Gender Pitch

Gender Pitch Gender Pitch is an audio library of women's experiences. Her voice matters. It's a virtual community where women share, learn, accept, & teach thru storytelling.

Our goal in producing this podcast is to promote global understanding, diversity, and respect

10/02/2022

The pioneering singer, songwriter, producer, and model is also known for her brief, influential marriage to Miles Davis.

Love Books!
19/10/2021

Love Books!

Rosa Duffy, founder of Atlanta-based Community Bookstore curates the first season of Saint Heron's Library. Launching today, the library offers free and rare titles from Black authors. Solange’s Saint Heron is serving up its newest offering, a free library of rare and collector’s edition books b...

Inspiration!
13/09/2021

Inspiration!

Actress Taraji P. Henson is making money moves, and showing Black women what's possible on and off the screen. She has racked up a $25 million net worth.

12/09/2021

Megan Thee Stallion has no problem with making men uncomfortable.

12/04/2021

Amid unrest at local jails, surging gun violence and a pandemic that has disproportionately hurt people of color, Tishaura Jones says: "We are done avoiding race and how it holds this region back."

07/03/2021

Here are some of the most interesting and powerful photo stories from across the internet.

06/03/2021

At an Inc. National Small Business Town Hall stream event, entrepreneurs shared advice on networking, PPP loans, and resources to come through 2021 stronger.

05/03/2021

When white models and influencers decided thick eyebrows were in, South Asian women struggled to recover the natural features they had been shamed into thinning. Now, they’re undoing the internalized shame they've felt about their body hair for years.

03/02/2021

The former Georgia lawmaker was lauded for work that "follows in Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s footsteps in the fight for equality.”

Consider this...
29/01/2021

Consider this...

27/01/2021

Hundreds of Harlem residents protested on behalf of a woman who was attacked by a group of men who accosted her while she tried to buy a bottle of wine after work on Jan. 18. According to interviews with local NBC and ABC affiliates, the woman, who asked not to be identified, was walking home from w...

27/01/2021

JoJo Siwa is beloved by millions of kids and known around the globe for her peppy videos and extremely oversize, rainbow-colored hair bows, but after she publicly shared this week that she is a member of the LGBTQ+ community, she's gotten even more attention. And although most of it has been in the....

17/01/2021

Kamala Harris will be sworn in Wednesday as the next vice president of the United States by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, according to a Harris aide.

16/01/2021

Health care workers in Alaska distribute the COVID-19 vaccine in extreme conditions.

07/01/2021

"I guarantee you if that was a Black Lives Matter protest in D.C., there would already be people shackled, arrested or dead," said the MSNBC host.

07/01/2021

Yep, it was Stacey. But don’t forget about Nsé, Helen, Tamieka, Melanie, LaTosha and Deborah.

04/01/2021

UN Women announces the theme for International Women’s Day, 8 March 2021 (IWD 2021) as, “Women in leadership: Achieving an equal future in a COVID-19 world.”

04/01/2021

Anna May Wong, the first Chinese American movie star and the first Asian American actress to become internationally famous, was born on this day in 1905. Wong is often remembered for her efforts to combat racial inequality and ethnic stereotypes in early film.

Born Wong Liu Tsong in Los Angeles, Wong was a third generation Chinese American, who grew up working at her family's laundry business but her dream was to star on the silver screen. The West Coast was just beginning its reign as the center for film studios, and young Wong was enthralled. By the age of nine she had chosen her stage name, Anna May Wong. At age 17, she landed her first leading role in the Technicolor film "The Toll of the Sea," a performance that received rave reviews.

Critical praise continued to follow Wong but the only jobs being offered were for supporting roles depicting stereotypical characters. Her hopes for leading roles were limited, as the laws of the day even prevented in*******al kisses from appearing on-screen. Frustrated by the limited options, and a tendency for Hollywood to cast non-Asians for Asian characters, Wong pursued stage and screen roles elsewhere. Her travels brought her to Europe, where she developed a glowing reputation, but she eventually moved back to Hollywood. She continued to be met with and challenge typecast roles for the duration of her career, which lasted for 40 years and included 54 films.

