99% Invisible - 550- Melanie Speaks
Episode Date: August 22, 2023The story of a voice training VHS tape that helped trans women at a time when other resources were hard to access.The way a person's voice changes over time feels like a simple, and overlooked act of ...magic. Whether intentionally or subconsciously, our voices are products of our environments as much as they are part of us. Today we’re featuring an episode about voices from a series called Sounds Gay, a brilliant show about queer culture, community and music.Plus, guest host Swan Real discusses the universality of voice training with 99pi regular host Roman Mars.Melanie Speaks
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This is 99% invisible.
I'm Swan Rael.
What makes you sound the way you do?
Maybe you've been told that you speak like your mom, or that you laugh like your uncle.
Maybe you sometimes slip back into an accent that reveals something about your past.
Maybe you have a habit of matching the ways that other people speak when you want to make
them more comfortable.
Maybe you haven't thought about your voice.
Or maybe you think about it all the time, because you have to.
Voices are fascinating to me. The way a person's voice changes over time feels like a simple
and overlooked act of magic. Whether intentionally or subconsciously, our voices are products
of our environments as much as they are part of us. Today we're featuring a series that
I'm excited to share with you. It's called Sounds Gay, a show about queer culture, community, and music. This is an episode
that they did about voices, about a videotape, and about sisterhood. And after the
episode Roman is gonna join me for a special conversation. I hope you dig it.
Hi, I'm Melanie Ann, and in the next 30 minutes you're gonna get everything you need to develop a more feminine voice.
There's seven major areas I found to be real tools. You're not going to cover them all in great detail.
If you're a trans woman in 2023 and you want to change your voice to sound more traditionally feminine, you have options. There are apps, YouTube videos, even online voice coaches.
But if you were a trans woman in the 90s and you
wanted to change your voice, you'd want to get your hands on a video tape like Melanie speaks.
Over the course of her 45 minute tape, Melanie offers tips, vocal exercises, and plenty of
encouragement. And she points out that there are many ways to sound feminine.
Let me give you a couple of examples. First of all, look at Suzanne Plishette, And she points out that there are many ways to sound feminine.
I'm Sarah Esacoff and this is Sounds Gay, a podcast about the intersection of music and queerness. This week we're talking about voices, not just vocals in a song,
but also speaking voices. The instrument I'm using to tell you this story right now.
also speaking voices. The instrument I'm using to tell you this story right now. We get so much information from how people talk. We hear regional accents or slang,
the rise and fall of emotion, the scratchiness of a night smoking in the back of a dive bar.
But a trans person's voice might lead to unwanted exposure, even in the most mundane interactions.
Buying a pack of gum can become a record scratch moment, where suddenly everyone's staring
at you.
Your voice can make you stand out when you desperately want to blend in.
For decades, trans people, especially trans women whose voices don't change when they take
hormone therapy, have been teaching each other how to find their new voices.
And in the 90s, one of the people doing the teaching
was a woman named Melanie.
Today we're asking, how did Melanie help a generation of trans women
find their voices? And where is she now?
I learned about Melanie Speaks from Soundsgate Consulting Producer and Creature of Habit, Cass Adair.
What do you have for breakfast?
What do I have for breakfast?
Um, chicken and sweet potatoes, which is the only food that I eat.
Cass is a media studies professor and is currently writing a book
about transgender history and digital media.
So he spends a lot of time in trans archives.
A lot of what being an archive is
is just reading old newsletters and old magazines
and kind of getting a sense of like who the characters are.
Melanie advertised her tape in these newsletters.
So she was one of the main characters on Cass's radar.
And weirdly, she kept coming up. Like, I would read like a biography of someone who came out in the
early 2000s, and then they would mention the same person. So I was like, oh, weird. Like, clearly,
she was like a big deal. But unlike the other main characters in Cass's research,
he'd never actually spoken to Melanie. He said a lot of the older trans women from that world,
he would see at conferences, or they'd be active on Facebook groups he was in for his research. He'd never actually spoken to Melanie. He said a lot of the older trans women from that world,
he would see at conferences
or they'd be active on Facebook groups
he was in for his research, but not Melanie.
She just seems like somebody who dropped in
was like so important for like eight years.
And I didn't know where she went.
We wanted to track down Melanie
and talk to people who had used her tape, but first we
had to find the tape itself.
Cass had never actually seen it.
He just heard about it.
But he figured it wouldn't be a problem.
After all, there's a huge trans archive on the internet where people have scanned
zines and newsletters and even like random people's scrapbooks.
