Chelsea Wolfe on Transformation, Spirituality, and Her Enduring Authenticity
In Conversation Kristin Prim In Conversation Kristin Prim

Chelsea Wolfe on Transformation, Spirituality, and Her Enduring Authenticity

Haunting, alluring, and perennially enchanting, Chelsea Wolfe’s latest album, She Reaches Out To She Reaches Out To She, weaves a web of reverie around its listeners. As its swelling synths rise like shadows in the dark, crashing against captivating vocals that fluctuate from whispers to cries, Wolfe’s latest work of genius personifies emotional catharsis, punctuating a new era of “self-preservation, self-love, and self-worth.”

Read More
El Perro del Mar on Metamorphosis, Motherhood, and Aging Fearlessly
In Conversation Kristin Prim In Conversation Kristin Prim

El Perro del Mar on Metamorphosis, Motherhood, and Aging Fearlessly

Deeply rooted in introspection and authenticity, Sarah Assbring’s sonic journey as El Perro del Mar channels melancholia as a space for healing and contemplation. The Gothenburg native’s latest release, Big Anonymous, profoundly explores bringing secrets into light – “the things that often go unsaid” – requiring us, the listeners, to confront our vulnerabilities and acknowledge the touching beauty of human frailties.

Read More
Katy O’Brian on Confidence, Self-Defense, and Love Lies Bleeding
In Conversation Kristin Prim In Conversation Kristin Prim

Katy O’Brian on Confidence, Self-Defense, and Love Lies Bleeding

Tunneling through violence, vulnerability, endurance, and erotic encounters, Katy O’Brian tailors emotional torrents with a decided, confident strength, dazzling audiences in Love Lies Bleeding. Yet it is her life off the screen that is arguably as captivating – an unorthodox career path and challenging personal struggles have cemented her as a canon of reinvention, reclamation, and resilience.

Read More
Janice Dickinson on Honesty, Bravery, and Redemption
In Conversation Kristin Prim In Conversation Kristin Prim

Janice Dickinson on Honesty, Bravery, and Redemption

Dynamic, commanding, and searingly unapologetic, Janice Dickinson stands as an enduring, empowering figure of reinvention in an industry often resistant to change. Initially rejected by countless modeling agents in the 1970s who deemed her “too ethnic” to work, Janice commandeered a blonde-haired, blue-eyed industry with an unmistakable attitude – and an ax to grind.

Read More
Aubri Ibrag on Period Dramas, Inner Strength, and The Buccaneers
In Conversation Kristin Prim In Conversation Kristin Prim

Aubri Ibrag on Period Dramas, Inner Strength, and The Buccaneers

Through the exploration of gender roles and power dynamics, The Buccaneers has both redefined and revitalized the importance of the period drama. Portrayed by the shining Aubri Ibrag, Lizzy Elmsworth finds herself within the crosshairs of Lord Seadown’s abuse of power within the hit show’s first season, prompting her inspiring and modern response to the perennial injustice that is exploitation.

Read More
quinnie on Intuition, Vulnerability, and Her Meteoric Rise
In Conversation Kristin Prim In Conversation Kristin Prim

quinnie on Intuition, Vulnerability, and Her Meteoric Rise

quinnie’s brilliant masterpiece, “touch tank,” took the digital world by storm in the summer of 2022. The brazen, candid, and tender track, as sweet as it is blunt, is a perennial tale of infatuation that enchantingly wove its way onto the playlists of millions around the globe. But quinnie is uneasy – if not completely reluctant – to consider that her magnum opus. In fact, that’s only the beginning.

Read More
Paz de la Huerta on Her Art, Rebirth, and Survival
In Conversation Kristin Prim In Conversation Kristin Prim

Paz de la Huerta on Her Art, Rebirth, and Survival

To many outside of her sphere, Paz is talented, beautiful, glamorous, free-spirited, and fearlessly uncontrollable – a screen iconoclast oft-caught by paparazzis stripping down in public, consistently living life as free as her own fate will let her, sometimes daringly spitting in its face. But who I consistently saw, even before knowing her, was a sensitive soul and a survivor – a fierce, unapologetic woman who has been dealt an unconscionable amount of bad hands throughout her life, yet somehow ended up beating the house with all of them.

