Archive for bisexual

Femme Day of Action Los Angeles Edition

Posted in Cultural Events, Parties and Club Nights with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on January 21, 2012 by Mommy Fiercest
Los Angeles Femme Day Of Action

Los Angeles Femme Day Of Action

Saturday February 21, at 3:00pm until Sunday at 1:00am

Instigating and Imagining Femme(inine) Community in LA

Calling all self-defined queer folks on femme/inine spectrums to come together for a day of conversation, creativity, and community-building. And a party afterward.

Whether you feel uneasy with the word “femme” but still wonder if it could apply to you, or whether you came out of the womb an 8th level card-carrying high femme, we welcome the wide scope of identities and experiences to contribute to building a smarty-pants good time. We will interrogate and celebrate the definitions, embodiments, and spirits of femme-ness. In this city of such rich diversity and sprawl, let’s intentionally reach across our divisions to imagine and instigate an inclusive, powerful femme community.

And did we mention there’s a dance party?

Saturday Jan 21
Starting at 3 p.m. sharp

Human Resources Gallery
410 Cottage Home Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012
(3 blocks from Chinatown stop on the Metro Gold line)

Schedule for the day:

3-4 pm: Meet & Greet
4-6 pm: Facilitated group discussion/workshop time *
6-7 pm: Dinner break (bring something or run out for something)
7-9 pm: Collaborative crafting/party decorating
9 pm on: Dance party**

4-6 pm Group Discussion / Panel:
FACES OF FEMME … Instigating & Imagining Femme(inine) Community in LA

*GROUP DISCUSSION: It’s All About You! Let’s talk about how You identify as femme, tell us when/how you ‘came out’ as femme, and if you could imagine femme community in LA what would it look like?

*PANEL: an amazing group of LA femmes bring perspectives & raise questions about everything including Femme Failure, Trans-femme, Black Femme Identity, Xicana femmes, Body autonomy, and Femme Naked?

-Prof Laura Harris (Pitzer College) co-editor of ‘Femme: lesbians, feminists & bad girls’
-Prof Talia Bettcher (Cal State LA) – co-editor ‘Transgender Studies and Feminism’/Hypatia
-Prof Mignon Moore (UCLA) – Author of ‘Invisible Families: Gay Identities, Relationships and Motherhood Among Black Women’
-Laura Luna Placencia – Queer Fat Femme community activist & ‘Creative Xicana’ blogger
-Lynn Harris Ballen – queer femme(inist), co-founder LEX, host ‘Feminist Magazine’ radio/KPFK

** Dance party is open to everyone. We respectfully request that events from 3 – 9 p.m. are attended only by self-identified femmes (of all genders) and folks exploring their femme/ininity.

This event is FREE. We will provide light snacks and adult beverages by donation

LA Queer Posada

Posted in Cultural Events, Parties and Club Nights with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on December 20, 2011 by Mommy Fiercest
LA QUEER POSADA

LA QUEER POSADA

Performance Event Collective Mama Pancha’s Queer Life Rituals presents the Third Annual LA Queer Posada, featuring Payasos L.A. and the Los Angeles chapter of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence. A new take on the Mexican Posada celebration, LA Queer Posada will include performances in theatre, poetry, dance and music with intercultural queer artists.

The procession will take place on Friday, December 23, 2011 and will commence promptly at 7:59 pm at The Eagle in Silver Lake (4219 Santa Monica Blvd, Los Angeles, 90029). The procession will head north on Santa Monica Blvd, then east on Sunset Blvd, and end at Los Globos Nightclub (3040 W. Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles, 90026). Guests are encouraged to bring instruments to join the Posada Band in playing some Christmas tunes as we strut down Sunset Blvd!

This year LA Queer Posada will end its mile-long procession at Los Globos (3040 W. Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles, 90026) where performances symbolizing the gift of the Magi will take place. The gift of the Magi will feature performances by Selah Gospel Choir, Burlesque sensation La Cholita, and more to be announced. The dance party is scheduled to follow the performances. Please note that Los Globos is 21 and over. There is no admission fee however donations will be collected to benefit the Transgender Youth Clinic of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

Mama Pancha’s Queer Life Rituals is a performance, party, right-of-passage collective that serves the LGBT community through the creation of accessible, inclusive, and intercultural participatory spiritual happenings. The Posada is traditionally a community performance that reenacts the pilgrimage taken by Mary and Joseph as they searched for shelter leading to the birth of Christ.

