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intersectionally speaking
Seadimo Tlale
15 episodes
4 days ago
conversations in the pursuit of better and more inclusive ways of living! about the host: Seadimo (accepts all pronouns) is a South African born Black queer human - with an LLB (cum laude) from Wits University and an LLM in progress from UCLA. Their passions include abolition, sustainability, art, Thandiswa Mazwai and rants about cis-hetero patriarchy and capitalism in moderation.
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Society & Culture
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All content for intersectionally speaking is the property of Seadimo Tlale and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
conversations in the pursuit of better and more inclusive ways of living! about the host: Seadimo (accepts all pronouns) is a South African born Black queer human - with an LLB (cum laude) from Wits University and an LLM in progress from UCLA. Their passions include abolition, sustainability, art, Thandiswa Mazwai and rants about cis-hetero patriarchy and capitalism in moderation.
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Society & Culture
Episodes (15/15)
intersectionally speaking
Black Women Living Abroad with Nthabiseng Nooe and Neo Dipate [Part 2]

In this series I chat with Black women about their lived experiences of living abroad.

Nthabiseng (@nthabiwabi /Nthabynooe) is a South African who has been living in Denmark for over a year, pursuing further education.  Neo (@sandra_neo) was born in Botswana, and has been living in England with her family for the past 10 years.  In this first part of the Black Women Living Abroad series, Nthabiseng and Neo shared the journey of how they ended up living abroad.

In this second part of this conversation we unpack how being a Black woman has shaped their personal experiences of living abroad by unpacking experiences of crime, racism, xenophobia and cost of living.

Music by Blaklez, PDOT O and Ntate Stunna: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIssXeDp3ok

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5 years ago
48 minutes 13 seconds

intersectionally speaking
Black Women Living Abroad with Rudo Christine

In this episode I reconnect with my childhood best friend Rudo Christine (@christiner810), who was born in Zimbabwe and has been living in America for 13 years.  We chat about racism and xenophobia, but also about the advantages of being a young person from Africa in America.  She may have coined the term "African Privilege" and I love it.


Music:

Changes x Black Sabbath: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EKrz8BRvwQM

Going through changes x Eminem : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rc9F_mUCp4U 

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5 years ago
47 minutes 47 seconds

intersectionally speaking
Black Women Living Abroad with Nthabiseng Nooe and Neo Dipate [Part 1]

In this series I chat with Black women about their lived experiences of living abroad.

Nthabiseng (@nthabiwabi /Nthabynooe) is a South African who has been living in Denmark for over a year, pursuing further education.  Neo (@sandra_neo) was born in Botswana, and has been living in England with her family for the past 10 years.  In this first part of the Black Women Living Abroad series, Nthabiseng and Neo share the journey of how they ended up living abroad.

In the second part of this conversation we unpack how being a Black woman has shaped their personal experiences of living abroad by unpacking experiences of crime, racism, xenophobia and cost of living.

Music by Blaklez, PDOT O and Ntate Stunna: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIssXeDp3ok

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5 years ago
52 minutes 56 seconds

intersectionally speaking
Black Love with YouTube couple, the Viks

In this episode YouTube couple, The Viks (@wearetheviks) share their experience of Black Love..

Music by Magdy Haddad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=noIyZdwh-Jo

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5 years ago
1 hour 41 seconds

intersectionally speaking
Survivor or victim? (TW: content about rape)

[This is a repost from a few weeks ago]  In this episode I share my reflections about how messed up it is to expect people to comfort you about their traumas.  I.e. please don't listen to this and message me about how sorry you are.  That makes me feel uncomfortable and pressured to give you comfort about my trauma.  Also don't go around insisting people are survivors (if that's not how said people identify) because you need their trauma to mean something greater.  I am not here to inspire you.  Also you are complicit in rape culture if you participate in making it so damn hard and uncomfortable for us to be rape victims in peace.  


Sources referred to:

5 Reasons Why I Identify As a Rape Victim, Not a Rape Survivor: https://everydayfeminism.com/2016/07/rape-victim-not-a-rape-survivor/

Inspiration Porn: Why We Need to Stop Tokenizing Survivors: https://everydayfeminism.com/2014/10/survivor-stories/

James is Dead: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Op14XhETfBw&feature=emb_logo

Born to Kwaito: 

Music by Bongo Maffin: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdIz7UNE5Mc




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5 years ago
22 minutes 2 seconds

intersectionally speaking
PSA: My Preferred Pronouns

What are your preferred pronouns?  And are pronouns important to you?  In this episode I talk through my thought process regarding my preferred pronouns.


The music is by Thandiswa Mazwai, and the source is Ted: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-guHd9Zrbn4

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5 years ago
32 minutes 25 seconds

intersectionally speaking
Substantive Transformation with Sohela Surajpal

Sohela Surajpal (@sohelasurajpal) and Seadimo  (@seadimotlale) exchange reflections on what transformation in South Africa means.


