The Pink Patriarchy Podcast

There’s a version of feminism out there that wears a pussyhat, clutches her pearls, and still calls the manager when a sex worker speaks at a panel. She’s the board member who proudly posts “women supporting women” selfies, yet signs off on policies that systematically exclude trans women, criminalized mothers, and survivors who sell sex just to stay housed. She believes in women’s empowerment - as long as it arrives wrapped in a college degree, a polished LinkedIn profile, and a sworn rejection of OnlyFans.
There’s a version of feminism out there that wears a pussyhat, clutches her pearls, and still calls the manager when a sex worker speaks at a panel. She’s the board member who proudly posts “women supporting women” selfies, yet signs off on policies that systematically exclude trans women, criminalized mothers, and survivors who sell sex just to stay housed. She believes in women’s empowerment - as long as it arrives wrapped in a college degree, a polished LinkedIn profile, and a sworn rejection of OnlyFans.
Episodes
Episodes



Thursday Mar 05, 2026
Thursday Mar 05, 2026
Third-wave feminism emerged in the early 1990s as both a continuation of - and a critique of - the feminist movements that came before it. Second-wave feminism had achieved major legal and cultural victories: workplace equality, reproductive rights, and anti-discrimination protections. But by the late 1980s and early 1990s, many younger feminists began asking a question that made the movement uncomfortable: which women had actually benefited from those victories? Increasingly, women of color, queer women, working-class women, and women living under criminalization argued that mainstream feminism still centered the experiences and priorities of relatively privileged white, middle-class women. Third-wave feminism grew out of that frustration and a desire to expand feminist politics beyond the boundaries earlier generations had drawn.



Thursday Mar 05, 2026
Thursday Mar 05, 2026
Second-wave feminism, spanning roughly the 1960s through the 1980s, transformed the political landscape for women in the United States and much of the Western world. The movement forced public recognition of issues that had long been dismissed as private or inevitable: workplace discrimination, reproductive autonomy, domestic violence, marital rape, and sexual harassment. Many of the legal protections and social conversations that women rely on today emerged directly from the organizing of this era.
But second-wave feminism was never a single unified movement. It was a coalition of competing ideas about power, sexuality, and liberation. While it produced enormous gains, it also hardened ideological battles that continue to shape feminist politics today - especially around sexuality, sex work, race, and who feminism was truly meant to serve.
Understanding the women who led this movement means grappling with both their extraordinary courage and the ways their frameworks excluded or misunderstood other women.



Thursday Mar 05, 2026
Thursday Mar 05, 2026
First-wave feminism, usually dated from 1848 to 1920, is remembered as the era when women began openly demanding legal recognition - most famously the right to vote. But the movement didn’t appear out of nowhere. It grew out of abolitionist organizing, religious reform movements, labor agitation, and the basic realization that women were treated as legal dependents rather than citizens.
The official “starting point” most historians point to is the Seneca Falls Convention of 1848, where activists drafted a document modeled after the Declaration of Independence arguing that women were entitled to the same civil and political rights as men.
That moment lit the fuse for a seventy-year campaign that would eventually culminate in the 19th Amendment in 1920, granting women the right to vote in the United States.



Thursday Feb 19, 2026
The Pink Patriarchy Podcast - Why we're here!
Thursday Feb 19, 2026
Thursday Feb 19, 2026
Starting The Pink Patriarchy wasn’t just a media project—it was a necessity. 📍 Because for too long, I’ve watched mainstream feminism wear a pretty face while doing some pretty ugly things. I’ve sat in rooms where ‘empowerment’ was the word of the day—right before someone suggested we criminalize sex buyers without ever asking a sex worker what we need. I’ve seen survivor stories edited until they were unrecognizable—palatable enough for donors, but stripped of the truth.
We’re not here to cancel—we’re here to crack things open. To question why the same systems keep getting rebranded as progress. To say, with love and fire: feminism that doesn’t include sex workers, incarcerated women, trans people, and poor survivors… isn’t feminism. It’s just another gatekeeper with better lighting.
The pink patriarchy thrives in silence. So we’re turning up the volume!
So if you have experienced a version of the Pink Patriarchy that made YOU concerned for this "flavor of feminism", we'd love to hear from you!
You can email questions, concerns and you ABSOLUTELY give YOUR opinion! We will read it and talk about on the show!