LA Queer Posada is celebrated in Silver Lake to commemorate the area as a historically gay and Latino neighborhood, at a time when many markers of that history are vanishing. “This year in particular we call attention to the closing of Le Barcito, formerly The Black Cat, a landmark gay bar that launched The Advocate out of pre-Stonewall protests against LAPD raids,” says Mama Pancha. “Not only had Le Barcito become a sort of sanctuary for the gay Latino community, but they also hosted the previous two Queer Posadas and tons of other queer life rituals.”

Questions? Contact Miguel Barragan at LAQueerPosada2011@gmail.com.
For the latest La Queer Posada updates, follow us on Twitter: @LAQueerPosada.

homo-centric: donning our gay apparel

Posted in Cultural Events, Parties and Club Nights with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on December 14, 2011 by Mommy Fiercest
Ofelia Del Corazon Reading At Homo-Centric

Ofelia Del Corazon Reading At Homo-Centric

I’ll be reading at homo-centric this Thursday. Internet stalking is for lazy people! Come on out and show me you’re really committed to your unhealthy obsession!

I’m Reading On The Storytelling & Readings Stage At The West Hollywood Book Fair Sun. Oct. 2nd

Posted in Cultural Events, Parties and Club Nights, Personal Narrative with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 30, 2011 by Mommy Fiercest
West Hollywood Book Fair Sunday, October 2nd

West Hollywood Book Fair Sunday, October 2nd

Sunday, October 2nd 2011 at 12:45p on the Storytelling and Readings Stage

I’ll be reading at the West Hollywood Book Fair on Sunday October 2nd as part of the diversity reading on the Storytellings and Readings stage. Hank Henderson’s vision was to get six different writers who represent each of the LGBTIQ letters in our beautiful queer alphabet. Hank had facebooked me about reading but I hadn’t been able to decide which letter I wanted to represent: it turned out to be an obstacle for a number of folks and I’d later learn it seemed to be a sore issue with Hank! He pulled out a small pad of paper, scrawling my name down under the mish mash of notes in the cluttered little booklet.

“How do you identify?” He asked me flatly. This is a common question in post modern identity politicking circles. It kink felt like of like going to see a new therapist for the first time; exciting but also a little bit like a police interview.

“Squeeze me in under ‘B’ for ‘bisexual’ or ‘Q’ for queer! Whichever you need me to be!” I smiled thinking I was being accommodating  but he seemed slightly perturbed.

“Pick one. It doesn’t mean you’re not both but for the purpose of this reading Puh-lease! Just pick one!” he said sounding a bit more queenie than usual.

“Okay! ‘B’ for ‘bisexual!’” I squealed uncharacteristically chirpy.

I’ve really been feeling the love for the bisexies lately and I feel excited and proud to rep the bisexy love at the West Hollywood Book Fair. Also reading will be:
Hank Henderson

Bonnie S. Kaplan

Philip Littel

Schaffer Nelson

Tracy Jeanne Rosenthal

Sunday, October 2nd 2011 at 12:45p on the Storytelling and Readings Stage

at the West Hollywood Book Fair

www.homo-centric.com

www.westhollywoodbookfair.com

Will Fellows & The One Archives Present, “GAY BAR” A Closer Look at Helen Branson’s Queer Little Book

Posted in Cultural Events, Parties and Club Nights with tags , , , , , , , , , on September 3, 2011 by Mommy Fiercest
"Gay Bar" By Helen Branson

"Gay Bar" By Helen Branson

Sunday, September 18 · 2:00pm – 5:00pm

ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives

909 W Adams Blvd
Los Angeles, CA
Helen P. Branson operated a gay bar in Hollywood in the 1950s and her book Gay Bar was published in 1957. Part memoir, part pro-gay testimonial, it was an extraordinary book for its time.

Will Fellows, creator of a new edition of Gay Bar, will discuss the 1957 book’s origins, how it was received when it first appeared, and its enduring significance.

Read C heryl Santa Maria’s review of Helen Branson’s 1957 novel, “Gay Bar” here.

Call For Submissions: 2011 Los Angeles Transgender Film Festival

Posted in Cultural Events, Parties and Club Nights, Projects with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on August 19, 2011 by Mommy Fiercest

Call for Submissions

We’re  currently accepting film submissions for the 3rd annual Los Angeles Transgender Film Festival. Please forward widely! Submit your short or feature film today!

