you. These days, if you are applying for a job, prospective employers will comb social media for any suggestion of character flaws. HR departments, it seems, are less interested in finding someone who will be good at the job, and more interested in screening out anyone who might be seen as “difficult” in any way.

For trans people it is even harder. The medical profession might have (partially) moved away from the idea that we are all crazy, and towards the understanding that transition cures most of our mental health problems. Society has not taken the same leap. For example, this report from California shows how trans pilots are required to prove themselves sane each year, even though the FAA’s official guidelines say it is not necessary. I have similar problems with GPs, all of whom seem to be convinced that I am likely to be Overcome With REGRET! at any moment.

Of course if you are subject to regular harassment as part of your daily life, and many trans people are, you can still have mental heath problems post-transition. Last night we had the Annual General Meeting of LGBT Bristol, of which I am a trustee. The staff spoke eloquently about how many of the people they helped had complex and multiple problems to face in their lives. Not just trans, but trans, depressed and homeless, for example. I have tremendous admiration for the people who make it their day-to-day business to help such folk.

Help is available, and hopefully is improving in quality. Shortly after talking to Emma I got email inviting me to a one-day conference in Bristol in January. It is being run by Mind, and it is focused on suicide prevention for LGBT people. If it helps just one person, it is absolutely worth a day of my time being grilled about what it is like being trans.

More Radio

I was on Ujima again yesterday. Paulette has an education-themed show on Thursday mornings and Paul Jacobs, the Service Director for Education at Bristol City Council, has kindly agreed to come in once a month to talk to listeners. I needed to see Paul about next year’s LGBT History Month plans, and this seemed like a good time for a meeting. Of course Paulette saw it as a good chance to interview me.

So I ended up guesting with Ujima Chairman, Roger Griffith, talking about our experiences of education: me as a trans girl in the days before trans was even talked about, him as a black boy in a mostly white school. You can listen to that here. In the second hour Paul bravely took questions from a group of kids from a local school.

While I was on air Judeline phoned in sick, so I offered to take her place in the What the Papers Say panel on the following show. I had time to flick through a few of the day’s papers during the second half of the education show and immediately zeroed in on an article by Dave Aaronovitch in the Times where, in defense of Germaine Greer’s transphobia, he had the cheek to accuse students today of being Stalinists. Anyone who was active in student politics in the late 70s and early 80s will know just how ironic that is. Of course these days Aaronovitch is a shill for Rupert Murdoch. Doubtless he somehow manages to claim that his politics haven’t changed.

Anyway, I may have had a little rant about Greer.

I also made reference to this blog post by Radio Bristol presenter, John Darvall, who has been complaining about how the local media, including the BBC, have reported the death of his daughter. Sadly I don’t think it will change anything. The mainstream media will always hide behind the excuse that they have to simplify everything for the benefit of their listeners, and that the wishes of those whose lives they are reporting, not to mention the truth, always come a distant second.

That segment of the show is available here, and of course don’t forget that in the second hour Paulette and Zuzana reported on their trip to Calais to bring supplies to the refugee camp.

Today on Ujima : Sanctum, TDOR, Tara and Tade

I was in charge of the Women’s Outlook show on Ujima again today. My first guest was Sara Zaltash who, like me, has performed at Sanctum. She’s one of those brave people who have been performing there in the middle of the night. And if you think that a trans woman reading science fiction stories is off the wall, just wait until you hear what Sara was doing.

Sara’s parents are Iranian, so along side discussion of her Sanctum performance we chatted about the issue of women’s rights in Iran. That was with reference to this article in yesterday’s Telegraph. I did rather like the idea that women in Iran are getting round laws about being their husbands’ property by refusing to get married. Of course personally I think the solution is to bring back Ishtar worship, but I can see that might be a bit unpopular in some quarters.

After Sara my next guest was Chris Hubley, a local artist who is staging an exhibition of work by trans artists as part of Trans Awareness Month (which November is). That includes a fundraiser party on the 13th at which I might be reading a bit of poetry. Chris and I talked a bit about the Trans Day of Remembrance (TDOR) and how we both want trans people to be known for things other than being tragic. You can find out more about the events Chris is organizing here.

You can listen to the first hour of the show here.