But when Cass went searching for Melanie Melanie speaks, this video that's advertised
in all these newsletters, it was nowhere to be found.
And the closest I could find was this like old website that was basically like an advertisement
for the video. And the website was like huge like angel fire, geocities Energy. Next cast searched the largest library catalog in the world
and found exactly one copy of Melanie Speaks.
It was at a library in Connecticut.
Once we had the tape, we wanted to talk to women
who actually used Melanie Speaks back in the 90s.
One of these women was Gwen Smith.
At the time, Gwen was, like, any cool 90s chick,
listening to a lot of women singer-songwriters and practicing singing along.
Jagged little till and a lot of s'mores said, was in the playlist. I also tend to listen to a lot of Melissa ethyr just brave and crazy. And Katie Lang, God, Katie Lang constantly.
The Aishan Yuald, I still adore that album today.
And go, live, gravy, gravy.
Gwen read about Melanie Speaks in an online chat room.
But remember, this was the 1990s internet.
The chatrooms were text
only. You couldn't just upload a video. So Gwen sent for her copy of Melanie
Speaks via snail mail.
If you want to order a copy of this tape, send $20. That's all it costs $20. post paid. VHS only is available at this time.
Up until that point,
any knowledge I had about things trans
was people that were in a book
or were in a newspaper headline.
And a lot of these individuals were fairly wealthy
or well off in their own ways
or at least projected that and me being at that
point a fairly young person who is working just a nine to five feeling like, well, can I
even do this from where I am in this world?
In her tape, Melanie offered an emphatic, yes, you can do this to women like Gwen.
I could be everything I always wanted to be just by learning this little routine.
What you found it may take you two weeks to find it, may take you a month to find it, but
believe me, listen to me, it's worth it.
I think Melanie's tape, one way or another, has become the basis for a lot of other people
talking about voice.
I know that I've taught people some of the things that I learned off those tapes to try
to help them with their voice.
I'm sure there are a number of other people that just pass on some of that knowledge over
time.
Thousands of miles away from Gwen, another woman named Dallas Denny was using the tape too.
Dallas lived in Nashville, Tennessee and started going out in women's clothing in her early teens.
I would go to the library, to lower, to the department, to the stores, to the movies,
out to eat, ride the buses, I had full fates on. I didn't feel like I was dressed if I didn't have
false-night lashes.
So I was wondering for years
would I just be seeing myself?
I was really passing, so I would do things
like buy a dress and check out line at the department store
and ask them if they could tell I was really in a kind.
Even though Dallas was wearing false eyelashes and buying dresses as a teenager, she didn't
encounter the larger trans community until she was 38.
That's when she heard about a trans support group in Atlanta, about 250 miles from where
she was living at the time in Tennessee.
Finally, after 25 years of searching for people like her, she found them.
And eventually that community led her to Melanie Speaks.
Dallas doesn't remember exactly where she heard about the tape, but she figures it was
at a support group or a conference.
One thing Dallas appreciated about Melanie's approach was that she didn't take herself
or her methods too seriously. The other way is to go directly into that voice and go kind of like the last one.
Like you're saying, yeah, I'm a New York City chem driver.
And gosh, there's a Midwest accent in the New York City.
Well, he came from the Midwest originally.
Her silly voice has made me realize that if you're going to change things, you have to
get out of your zone and what
better way to do it than to go on all the way out there with the most bizarre things you
can do with your voice and then reeling it back in until you find a new door.
Well, I have to do that.
You can get down here and then you sound like the typical Southern Bay of, and you can
say, al-back now it's just mild, isn't it?
But then you bring it out even a little bit more, and then you can just out like, no, it's just marvelous isn't it? But then you bring it up a little bit more,
and then you can just be typical American voice.
The American woman's 90s voice.
I really like what she was advocating about,
just going through a phase of exploration with the voice,
because a lot of the people that I knew were just refusing
to do that because they thought it made them sound silly or gay.
Dallas thinks this fear of sounding silly or gay
held women back from finding their true voices,
but it was also a legitimate fear to have,
because in the 90s, passing as cisgender
was considered imperative.
At the time, we were supposed to pass.
Everyone inspired to pass.
No one thought about being okay, not to pass. And so we
counseled one another and we were counseled by professionals to perfect our
appearance and our voices so that, well, mostly so we would be safe, but also to be
employable that we would not be ridiculed or beaten or killed.
These professionals Dallas mentions who were counseling her to hide her trans
identity. They were doctors, doctors who were following guidelines that were
then called the Harry Benjamin standards of care.
One of the requirements for a doctor approving you to take hormones was this
thing called the real life experience test.