Whether you’re dealing with gender-specific issues or not, we will be screen many diverse works made by trans, genderqueer, and intersex artists and our allies, including comedy, dramedy, drama, erotica, experimental, animation, and more!

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SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

1. Accepting Feature Length and Short Films in all genres.
2. Complete the Festival Entry Form below.
3. Submit a DVD (Region 1) preview copy of your film/video. These items will be archived and will not be returned.
4. Include a CD of Stills (300 dpi, high resolution) if possible

DEADLINE: September 15th, no entry fee.

Mail items to:
TG Film Fest
c/o Reel Boi Productions
3504 White House Pl Los Angeles, CA 90004 U.S.A.

Click the link below to download the submission form.

2011 Transgender Film Festival Call For Submissions

Questions? Contact us at info@tgfilmfest.com

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Who are we?
TG Film Fest: The Los Angeles Transgender Film Festival was founded in 2009 to increase visibility for powerful films by trans and genderqueer filmmakers. Started in response to the lack of transgender people in the media, the TG Film Fest showcases works by established and emerging trans and genderqueer filmmakers. We promote filmmakers to new audiences with encore “best of fest” screenings at colleges and organizations throughout the year.

While you’re at it, submit to the SF trans film fest too! Our friends Shawna Virago and Sean Dorsey run the San Francisco Transgender Film Festival and they’re amazing! Submit to both! 
CALL FOR ENTRIES San Francisco Transgender Film Festival
November 3-6, 2011 San Francisco, CA

The San Francisco Transgender Film Festival (SFTGFF) seeks entries for its 2011 Festival (November 3-6, 2011). SFTGFF accepts narrative, documentary, experimental, animated films and music videos. All work should be created by transgender/genderqueer people. All work submitted this year must be 20 minutes or under. Please only submit one film.

The San Francisco Transgender Film Festival, aka Tranny Fest, was founded in 1997 as the nation’s first transgender film festival. In the 14 years since, we have exhibited groundbreaking, provocative, outrageous, courageous, moving and innovative works that show the complexity of lives lived on the transgender/ genderqueer spectrum. The San Francisco Transgender Film Festival is co-presented by Fresh Meat Productions.

DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: September 1, 2011
Early submissions are encouraged. There is no entry fee.

HOW TO SUBMIT YOUR FILM
1. Download and complete the Entry Form and print a copy.
2. Send your Entry Form and one copy of your work (DVD only) to:
SF Transgender Film Festival
c/o Fresh Meat Productions
P.O. Box 460670
San Francisco, CA 94146-0670 USA
3. Email a 300-dpi (high resolution) JPG image for your film to freshmeatinfo@gmail.com.
4. We will email you notification when your submission has been received.

GUIDELINES
1. Please include all required materials when submitting your entry – don’t forget to email us a JPG for press purposes (All work must be 20 minutes or less! No exceptions).
2. We cannot return any submitted materials.
3. We will notify you if your work is accepted by September 10th.
4. Once a film is submitted, it may not be withdrawn for any reason.
5. For questions or more information, contact: freshmeatinfo@gmail.com.

Call for Volunteers
The TG Film Fest is working on a fundraiser to support our next festival and could use help with online promotions. We also need help with data entry, contacting sponsors and advertisers for the festival, and promoting the call for submissions to filmmakers.
If you are interested, email info@tgfilmfest.com to learn more.

THE GAY PHOTO SHOOT at ONE Archives Sunday, August 14th

Posted in Cross Posts, Cultural Events, Parties and Club Nights with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on August 2, 2011 by Mommy Fiercest
Warhol Factory Folks

Warhol Factory Folks

ONE NATIONAL GAY & LESBIAN ARCHIVES         PRESENTS

THE GAY PHOTO SHOOT
           at
ONE Archives

Sunday, August 14th
12:00 noon – 6:00 PM
909 West Adams Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90007

(213) 741-0094

On Sunday, August 14th, be transformed by history and frozen in time as a cherished member of a tableau vivant-style
GAY PHOTO SHOOT at ONE archives.

Calling all haggard bull daggers and baby dykes, saucy queens, bossy bisexuals, telepathic transgenders, ambidextrous allies, leathery leather daddies young and old, interested intersex people, soft butches, closet cases, as well as staff, board members, volunteers and friends of ONE Archives! Join us and strike a pose with an archival object!