While Wong began acting in the silent film era, she is one of the few actresses who successfully made the transition to cinema with sound. Her contributions to the film industry have been honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and a pillar depicting her image in the "Gateway to Hollywood" sculpture.

To introduce children to Anna May Wong's fascinating life, we recommend "Shining Star: The Anna May Wong Story" for ages 5 to 9 at https://www.amightygirl.com/shining-star

Adults can also learn more about her life and work in the book "Anna May Wong: A Complete Guide" at http://amzn.to/2CA2bFK

For more Mighty Girl stories starring Asian-American girls and women, check out "Asian American" book collection at http://amgrl.co/2AhIopz

And, to inspire children and teens with the stories of artistic girls and women - both in real-life and fiction - visit our "Creative Arts" book section at http://amgrl.co/2ibkDIQ

What’s the story here?
04/01/2021

What’s the story here?

Colorado police say a National Guard soldier, who was the first woman to earn the Special Forces tab and coveted Green Beret. received a summons.

23/12/2020

The former basketball player lends his full support to his daughter who came out as transgender earlier this year.

22/12/2020

Repost from

Here are some 1940s swing dance moves every swing cat should know 🎶✨

  Is important. Visit us to post yours today!
22/12/2020

Is important. Visit us to post yours today!

In the Northern Hemisphere, the December solstice is the year’s day of least sunlight, when the sun takes its lowest, shortest path across the sky. North of the Arctic Circle, it is the midpoint of the period of darkness, when even twilight doesn’t reach the horizon. We asked a few of our Native...

Don’t be afraid to
21/12/2020

Don’t be afraid to

"I am trans, my pronouns are he/they and my name is Elliot," Page said in a previous statement

19/12/2020

Efforts by the city of Chicago to keep unflattering video of police from the public has drawn comparisons to the Laquan McDonald coverup.

17/12/2020

Anandibai Joshi journeyed from India to the U.S. to pursue a medical school education in 1883. Prior to leaving, she wrote her sponsor, a wealthy woman from New Jersey who over years of correspondence had become akin to family, “You have reason to think that this very distant voyage will be hazardous for a girl of 18 because the world is full of frauds and dangers, but dear Aunt, wherever I cast my glance, I see nothing but a straight and smooth way. I fear no miseries. I shrink not at the recollection of dangers, nor do I fear them.”

This was Anandibai. Fearless. Staunch in the pursuit of her goals. By eighteen she had already overcome much. Married at the age of nine, at fourteen she endured the loss of her child ten days after giving birth. And then she spent much of her late teens in poor health, suffering from a multitude of maladies including weakness and frequent headaches.

But education was important to her. It had been for much of life. Born into a wealthy family, her father went against customs to have his daughter educated and her husband supported Anandibai’s studies as well.

In the U.S., she was admitted to and attended the Women’s Medical College. After graduating in 1886, she traveled back to India in hopes of practicing medicine there. But she became ill shortly after her return, passing away in 1887 from tuberculosis.

Sources:
1. https://www.thetriangle.org/snowball/the-graduates/
2. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/19th-century-lady-doctor-ushered-indian-women-medicine-180964613/
3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anandi_Gopal_Joshi
4. Photo taken by Caroline Wells Healey Dall, Drexel University College of Medicine (http://xdl.drexelmed.edu/item.php?object_id=001128) / Wikimedia Commons

10/12/2020

This year’s crop of female-fronted performances is deep, from steadfast stars to rising talents.

09/12/2020
09/12/2020

Rashida Jones will be taking over as president of MSNBC, making her the first Black executive to lead one of the major cable news networks

07/12/2020

05/12/2020

Be sure to listen again same time same place next week! Thanks to the South Bend Museum of Art for its support.

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