Cover image of show South Sound Sapphic

South Sound Sapphic

Podcast by Roxy

English

Technology & science

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About South Sound Sapphic

South Sound Sapphic Queer History. Local Resistance. Collective Joy.Welcome to South Sound Sapphic—a powerful, community-rooted podcast and community organization amplifying the voices, stories, and resistance of queer, trans, and sapphic folks in Washington’s South Puget Sound. Hosted by Roxy, a queer Black femme entrepreneur, creative, storyteller, and organizer. This show is a deep dive into the past, present, and future of QTBIPOC (Queer, Trans, Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) liberation in one of the most politically charged and historically rich regions of the Pacific Northwest.This is more than a podcast. It’s a living archive. A love letter. A call to action.Each episode uncovers the truths buried in Washington’s soil—stories of exclusion, uprising, survival, and joy. From anti-miscegenation laws and redlining to the AIDS crisis, the fight for gender-affirming care, and the organizing power of mutual aid—we trace the real history of this place through the eyes and voices of those who’ve shaped it, resisted it, and are still building something better.Whether you’re a newly out late bloomer, a long-time activist, a sapphic academic, or just seeking to belong somewhere tender and revolutionary—South Sound Sapphic invites you into the conversation.What You’ll Hear:Deeply researched historical storytelling that centers QTBIPOC voices and movements across the South SoundCandid, heart-centered conversations with queer organizers, artists, educators, public servants, elders, and youthExploration of policy and protest, from grassroots wins to legislative backlashesSpotlights on mutual aid, queer joy, and chosen family as radical tools of survivalCalls to action that are local, tangible, and rooted in collective careThis Podcast Is For You If…You’re queer, sapphic, trans, nonbinary—or a fierce ally—living in Washington state (especially Pierce, Thurston, Kitsap, or King County)You want to learn about the real history of civil rights and queer liberation in Washington—not just from textbooks, but from lived experienceYou’re craving grounded, intelligent storytelling that doesn’t shy away from hard truths—and also makes space for joy, healing, and resistanceYou believe that showing up locally is just as powerful as trending nationallyYou know that community is everything, and you’re ready to find yoursOur MissionSouth Sound Sapphic exists to tell the truth, build community, and protect joy. We believe in the power of local history, collective care, and unapologetic queerness. Through storytelling, we make the invisible visible—and inspire the next generation to rise.Get InvolvedJoin our community for local queer sapphicsFollow us on Instagram: @southsoundsapphicShare the pod with your friends, chosen fam, or co-conspiratorsSupport local mutual aid, trans-led clinics, and QTBIPOC organizers in your areaBecause we deserve more than inclusion—we deserve liberation. And it starts right here, in the South Sound.

All episodes

7 episodes

episode The Temperature Has Changed artwork

The Temperature Has Changed

There's a moment right before crisis becomes undeniable—when harm is still being minimized, reassurance is still working, and those most impacted are already adjusting their lives. In this opening episode of Season Two, South Sound Sapphic names that moment. Instead of reacting to headlines or spectacle, this episode examines how state violence escalates quietly—through policy language, institutional denial, and the enforcement of calm. Drawing from critical race theory, Black radical thought, and lived experience, this episode asks why some people sense danger early while others insist nothing is happening at all. This is not an episode about panic. It’s about pattern recognition. In this episode, we explore: * What escalating state violence looks like before it becomes widely acknowledged * How “nothing has happened yet” has historically been used to delay response * Why QTBIPOC communities feel escalation first—in the body, not just the mind * How neutrality and enforced calm protect institutions more than people * Why familiarity is not comfort, but warning Season Two begins by situating listeners in the present moment honestly—without denial, sensationalism, or false reassurance. Referenced thinkers and frameworks: * Critical Race Theory (structural harm, neutrality, and power) * Huey P. Newton, Revolutionary Suicide * Assata Shakur on surveillance, control, and early recognition * Toni Morrison on racism as distraction * Contemporary analysis of denial, liberalism, and institutional reassurance This episode is intended for listeners who are ready to engage with difficult realities thoughtfully and without simplification. It centers QTBIPOC experiences and critiques systems—not individual people. If this episode resonates, consider supporting the show on Ko-fi [https://ko-fi.com/southsoundsapphic]or sharing it with someone who knows the temperature has changed—but hasn’t had language for it yet.

3 Feb 2026 - 27 min
episode Season Two: There Is No Neutral Ground artwork

Season Two: There Is No Neutral Ground

Season Two of South Sound Sapphic is a reckoning with memory, power, and repetition. This season interrogates the growing sense that something is tightening—politically, culturally, materially—while we’re being told to stay calm and trust institutions that have failed us before. Through historical analysis, cultural critique, and lived experience, Season Two traces how the United States responds when power feels threatened: progress followed by backlash, visibility followed by surveillance, care followed by abandonment. Episodes examine Reconstruction backlash, state repression, AIDS-era neglect, the policing of queerness under “public morality,” and the deliberate cultivation of American amnesia that allows these patterns to repeat under new names. This is not a reaction podcast. It’s long-form, culturally fluent analysis for listeners who want context instead of comfort, clarity instead of reassurance, and history treated as instruction—not nostalgia. Season Two unfolds across three connected spaces: * The public podcast, offering accessible, deeply researched episodes * Substack [https://substack.com/@southsoundsapphic], featuring long-form shadow essays and annotated timelines * Ko-fi, [https://ko-fi.com/southsoundsapphic] hosting bonus audio and personal reflections supported directly by the community South Sound Sapphic centers QTBIPOC perspectives and speaks to an engaged audience of elder millennials, creatives, organizers, and professionals who value depth, integrity, and accountability in the media they support. This season doesn’t ask you to panic. It asks you to remember correctly—and pay attention. Season Two launches now.