Comb the collections of ONE and model a costume, animate an Act-Up protest placard, display a book or painting from the Archives on your body. Bear your teeth, your breasts, your behind or cover your entire head with an overturned archival storage box and remain anonymous! Invent a pseudonym for the day, a dynamic or deadpan persona. Impersonate or channel the spirit of your favorite LGBT mentor with your photogenic gestures and creativity! Practice your poker face, your camera face and be fabulous or discrete.

Above all, BE THERE ON SUNDAY AUGUST 14, 2011.
Light refreshments will be provided
and the shoot is guaranteed to be a hoot!

The final photo will appear as an limited edition full color posters on the inside book jacket of the much anticipated Cruising the Archives catalogue that ONE Archives is publishing for the forthcoming Pacific Standard Time exhibition in conjunction with the Getty Institute. This event is organized by artist and recent USC MFA graduate, Onya Hogan-Finlay.

If you would like to participate please RSVP to Onya Hogan-Finlay: onyahoganfinlay@gmail.com

Hollywood Queer Open Mic And Workshop: Featured Writer: JACK TANGLE Friday, July 29

Posted in Cultural Events, Parties and Club Nights with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on July 27, 2011 by Mommy Fiercest

 

 

My dear friendRyka Aoki de la Cruz has asked me to run this month’s Hollywood Queer Open Mic & Workshop and I couldn’t be more delighted. We have a stellar line up of featured performers including one of my favorite LA storytellers, Jack Tangle. Also reading is  Christine Beatty, author of Misery Loves Company & Not Your Average American Girl,  Diviana X Ingravallo, Moe Macarow and  author and journalist Jeanne Cordova. Jean Cordova’s books include Kicking the Habit, a Lesbian Nun Story, and Sexism; It’s a Nasty Affair, her work has appeared in numerous anthologies.  

Hollywood Queer Open Mic & Workshop

Hollywood Queer Open Mic & Workshop

The venue, BHS, is humble but I have a strong affection for it: it’s where Ryka started the Trans/Giving shows (by the way if anyone wants to start organizing that show again talk to me, collectives grow and change but there hasn’t been a show in over a year!) began eight years ago.   The Hollywood Queer Open Mic is a fantastic space to workshop new material and I hope you’ll join us either as a reader or a member of the audience.

July Hollywood Queer Open Mic & Workshop |

Featured: JACK TANGLE Friday,

July 29 · 7:30pm - 10:30pm

Behavioral Health Services, Inc.

6838 West Sunset Blvd.

Los Angeles, CA

Émile Bonnet: Tales of A Teenage Crossdresser And His Mistress

Posted in Personal Narrative with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on June 28, 2011 by Mommy Fiercest

I had decided that I would fall in love with Émile Bonnet before I’d ever even met him. He possessed so many desirable qualities: he was my junior high school boyfriends foreign exchange student, 19 and french. I loved Émile because he was smart and worldly and he did what I wanted him to do.

When he arrived we stayed up late sitting out on the picnic bench in my boyfriends families backyard.  The breeze from the ocean cooled our sweaty skin and carried with it the pungent aroma of the tomato cannery and the garlic fields that surrounded my tiny village. Émile and I laughed and flirted as the yard sizzled and hummed with the sounds of frogs and crickets and the world was wonderful and smelled like spaghetti.

Émile  showed me photos of his college hazing, regaling me with tales of being made to run around Paris on a scavenger hunt covered in raw eggs and carmel sauce in only his underpants. In one such photo Émile was standing atop a formica table before a blackboard in a lecture hall. He wore an ill fitting french school girls uniform that one of his classmates had brought with her from home. He sang into a child’s toy microphone, head thrown back, chest thrust forward and he looked positively radiant.  Not in the least humiliated.  I had already begun dressing my boyfriend in my goth girl drag and my approval and subsequent titillation were all the incentive Émile needed to become my cross-dressing femme entertainment.

One summer afternoon I bleached his outdated Beatles bowl haircut and dyed it bright pink. He rinsed the dye out in my shower and he stained his entire face (and my bathtub) Manic Panic fushia.  I sent him home on the skate board he borrowed from my boyfriend. I had no desire to make out with his tomato face.

He was a good kisser but his breath often smelled of anchovies, which he ate almost daily. I knew of no other teenagers who ate anchovies or the kind of hot mustard that stung your nose and made your eyes well up with tears when you swallowed.

