4 • 1.1K Ratings
🗓️ 28 May 2025
⏱️ 41 minutes
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0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to Outward Slate's podcast about the importance of eating three square gay meals a day. |
0:24.1 | And what better place to break our daily bread than at the homosexual diner, the trans coffee shop, |
0:30.9 | the lesbian vegan joint, and all the other places where our queer ancestors have flirted and gossiped and broken up and made up and cried on each other's shoulders over pork chops and tempe burgers and a sweet and sour cabbage soup that tastes like home. |
0:49.4 | I'm Christina Cotarucci, a senior writer at Slate, and I love a gay restaurant. Really, I love a gay |
0:55.9 | anything, but there's something particularly homie, I think, about a place that serves food |
1:01.4 | and a place where you can sit around a table and actually hear each other talk. But gay |
1:08.0 | restaurants aren't always easy to identify. And if you're like me, you probably don't know much about their history. |
1:15.6 | Gay bars are a much more common cornerstone of queer social life. They're where the parties are and where you'll almost always find people looking to make friends or hook up. But the LGBT's, we're only |
1:29.2 | human. We need to eat. And for more than 150 years, we've been opening queer restaurants or |
1:36.2 | commandeering straight ones to have our meals together. There's a new book coming out at the |
1:41.7 | beginning of Pride Month that fleshes out that history in |
1:44.9 | gorgeous mouth-watering detail. It's called, appropriately enough, dining out, first dates, |
1:52.6 | defiant nights, and last called disco fries at America's gay restaurants. And the author, |
1:58.5 | Eric Pippenberg, joins us this week to talk about how gay cafeterias and bistros and lunch counters and fine dining establishments have been essential to queer culture across the country. |
2:11.4 | We'll also talk about what place they might hold in our lives today. |
2:14.8 | We'll be right back with Eric after the break. |
2:29.7 | Thank you. in our lives today. We'll be right back with Eric after the break. Hey there. It's Mary Harris, host of Slate's Daily News podcast, What Next? |
2:35.2 | Donald Trump's deportation machine is becoming a more visible part of everyday life in America. |
2:41.8 | This week on the show, we're asking Adrian Carasquillo from the bulwark, do voters like what |
2:47.1 | they're seeing? |
2:48.1 | When you start going into the interior, people then all of a sudden are like, |
2:51.1 | yeah, that's my neighbor. |
... |
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