24 min listen
Kink at Pride is a mainstay — but for how long?
Kink at Pride is a mainstay — but for how long?
ratings:
Length:
19 minutes
Released:
Jun 28, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
People expressing their sexuality in public by dressing up in kink fashions — leather, rubber, furry, dom and a whole other universe of expressions — have been mainstays of Pride parades and festivals since the earliest celebrations in the 1970s. But as these celebrations have slowly mainstreamed, some groups say the kink factor should go down, if not disappear altogether. And the attacks aren’t coming from the right. Today, we talk about kink — what’s its role in Pride, and how does its expression there benefit not just those who partake, but society in general? Our guests are Yale University professor Joe Fischel, who recently wrote an essay in the Boston Review advocating for kink to stay at Pride, and we also talk to the president of San Francisco’s Leather and LGBTQ District — yeah, it’s a thing.More reading:Can San Francisco’s famed leather district be saved in an era of high property values?Keep Pride NudeWhat are you willing to wear on your next Zoom? Fetish fashion is on the rise
Released:
Jun 28, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Who really created Flamin’ Hot Cheetos?: A junk snack may not seem like a big deal, especially in this current world. But the story of Flamin’ Hot Cheetos — a gnarled, messy, crunchy, bright-red corn puff that debuted in the early 1990s — and its creation has long been told as an inspirational fable from classrooms to boardrooms because of one man: Richard Montañez. His tale was irresistible: he was a former janitor at a Frito-Lay plant who became a high-ranking executive. That is all true. But he credited his rise to his creation of Flamin’ Hot Cheetos. Now, an L.A. Times investigation has cast doubts on those claims, and the internet is, well, aflame. We get some insight into the matter from Times business reporter Sam Dean and our very own senior podcast producer Denise Guerra. by The Times: Essential news from the L.A. Times