Just a A French Teenage Crossdresser & His Mistress

Just a A French Teenage Crossdresser & His Mistress

After he returned to Paris we maintained a love letter romance for about a year and a half before one of us eventually lost interest and we fell out of touch. I will always remember  Émile in photos. Émile the naughty schoolgirl. Émile the pink haired teenager in a red pleated skirt and silver thigh high stockings. Émile the slutty goth girl in my driveway blowing kisses from beneath the shade of my Ren-Fair head dress. Because that summer, in America, in Gilroy, Émile was fearless.

What Makes Queer Filmmaker And Hip Hop Artist Kalil Cohen “Metahuman”?

Posted in Interviews with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on April 16, 2011 by Mommy Fiercest

Queer Hip Hop Artist & Filmmaker Kalil Cohen AKA Metahuman

LA based hiphop artist, Metahuman, is a master at blending old-school rap metaphors with radical queer politics. Known for his politically conscious often often risqué lyrics he often performs at Southern California Pride festivals and makes his living as a writer, film maker, educator and doing the college touring circuit where he has become known as a one stop shop for  queer and trans entertainment & education. We met six years ago after having running in the same circles for years and never having bumped into each other. At that time I knew him only as “Kalil Cohen”: Zinester, poet, community organizer and amateur documentary filmmaker. I’ve had the privilege of watching this talented artist grow into new roles and I’ve been fortunate to have the opportunity to collaborate on many productions with him. One of his most fantastic qualities is his commitment to engage the community around him in all his projects and his willingness to mentor other emerging artists.

Metahuman performing at a Gender Justice LA Fundraiser

After spending years performing at open mikes at cafes and queer spaces all over California he began composing his own beats and collaborating with artists like DJ Nova Jade (who can often be heard singing back up vocals on many of Metahuman’s tracks) and Devin Tait. Last year he released the single “You Don’t Really Know Me” followed by an EP in March 2010.

After being frustrated, hurt and often angry at the depictions of trans and gender variant folks at gay and lesbian film festival he founded the TG Film Fest: Los Angeles Transgender Film Festival, which brings world-class transgender films to audiences in southern California. His award-winning short film “Queerer Than Thou” (2008) has screened at LGBT film festivals around the world, including London, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Brussels, Jakarta, and Mumbai. His documentaries on gender have screened at academic conferences throughout the US and have been included in college curricula.

Here he shares a little bit with me about his history and current projects.

Mommy Fiercest (MF): How long have you been writing? When did you begin sharing your work with others as a performer?

Metahuman: I have been a writer since I was five years old and started my first journal. I used to write long illustrated stories as a child, which I continue to do as a filmmaker today. I began writing poetry in my teens, which later expanded to include song lyrics as well. It took me a long time to share my work with others; even as a child I refused to let anyone read my short stories. The first time I shared my work was with my first serious girlfriend. Her response inspired me to compile some poems together in a chapbook, which I then started reading at a few poetry events. I remember the first time I read my poetry out loud to an audience at Circle of Books, as awesome queer bookstore in West Hollywood. It was completely terrifying but a great place to start because the audience was very encouraging and warm. My first time performing hip hop was at a Trans/Giving show, before I became an organizer of the arts collective. It was even more terrifying than reading poetry, but it was also a great supportive crowd that encouraged me to develop my craft further as a performer.

MF: What has been your greatest challenge in moving from using traditional narrative to tell your stories to film?

Metahuman: Filmmaking involves bringing together a lot of different artists who will create different parts of the final film including the lighting, sound, music, set design etc. Learning how to gather all the artists, communicate effectively with each other, and create a cohesive film with my collaborators has been the greatest challenge, but also the most exciting part of making films. It is exciting because when you are making independent films as a labor of love, the process is very intense and creates a small community out of the collaborators.

MF: Why did you choose to use film as a medium to share your stories with people?

Metahuman: I love film as a medium because of the ability to reach large and diverse audiences, and the strong impact films have on the viewer. For independent filmmakers there are incredible alternative structures in place that allow you to reach audiences without large marketing and advertising budgets. There are thousands of independent film festivals worldwide, which provide amazing opportunities for filmmakers to share their work. Online streaming is also a really effective way to get your films seen. Another reason I like to share my stories through film is that people will watch short films from many different genres, whereas people are often more genre-segregated with music. For instance, as a hip hop artist I have a certain audience that is interested in my music, but with films people are more open to watching all kinds, not only films from one genre.