Here's our producer, Cass again.
You had to live in your target gender,
like the gender that you were trying to express for a year
before you were able to actually take hormones.
And if you think about that for like two seconds,
what that means is you're not allowed
to do any of the things that would help you
experience life in that gender. You're not allowed to have hormones that might soften your skin that might
like help you grow your chest that might help you
I don't know, it might change your hairline or like all these different things
But you still have to go out into the world and like where are the clothing of that gender or like
you still have to go out into the world and like where are the clothing of that gender or like try to have a new job as that like like so much like intense stuff to do while
you're also getting basically no help making your body look the way it needs to look or
the way it should look or the way people expect a body to look.
For trans women undergoing the real life experience test in the 90s, one of the only things they
could do to feminize their presentation without medical assistance, which, again, they couldn't
get until they completed the test, was voice training. Which brings us back to the tape, Melanie
Speaks. Melanie's tape gave trans women of her generation permission to speak on their own terms,
and it showed them how to do it in a fun, inviting way.
This wasn't a doctor or a psychologist ordering you to conform.
It was another trans woman showing you how she did it.
Melanie Speaks is also, in many ways, a relic of its time.
Start with belly girl.
Walked for sure. I went and saw my boyfriend didn't get me with a spoon.
It was just like grody to the max for sure.
This was very interesting.
I'm kind of in like a weird, like speechless place.
This is Brianna Sinclair, a trans woman and professional soprano.
Brianna has never done voice training for speaking.
She naturally has a high register.
But she's a classically trained singer, so she definitely knows her stuff when it comes
to voice.
She had heard of Melanie, but she'd never seen the tape, so I played it for her.
The third area we're going to cover is dynamic range.
It gives that sing-song effect that makes the feminine voice more feminine.
And we'll cover how you think it.
What are you thinking?
I mean, this is interesting.
That's kind of like how opera singers normally study.
Like, you find the limits of our voice and the opera and we find the limits in our bottom
register.
So, I mean, she's kind of right there.
But Breonna wasn't a fan of every part of Melanie's tape,
like this section, for example.
Remember, in our society,
men are trained to be aggressive.
For example, a man would say,
I'm going to do this.
And a woman would say, I was thinking
that I ought to do this.
And here, that fast food rest from solid time,
a guy comes up to the little speaker box and he says,
I want a big Mac.
And a woman comes up to the same speaker box
and says, I'd like a small salad, please.
I'm just wondering what it would be like
for trans folks who utilize that tape,
what are their thoughts?
I'm like her saying, I'm trying to produce the stereotype.
There is beauty in vocal sounds and I think the world has made the voice determine what's
masculine and what's feminine.
The voice can do anything.
We just live in a world of such binary concepts.
You speak high, you're a woman, you speak speak low, you're man, that's it.
Every human being should experience different
timbres of their sound and play with it
and see what it's like.
But as an opera singer, even Breonna
sometimes relies on gendered stereotypes
to bring characters to life.
When I hear a tin of voice, it really does have
a typical,
heric sound, like a tambourine.
It's very hero-like tambourine to it.
Kind of like a Disney Prince.
["Dance of the Wind"]
Okay, and what about Mr. Piano?
Ha-ha-ha.
Wow, so Piano's we get jokes a lot because they consider us ditty or thing.
Oh my god, I'm going to get beat up for this. I hate to ask, but do you relate to that at all?
That is an embarrassing question. Yes, at times, my friends know that I could be ditzy a lot.
I could be, oh my god, I could be very ditzy sometimes.
For Brianna, these operatic voices are characters, tropes even.
But the voice you use in your everyday life, your speaking voice, is specific to you.
And it can be the difference between being accepted in your community and being shunned.
It's sad that we live in a world most of it's full of hatred in regards to the trans community.
Our voice does make a huge impact on how we remove it in the world, getting clogged
or disrespected healthcare.
There's so many layers around that.
For her part, at least in the video, it seems like Melanie knows that the way she talks about
what's feminine and what's not isn't exactly helping the cause. It's a sacrifice she makes to help
trans women feel safe and comfortable. Now, believe me, I know this is a nathema to feminism,
Now, believe me, I know this is a nathema to feminism, and I know that this is something that is bad to perpetuate.
But this tape is not about the subject of how to break those stereotypes.
It's first about how to become one.
By this point, you're probably wondering, where is Melanie?
What does she think of all this now?
And that is exactly what we wanted to know.
This whole time, while Cass and I were looking for the tape and talking to Dallas and Gwen and
Brianna, we were also looking for Melanie, and she was not easy to find.
