Episodios

  • Light Bird Sings Out for Transgender Visibility
    Mar 31 2026

    Veteran folk-rock musician Danni Hoshino surprised everyone — not least herself — when she came out as a transgender woman in 2022, just weeks before her planned wedding. But her gender identity wasn’t the only thing that changed. She moved from her native Boston to New York, changed her stage name to Light Bird, and began working on a new album of songs that bare her soul with gritty honesty and raw emotion.

    In this audio feature, Light Bird shares some of her new songs with journalist David Hunt, including “Alright,” a single released for Transgender Day of Visibility. The full album is due out in a few months, likely in June 2026.

    In the interview, Light Bird discusses the intersection of her transgender identity with her life and career as an aspiring singer-songwriter.

    Her upcoming album is her first full-length album as Light Bird. It tracks her journey of self-discovery and self-love, with songs written both before and after she realized she was trans. She chose the name Light Bird to signify a fresh start, moving from a "dark bird" that was reserved and hidden to a free spirit "stepping into the light" and celebrating herself in the spotlight.

    Light Bird describes her musical style as having an "old soul" feel, heavily influenced by 1970s singer-songwriters and classic rock introduced to her by her parents. She feels her music is now more "honest and raw" because she finally has a real perspective and voice to share.

    Despite the challenges of being a small artist in New York, she feels it is vital to keep singing out and making her story visible. She writes to move people and to help both trans and cis audiences find shared humanity in her experiences.

    Raised in a suburb of Boston, Light Bird was living a traditional life with a 9-to-5 job and was about to get married when she realized she was trans in her 30s. She describes this realization as a "lightning strike" that upended all her previous plans. The heavily gendered expectations of her upcoming wedding—such as being pressured to wear a suit when she really wanted to wear a dress—acted as a final catalyst for her realization.

    While her gender dysphoria was not always acute before her transition, it became an "urgent imperative" once she understood it. She views her transition as a "beautiful gift" but also mourns the younger version of herself who didn't understand why she felt "off" for so many years. Ultimately, she has never felt this good and finally feels a sense of peace.

    Light Bird reflects on how a lack of positive trans representation in 1990s/2000s media—where trans people were often the "butt of the joke"—delayed her own realization. She now emphasizes the importance of trans visibility.

    Transitioning meant moving from the status of a cis man to a member of a group facing significant oppression. She acknowledges she is still learning about trans history and culture, but asserts that one's queerness is legitimate even without knowing everything.

    Find her music at https://www.lightbirdmusic.com/

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    David Hunt is an Emmy-winning journalist and documentary producer who has reported on America's culture wars since the 1970s. Explore his blog, Tell Me, David.

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    32 m
  • The Many Queer Worlds of Kestral Gaian
    Mar 4 2026

    Kestral Gaian brings a queer sensibility to their new book, The Boy From Elsewhere, putting a queer spin on that universal trope: the hero’s quest to conquer evil and save the world. It’s a genre-bending story featuring a young-adult cast of characters on a trek through the multiverse. The landscape is familiar at first, but beware. Nothing is quite what it seems.

    Gaian’s creative energy is nearly as boundless as their stories. They’re a poet, playwright, essayist, composer and author whose previous books include Tubelines: The Poetry of Motion, Hidden Lives, and Counterweights.

    Gaian discusses their new book and the importance of queer visibility in young adult fiction in a conversation with journalist David Hunt.

    Learn more about Kestral Gaian at https://kestr.al/

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    David Hunt is an Emmy-winning journalist and documentary producer who has reported on America's culture wars since the 1970s. Explore his blog, Tell Me, David.

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    48 m
  • A Deadly Head Start: The Early Years of AIDS
    Nov 12 2025

    In the early 1980s, the LGBTQ movement experienced the first tremors of a shockwave that would shake its very foundations. A disease outbreak diagnosed in just five gay men in Los Angeles in 1981 would eventually claim the lives of more than 700,000 Americans. Nearly 60% of the dead would be gay or bisexual men.

    It was the beginning of a global pandemic: AIDS — the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.

    To mark World AIDS Day — December First — journalist David Hunt revisits a story he first covered for Pacifica Radio more than 40 years ago: the early years of the AIDS epidemic. The program includes rare audio recordings of the nation’s first AIDS demonstrations, some of the first media interviews of AIDS patients and AIDS activists, and an inside look at the panic sweeping the gay community as the death toll mounted and the Reagan administration remained silent.

    The program documents the greed, bigotry, and misinformation that would give the AIDS virus a deadly head start as it spread among some of society’s most marginalized populations: gay men, Haitian immigrants, and IV drug users.

    And it follows the first steps a small number of progressive leaders, journalists, and ordinary people would take to meet the crisis and rouse the nation to action.

    Featured voices include AIDS activists Bobbi Campbell, Bob Cecchi, Bill Bader, Matt Redman, Douglas Wright, and Daniel Warner. You’ll hear pioneering gay journalist Randy Shilts and San Francisco Supervisor Harry Britt discuss their efforts to pressure gay bathhouses to protect their patrons. You’ll find out about a meeting with the blood bank industry that had public-health officials pounding the table in frustration. You’ll learn about the health threat sociologist Laud Humphreys said was greater than AIDS. And you’ll meet the self-described “sexual prima donna of New York City.”

    Adding context to the archival recordings are recent interviews with retired Rep. Henry Waxman, who helped secure the first federal funding for AIDS research in 1983; Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter B.D. Colen, who covered the epidemic for Newsday; and AIDS activist Colin Clews, a writer and social worker who spearheaded AIDS information and treatment programs in the U.K. and Australia.

    Special thanks to the ONE National Gay and Lesbian Archives at the University of Southern California and the Pacifica Radio Archives. Photo by Daal Praderas.