How was the process of creating your first narrative film, “Queerer Than Thou”, different from creating your “So PoMo” music video?

Metahuman: On “Queerer Than Thou” I knew a lot less about the process of filmmaking, which was more challenging technically, but also easier because of my naiveté at how long and time-consuming the process would be. “Queerer Than Thou” came about through a collaboration with my frequent creative partner Nova Jade. Many people helped shape the film, which was co-written by the cast. This gave the whole project an ‘arts collective’ type feel which I really enjoyed, and which helped me to grow a lot as an artist. “So Pomo” is my first music video, which are often shot and cut very differently than other short films, so this is a new experience for me. “So Pomo” is also a collaboration, I wrote the lyrics while Devin Tait (of Devin Tait and the Traitors, formerly of Shitting Glitter) wrote the music. In addition, I am working mostly with a new production team who bring a lot of experience to the project. This is an amazing opportunity for me to learn from them and continue to grow as a filmmaker.

MF: What do you think the future of trans people in the media will look like?

Metahuman: We are living in very exciting times for transgender people in the media. Although there are still many negative depictions of us being created and seen all the time, we are also living in a time when positive, accurate, compassionate images of transgender people are starting to appear in the media as well. As far as transgender filmmakers, there are a lot of amazing artists telling compelling transgender stories whose work reaches wide audiences including Silas Howard, Gwen Haworth, Chris Vargas, and Andrea James. In addition there has also been a huge shift in how we are reported about in the news. The official Associated Press guidelines which most journalists follow now include using the pronouns that corresponds to a person’s gender identity, and the name a person uses rather than their birth name. This hard-won progress by the transgender community is truly significant for how we are regarded in society.

MF: What projects are you working on?

Metahuman: My main project is TG Film Fest: The Los Angeles Transgender Film Festival, which I founded in 2009. We have an annual film festival, and then screen selections from the festival throughout the year, primarily at colleges and universities, but also at community centers, high schools, and conferences. The festival screens short and feature length films from around the world. This has afforded me the opportunity to meet many talented filmmakers from around the world. We have rolling submissions for the festival, and people can find out how to submit at www.tgfilmfest.com

MF: When did you start organizing the TG Film Festival? Why is it important to have something like this?

Metahuman: I founded the TG Film Fest as a way to promote films by trans filmmakers. There are many amazing transgender and genderqueer filmmakers out there telling interesting stories, but whose work is not seen as widely as it should be. When my films began screening at LGBT film festival, I would often see short films with transphobic content (tired gags about ‘men in dresses’, accusations of our misogyny, and one-dimensional trans hookers or murder victims). This propelled me to create a transgender film festival, to help expand the way people view the lives of trans or genderqueer people. By hearing from so many unique voices, the audience is able to experience a wide breadth of creative trans stories in a single screening. This is important to me because although the mainstream media has been changing, it still is not telling most trans and genderqueer stories accurately. For meaningful change to occur in our society, it is important that we tell our stories, and that a large audience sees this work. With TG Film Fest we are filling a gap between how the mainstream media depicts us and the images we should be seeing on screen.

MF: When did you start rapping?  Who are your greatest influences?

Metahuman: I started rapping in my early 20s, when my poetry started morphing into hip hop lyrics. Although I grew up listening to hip hop, I wasn’t a huge fan until I discovered politically conscious hip hop artists in my teens. At that point I got really immersed in some of the more political content. Through hip hop I began my education about radical black history from some of my favorite artists including Dead Prez and Tupac. Dead Prez is by far my greatest influence because of the way they combine radical political ideology with amazing beats and hooks that keep you entertained and enlightened. I aspire to write songs as enjoyable yet deep as they do. Tupac had the same ability, but it’s more of a mixed bag with him because some of his songs are so heartfelt and transformative while others just aren’t my style. Currently I am also influenced by Feloni, an amazing rapper from Detroit, and the now-defunct Deep Dickollective who helped start the “Homo Hop” genre.

MF: What is the most challenging thing about being a multi media artist?

Metahuman: The most challenging thing for me is balancing my time between my different projects. I am really passionate about my music and filmmaking and running the film festival, but it can be hard to find time for relaxing or rejuvenating when I am all my time and energy into these projects.

MF: Who were your role models when you were coming into your queer identity? How have they influenced your work?