Read More
Dita Von Teese on Self-Confidence, Old Hollywood, and Her Historic New Las Vegas Revue
In Conversation Kristin Prim In Conversation Kristin Prim

Dita Von Teese on Self-Confidence, Old Hollywood, and Her Historic New Las Vegas Revue

Seductive, vampy, and intoxicatingly enigmatic, Dita Von Teese has innovated an intriguingly transgressive world of vintage glamour, class, opulence, and timeless beauty. Bursting onto the scene in the early 1990s, Von Teese transformed from a “dishwater blonde from a farming town in Michigan” to a raven-haired, red lipstick-swathed siren, becoming a beacon of empowering reinvention and self-confidence for women all over the world.

Read More
Sandra Bernhard on Her Illustrious Career, Unwavering Self-Confidence, and the Election
In Conversation Emma Reese In Conversation Emma Reese

Sandra Bernhard on Her Illustrious Career, Unwavering Self-Confidence, and the Election

Sandra Bernhard lives by her own rules. It was her biting and groundbreaking stand-up that rose her from relative obscurity to international levels of acclaim, pioneering her way through the late 1970s and 80s. Before searing performances and numerous iconic late-night appearances, she was cast by Martin Scorcese in 1983 to appear in his black comedy drama flick, The King of Comedy.

Read More
Roxane Gay on Marriage, Ellen, and the Importance of Marginalized Voices
In Conversation Emma Reese In Conversation Emma Reese

Roxane Gay on Marriage, Ellen, and the Importance of Marginalized Voices

American writer, editor, professor, cultural critic, and social commentator Roxane Gay believes that women are at their best when they are bad, difficult, and heard. The writer outlined the ways that she, and by extension all women, can (and should) contradict themselves as they form their personhood and embrace their badness in her 2014 bestselling collection of essays, Bad Feminist.

Read More
King Princess on Queerness, Representation, and Loving Lady Gaga
In Conversation Kristin Prim In Conversation Kristin Prim

King Princess on Queerness, Representation, and Loving Lady Gaga

King Princess burst onto the scene with 2018’s “1950,” a melodious anthem to queer love based on Patricia Highsmith’s seminal 1952 novel, The Price of Salt. Since then, she has secured herself as one of the leading voices in queer pop, penning personal and intimate tracks such as “Homegirl,” “Trust Nobody,” and “If You Think It’s Love.”

Read More
Nikki Reed on Sustainability, Thirteen, and Women Creating Their Own Opportunities
In Conversation Alexandra Julienne and Emma Reese In Conversation Alexandra Julienne and Emma Reese

Nikki Reed on Sustainability, Thirteen, and Women Creating Their Own Opportunities

Whether it’s through her oft-groundbreaking and shapeshifting film roles or her eco-conscious brand, Nikki Reed affects change. In 2003, Reed blasted onto the scene by co-writing and starring in the seminal teen drama, Thirteen, opposite Evan Rachel Wood. It was her groundbreaking performance in the Catherine Hardwicke-directed debut that led to numerous other roles, including Kathy Alva in 2005’s Lords of Dogtown and Rosalie Hale in Twilight.

Read More
Tatiana Maslany on Visibility, Perry Mason, and Provocative Women
In Conversation Alexandra Julienne In Conversation Alexandra Julienne

Tatiana Maslany on Visibility, Perry Mason, and Provocative Women

Emmy Award-winning actress Tatiana Maslany doesn’t back down from a challenge. It was her portrayal of over a dozen roles in Orphan Black that won her the prestigious award, showcasing a range of talent on screen unlike many had ever seen. Moving on from her shapeshifting, groundbreaking role on Orphan Black, Tatiana is now portraying the fiery, impassioned evangelist, Sister Alice McKeegan, on HBO’s captivating new series, Perry Mason.

Read More
Lea DeLaria on Butch Representation, Orange Is the New Black, and Being the First to Ever Do It
In Conversation Alexandra Julienne and Kristin Prim In Conversation Alexandra Julienne and Kristin Prim

Lea DeLaria on Butch Representation, Orange Is the New Black, and Being the First to Ever Do It

In 1993, Lea DeLaria became the first openly gay comic to perform on American television with her groundbreaking performance on The Arsenio Hall Show. That landmark appearance, in which she mentioned the words “dyke,” “fag,” or “queer” 47 times in 9½ minutes, remains one of the most revolutionary moments in modern television. Now 27 years later with a bevy of iconic roles behind her, from Orange Is the New Black to Broadway, Lea DeLaria is still changing perceptions. Kristin Prim and Alexandra Julienne spoke to the enduring icon about being butch, playing Big Boo, and loving the Yankees.

Read More