33 min listen
Best of Strange Fruit: David Sedaris on Unwelcome Duck Tongues & Accidental Activism
FromStrange Fruit
Best of Strange Fruit: David Sedaris on Unwelcome Duck Tongues & Accidental Activism
FromStrange Fruit
ratings:
Length:
30 minutes
Released:
Apr 3, 2015
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
David Sedaris never liked Chinese food. Then he went to China, and he really didn’t like Chinese food. His essay about it, Chicken Toenails, Anyone? was published in the Guardian and was criticized as disrespectful, xenophobic, and even racist. This week we listen back to our chat with Sedaris, from when he’d just released his book, Let’s Explore Diabetes with Owls. He said if he were worried about keeping his humor PC he couldn’t be an honest about his experiences, and wouldn’t get as many laughs. “I always figure that the thing you can admit that’s most embarrassing is the thing that most people can relate to,” he explained. “Because we’re not that different, really.” We asked whether he considers himself an LGBTQ activist. He told us, “the way I write about my relationship is just about trying to make a life with somebody, and anybody can relate to it. It’s not important that I’m trying to make that life with another man. It’s just important that I’m trying to make that life with another person.” We also spoke more broadly about his life and work, LGBTQ visibility in pop culture, why speech therapy classes are full of gay children, and whether marriage equality will lead to an increase in annoying destination weddings. “I think gay people should get the right to marry,” he said. “And then I think none of us should act on it.” And last week we told you that friend to the show Aisha Moodie-Mills was named Executive Director of the Victory Fund. This week we bring you an excerpt of our conversation with her, and her wife Danielle Moodie-Mills.
Released:
Apr 3, 2015
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Strange Fruit #46: Locs of Love from Dr. Yaba Blay: Earlier this month, 7-year-old Tiana Parker was told that her locs were [considered an unacceptable hairstyle](http://youtu.be/EiNK4rOdhWc) in her African-American charter school. Word quickly spread among black feminist scholars, including friend-to-the-show Dr. Yaba Blay. What followed was a testament to the power of black women to uplift each other and celebrate the beauty of black girlhood. Dr. Blay assembled [a care package for Tiana](http://yabablay.com/a-care-package-for-tiana-locs-of-love/) which quickly got attention from thousands and thousands of people online, and has now been crafted into [an e-book](http://issuu.com/yabablay/docs/for_tiana_a_care_package__1_/1?e=3379385/4748283) for black girls. Dr. Blay joined us this week to tell us what moved her about this story, and how the project came to fruition. And in our Juicy Fruit segment, we talk about the South Carolina church whose black pastor requested that only white p by Strange Fruit