I've been working on like trans history of this sort of like 80s and 90s for a while, and I've been working on trans history of this sort of like 80s and 90s for a while and I've
had like really good success getting people to talk.
So I started going through my like older trans women role-adex and emailing people and
like kept striking out.
Cass also asked historians, people doing archival work, no dice.
We'd also learned that Melanie has a company that publishes screenwriting software, so we
reached out to them too.
No one got back to us.
How did we know Melanie was still alive?
Part of the answer is that we could see her social media.
She has a public Facebook profile, but it's like a fan page, so you can't send her a
friend request.
Melanie is also a prolific self-published author, and during our search we could see her
publishing new books on Amazon every few months.
So since Cass wasn't having any luck with her former friends and business partners, he
decided to dive headfirst into Melanie's brain.
The thing that reminds me the most of is when I first got a copy of the Lord of the Rings as a child
and was like, this is the biggest book of all time, it's also three fucking giant books.
Melanie published an enormous memoir in 2018 and like the Lord of the Rings, it has three volumes. Cast started reading.
What's really fascinating about them is that they, as memoirs, are really unique and strange. They're
not necessarily chronological. They're very associative. They drop hints about the person who is writing
them, but are often obfuscating other details so they'll be like,
I lived out in the woods and you're like, what woods?
Cass wasn't just reading this tome for fun. He was looking for clues.
I was trying to find places where she mentioned like landscape or mention locations,
and that was helpful and then it told me that she did not want to live in the city because she did not want people to bother her. And I was like, Oh, no. So that was, so that was one of the first
like indications that I really, where I really started to feel like, Oh, maybe what's happening
isn't that we keep having the wrong email address. Like maybe what's happening is this person
just like does not want to talk to people like me.
By this point, we're getting desperate. We've sent Melanie a ton of emails, we've message her on multiple social media platforms, no response, and now there's time pressure, because we are
pretty sure that Melanie lives in California. And I am in California on a reporting trip for
another story, and I have not booked my return flight. So I'm in my Airbnb in Berkeley, I am in California on a reporting trip for another story, and I have not booked my return flight.
So I'm in my Airbnb in Berkeley.
I'm in like full reporter mode pacing around in circles,
calling Cass every five minutes,
being like, we need to find Melanie
or I need to book my flight home.
This is when Cass has a breakthrough.
He's been running public records requests
for Melanie in California. and the results say like,
Melanie has lived in these five towns. But then Cass notices that there's another Melanie,
with a different last name, who's showing up as having lived in all the same small towns.
And when we search the Melanie with a different last name, we find Melanie's personal Facebook account,
not the professional fan page we'd
seen before.
From there I could see all these pictures of her with her whole family.
I could see her kids.
I could see her grandkids.
So the name we had must have been like a professional name, a pen name, maybe a maiden
name, and now she's married.
The new name also gives us a much clearer picture of where Melanie might be.
We were at the point where I was like,
here's her last five addresses.
I'm pretty sure these are right because they're the ones that appear under this new name that we know is the right name,
and they're the ones that appear consistently enough that they probably not just data aggregation errors.
And so they're like, oh, she probably was there for a while,
and then she went to this other place. Like we really were like honing in on like making that like Lord of the Rings map of Melanie.
At this point, I'm like, all right, fuck it. We know the town. I'm gonna drive there. I'm gonna knock on doors.
I'm gonna find her. But Cass was starting to feel uneasy.
I just was like, listen, I've worked so hard to like creep on this older trans woman. And she has
intentionally covered her tracks in every step of the way. And I see journalists a lot like
overstep with trans people and presume that a certain amount of like transparency about yourself
is going to be good for the community or like tell us more about what you've gone through.
And a lot of that doesn't inform the public.
It just retraumatizes trans people.
And it doesn't understand that when trans people
are hiding something about themselves,
it's not like being shady.
It's just a survival mechanism.
And I don't think there's anything inherently harmful
about knocking on someone's door. But I think that like, though closer we got to kind of like breaking her little
shields, like breaking her bubble, the more I started to feel like that was not okay.
Yeah. And we were at that point where we were seeing her family photos,
it felt very...
We had found to a real name,
it did feel like we had broken into some bubble that she didn't want us to.
Yeah, it's almost like that other name is the cabin in the woods she was looking for.
It's her way of staying out of the spotlight and giving herself some peace and some respite and like all I could think of when I was like feeling that gut feeling of like
I don't want to hunt this person down anymore is oh my gosh like how many trans women get
to have that cabinet in the woods?
How many trans women in our society get to find peace and quiet ever in their lives.