Chris had to rush off to catch a bus to London, but before he went we had a brief chat about the Tara Hudson case. Chris explains why he doesn’t have a Gender Recognition Certificate. If the Ministry of Justice were being consistent they should hold that, were Chris to commit a crime, he should be sent to a women’s prison. My guess, though, is that it wouldn’t happen. The trouble with the MoJ Guidelines is that they are based on the assumption that the primary goal is to protect the other inmates from the trans person, not the other way around. Trans women, because they are still seen as men by the MoJ, are deemed a danger to other women prisoners. Trans men are also seen as men by the MoJ, and therefore also deemed to belong in men’s prisons.

That only took up 15 minutes as Chris had to go, so in the next slot I brought in Paulette and our new colleague, Zuzana, who were just back from a trip to Calais to deliver supplies to the refugee camp there. They will have a much fuller report on the trip in tomorrow’s Outlook show. It sounds like it will be well worth a listen.

In the final segment of the show I ran a pre-recorded interview with Tade Thompson about his new novel, Making Wolf. Tade and I talk a lot about the background to the novel, which is set in an imaginary country carved off from Nigeria after the civil war. There’s a lot of great material in there.

You can listen to the second half of the show here.

The playlist for the show was as follows:

  • Thieves in the Temple – Prince
  • So Blue – Mahsa Vahdat & Mighty Sam McClain
  • Pressure Off – Duran Duran with Janelle Monáe & Nile Rodgers
  • Love will save the day – Koko Jones
  • Appletree – Erykah Badu
  • Lovin’ You – Minnie Riperton (dedicated to Kevin)
  • Killer on the Rampage – Eddy Grant
  • Jezebel – Sade

I am particularly grateful to Sara for introducing me to Mahsa and Sam. I was also very pleased to be able to music by a trans woman of color during our discussion of TDOR.

I’m going to be on Paulette’s education show briefly tomorrow morning. She’s interviewing Roger Griffith and I about performing at Sanctum was how/whether our various educational backgrounds prepared us for being writers. That will be between 10:00 and 11:00.

Women’s Outlook Does Literature

It was all books all the time on yesterday’s Women’s Outlook show.

First up I had a great interview with Nicola Griffith, mainly about her wonderful novel, Hild. Naturally that brought us on the the position of women in Anglo-Saxon society and the more general issue of how women’s roles in history are erased. We also touched on the work Nicola has been doing on women and literary awards, and on the forthcoming film of Kelley Eskridge’s novel, Solitaire.

The full interview with Nicola ran to about half an hour, so I had to cut quite a bit. I’ll put the whole thing on Salon Futura when I get the chance.

After that it was all Bristol Festival of Literature. I was joined in the studio by Amy Morse, Kevlin Henney and Pete Sutton. We talked through just about every event in the Festival. You can find more details about all of them here.

To listen to the first hour of the show click here, and for the second hour click here.

The playlist for the show was as follows:

  • Barry White – Let the Music Play
  • Percy Sledge – When a Man Loves a Woman
  • Duran Duran – Pressure Off
  • Sade – Nothing Can Come Between Us
  • Prince – I Wanna Be Your Lover
  • Cameo – Word Up
  • Heatwave – Boogie Nights
  • Parliament – Bop Gun

Yeah, I did play the new Duran Duran single. If you don’t know why, listen to the show. All is explained. (And it is a great song.)

Today on Ujima – BristolCon, Stephanie, Art & Refugees

Today’s Women’s Outlook show had a lot of science fiction content. For the first half hour I was joined by Joanne Hall, the Chair of BristolCon. We discussed the various things that people will be able to see and do at the convention, and then we went on discuss Jo’s new book, Spark & Carousel, which is launching at the convention. We may have noted that Jim Burns like a beer or two.

One of the many fine authors who will be attending this year’s BristolCon is Stephanie Saulter. Last week I did a phone interview with her about her latest novel, Regeneration, which I broadcast today. The whole thing is about half an hour long, so I had to cut it down quite a bit for the show because of ads, music and news. I will post the extended version on Salon Futura in due course.

You can listen to the first hour of the show here.

The second half began with the studio full of artists. They were all people involved with the Art on the Hill art trail, which is one of many such trails in Bristol. Nicolette de Sausmarez provided all of the admin details, Jane Lee & Sue Jones talked about their art, and Alan Gibson represented Nota Bene, a local a cappella group.

Finally we got serious and discussed the refugee crisis. Paulette, who is back from Jamaica at last, announced a new initiative from Ujima to help people in Calais. I talked to Dr. Naomi Millner from Bristol University who wrote this fine article about what we can do to provide practical help.

You can listen to the second hour of the show here.

