Lipstick and Lacerations

Ep 005 Queer and Hunted

10 min · 30 de sep de 2025
Portada del episodio Ep 005 Queer and Hunted

Descripción

In this episode, Alicia goes bold, filthy, and furious — tearing into the political and cultural attacks targeting the LGBTQ+ community. From nearly 1,000 anti-trans bills to sodomy laws still on the books, to the hypocrisy hiding in “good old boys’” bedrooms, nothing is off-limits. This isn’t about left vs. right — it’s about humanity. With equal parts fire and humor, Alicia dismantles the shame, exposes the absurdity, and reminds us why neutrality is never an option. Queer couples are living, loving, and yes, doing the exact same things as everyone else. So why are they being hunted?

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6 episodios

episode 004 Jessica's Law artwork

004 Jessica's Law

We track packages. We track pizza. We even track our dogs when they wander out of the yard. But we don’t track the predators who steal childhoods. This episode of Lipstick and Lacerations cuts through the excuses around Jessica’s Law. It’s not about redemption arcs or “second chances.” It’s about why the U.S. still leaves kids exposed while offenders slip through the cracks. From my own fight to keep my daughter safe, to the failures of sex offender registries, to the tech solutions we should already have — this is a blunt, unapologetic call for accountability. No warnings. No coddling. Just one truth: if you hurt a child, you don’t deserve privacy. AliciaKay.co Subject: Quick ask — GPS monitoring & school alert protocol Hi — I’m a constituent and parent in [YOUR TOWN / ZIP]. Can you tell me: (1) Are high-risk sexual offenders in our state monitored by GPS/geofencing? (2) If an alert fires (an offender entering a school zone or protected area), who is notified and how quickly does someone respond? If these systems don’t exist, what is the plan and timeline to implement them? Thank you. — [Your name, town]

23 de sep de 202511 min
episode 002 CPS: Helpful or Harmful? artwork

002 CPS: Helpful or Harmful?

When you're poor, being a parent means walking a tightrope with no net — and CPS is the one shaking the rope. In this episode, I dig into the child welfare system that claims to protect children but too often punishes the families who need help the most. From “dirty shoes” and empty fridges to federal incentives for removals, I expose how poverty is criminalized, how surveillance hides behind the word “support,” and how fear keeps mothers silent. Because when the state profits from family separation, “help” becomes a threat — and protection becomes a privilege you have to afford. Music- Alena Smirnova: Darkness is Coming My Website: AliciaKay.co   Sources and Further Reading: Dorothy Roberts – Torn Apart: How the Child Welfare System Destroys Black Families      OR Shattered Bonds: The Color of Child Welfare The Rise – and Cost – of Adoption Incentives (Google: “Title IV-E Adoption Incentives” or check Children’s Bureau site for breakdowns) Family Integrity & Justice Works Website: https://www.fi-jw.org [https://www.fi-jw.org] The Marshall Project https://www.themarshallproject.org [https://www.themarshallproject.org] "Child Welfare’s Parental Surveillance State" — NYT op-ed by Dorothy Roberts, 2021

9 de sep de 202515 min
episode 001 Criminalized Captives artwork

001 Criminalized Captives

What happens when girls survive the wrong way? In this pilot episode of Lipstick and Lacerations, Alicia Kay dives into the stories of Chrystul Kizer, Cyntoia Brown, Sara Kruzan, and Tammy Garvin—four girls who were groomed, trafficked, abused… and then punished for fighting back. These are not cautionary tales. They are indictments. Of a system that protects predators. Of a culture that expects girls to endure. And of the brutal truth: Self-defense isn’t always considered legal when you're poor, Black, brown, or inconvenient. Listen in as we unpack how survival becomes a crime—and why the world would rather cage a girl than confront what put her there. Music- Alena Smirnova: Sorrow   Sources & Further Reading Chrystul Kizer * The Washington Post: “Chrystul Kizer killed her alleged sex trafficker. Prosecutors still want to put her in prison.” * The Guardian: “Chrystul Kizer, accused of killing alleged sex trafficker, released from jail on bond” * New York Times: “Wisconsin Supreme Court Rules for Teen Charged With Killing Her Abuser” Cyntoia Brown * PBS Independent Lens: Me Facing Life: Cyntoia's Story (documentary) * NPR: “Cyntoia Brown, Sentenced To Life At 16, Walks Free After Clemency” * The Tennessean: “Cyntoia Brown-Long: Timeline of her case, clemency, and release” Sara Kruzan * Human Rights Watch: “The Case of Sara Kruzan” * CNN: “She was sentenced to life for killing her pimp. Now she’s free—and telling her story.” * The Appeal: “Sara Kruzan's Clemency Case Reveals a Broken System” Tammy Garvin * The Girls Who Went Away and related survivor interviews * Sex Workers Outreach Project USA (SWOP-USA) case records * The Last Girl: My Story of Captivity, and My Fight Against the Islamic State (by Nadia Murad – used here for trafficking survivor lens/context) General Sources * National Center for Youth Law: Juvenile justice & sex trafficking * National Survivor Network * Polaris Project: Human trafficking and the criminalization of survivors * “Arrested Justice: Black Women, Violence, and America’s Prison Nation” by Beth Richie (contextual source)

2 de sep de 202514 min