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    David Hunt is an Emmy-winning journalist and documentary producer who has reported on America's culture wars since the 1970s. Explore his blog, Tell Me, David.

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    58 m
  • Jennie Arnau: Carolina Calling
    Oct 16 2025

    Jennie Arnau lives and works in New York City. But her childhood home is in the American South, in Greenville, South Carolina. It’s the place she discovered her passion for music. And the place that called her back in a time of loss and grief.

    As she ends a self-imposed break from songwriting and performing, Arnau sat down with journalist David Hunt to discuss her musical journey, life’s ebbs and flows — and her new album, "A Rising Tide."

    Find Arnau's music on your favorite streaming platform or visit https://www.jenniearnaumusic.com

    "A Rising Tide" will be released Nov. 7, 2025.

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    David Hunt is an Emmy-winning journalist and documentary producer who has reported on America's culture wars since the 1970s. Explore his blog, Tell Me, David.

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    29 m
  • Kimahli Powell on the LGBTQ Refugee Crisis
    Sep 19 2025

    The world faces a refugee crisis. More people are displaced today — by war, famine and climate — than at any time in human history. Among the most vulnerable are people persecuted for their sexual orientation, gender identity and sex characteristics.

    But even as the number of refugees and asylum-seekers skyrockets, countries that once provided a safe haven are pulling up the welcome mat — and demonizing immigrants, especially LGBTQ immigrants.

    Kimahli Powell, an activist, scholar and former CEO of Rainbow Railroad, talks with journalist David Hunt about the challenges confronting queer refugees and asylum-seekers in an increasingly hostile world.

    An edited version of this feature aired on This Way Out: The International LGBTQ Radio Magazine.

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    David Hunt is an Emmy-winning journalist and documentary producer who has reported on America's culture wars since the 1970s. Explore his blog, Tell Me, David.

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    15 m
  • Jessica Stern on Global LGBTQ Human Rights
    Sep 11 2025

    In a wide-ranging interview with David Hunt, Jessica Stern recounts pivotal moments in her career, from her work as a scholar and global human rights activist to her tenure as the top queer diplomat in the U.S. State Department during the Biden administration.

    Stern, now a senior fellow at the Carr-Ryan Center for Human Rights at Harvard, critiques the Trump administration’s retreat on LGBTQ human rights and offers her optimistic prescription for reasserting progressive ideals in the U.S. and beyond.

    Stern gives a behind-the-scenes look at a historic U.N. Security Council meeting she helped organize in August 2015 that focused the council’s attention — for the first time — on LGBTQ human rights. And she discusses the difficult decision to move to Washington, D.C., in 2021 to become the U.S. Special Envoy Advancing the Human Rights of LGBTQI+ Persons. During her three-year tenure at the State Department, Stern worked to raise the profile of LGBTQ rights in U.S. foreign policy and to assist LGBTQ people facing violence and discrimination around the world.

    An edited version of this feature aired on This Way Out: The International LGBTQ Radio Magazine.

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    David Hunt is an Emmy-winning journalist and documentary producer who has reported on America's culture wars since the 1970s. Explore his blog, Tell Me, David.

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    33 m
  • A Campy History of Queer Media in the 1940s
    Sep 4 2025

    Mainstream news outlets regularly cover LGBTQ stories, reporting on everything from queer culture and the arts to political and legal struggles for equality around the world. But that’s a relatively recent phenomenon. Until the 1990s, most news organizations paid little attention to LGBTQ news beyond coverage of the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

    In the decade after Stonewall, most news about the gay and lesbian community was covered by a few local LGBTQ newspapers, such as Gay Community News in Boston and the Bay Area Reporter in San Francisco.

    But who covered queer news in the bad old days, the pre-Stonewall era, when most LGBTQ people were closeted? It turns out, it all started with a few brave soldiers stationed in the American South during World War II and a young lesbian who worked in the entertainment industry in Hollywood. They published what are believed to be the first gay and lesbian newsletters in the United States — in the 1940s.

    David Hunt got the scoop from a pioneering gay historian, Allan Bérubé, at the 1983 convention of the Gay and Lesbian Press Association in San Francisco.

    An edited version of this featured aired on This Way Out: The International LGBTQ Radio Magazine.

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    David Hunt is an Emmy-winning journalist and documentary producer who has reported on America's culture wars since the 1970s. Explore his blog, Tell Me, David.

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    17 m
  • Beyond Belief: Jennifer Knapp's Musical Journey
    Aug 28 2025

    Jennifer Knapp burst onto the Christian music scene in the late 1990s with an energy and honesty that resonated with thousands of young people searching for meaning and connection. Knapp’s first three albums sold over 1 million copies and earned the singer/songwriter two Grammy nominations and a Dove Award for New Artist of the Year in 1999.

    But success took its toll. Exhausted by the pace and pressures of the industry, Knapp stopped performing in 2002 and left the United States, moving to Australia to clear her head and nourish her heart.

    Seven years later, she returned to the U.S. with unexpected news: she was coming out with a new album, “Letting Go,” and coming out of the closet as a proud lesbian in a long-term relationship.

    After a firestorm of controversy in the media, Knapp settled down in Nashville and settled into the work of recreating her career — this time outside of contemporary Christian music.

    On the eve of her upcoming U.S. tour, Knapp sat down with David Hunt to recall the early days of her career and to discuss her recent work, which still focuses on the human search for love and meaning.

    An edited version of this featured aired on This Way Out: The International LGBTQ Radio Magazine.

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    David Hunt is an Emmy-winning journalist and documentary producer who has reported on America's culture wars since the 1970s. Explore his blog, Tell Me, David.

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    41 m