Tag: Tina Knowles

  • Queer Voices in Your Ears: The Must-Listen LGBTQ+ Podcasts for Pride Month

    Queer Voices in Your Ears: The Must-Listen LGBTQ+ Podcasts for Pride Month

    Pride Month is a celebration of queer joy, resilience, creativity, and let’s be honest, really good content. From hilarious hot takes to raw, revealing interviews, queer-led podcasts have become essential listening for anyone craving perspectives that live beyond the binary. Whether you’re looking for political realness, pop culture deep dives, or conversations that feel like your group chat on a good day, we’ve rounded up the queer podcasts you need in your rotation right now.

    HIGHKEY!:  Unfiltered, Unapologetic, and Unmissable

    Hosts: Ben O’Keefe, Ryan Mitchell, Yvie Oddly

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    This brand-new show is the chaotic-good group chat we’ve always wanted to crash. HIGHKEY! brings together political strategist Ben O’Keefe, cultural critic Ryan Mitchell, and Drag Race icon Yvie Oddly for weekly episodes that swing between pop culture critique and soul-baring storytelling. The trio doesn’t shy away from the spicy stuff, expect candid convos, bold opinions, and a weekly dose of joyful rebellion. HIGHKEY! is proof that queer voices aren’t just influencing culture; they’re defining it.

    Pride: Queer Storytelling, Center Stage

    Host: Caitlynn McDaniel

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    Pride feels like a love letter to the moments that made us feel seen. Host Caitlynn McDaniel explores iconic queer characters, behind-the-scenes firsts, and the media milestones that changed the game. From sweet rom-com smooches to TV breakthroughs, this podcast is for anyone who’s screamed “FINALLY!” at their screen. Equal parts celebratory and critical, it’s a weekly reminder that representation isn’t a luxury, it’s essential.

    Las Culturistas: The Gay Gospel According to Matt and Bowen

    Hosts: Matt Rogers & Bowen Yang

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    This long-running comedy-meets-culture pod is a masterclass in millennial wit and Gen Z absurdity. Hosts Matt and Bowen gleefully unpack everything from Taylor Swift’s album lore to Real Housewives breakdowns, plus the occasional “I Don’t Think So, Honey” rant that’ll leave you howling. With celeb guests and a thriving listener community (shout out to the Kayteighs), Las Culturistas is a living, breathing reminder that “culture is for me.”

    Outlaws with TS Madison: Icons, Rebels & Truth-Tellers

    Host: TS Madison

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    TS Madison isn’t here to play nice, she’s here to play real. Her podcast is a platform for queer icons and trailblazers to speak their truth without a filter. With guests like Tina Knowles and Laverne Cox, Outlaws is part masterclass in authenticity, part celebration of Black, trans, and queer excellence. Come for the legendary guests, stay for the unshakable realness.

    The Bald and the Beautiful:  Drag Royalty Gets Deep(ish)

    Hosts: Trixie Mattel & Katya Zamolodchikova

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    Trixie and Katya aren’t just drag legends—they’re also philosopher-clowns in wigs. The Bald and the Beautiful blends their absurdist humor with musings on fame, love, mental health, and their favorite brands of deodorant. It’s chaotic, insightful, and wildly entertaining. Basically, if you like your wisdom with a lash of mascara and a side of madness, this is your vibe.

    The Pop Report: Headlines with a Sparkle

    Hosts: Zack Peter, Andy Lalwani

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    The Pop Report is your mid-week gossip fix with a queer twist. Hosts Zack and Andy tackle trending topics, viral drama, and celebrity tea with charm and cheek. Think “E! News,” but make it slay. New episodes drop every Wednesday and Friday.

    Keep It!: Cultural Commentary with a Queer Edge

    Hosts: Ira Madison III, Louis Virtel

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    Ira and Louis are the snarky, brilliant pop culture analysts you didn’t know you needed. Keep It! is what happens when shade meets substance, and their guests are just as iconic, from Gabrielle Union to Michelle Yeoh. They unpack the week’s biggest headlines with wit, rage, and a flair for dramatics. It’s part think piece, part tea spill, and all queer perspective.

    Vibe Check: News, Feels, and Fabulous Takes

    Hosts: Sam Sanders, Saeed Jones, Zach Stafford

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    Imagine your favorite group chat suddenly got a podcast deal. That’s Vibe Check. With discussions that span politics, pop culture, and queer identity, this trio brings warmth, smarts, and soul to topics that matter. Whether they’re laughing through chaos or holding space for hard truths, every episode feels like a hug from your smartest, sassiest friends.

    Wide Open with Ashlyn Harris: Vulnerability Is the New Superpower

    Host: Ashlyn Harris

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    Former soccer star Ashlyn Harris ditches the playbook and gets real with her guests about life off the field. The show explores the power of being open, about love, mental health, identity, and growth. Whether you’re queer, questioning, or just craving a podcast that goes beyond the highlight reel, Wide Open invites you into the game of self-discovery.

    Very Delta: Commentary That’s As Sharp As Her Contour

    Host: Delta Work

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    Delta Work is beauty, brains, and biting commentary wrapped in a perfectly teased wig. Very Delta covers everything from bad fast food etiquette to drag politics, all with the poise of a diva who’s seen it all. It’s camp, it’s classy, and it’s a must-listen.

    Ride: The Queer Bimbo Brain You’ve Been Craving

    Hosts: Benito Skinner & Mary Beth Barone

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    Equal parts silly and cerebral, Ride is a chaotic journey through the pop culture multiverse. From Schrödinger’s cat to Sephora hauls, it’s everything you talk about at 2 a.m. with your weirdest (and smartest) friends.