1 Feb 2026 - 3 min
episode The Illusion of Being Last: When Proximity to Power Stops Protecting You artwork

The Illusion of Being Last: When Proximity to Power Stops Protecting You

In this episode of South Sound Sapphic, we dismantle a lie that has been quietly shaping American survival strategies for generations: the belief that violence moves in order—and that some people will always be last. Through a sharp, historically grounded lens, this episode examines how whiteness functions not as innocence, but as delay—a strategy that allows violence to be watched, rationalized, and absorbed by others until the buffer fails. What many white women are experiencing right now is not the arrival of new danger, but the collapse of a promise that was never guaranteed. We trace how white women were not “late” to domination, but among the first to be conquered—legally absorbed through marriage, stripped of autonomy under coverture, yet elevated racially rather than annihilated. This episode refuses false equivalence: white women’s subjugation was paired with usefulness, proximity, and protection, while Black women were positioned as disposable infrastructure. We examine how marriage functioned as economic transfer, sexual governance, and reproductive control—and how modern iterations of this conquest, including the glamorization of the “trad wife,” continue to leave women economically vulnerable, dependent, and exposed when conditions shift. The episode moves into the present moment, confronting the shock many white women feel at their husbands’ apathy toward state violence. We name this shock for what it is: not a crisis of values, but a crisis of perceived risk. We interrogate divorce discourse that centers emotional betrayal while avoiding earlier silence and historical complicity. We explore how white femininity has long functioned as political technology—where tears become evidence, fear becomes justification, and innocence becomes moral cover for state violence—from lynching-era accusations to modern policing and surveillance. Finally, we make a clear distinction between solidarity and performance. Liberation movements are not onboarding sessions. “What can we do to help?” often functions as labor extraction, discomfort outsourcing, and moral delay. This episode calls for something harder and more honest: risk without reassurance, action without instruction, rupture without applause. Because safety built on someone else’s disposability is not safety at all. Shock is not solidarity. And only sustained rupture—quiet, costly, and unapplauded—earns trust. This is not an episode designed to comfort, but to clarify and unsettle. To name what many have felt in their bodies long before they had language for it. And to ask the question that can't be unasked once heard: what have you been willing to let happen so you wouldn’t have to ask this sooner?

23 Jan 2026 - 50 min
episode Black Womanhood in White Queer Culture artwork

Black Womanhood in White Queer Culture

TW: Mentions slavery & sexual abuse. In this vital episode, we explore the history, harm, and reclamation of Black femininity—particularly as it exists within white queer culture. From the violent myths born on the plantation to the modern dynamics of white-dominated queer spaces, we trace how Black womanhood has been distorted, denied, and policed. We center the experiences of Black queer women and femmes as we unpack the tensions, dangers, and double standards that define our interactions with systems and communities that claim to be liberatory. Finally, we uplift the work of reclamation: how Black femmes are creating spaces of tenderness, visibility, and belonging on our own terms. What You’ll Hear in This Episode: * The origins of distorted Black femininity: Jezebel, Mammy, and the plantation’s racial-gender order * How Black femininity is policed or erased in white-dominated queer spaces * The failures of white-centered feminism to address the realities of Black womanhood * The work of reclaiming softness, tenderness, and humanity in a world that often denies it * The importance of intentionally curating the spaces, relationships, and media we engage with for affirmation and healing Referenced Works & Further Reading: * Patricia Hill Collins, Black Feminist Thought (1990) * Deborah Gray White, Ar’n’t I a Woman? (1985) * Jacqueline Jones, Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow (1985) * Monique Morris, Pushout (2016) * Margaret Hunter, “If You’re Light You’re Alright” (2002) * Bailey, M. & Trudy, “On misogynoir: citation and the epistemic violence of invisibility” (2018) Support the Show: Consider supporting South Sound Sapphic to help us continue producing bold, intersectional content. 🔗 https://www.southsoundsapphic.org

6 Jul 2025 - 40 min
episode Queerness is Resistance: A Deep Dive Into Our History artwork

Queerness is Resistance: A Deep Dive Into Our History

In this episode of South Sound Sapphic, we take you on a journey through the history of queerness—where we’ve been, who we’ve lost, how we’ve survived, and how we keep resisting. From Boston marriages and the hidden lives of sapphic ancestors, to the defiance of Compton’s Cafeteria and the terror of the Lavender Scare, to the ways queerness continues to challenge systems of power today—you’ll hear the stories that built our present and continue to shape our future. This episode isn’t just history. It’s an invitation to learn, reflect and hopefully, connect. To honor the people who came before us and to imagine the world we are still fighting to create. What does it mean to be queer? Where did the word come from? How has queerness shaped—and been shaped by—resistance, survival, and defiance? We explore the deep, complicated, and beautiful history of queerness. We trace its meaning from the 1500s to today. We honor the lives of sapphic people who loved in the shadows, fought back against oppression, and dared to imagine something different. We’ll talk about: * The hidden histories of Boston marriages and Wellesley marriages * The riot at Compton’s Cafeteria (1966) and early trans and drag resistance * The terror of the Lavender Scare and the cost of being queer in mid-century America * How queer identity today resists patriarchy, white supremacy, and capitalism * Why queer joy, mutual aid, art, and chosen family are acts of defiance This is an episode for everyone who has felt othered. For everyone who has fought to exist. For everyone dreaming of a world where queerness is not just accepted, but celebrated. 👉 Support this work on at www.southsoundsapphic.org [http://www.southsoundsapphic.org]

28 Jun 2025 - 57 min
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