I understood where Cass was coming from, but I wanted Melanie to say no herself.
I wanted to be sure that she knew we were looking for her,
and I didn't wanna tell her story without her.
If there was any chance, she'd wanna be a part of it.
We'd messaged Melanie on her personal Facebook account.
On Facebook, you can see if a message has been opened
and ours hadn't been.
But we'd also messaged one of Melanie's children
and that message was opened.
This was why it was enough for me, was that
it was seen by her kid who, if it were me,
I would send it to my mom.
It's possible that the kid didn't.
But also, we had both commented on posts
that Melanie had made like that day,
on a page where she seems to be checking it all the time.
It's not like there are a million people commenting.
Like, it would be just us commenting.
I feel pretty certain that she knew
we were looking for her,
enough that I felt okay about not driving to her house.
And we both ethically agreed that it was best
to not drive to her house.
Yeah, yeah, I think that's right.
And I mean, I think that like,
I just didn't wanna send a random non-transjournalist
talking on her door.
It was like, to be honest, like, when that had,
like that, like that's a whole different movie.
Like that's the movie of a trans person
in a moment of some of the most acute media-based transphobia
that this country has ever seen.
Like going to your house with a microphone,
like if I were that trans person,
I would be like, this person is from Fox News,
I'm about to get murdered, I would be like, this person is from Fox News. I'm about to get murdered.
I would be really scared.
So yeah, rather than be like, Hey, go put on all your like radio gear and do
like serial style door knock of this person, you know, like, and maybe we would have
done it if it was serial and we were investigating a actual murder.
But the stakes are not is this person unfairly imprisoned.
The stakes are like, who made this video tape?
Like, not even who made it, we know who made it.
Right, exactly.
It's more like, how do they feel?
Right, yeah, yeah, the stakes are,
how do you feel about this thing?
We never talked to Melanie.
Instead, to get some clues about how she might feel about Melanie's speaks, we turned to
an article she wrote in 1994, and we asked Carda Monier, a trans artist and performer,
to read some of Melanie's words.
Suddenly, I realized that all through transition, I had been telling everyone I met that I used
to be a guy.
I even carried an old photo of bearded man in my purse to whip out and shock people.
I enjoyed that.
To me it was a measurement of my success as to just how shocked they were.
Every time it happened, I felt so proud of myself, so accomplished, so special.
And therein lies the problem, if I based my specialness on having been a
man that man would always be a part of me. Melanie wondered if she needed to
forget her past entirely in order to move forward, but that wasn't quite it.
I didn't want to forget that I was a man. I wanted to forget what it felt like to
be a man. Melanie realized that every time she pulled out that old photo, she was bringing up those
feelings, so she decided to stop.
And I made a commitment to begin to lie.
No longer will I share my story with new friends, or acquaintances. There are some who will
find out, either by circumstance or from others, but they will not find out from me.
When I speak of my past, I will no longer temper the truth by saying,
when I was a child, but will bold-faced state,
when I was a little girl, and mean it.
Because, although it may be a lie in terms of logic,
it is God's honest truth in terms of logic. It is God's honest truth in terms of feelings.
Carta, the performer who read Melanie's words related to her feelings, even though they were recorded three decades ago. It feels like I'm sharing a version of my own experience, although obviously with
a lot of details changed. There are elements of the trans experience, especially
when it comes to wanting to be perceived as your proper gender that are fairly timeless and universal.
Cardicee's Melanie as an example of the ways trans women take care of each other,
especially when traditional resources fail them. I look at her and I say like, she is one woman
making video tapes and kind of setting them out into a void.
And like, in the tape, she says, like, I'm not a doctor.
I don't know if talking like this is going to hurt your voice long term.
I have no idea, you know?
And that's the feeling behind so much of trans stuff. Just like, this is what
works for me. I have no idea what it's going to, you know, like, don't ask me any more
questions. This is as much as I know.
Maybe for Melanie, producing her videotape was her way of saying, don't ask me any more
questions. This is as much as I know. Speaking to us for a podcast might have meant remembering
a part of her, she'd just as well
keep on forgetting.
Even when she made the video back in the 90s, Melanie was already hinting that the before
and after of transition just wasn't something she wanted to share anymore. get an idea of how I've changed. But after a while, I reached the point where that old role and that old persona is no longer a part of me
and no longer appropriate.
Sometimes the most powerful thing we can do with our voice
is stay quiet.
But in the midst of Melanie's silence,
hundreds of people who watched her tape back in the 1990s,
who passed it from woman to woman in their support groups
or sent a $20 check to an address they found in the margins of a community newsletter.