The playlist for today’s show was as follows:

  • Earth, Wind & Fire – Fantasy
  • Janelle Monáe – Tightrope
  • Pointer Sisters – We are family
  • Bob Marley – Could you be loved?
  • Prince – Art Official Cage
  • Nota Bene – Let’s do it
  • Jamiroquai – Emergency on Planet Earth
  • Jama – No Borders

And finally, here is a news report about Ujima’s recent win at the National Diversity Awards.

BristolCon Next Week

Yep, it is only a week to go to BristolCon. Because I host the website I see the committee emails go through and I know how hard Jo and her team are working. But that’s all under the surface. I’m sure that on the day everything will seem as serene as ever. If you are thinking about going, look who else will be there:

  • Jasper Fforde
  • Jaine Fenn
  • Chris Moore
  • Paul Cornell
  • Jim Burns
  • Emma Newman
  • Pete Newman
  • Gareth L Powell
  • Anne Lyle
  • Huw Powell
  • Stark Holborn
  • Jonathan L Howard
  • Adrian Tchaikovski
  • Stephanie Saulter
  • Juliet E. McKenna
  • Ben Galley
  • Sarah Ash
  • Janet Edwards
  • Danie Ware
  • Jen Williams
  • Graham Bleathman

And many, many others. And me, of course. See here for my schedule.

Jo Hall will be in the Ujima studios with me on Wednesday to preview the event, and I’ll also have an interview with Stephanie Saulter.

National Diversity Awards

So I’ve been up late and pacing around nervously. No, it was nothing to do with England’s last second try in the rugby. I have been watching the results come in for the National Diversity Awards.

Commiserations to my pal Kathy Caton who didn’t win the LGBT Role Model category, but she was beaten by a trans woman, Megan Key, who I believe is the most senior trans person in the Civil Service. Well done, Megs!

Congratulations are also due to Trans* Masculine Support & Advice who took away the award for LGBT Community groups.

Commiserations again to BCFM who did not win the multi-strand community award, but like Kathy thoroughly deserved their nomination.

And then there was this:

Wow.

I may be more coherent about this tomorrow. Then again…

Today On Ujima – Feminism and Fringe

Yeah, I have been back on the radio again. Paulette is still in Jamaica so I was allowed to put the whole show together myself. What I wasn’t expecting was that I’d end up learning to be an engineer on the job. I’ve had a bit of training on the desk before, but this is the first time I have actually done it live myself. There were a few very minor gaps in the flow where I had a panic as to which button to push, but mostly it was very smooth. Huge thanks are due to my colleague, Jack, who was keeping an eye on me and pointing out when I had forgotten something.

Anyway, the show began with discussion of the current furor in the UK over the election of Jeremy Corbyn to be leader of the Labour Party. As I said on the show, I’m not a Socialist, but the behavior of the mainstream media, the right wing of the Labour Party, and even the Prime Minister has been so childish that you can’t help but have sympathy and respect for Corbyn. I’m not surprised that there has been a flood of people joining Labour since he was elected. My colleagues, Judeline and Jack, offered their opinions.

Next up I talked a bit about the Ascent of Woman documentary series that is airing on BBC 2 at the moment. I’ve talked a lot about it here already, so I won’t go into that again.

After the news we were joined by Tom Parker and Jasmine Atkins-Smart of the Tobacco Tea Theatre Company. You may remember Tom from his appearance at BristolCon Fringe. The they have been up in Edinburgh performing in a play called The Accidental Adventures of Sherlock Holmes in which Tom played Doctor Watson and Jasmine played Sherlock. We chatted a bit about what it was like being at Fringe as performers, about the theatre scene in Bristol, and about Sherlock as a cultural phenomenon.

Next up we were supposed to have Cezara Nanu of Bristol Women’s Voice talking about modern slavery. Sadly she had caught a chill, probably from running the Bristol Half Marathon on Sunday (where she was raising money for refugees) so we gave the actors a little longer and then covered the slavery issue as well as we could by ourselves. Judeline and Jack had done some great research.

Finally we touched on an issue that arose out of the media panic over Mr Corbyn, the idea of women-only railway carriages. That naturally broadened out into the topic of safe spaces in general. I chipped in with the issue as to whether trans women were allowed in women’s spaces, and put poor Jack on the spot as our representative of men.

If you want to listen to the show you can find the first hour here and the second hour here.