Resources referred to:

Sohela's twitter thread: https://twitter.com/sohelasurajpal/status/1286200048670433280?s=20

Mpho Ndaba's On (Black) billionaires: https://medium.com/@manofcolor_/on-billionaires-88b83e647531

Are Prisons Obsolete? - Angela Davis

The Communist Manifesto - Friedrich Engels and Karl Marx

The Destruction of Black Civilizations - Chancellor Williams


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5 years ago
50 minutes 3 seconds

intersectionally speaking
Takeover by Mfumo B - Love in the time of the rona

Mfumo B (@mfumo_B) chats with Nonkululeko Nojoko (@nkulijoki_) and Ntokozo Mbonani (@iamntokozom) about the challenges of mjolo in the time of the rona.

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5 years ago
40 minutes 43 seconds

intersectionally speaking
Tribalism with Mfumo B and Paballo Chauke

"Venda and Tsonga people (from Limpopo) have South Africans of many tribes meting out myriad violence to us. We are at the bottom of the totem pole, with harmful discourses about how difficult our languages are, hypersexualized and seen as less attractive and more intelligent.  The violence is expressed through lack of representation in government, media, and other spheres.  The stereotypes are that we eat dirty or scary foods, are spoken of in the same xenophobic and afrophobic terms used to alienate other Africans. Tribalism is not a joke. . . The violence does ultimately become physical but most of it is seen in discourse around and about Tsonga and Venda people as being dark, ugly, not belonging and existing in the periphery so the jokes are not funny as they have tangible ramifications on peoples lives . . .I hope this thread can be a conversation starter amongst us a people, to be reflexive and adopt an intersectional revolution, because yes Black Lives Matter, but let’s also get our house in order."

Thread about tribalism in South Africa, by Twitter user @withPaballo.  Check out the full thread here: https://twitter.com/withPaballo/status/1272413369866293249?s=20


In this episode, two South African Tsonga men from different intersections, Mfumo Bamuza (mfumo_B) and Paballo Chauke (@withPaballo) unpack their experience with tribalism with Seadimo (@seadimotlale).

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5 years ago
54 minutes 49 seconds

intersectionally speaking
Black Girl Joy with Buhle Mayatula

In a world filled with so much pain and exclusion for Black women, what does joy and the relentless pursuit of it look like?

Listen to Buhle Mayatula (@buhlemayatula) and Seadimo (@seadimotlale) share their  journeys.


TW: content about mental illness.

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5 years ago
1 hour 2 minutes 2 seconds

intersectionally speaking
Prison Abolition with Tumi Moloto

In this episode, Tumi Moloto (@tumi.moloto) and Seadimo (@seadimotlale) share their respective journeys of being abolitionists in South Africa.

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5 years ago
54 minutes 10 seconds

intersectionally speaking
White Allies with Sarah Godsell and Kate Paterson

Sarah Godsell (@sdgosell) and Kate Paterson (@take_the_kate) chat with Seadimo (@seadimotlale) about white guilt, white privilege and fighting racism as a white person in South Africa.



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5 years ago
47 minutes 1 second

intersectionally speaking
Bisexuality with Mpho Ndaba

Bisexual people make up more than 50% of the LGBTQ community worldwide, yet they are the least visible.

South African bisexual Black man, Mpho Ndaba (@manofcolor_) and queer Black human, Seadimo (@seadimotlale) have a chat about the less visible members of the LGBTQ community, with a focus on the bisexual community.  We unpack biphobia, and ways to be more kind to and inclusive of bisexual people.


some relevant material:

Article by Mpho Ndaba on his experience of being a bisexual Black man in South Africa: https://mg.co.za/article/2018-10-05-00-no-home-for-bisexual-black-men/

Things you should not say to bisexual people: 

https://www.pride.com/identities/2020/5/19/11-things-you-should-never-say-bisexual-men#media-gallery-media-4

https://www.playboy.com/read/in-search-of-the-20biteen-man

More conversation on the experience of Black bisexual black men in South Africa: https://omny.fm/shows/mid-morning-show-702/the-experiences-of-black-bisexual-men-in-south-afr

Also check out Changing the Lens by Mpho Ndaba: https://radiopublic.com/changing-the-lens-6VBdrM/episodes

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5 years ago
54 minutes 40 seconds

intersectionally speaking
HBO's Insecure Season 4 Finale [part 2]

Part two of the conversation between three Black South African women on HBO's Insecure Season 4 Finale.  On this part we unpack mental health, imposter syndrome and the burden of responsibility we place on Black people with social influence.


Hosts: Seadimo (@seadimotlale), Zanele Masombuka (@kneezus_) and Malebona Maphutse (@bonny_maphutse).

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5 years ago
24 minutes 48 seconds

intersectionally speaking
HBO's Insecure Season 4 Finale [part 1]

Three Black South African women,  Zanele Masombuka (@kneezus_),  Malebona Maphutse (@bonny_maphutse) and Seadimo (@seadimotlale) unpack their feelings about the season 4 finale of HBO's Insecure, and the ways they relate to the friendship dynamics, Issa and Lawrence's relationship and Tiffany's post partum depression.

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5 years ago
25 minutes 41 seconds

intersectionally speaking
conversations in the pursuit of better and more inclusive ways of living! about the host: Seadimo (accepts all pronouns) is a South African born Black queer human - with an LLB (cum laude) from Wits University and an LLM in progress from UCLA. Their passions include abolition, sustainability, art, Thandiswa Mazwai and rants about cis-hetero patriarchy and capitalism in moderation.