Why Would We Need Horny Women? A Conversation About The Pink Pill Film With Cindy Eckert and Joanna Griffiths
No se pudo agregar al carrito
Add to Cart failed.
Error al Agregar a Lista de Deseos.
Error al eliminar de la lista de deseos.
Error al añadir a tu biblioteca
Error al seguir el podcast
Error al dejar de seguir el podcast
-
Narrado por:
-
De:
In this episode of Hysterical Women, we dive into the story behind the documentary The Pink Pill: Sex, Drugs & Who Has Control — a film that exposes the decade-long fight to bring the first medication for low sexual desire in women to market.
Joining us are two incredible women behind the story:
- Cindy Eckert, founder of Sprout Pharmaceuticals and the driving force behind Addyi
- Joanna Griffiths, founder of Knix, women’s health advocate, and executive producer of the film
Together we unpack the staggering bias that shaped how women’s sexual health has been studied, regulated, and dismissed — and why the road to approval for a women’s drug looked nothing like the path that led to the little blue pill.
From shocking quotes inside FDA hearings to the women who bravely shared their stories in public, this episode explores what happens when systems designed around men attempt to define women’s health.
We also talk about resilience, advocacy, the power of getting angry, and what it actually takes to push change forward in women’s health.
Spoiler: sometimes it requires women who are willing to be a little mad.
In this episode, we’re talking about:
- The documentary The Pink Pill: Sex, Drugs & Who Has Control
- The fight to bring Addyi, the first medication for low sexual desire in women, to market
- The shocking statements made during the FDA approval process
- Why women’s sexual health has historically been dismissed or trivialized
- The double standard between drugs for men’s sexual function and women’s desire
- How bias in medicine and regulation can delay progress for decades
- What it felt like for women to publicly share their most personal health struggles
- How advocacy movements are often fueled by anger, injustice, and purpose
- The role of resilience when fighting systems that resist change
- Why women’s health conversations have historically been rooted in shame and stigma
- How simply sharing our stories can drive cultural and medical change
Let’s Connect:
If this resonated, leave a review or share it with someone who needs to hear it. Follow us and find more information about Coven at @covenhealth or visit www.covenhealth.com
- Follow Cindy at @cindypinkceo
- Follow Joanna at @joannaknix
- Follow the film at @thepinkpillfilm