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The Pink Patriarchy Podcast
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societyculture

The Pink Patriarchy Podcast

Hosted by PinkPatriarchyPodcast · 🇺🇸 US · EN · 11 episodes

Where this show ranks

Episodes
11
Last ep.
13 days ago
Avg length
10m
Booking Probability™
35
Stretch.
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Estimated audience
,
Audience size not yet estimated
Listen Score
15
Niche reach.
Virality (30d)
46
Steady cadence.

Pitch Analysis

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Required Pod Score
80/ 100
Premium

Established thought leaders with verified media credentials.

Guest openness
Not signalled recently
Best topics to pitch
societyculture

About this podcast

There’s a version of feminism out there that wears a pussyhat, clutches her pearls, and still calls the manager when a sex worker speaks at a panel. She’s the board member who proudly posts “women supporting women” selfies, yet signs off on policies that systematically exclude trans women, criminalized mothers, and survivors who sell sex just to stay housed. She believes in women’s empowerment - as long as it arrives wrapped in a college degree, a polished LinkedIn profile, and a sworn rejection of OnlyFans.

societyculture

About the host

PinkPatriarchyPodcast hosts The Pink Patriarchy Podcast, a society show with 11 episodes published.

Recent episodes

Our AI reads these to draft pitches

The Lesbian Feminist Who Refused to Abandon Sex Workers: Pat Califia and the Politics of Sexual Dissent

May 27, 202613mEp. 14S2026

One of the strangest recurring patterns inside institutional feminism is how efficiently it forgets the women who challenged its boundaries most aggressively. Not accidentally forgets - the forgetting tends to be too con

Show notes

The Woman Behind the Protest Signs: Margo St. James and the Politics of Naming Yourself

May 27, 202613mEp. 13S2023

One of the strangest recurring patterns inside institutional feminism is how efficiently it forgets the women who challenged its boundaries most aggressively. Not accidentally forgets - the forgetting tends to be too con

Show notes

What Is Carceral Feminism?

May 27, 202614mEp. 12S2026

Carceral feminism is a branch of feminist politics that relies primarily on policing, prosecution, incarceration, and other punitive state mechanisms as the main tools for addressing gender-based violence, sexual exploit

Show notes

Not Your Mama’s Feminism: The Policy in Practice - The Magical Thinking of Nordic Model Interventions

Apr 22, 20269mEp. 11S2026

On paper, buyer criminalization is sold as a feminist compromise. Sex workers won’t be punished, the story goes. Only buyers will be targeted. Demand will shrink. Exploitation will end. Everyone claps. Grants are written

Show notes

Why Carceral Feminism Gets Consent Wrong (Again)

Apr 22, 20268mEp. 10S2023

Spoiler: If your feminism relies on police and prisons, it's not protecting us—it's punishing us. For a movement that claims to be rooted in liberation, carceral feminism sure loves a cage. Carceral feminism is the belie

Show notes

First Wave Feminism: The Birth of a Movement

Mar 12, 20269mEp. 20

The term feminism entered the political landscape in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as these long-standing struggles began to cohere into identifiable movements - particularly in Europe and the United

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Fourth-Wave Feminism, Power, Platforms, and the Fight Over What Comes Next

Mar 12, 20267mEp. 80

Fourth-wave feminism didn’t arrive quietly. It emerged loudly, online, and mid-crisis - shaped by social media, economic instability, racial reckoning, and a growing refusal to pretend that representation alone equals ju

Show notes

Third-Wave Feminism: Identity, Agency, and the Turn Toward the Individual

Mar 12, 20267mEp. 60

Third-wave feminism emerged in the 1990s as both a continuation of and a reaction against the second wave. By this point, many of the second wave’s gains - legal protections against discrimination, expanded access to edu

Show notes

Second-Wave Feminism, When the Personal Became Political

Mar 12, 20268mEp. 40

Second-wave feminism emerged in the 1960s not because first-wave feminism had “finished the job,” but because its victories exposed how much work remained undone. Women could vote, in theory. They could own property, on

Show notes

The Women of Fourth-Wave Feminism: The Internet Era Gets Political

Mar 5, 202610mEp. 9S2026

Fourth-wave feminism is generally understood to have emerged in the early 2010s, shaped by two forces that dramatically altered feminist organizing: the rise of social media and the growing visibility of intersectional p

Show notes

The Women of Third Wave Feminism: When Younger Feminists Looked at the Movement and Said “Hold Up…”

Mar 5, 202611mEp. 7S2026

Third-wave feminism emerged in the early 1990s as both a continuation of - and a critique of - the feminist movements that came before it. Second-wave feminism had achieved major legal and cultural victories: workplace e

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The Women of Second-Wave Feminism: Breakthroughs, Blind Spots, and the Feminist Battles That Still Shape Today

Mar 5, 202613mEp. 3S2026

Second-wave feminism, spanning roughly the 1960s through the 1980s, transformed the political landscape for women in the United States and much of the Western world. The movement forced public recognition of issues that

Show notes

The Women of First-Wave Feminism: The Birth of a Movement (and the Mess It Brought With It)

Mar 5, 202612mEp. 2S2026

First-wave feminism, usually dated from 1848 to 1920, is remembered as the era when women began openly demanding legal recognition - most famously the right to vote. But the movement didn’t appear out of nowhere. It grew

Show notes

The Pink Patriarchy Podcast - Why we're here!

Feb 19, 20261m0

Starting The Pink Patriarchy wasn’t just a media project—it was a necessity. 📍 Because for too long, I’ve watched mainstream feminism wear a pretty face while doing some pretty ugly things. I’ve sat in rooms where ‘empo

Show notes

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Audience demographics

Age
25-54
Consumer type
General audience

Topics covered

societyculture

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Frequently asked questions

How do I pitch The Pink Patriarchy Podcast as a podcast guest?

To pitch The Pink Patriarchy Podcast, visit https://PinkPatriarchyPodcast.podbean.com for contact information, then craft a tight one-paragraph hook that ties your expertise to a gap in their recent society coverage.

Who is the host of The Pink Patriarchy Podcast?

The Pink Patriarchy Podcast is hosted by PinkPatriarchyPodcast. The show is categorised under society (culture) and has published 11 episodes.

How many episodes does The Pink Patriarchy Podcast have?

The Pink Patriarchy Podcast has published 11 episodes.

What topics does The Pink Patriarchy Podcast cover?

The Pink Patriarchy Podcast regularly covers society, culture. It sits in the society category, with a culture focus.

Is it hard to get booked on The Pink Patriarchy Podcast?

The Pink Patriarchy Podcast is accessible for guests with genuine society expertise. A personalised, episode-aware pitch will still outperform a generic one every time.

Is The Pink Patriarchy Podcast currently accepting guest pitches?

The Pink Patriarchy Podcast hasn't explicitly signalled guest openness in recent episodes. That doesn't rule out pitching. your hook just needs to be especially compelling and relevant to their recent content.

How long are The Pink Patriarchy Podcast episodes?

Episodes of The Pink Patriarchy Podcast average 10 minutes. a focused format where a clear narrative arc and tight preparation matter most.

What guest credentials does The Pink Patriarchy Podcast typically look for?

Our data rates The Pink Patriarchy Podcast's guest bar at 80/100 (Premium tier). Established thought leaders with verified media credentials. Sign in to PitchCentric to see how your own Pod Score compares against this show.

Methodology. Booking Probability™ blends Listen Score, 30-day Virality, open-to-guests detection, and Apple ratings. Data refreshed every 60 minutes. Listen Score and Booking Probability are calculated by PitchCentric. Last enriched 12 days ago.

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