Metahuman: Kate Bornstein was a huge role model as I was coming out because she is genderqueer and trans and queer and outspoken and brilliant! She has influenced me because she is proof that you do not have to give in and conform in order to reach a wide audience or be respected as an artist. As a filmmaker, Silas Howard has been a huge inspiration. His 2001 feature By Hook or By Crook, is a brilliant story about two genderqueer people (Silas and Harry Dodge) made for very little money. It premiered at Sundance, found distribution, and was widely seen. That helped me know that it is possible for our stories to appeal to a wider audience, and that it can be made on a shoestring budget.

MF: Who would you love to work with?

Metahuman: I would love to collaborate with the rapper Feloni and my dream would be to have her produce my album! Making a film with Silas Howard would also be a dream come true. They are both so talented and it would be such a joy to work with them!

MF: Do you have an “It Gets Better Message” for all the folks that might be reading this and feeling bad right now?

Metahuman: I think the reason there are so many talented trans artists is because of the challenges we have had to face, and the ways we have had to grow in order to cope with the world. Although it sounds cheesy, adversity really will make you stronger in the long-run.

MF: Why is it important that we support our LGBTQ youth?

Metahuman: There have been incredible strides in the movement for LGBTQ rights, and many LGBTQ youth are able to be out, however many more continue to struggle. LGBTQ youth today are experiencing a level of harassment in schools that is totally unacceptable. At the same time, there are several successful models for how to create an open and accepting school climate, which can be implemented at any school, urban or rural, in any part of the country. It has been done in unexpected places, so I know that it can be done. Creating change for youth will cause a lasting shift in our culture that will help ensure that the human rights of LGBTQ people are upheld and affirmed in our society.

MF: Where do you find your inspiration?

Metahuman: This is somewhat related to my “It Gets Better Message” because I don’t know what my art would be about if it weren’t for the challenges I’ve faced. I am often inspired by negative situations I’ve experienced or things I’ve read about in the news. For instance, when I went to a protest and witnessed police brutality against demonstrators it inspired the song May Day in LA, while The Bling Ring is based on a news story involving five wealthy teens robbing celebrities of millions in clothes, jewelry, and cash. I often spoof these experiences or turn them into jokes in order to heal myself, or to build strength to resist these situations. Although this sounds really serious, the actual art that comes out of it is often lighthearted and funny. It is very powerful to combat negativity with humor. When I am performing for majority-straight audiences, or people who don’t identify with radical politics, humor helps opens people up to hearing about unfamiliar experiences or ways of thinking.

MF: You’re raising funds for your new project via kickstarter. Why do you think this is a project that people should open up their wallets for? It’s your music video. Why should people give you money to make your own music video.

Metahuman: We’ve already reached our goal but since Kickstarter is all or nothing (if you don’t meet your goal we don’t get any of the dollars pledged), we set our initial goal at the bare minimum we need to make this film.  However, the more money we raise the better it will look.  We already have the most important thing, which is the story, but extra funds will definitely have a significant impact on the success of this film, especially the increased costume budget! am raising money for the project from the community, because I think the message is one that we need to see. “So Pomo” is a response to the homophobic phrase “No Homo”, and the negativity that so many queer people face on a daily basis. ‘Pomo’ stands for Post-Modern, and Pomosexual is someone who identifies as beyond the labels gay, straight, or LGBT. Using camp, surrealism and fantasy, “So Pomo” celebrates queer desire and subverts the notion of fixed sexual and gender identities. I believe that this is an important message for queers to tell and to see, and therefore worth supporting as a community. Many people have to hear the phrase “No Homo” regularly, and “So Pomo” can serve to replace that negative experience with funny, sexy thoughts about PoMoSexuality and self-acceptance.

MF: Where can folks see your film festival and more of your work?

Metahuman: I have been touring for the last couple of years on and off and will be touring East Coast colleges in the fall. I love touring because you get to see each local queer/trans community and become a part of that world for a brief while. Usually I stay with who ever is organizing the show, so I get to plug in to the queer community in each town right away, which is really exciting. The film festival is currently traveling extensively in southern California, and we’d love to bring it to other places as well! Folks can find out tour dates for the film festival at www.tgfilmfest.com and contact us to schedule a screening. To hear “So Pomo” and purchase the Metahuman EP, go to www.metahumanmusic.com

It takes a lot of time to make music and films, so if you like what you hear, please buy a CD or check out http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1690619144/queer-music-video?ref=users to learn more about Metahumans latest project the “So PoMo” video or watch the 8 minute short “Queer Than Thou” below!

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