Those people found their voices.
And where do you do you sing in the shower?
Do you sing doing chores?
Here's Gwen Smith again.
Sing in the shower, sing doing chores, sing while working.
Have to sometimes make sure I'm not
if I'm on phone calls.
But yeah, I mean, music is omnipresent.
In her writing, Melanie wrestles with this desire
to leave her past behind.
She even calls it dishonest, saying,
I made a commitment to lie.
But she also says it was God's honest truth
to present herself as just another woman, living with her partner, enjoying long hikes,
and taking pictures of wildflowers. No one has to reveal all the parts of themself in order
to be authentic. But if we don't share artifacts like Melanie Speaks, a whole generation of queer
and trans people
won't know how their elders created community.
This was back in the days before trans people
could find each other on Pokemon Discord servers
or fighting about Marxism on Twitter
or wearing pronoun buttons at the farmer's market.
Trans people were already telling their own stories
30 years ago and long before that too.
It makes sense that Melanie herself might not want a linger in that period of trans history,
but we want to make sure the next generation has the choice to remember it.
And anyway, there's no way to fully erase the tape.
Even if the last copy breaks down over time, as all old tape eventually does,
Melanie's influence will endure. The advice and encouragement she gave will ripple down to future generations.
It already has.
This is Dallas Denny playing her original song, Dark Old Wind. It now then moves, it never tells us where it's never still.
How it once, how it will.
Sounds Gay is created and produced by me, Sarah Esacuff.
Our story editor is J.TT Green of Molten Hard.
Cassadair is our consulting producer, additional editing by Gianna Palmer.
Original music by Chris McCormick, mixing in sound design by Casey Holford,
fact checking by Serena Solen. Our program manager is Sam Termine.
Sounds Gay is a stichre studio's production and is executive produced by
Sarah Bentley, Bill Crandall, Jen Durwin, Mike Spanella, Camille Stanley, and myself.
You can find Sounds Gay on the serious XM app, Pandora, Stitcher, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you like to listen.
If you like the show, please rate, review, and share so other people can find us. That dark o'er.
More about voices with me and special guest, Roman Mars, after the break.
We're back.
And joining me in the studio is none other than Roman Mars. Hey, Roman.
Hey, Swan.
How you doing?
I'm doing great.
It's so nice to be a guest on 99% Invisible.
I enjoy it immensely.
Yeah, yeah.
You don't get to do that too often, I think.
Did you enjoy the episode?
I did.
I love this story.
And when I first heard it, I knew it would be good for us.
But I also knew that I wasn't the person to comment on it, that it only made sense if you hosted
the show. And I appreciate that. And I, I've really enjoyed hosting. And yeah, I, I really,
I really enjoyed the episode. There were a lot of things about it that, you know, that
did touch me and sort of like made me think a little differently and
like made me reflect on my own experience in a way that I appreciated.
Yeah, that's great.
And I think that something that really jumped out at me especially was that
part in the end about sisterhood, about how trans women take care of each
other when traditional resources fail them because Because that's all the time.
Like, you know, like I spend most of my time around other trans women.
And there are so many big and small roadblocks that were up against all the time.
And obviously there's like, you know, like, understanding that we can give each other
than no one else can.
But like, the queer community are also like the first to show
up for each other when we're facing things like job
discrimination and housing discrimination when we need, you
know, like, help recovering from surgery or money from surgery.
You know, it's like when insurance isn't covering stuff.
I mean, that's so nice to hear that that you all do. It's, it's so nice to hear that you all do.
It's always sad to hear that it's out of a kind of necessity
because no one else does.
But you take care of me, Ronald.
Thank you.
That wasn't a prompt, but I appreciate it.
No, I mean it.
I mean it.
Well, while we're sharing this sort of personal experience
and I was hoping that you could
share some of your voice training experience.
How did you navigate that yourself?
Yeah, I had insurance coverage for a speech-language pathologist.
And speech pathologists are doctors who work with patients who, you know, like have had like vocal hemorrhages or other
kinds of like neck injuries and stuff, you know, people with speech impediments and they,
you know, it's like it's speech therapy. And so, you know, some speech pathologists also take
on trans clients, women, men, non-binary, you know, to help them actualize their voices. But
and men non-binary, to help them actualize their voices. But the hangups that come with this is that this person
who was teaching me was a cis woman
and being corrected on my gender presentation vocal wise
or even being applauded for speaking
like quote more femininely by this cis woman.
While her authority is that she's a speech pathologist and she's commenting on this
process that we're undergoing, that dynamic of her being cis and commenting on how my gender is perceived.