    Whether You’re Into Laughs, Tea, or Tears, There’s a Queer Podcast For That

    Pride is about visibility and celebration, but it’s also about amplifying the voices shaping the culture from the inside out. These podcasts don’t just entertain—they connect, challenge, and affirm. So plug in, press play, and let queer brilliance flood your ears.

  • Tina Knowles Honors Uncle Johnny in Memoir ‘Matriarch,’ Celebrating Queer Legacy and Love

    Tina Knowles Honors Uncle Johnny in Memoir ‘Matriarch,’ Celebrating Queer Legacy and Love

    In her new memoir Matriarch, 71-year-old designer and matriarch Tina Knowles opens up with humor, heart, and unflinching honesty about her extraordinary life — and the extraordinary people who helped shape it, particularly her beloved relative Johnny.

    For longtime fans of Beyoncé, Uncle Johnny is far from a footnote. He’s the vibrant spirit honored in Renaissance, the Grammy-winning singer’s 2022 disco-infused celebration of queer Black joy and liberation. But in Matriarch, readers finally get to know the man behind the myth — through the eyes of the woman who loved him most.

    “He was my best friend, my protector,” Knowles says in an interview with Out. “And I was his.”

    A Southern Childhood with a Creative Spark

    Knowles takes readers back to her childhood in Galveston, Texas, during the civil rights era — a place and time where being different could mean danger. Yet, even as a self-described hyperactive kid with what she now recognizes as undiagnosed ADHD, she found connection and purpose in her bond with Johnny.

    “We were the two rebellious ones,” she recalls. “We didn’t fit in, and we didn’t care. One day our hair would be green, the next orange. We wore wild clothes and put on drag shows in our living room. We just existed in our own little world.”

    That world blossomed into a lifelong creative partnership. Knowles credits Johnny with helping her find her calling in fashion — starting with crafting dresses for drag queens in Galveston. “That’s how I got started sewing. With him,” she writes.

    Discovering Safe Spaces — and Disco Dance Floors

    Knowles’ memoir also tells the story of how she helped Johnny find community at a time when queerness had to exist in the shadows. At just 17, she sought out Galveston’s gay scene so Johnny wouldn’t feel alone once she left for college. That search led them to Kon Tiki, a discreet local gay bar that became a formative experience.

    “The outside looked like nothing,” she says. “But inside, it was magic — disco balls, lights, people just being free.”

    Photo: Tina Knowles
    Tina Knowles with ‘Uncle Johnny.’ Photo: Tina Knowles

    What she didn’t notice right away? The dance floor was illuminated with neon penises.

    “Johnny loved to tell that story,” she laughs. “He’d say, ‘And Mary was just dancing away, not realizing where she was!’”

    A Bond That Endured — and a Legacy That Lives On

    Uncle Johnny’s joy, Knowles says, was contagious — but his battle with HIV was devastating. Diagnosed in 1997 with AIDS-related dementia, Johnny passed away the following year, just as Beyoncé’s career with Destiny’s Child was taking off.

    “It was one of the worst times of my life,” Knowles writes. “The stigma, the silence, the lack of access to care — it was heartbreaking.”

    She recounts how Johnny, even in hospice, remained a light to those around him, while also recalling the painful reality of patients whose families had abandoned them.

    “One young man thought I was his mother,” Knowles says. “Just because my voice reminded him of her. That broke me.”

    His death came on July 29, 1998 — just months after Destiny’s Child dropped their debut album. Beyoncé would go on to honor his legacy in countless ways, from a shoutout in the song “Heated” to a deeply personal speech at the 2019 GLAAD Awards.

    And in 2022, Renaissance was released on the 24th anniversary of his passing.

    “He always used to say, ‘I deserve to be famous,’” Knowles remembers. “And he was right. He did. Now he’s finally getting his flowers.”

    The Book Behind the Book — And Maybe Another?

    Matriarch spans over 500 pages — pared down from Knowles’ original 1,000-page draft. But she hints there’s still more to say, especially when it comes to Johnny.

     

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    A post shared by Tina Knowles (@mstinaknowles)

    “I might have to do a whole Johnny book,” she teases. “There’s just so much love there, and so many stories that deserve to be told.”

    In her writing process, Knowles says she confronted old traumas and began to heal. “I didn’t even realize some of it was trauma. I just thought it was life. But writing this helped me understand — and gave me a way to make things right.”

    A Family Built on Love and Glitter

    The memoir is filled with stories of laughter and resilience, including one about Johnny’s longtime partner, Peanut — “the love of his life,” Knowles says. They were never married legally, but in every other sense, they were a committed couple.

    “Johnny got to experience real love,” she says. “And I thank God for that.”

    In true Knowles fashion, even the light-hearted gets love. She shares behind-the-scenes moments from Beyoncé’s “Freakum Dress” music video, remembering how she sewed outfits on the spot for her daughter — all while celebrating the inclusion of queer Black men on screen.

    “I didn’t even realize that was the first time a lot of people saw that representation,” she says. “It makes me proud now. And tired,” she laughs, “because Beyoncé still expects me to whip up dresses out of nowhere.”

    A Call to Share Our Stories

    As LGBTQ+ rights face renewed attacks across the U.S., Knowles says it’s more important than ever to document our own histories — especially those that have been ignored.

    “We’re seeing our history being erased,” she says. “Write your stories. Even if it’s just for your family, your kids, your legacy. It helps you heal.”

    Knowles hopes Matriarch will be part of that healing — not just for herself, but for anyone who’s ever felt like an outsider.

    “I get messages from young men who say, ‘I never had that kind of love and protection, but it feels good to know that someone did,’” she says. “And I tell them — you deserve it, too.”

    Matriarch by Tina Knowles is available now. Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter tour kicks off April 28 in Los Angeles.