This weekly podcast explores how culture, politics, and the climate crisis are reshaping music. From AI and activism to festival futures and the collapse of local scenes, we treat music as an ecosystem, not just entertainment. Guests include artists, changemakers, and organisers reimagining what music can be. Subscribe and join the conversation.
Hosted by Sean Adams, founder of Drowned in Sound
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This weekly podcast explores how culture, politics, and the climate crisis are reshaping music. From AI and activism to festival futures and the collapse of local scenes, we treat music as an ecosystem, not just entertainment. Guests include artists, changemakers, and organisers reimagining what music can be. Subscribe and join the conversation.
Hosted by Sean Adams, founder of Drowned in Sound
Is music finally ready to confront misogyny? DiS meets CheerUpLuv
Drowned in Sound
1 hour 2 minutes
1 week ago
Is music finally ready to confront misogyny? DiS meets CheerUpLuv
In music, abuse, harassment and discrimination is normalised whilst accountability and justice is rare, so how can change finally happen?
Sign up at http://drownedinsound.org for more on this topic and our weekly newsletter.
In this episode of the Drowned in Sound podcast:
For the past eight years, journalist and photographer Eliza Hatch has been documenting everyday harassment through her platform Cheer Up Luv. Following her recent Glamour investigation into misogyny in music, which has reached over a million people, DiS founder Sean Adams sat down to talk about the reactions to the stat that more than half of women in the industry have faced discrimination.
From government failures to arena tours by artists like Chris Brown and Marilyn Manson, this is a wide ranging conversation about the challenges and the solutions. We also hear how artists like Lambrini Girls and Nova Twins reacted to hearing that over 50% of women in music have faced discrimination.
And we talk about the role men can play in smashing the patriarchy, the rise of the far right, and what a safer, more equal music industry could look like by 2050.
Chapters:
00:00 – Misogyny and music: the scale of the problem10:30 – Everyday discrimination that builds hostile spaces 20:00 – When the government rejects reform: stalled progress and NDAs 24:00 – The role of media, libel laws, and silence in enabling abuse 26:00 – Chris Brown, Marilyn Manson, and the “separating art from artist” debate 33:00 – Why accountability is so rare in the music industry 42:00 – Smashing the patriarchy is good for men, too 52:00 – The far right, feminism, and why musicians need to speak out 57:00 – What the industry could and should look like in 2050
Continue the Conversation:
Email sean@drownedinsound.org with your thoughts or experiences
Subscribe to the DiS newsletter for weekly insights on music, culture, and resistance
Links:
Cheer Up Luv on Instagram
Sign up to the Cheer Up Luv Newsletter
Eliza Hatch’s piece for Glamour
We Are Music - resources for musicians facing harassment
On Wednesdays We Wear Black - Podcast documenting Marilyn Manson’s crimes
Drowned in Sound
This weekly podcast explores how culture, politics, and the climate crisis are reshaping music. From AI and activism to festival futures and the collapse of local scenes, we treat music as an ecosystem, not just entertainment. Guests include artists, changemakers, and organisers reimagining what music can be. Subscribe and join the conversation.
Hosted by Sean Adams, founder of Drowned in Sound