I just can't help but resent that dynamic.
I mean, as well intention as that speech,
pathologist might have been,
that she was friendly and she was real nice.
It must have been really frustrating.
Because you want to connect with people who know
everything goes on to it,
not just like where your epiglottis is or something like that. Like you want a real sense that they understand
what you're going through. Yeah, because it's way more than just a physical process. It's
extremely a psychological process, but that's why it's so important that you have someone who really gets that aspect of it,
that psychological part of it, and then has care for it.
And so what is the equivalent today of the Melanie Speaks tape?
I've seen, actually, you present some of your voice training online.
And is there a bunch of that out there?
of your voice training online. And is there a bunch of that out there?
Yeah, I mean, there are a lot of like women who go through their processes.
And because of this age that we live in, you know, there's like this whole wide range
of like Melanie speaks type stuff going on all the time.
And I had a lot of friends to talk about this stuff with in Pokemon Discord servers, like the story mentioned,
in voice training Discord servers,
and on my Twitch channel, which I started,
because I sounded like fun to play video games for people
and hang out, but I'd also stream my voice practice
on my Twitch channel, like to keep me accountable. And to have people
tell me I'm hot, you know, like let's not get ourselves. Of course. And, you know, I'd go
through my voice exercises and I'd sing songs. And then I'd select something to read in
my stereotypy straight girl voice.
Like, for example, here, the screenplay from the Matrix.
What the hell do they want with me, Neo asks?
Mortpia says, I'm not sure.
But if you don't want to find out, you better get out of here.
Neo says, how?
I can guide you out.
But you have to do exactly what I say, like a good
girl.
He doesn't say that.
The agents are moving quickly.
That's great.
Especially using the matrix as the sort of like modern, uh, trans text of our time.
Mm-hmm.
Our godmother is the Wachowski sisters. Yeah. And ramen you might have noticed
that my voice sounds a little different there than it does right now. Yeah. And so it
not to be like the speech pathologist or some sort of curious, look-y-loot type of person
who's like not sensitive to these things. Explain that to me. Explain
to me, we're voice therapists, you're voice when you're speaking to me now.
I mean, part of it is that thing that Melanie says in the video about embodying a stereotype
was a large part of my process. And it's the kind of thing that it's like, all the while, I felt like a
little resentful of. But really the like stereotype woman voice, you know, the, my name means money.
Many more men than women on the moon. That kind of stuff is like, you know, my voice really changed because I was like
having fun with that and putting on this extreme. Yeah. And I was talking to a friend the
other day about this though, and her perspective on it that I that I really liked was she was
like, I mean, yeah, but that's that's what everyone does. That's like, you know, that's what we all do as little kids
is that we put on extreme versions of a voice
of like something we saw on TV or in a cartoon or something.
And we just kind of like, we mimic it,
we have fun with it, you know, and then our voices
set from many, many different things.
And it's just that like with voice stuff
that I started thinking about a lot because of my voice training and seeing like other people go through this
process is that like there's actually no voice that is you know uninfluenced by something.
And there's no voice that's fixed. Like there's no voice that doesn't change. I mean, you
know, the stakes are different individual experiences
are always different.
This is sort of the caveat we always have in this discussion.
But literally everyone on Earth has gone through
voice transitions, and they've navigated it
with a certain type of consciousness and subconsciousness.
But everyone's voice has changed over time,
and have chosen different paths for it to go on.
And it's just like, it's a universal thing that people go through.
Yeah.
Everybody makes these decisions consciously or unconsciously anyway.
And I mean, like, you know, Roman, I even recall hearing like an, you know, an old episode
like from like, you know, the start of like 99 PI and really just like being struck by how different your voice is from there to where it is now.
Yeah, I mean, it was a real,
I mean, it's sort of a mix of conscious,
and unconscious like you're saying, you know,
like if you go back and listen to old episodes,
you will notice the difference
and people have made me aware, but they notice the difference.
And I just have this job where I hear my voice all the time, notice the difference and people have made me aware, but they notice the difference.
And I just have this job where I hear my voice all the time,
so you naturally begin to craft the parts of it
that you find pleasing and you sort of like
lean into those parts.
And also working with a microphone is a very unnatural.
And so this thing is like four inches from my face.
Oh, but it's so fun.
I love it.
I love the sound of voices on a microphone,
but like it's very different
than navigating the world. I'm talking pretty softly. In the world, my voice has a little
bit more of a nasal register higher, just so it can get further than about three feet.