The playlist for the show was as follows:

  • Tracy Chapman – Talking ’bout a revolution
  • Bob Marley – Revolution
  • Elvis Costello – Watching the Detectives
  • Isaac Hayes – Shaft
  • Mavis Staples – Eyes on the Prize
  • Nina Simone – Young, Gifted and Black
  • Duke Ellington – Take the A Train
  • John Coltrane – Blue Train

Women’s Outlook Does Palestine

Yesterday’s show on Ujima was devoted entirely to the plight of the Palestinian people. Paulette is away on the far side of the Atlantic again, and she had left me with a prepared show full of guests for me to host.

What she didn’t leave me with was music. Given that the Palestinian situation is very much about state violence, I figured I could start with “Hell You Talmbout”, the protest song written by Janelle Monáe for the Black Lives Matter campaign. The song features Janelle, Jindenna and the whole of the Wondaland crew chanting the names of people of color killed by police in the USA this year.

Naturally, having done that, I had to read the names of the trans women of color killed in the USA this year. To get some idea of why people are so worried, here’s an historical comparison:

  • 2010 – 14
  • 2011 – 9
  • 2012 – 15
  • 2013 – 16
  • 2014 – 10
  • 2015 – 20 to date

Here are their names: Papi Edwards, Lamia Beard, Ty Underwood, Yazmin Vash Payne, Taja Gabrielle DeJesus, Penny Proud, Kristina Grant Infiniti, London Chanel, Mercedes Williamson, Ashton O’Hara, Amber Monroe, India Clarke, K.C. Haggard, Shade Schuler, Kandis Capri, Elisha Walker, Tamara Dominguez, Jasmine Collins, Bri Golec, Mya Hall.

I also wanted to find music by Palestinians. This led me to discover Doc Jazz, who I was very impressed with. Then I found a page of songs about the Palestinian issue, most of which were hip hop. Scanning through I noticed one artist described with gender neutral pronouns, which is how I discovered the wonderful Invincible. That’s another brilliant trans musician I can add to my playlists.

The first hour of the show began with an interview with Ed Hill, a Bristol-based activist who has made several trips to Palestine and knows the situation there well. He did most of the work putting the show together, and his main interest is the forthcoming European Championship soccer match between Wales and Israel which is taking place in Cardiff at the weekend.

Next up I had a chat with Eddy, one of the founders of the Palestinian Museum in Bristol. Thanks to Eddy and Rita, we are fortunate enough to have the first museum in the world dedicated to the Palestinian people. Washington DC has since followed suit, and Amsterdam is now building one.

You can listen to the first hour of the show here.

Ed Hill came back to talk to me at the start of the second hour. Our main topic of conversation was the arms trade, and how British companies profit from the Israeli military operations again Palestine.

Finally I was joined by the Rev. Sue Parfitt and Eddy Knasel. We wanted to make a point that the campaign in support of the Palestinians is not simply a case of Muslim against Jew, as it is often portrayed in the Western media. Many Palestinians are Christians, and many Jews support the Palestinian cause. Sue is an Anglican minister who has just returned from a visit to Palestine where she helped a local Jewish-run peace organization build houses for Palestinians made homeless by the Israeli army. Eddy is a Quaker, and part of an international, multi-denominational Christian organization called Kairos which is dedicated to helping the Palestinians.

Of course I had to end the show with a shout out to Nalo Hopkinson for becoming the first Jamaican writer to be a Guest of Honor at a Worldcon. Well done, Finnish friends.

You can listen to the second hour of the show here.

The full playlist for the show was as follows:

  • Hell You Talmbout – Janelle Monáe and the Wondaland Jam Authority
  • Rising Tide – Doc Jazz
  • No Compromises – Invincible
  • Gimme Hope, Joanna – Eddy Grant
  • The Lebanon – The Human League
  • Lei Lei – Maryam Mursal
  • Our House – Madness
  • Change is Gonna Come – Otis Redding

My apologies once again to Isaac, my engineer, for screwing up the order of play. Apologies also for the pneumatic drilling that you may be able to hear in the background during the show. There was nothing we could do about that. Hopefully the building work will be done by the time I am back on the air in two weeks time, because I am expecting to interview Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson.

Trans Pride Reportage

Last night Shout Out devoted a large proportion of the show to my report from this year’s Trans Pride. It features Roz Kaveney, Sarah Savage, Fox Fisher, Kate Adair, Evie Andrew, a lady from Stonewall, a black family from London, and some fabulous kids from Mermaids. You can listen to the show as a podcast here.

I recorded a lot more material than the show was able to use. My apologies to the people who did not get in. I will be doing my own Trans Pride podcast in the near future that will have a lot more in it.