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LGBTQ youth radio: Gilbert Baker, creator of the rainbow flag - part 1 of 2

From Media for the Public Good, Inc. - OutCasting Media | Part of the OutCasting series | 29:00

Gilbert Baker, longtime LGBTQ activist and creator of the rainbow flag, talks with OutCasting youth participant Alex in one of his last interviews

Gilbert-baker-240px_small Gilbert Baker, longtime LGBTQ activist and creator of the rainbow flag, talks with OutCasting youth partipant Alex about his life, his activism, his flag, and more in this two part interview that connects LGBTQ youth with history.  This interview was recorded just a month before Gilbert's untimely death, and is thus one of the last interviews he did.  This is Part 1 of a two part interview.  Part 2 is also available.  In OutCasting Overtime, Alex gives a remembrance of Gilbert.

LGBTQ youth radio: Gilbert Baker, creator of the rainbow flag - part 2 of 2

From Media for the Public Good, Inc. - OutCasting Media | Part of the OutCasting series | 29:00

Gilbert Baker, longtime LGBTQ activist and creator of the rainbow flag, talks with OutCasting youth participant Alex in one of his last interviews

Gilbert-baker-240px_small Gilbert Baker, longtime LGBTQ activist and creator of the rainbow flag, talks with OutCasting youth partipant Alex about his life, his activism, his flag, and more in this two part interview that connects LGBTQ youth with history.  This interview was recorded just a month before Gilbert's untimely death, and is thus one of the last interviews he did.  This is Part 2 of a 2 part interview.

LGBTQ youth remember the late Gilbert Baker, creator of the rainbow flag

From Media for the Public Good, Inc. - OutCasting Media | 03:42

OutCasting youth participant Alex remembers Gilbert Baker, longtime LGBTQ activist and creator of the rainbow flag

Gilbert-baker-240px_small On March 1, 2017, OutCasting, public radio's LGBTQ youth program, interviewed Gilbert Baker, longtime LGBTQ activist and creator of the rainbow flag.  This resulted in a two part interview, also available here on PRX.  On March 31, Gilbert died unexpected in his sleep.  Unlike many of our guests, who join us by phone, Gilbert wanted to meet our youth participants, so he came into the studio in person and spent an entire session just talking with the kids and hearing their stories.  This created memories they'll never forget.  In this piece, OutCaster Alex, who conducted the interview with Gilbert, shares his thoughts on meeting Gilbert and the shock he felt when he heard about Gilbert's untimely death.

Gay youth look back on the Stonewall riots - PART 2 OF 2

From Media for the Public Good, Inc. - OutCasting Media | Part of the OutCasting series | 29:00

LGBTQ youth are often unaware of their own history. In this occasional series, OutCasting connects them with that history. This is part 2 of a two part series looking back on the Stonewall riots, which marked a turning point in gay activism. Our guest is Karla Jay, author, longtime activist, and retired Distinguished Professor of Queer Studies and Women's Studies.

Karla-jay-240_small It has been argued about and written about.  Films, some controversial, have been made about it.  But it has also been celebrated and commemorated for nearly half a century — 48 years, to be exact.   Of course, we're talking about the Stonewall uprising, a series of riots at and near the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in the West Village in New York City.

The uprising at the Stonewall Inn began after a police raid, then a common occurrence at gay bars in the city, on the night of June 27, 1969, and continuing for several nights afterward.  Judy Garland had just died at the age of 47, the first term of the Nixon/Agnew administration was barely five months old, and NASA was readying Apollo 11, the space mission that would land humans on the moon for the first time less than a month later.  Homosexuality was still considered a mental disorder, and the Left, despite its advocacy of a newly equal society for all minorities, was, as we look back on it now, surprisingly hostile to homosexuals.  An assimilationist approach dominated the gay activism that had been building for nearly 20 years, starting with the early "homophile" groups — the Mattachine Society for gay men and the Daughters of Bilitis for gay women.  As the U.S. became increasingly polarized over the Vietnam War, gay activism became less assimilationist and more militant.

On that hot summer night, gay men, lesbians, and street transvestites (as they were called at the time) fought back against the police during and after the raid.  Depending on whom you ask, these riots might be said to have marked, catalyzed, or even caused a dramatic turn in gay activism.

In this two part interview, we talk with Dr. Karla Jay, a longtime activist and author.  She was involved in the second wave of feminism and was the first female chair of the Gay Liberation Front, an early post-Stonewall activist group.  She is also a retired Distinguished Professor of Queer Studies and Women’s Studies at Pace University in New York City.

Karla talks about what it was like for gay people in the U.S. before Stonewall, a time when most people kept quiet about their sexual orientation and couldn't even legally dance together.  As the author and activist Michelangelo Signorile characterized it in his three-part interview on OutCasting , the gay bar has historically been to gay people what the black church was to African-Americans: a sanctuary for people who could be in danger if they congregated in public.  An arrest at a gay bar — merely for being there — could ruin your life.  In this in-depth interview, Karla talks about the riots themselves and how they marked a turning point, setting the stage for gay activism on a larger scale and of a more militant type than before.

This interview is part of an OutCasting series connecting LGBTQ youth to their history.  As we've noted before, LGBTQ history is generally not taught in school and is rarely passed down from generation to generation within families, so unlike those of other minority groups, our history is hidden, and LGBTQ young people — and many listeners today — never get to learn about the longstanding challenges the LGBTQ community has faced and met in our fight for acceptance and equality under the law.  Our youth rarely come to know that they stand on the shoulders of activists who fought battles over many decades to create the kind of climate for LGBTQ people we have today.  Though that climate is better in many ways than it was in the past, our movement still has far more to accomplish, especially as the Age of Trump threatens many of the advances we've achieved.

Minority stress in LGBTQ people

From Media for the Public Good, Inc. - OutCasting Media | Part of the OutCasting series | 29:00

Everyone experiences stress, but when you're LGBTQ, it gets worse because of stigma, prejudice, and discrimination, and has particularly strong effects on LGBTQ youth, who are at greatly heightened risk for substance abuse and suicide. In this program, we look at minority stress in LGBTQ people with an eminent scholar on the topic, Ilan Meyer, Ph.D., of the UCLA School of Law.

Ilan-meyer-240_small Everyone has stresses in their lives.  But when you're a member of a minority, things get worse.  The ordinary stresses can strike more frequently, and there are new stresses resulting from discrimination.  And if you're LGBTQ, the stigma and prejudice may be inflicted by your own family and friends.  You can internalize negative stereotypes.  You can feel forced to the soul-deadening concealment of your identity.  You may come to expect rejection.  You are at greater risk of bullying and physical violence.  And for people who are LGBTQ who are also members of other minorities, things can get worse still.  It can add up to a toxic mix particularly for vulnerable LGBTQ youth, leading to depression, desperation, and suicidal tendencies.

On this edition, OutCaster Sarah talks with Ilan H. Meyer, Ph.D., Williams Distinguished Senior Scholar of Public Policy at the Williams Institute for Sexual Orientation Law and Public Policy at the UCLA School of Law.  Through a number of frequently cited papers, Dr. Meyer has developed a model of minority stress for examining the factors that can cause health disparities between LGBTQ people and straight, cisgender people.