To round out our second series, we're joining two ABC reporters on a road trip around regional NSW to discover what pride means in regional communities.
In part two of our Sydney WorldPride cross-generational special, queer seniors ask a panel of LGBTQIA+ youth to demystify the lifestyles and language of queer Gen Z.
In the first of two cross-generational episodes for Sydney WorldPride, a panel of queer elders respond to questions from rainbow youth about what it was like to be young and queer back in their day.
In our final ep of 2022, a panel of expert ‘queer peers’ respond to your requests for coming out advice.
What’s it like to discover that you’re intersex? Intersex advocate Mimi Hall reveals how a falling down a YouTube rabbit hole unlocked the key to understanding her body and identity, and Tasmanian chicken farmer Robert Wilson tells how the healthcare system has failed him.
Three believers, with different beliefs, tell us how their relationship to religion and spirituality changed after coming out.
When it comes to dating, how do you tell a prospective partner how you identify and what your preferences are? Because sometimes it’s not obvious. High school student Frankie Mazzone tells us why she shares her transness early on, electrical engineer and proud asexual Kerry Chin reveals how he deals with being hit on, and writer Patrick Lenton smashes through biphobia with the support of his partner, musician Eilish Gilligan.
Did you know that autistic people are more likely to identify as LGBTQ+ than the general population?
Three non-binary people share what it’s like to come out as neither male nor female.
The award-winning ABC podcast Innies + Outies is back for a second series exploring uniquely Australian LGBTQIA+ stories about coming out and staying in.
The internet can be an amazing way for queer folks to find community and access all the info we're not taught at school. But there's also a darker side — it has trolls, bullies and plenty of misinformation.Inspired by their own journeys, you'll hear how Liz Duck-Chong from TransHub and Mohammad Awad from the Muslim Peers Project are using the internet to provide support to their communities in ways they never experienced.
What does pansexuality mean? In simple terms, it’s when you’re attracted to people regardless of their gender. And how is that different to being bisexual, you might wonder?
The ‘I’ in LGBTQIA+ stands for intersex! Broadly speaking, intersex people have innate sex characteristics that don't fit medical and social norms for female or male bodies.
You may have heard some people describe themselves as ‘queer’ and thought ‘hang on – am I even allowed to say that?’
Are you hearing people talk about pronouns these days and wondering what that’s all about?
Asexual is the A in LGBTQIA+ and it refers to someone who doesn’t experience sexual attraction towards other people. This might be how you’ve always felt, or it could change over time – but it’s a natural expression of human diversity.
Queer folks don’t come out just once – it's a never-ending process. This week you’ll hear from a Newcastle student whose evolving sexuality and gender identity has led to many coming out celebrations, and how a shocking accident propelled an Indian-Australian woman to come out after 30 years.
This week you'll meet two guys from diverse cultural backgrounds who struggled to reconcile their sexuality and religion. You’ll also hear from psychologist Sekneh Beckett who specialises in helping people navigate the complex world of queerness, faith and culture.
Coming out as queer is one thing but what happens when you’re not the only one in the family? This week you’ll meet a family who scored a hat-trick when all three sisters came out, and two brothers whose queerness brought them closer together.