You know, funny to me how it's a little bit of both of those things. It's a little bit of me
thinking about it and trying to make the most pleasing sound possible with my voice because it's what I find subconsciously pleasing and what I get rewarded for for sounding
a certain way.
But also, I'm just older.
I'm like 20 years older.
It's kind of all those things together. It's this swirl of,
you know, conscious choices, unconscious choices, you know, the fact that my job is broadcasting,
you know, all those sort of things swirl together to create the voice that I have, which is a voice
that feels like me, even though parts of it are chosen. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, everybody makes choices.
It's, you know, and we choose the things
because of who we are, you know.
I think it's great. I mean, so much of what
that you're sort of trained for this
in broadcasting or acting is because
you are so used to the idea that you have to work very hard
to get to the point of being natural.
Because as soon as you're in front of people
and in front of a microphone,
it immediately makes things unnatural
and weird and nervous and stuff.
And so you have to do all this effort
to sound just like yourself.
And I think that there's a metaphor here.
I think that it's even more direct than a metaphor.
It's like, this is something that,
you know, that I got hung up on in my voice training
and that like most girls I know get hung up on
is like, you know, they're just like, is this my voice?
Like, do I sound natural doing this?
And it's like, you know, like, is it inauthentic
that I'm doing so much work to sound natural?
And it's like, no, this is normal.
This is just, this is part of, this is part of it.
It is part of the human condition.
To what you put on, what face you put on further.
People, what is part is you, how much of that is you
that goes into it.
I mean, it's just everyone should and can relate to all this.
It's just what it is to be a human in the world.
Yeah, it's so true.
And it's like not everyone could be literally in danger if they can't put on a certain voice
like out at the liquor store or whatever.
But that's something that I started thinking about a lot also and think about all the time
still is that my old voice before training is something that I chose.
And it's something that I chose out of fear.
Like I went through my first puberty. I have mixed feelings about that, but that's a different conversation.
But, you know, but so like, you know, I went through my first puberty and as my voice was shifting,
I made this very conscious effort to speak lower, to speak more staccato, to speak monotone.
And sort of like, you know, like a little, a little like
key part of, you know, my voice feminization training
was being like, oh, it's not that I'm learning
to speak like a girl.
It's that I'm unlearning the things
that I was doing out of fear. The things that I was just like that I worked
really hard at in order to be perceived a certain way, to keep me safe. And the way that I speak
now, there's a flow to it that I have found that feels a lot more natural. And that's just like, you know, that's all I want for anybody,
honestly.
Well, I'm so glad that you shared some of your experience about this and so glad that
we got to present this awesome documentary from SoundsK. So glad that you host the show
and I could be your guest. I love it. I had a really great time. Thank you, Roman. Thanks
for having me. What was the choice? You spent years on those boys. They said girls. They said girls. 99% Invisible was produced this week by me, Swan Rale, edited by Vivian Le, sound
mixed by Martín González, original music by me, Swan Rale, including this song called
Basic Girls.
You can find it wherever you stream music.
Special thanks this week to Mia Byrne, Jamele San Dodo Senai, Sororl, and V. Viana.
Our senior editor is Delaney Hall, Kurt Colstead is the digital director.
The rest of the team includes Chris Barubay, Jason De Leon, Emmett Fitzgerald, Christopher
Johnson, Lashemadon, Jacob Aldenado Medina, Kelly Prime, Joe Rosenberg, intern Anna Castanero,
and of course.
Me, Roman Mars.
We'd also like to welcome Kathy too to the team,
who is joining us as our new executive producer.
We are so excited to have you Kathy.
If you'd like to hear more stories like the one in this episode,
check out Sounds Gay.
Their first season is out now,
wherever you listen to podcasts.
It's seven episodes, and each episode is a deep dive
into a different queer music subculture.
There's one where Sarah and Cass go to a trans punk show.
There's one about a closeted Christian music star.
There's one about a lesbian rap battle feud.
Pick the one that most interests you
and as far as I'm concerned, all of them should interest you
and just go from there.
The 99% invisible logo was created by Stefan Lawrence.
We're part of the
Stitcher and Series XM podcast family now had quartered six blocks north in
the Pandora building in all together now. Beautiful. Uptown. Oakland, California.
You can find the show and join discussions about the show on Facebook. You can
tweet at me at Roman Mars and the show at 9-9-PI org or on Instagram, Reddit and TikTok too.
You can find links to other Stitcher shows I love as well as every past episode of 99PI at 99PI.org. Okay, I'm gonna do my warm-ups.
Sally's sister-streamed Stitcher shows on Sirius XM.
serious XM.