I have received an early Christmas present in terms of being able to be in Louisville breaking bread for the first time in a decade with my chosen family and friends.
And no, this time we're not having a turducken as we did one Thanksgiving, but then again I wouldn't be surprised it Dawn pulled one out of the oven for this dinner we're going to happily scarf down in few hours.
While I'm getting to spend the day (and this week) with my chosen family, and know I'll be spending Christmas with my blood family, I realize on this day I am blessed to do so. Most trans people go into the holidays not able to have holiday dinners with their families.
If you find yourself in that situation today, find your chosen family and break bread with them. If you're hosting a Thanksgiving dinner, hope that you take the opportunity to reach out to trans folks who are home for the holidays with no place to go.
In a few hours, I'll be engaging in another |cherished holiday tradition of hating on my favorite NFL turkeys, the Dallas Cowboys while I eat dinner and hoping they get carved up by the opposition.
Happy Turkey Day y'all
Showing posts with label Kentucky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kentucky. Show all posts
Thursday, November 28, 2019
Wednesday, November 27, 2019
Chilling In Louisville For The Holidays!
My not so secret anymore location for this holiday trip is Louisville.
It has been five years since my last visit to Da Ville and ten years since I last broke bread with my chosen family up here in Kentuckiana during Thanksgiving.
But it started with major airline drama. After my nonstop flight took off on time from Hobby Monday morning, about 160 miles out from Houston there was an indicator light in the cockpit of an issue that while it wasn't dangerous and wouldn't impede us from safely landing, it did necessitate us turning around, flying lazy circles over east Texas to burn excess fuel, and returning to Houston Hobby.
We were walking off our now grounded plane at Hobby at the 12:45 CST time I would have arrived in Louisville.
Fortunately they had another 737-700 aircraft waiting for us across the hall from my return arrival gate at C-44 and we swiftly boarded it. I was majorly happy I'd gotten my aisle seat in 3C back.
They brought it back to Houston because there's a Southwest maintenance base there, and they would rather deal with it there than have the plane stuck in Louisville canceling a trip it was supposed to do to Dallas Love Field
To add to my drama, after I called to let Dawn and Polar know that I was going to be two hours late, my beloved LG K10 smart phone I had received as a birthday present three years ago from Nikki Araguz Loyd, finally died after I boarded the new plane.
That meant I now had to get a new phone when I arrived in Da Ville, because there's no way I could walk around Louisville for a week without one.
So I arrive in Louisville around 4 PM EST at Muhammad Ali International Airport, I get my bag, and we grab something to eat because at this point the only thing I've had to eat is two bags of peanuts.
I handle the new phone business, but discover to my horror they can't transfer my phone contact list, and the cloud update didn't have all the numbers that I've input into that phone over the three years I've owned it.
And I now have to not only download my critical apps, I now have to remember what password I used when I signed up for the app. I also have to get acclimated to working my new LG Stylo phone.
Nevertheless despite the drama, I made it to Da Vilee and Dawn's crib in one piece, and I'm now hanging out with my Louisville fam that did stay here for the holiday.
And I also received a $100 LUV travel certificate to use on Southwest next year for my trouble
It has been five years since my last visit to Da Ville and ten years since I last broke bread with my chosen family up here in Kentuckiana during Thanksgiving.
But it started with major airline drama. After my nonstop flight took off on time from Hobby Monday morning, about 160 miles out from Houston there was an indicator light in the cockpit of an issue that while it wasn't dangerous and wouldn't impede us from safely landing, it did necessitate us turning around, flying lazy circles over east Texas to burn excess fuel, and returning to Houston Hobby.
We were walking off our now grounded plane at Hobby at the 12:45 CST time I would have arrived in Louisville.
Fortunately they had another 737-700 aircraft waiting for us across the hall from my return arrival gate at C-44 and we swiftly boarded it. I was majorly happy I'd gotten my aisle seat in 3C back.
They brought it back to Houston because there's a Southwest maintenance base there, and they would rather deal with it there than have the plane stuck in Louisville canceling a trip it was supposed to do to Dallas Love Field
To add to my drama, after I called to let Dawn and Polar know that I was going to be two hours late, my beloved LG K10 smart phone I had received as a birthday present three years ago from Nikki Araguz Loyd, finally died after I boarded the new plane.
That meant I now had to get a new phone when I arrived in Da Ville, because there's no way I could walk around Louisville for a week without one.
So I arrive in Louisville around 4 PM EST at Muhammad Ali International Airport, I get my bag, and we grab something to eat because at this point the only thing I've had to eat is two bags of peanuts.
I handle the new phone business, but discover to my horror they can't transfer my phone contact list, and the cloud update didn't have all the numbers that I've input into that phone over the three years I've owned it.
And I now have to not only download my critical apps, I now have to remember what password I used when I signed up for the app. I also have to get acclimated to working my new LG Stylo phone.
Nevertheless despite the drama, I made it to Da Vilee and Dawn's crib in one piece, and I'm now hanging out with my Louisville fam that did stay here for the holiday.
And I also received a $100 LUV travel certificate to use on Southwest next year for my trouble
Tuesday, September 24, 2019
Matt Bevin Dipping Into The GOP Transphobic Playbook
Matt Bevin (R) is polling at historic lows for a Kentucky governor, and is trailing Kentucky Democratic AG Andy Beshear in the governor's race that will be decided in a few weeks.
So what does the GOP do when they have no governmental accomplishments to run on and their candidate is majorly unpopular?
Deploy the transphobia.
The SuperPAC campaign Fore American Principles deployed the ad aimed at Beshear which features a male actor running a race against female athletes.
Bevin's campaign predictably had no comment about the transphobic ad, but Chris Hartman, the ED of the Kentucky Fairness Campaign definitely did.
The Beshear campaign issued a statement that also tore Bevin a new anus over the transphobic ad.
Is November 5 here yet so my Kentucky peeps can fire Matt Bevin?
So what does the GOP do when they have no governmental accomplishments to run on and their candidate is majorly unpopular?
Deploy the transphobia.
The SuperPAC campaign Fore American Principles deployed the ad aimed at Beshear which features a male actor running a race against female athletes.
Bevin's campaign predictably had no comment about the transphobic ad, but Chris Hartman, the ED of the Kentucky Fairness Campaign definitely did.
"'Ads like this coming out of Washington DC think tanks, that have no grounding in reality, are the types of things that ruin our elections," said Hartman.
"I hope, I believe that the people of Kentucky will prove that this type of political fear-mongering out of Washington DC, just doesn't work here, back home, where we deal with things on a local level," Hartman added.
The Beshear campaign issued a statement that also tore Bevin a new anus over the transphobic ad.
"This is a shameful and false attack from a shady group that will lead to bullying of our kids. Andy opposes discrimination. Matt Bevin is an unhinged failure who is hurting our students by seeking to tear down public education. He even blamed teachers, without evidence, for the sexual abuse of children.”
Is November 5 here yet so my Kentucky peeps can fire Matt Bevin?
Labels:
Kentucky,
politics,
transphobia,
wedge issues
Monday, February 12, 2018
TransGriot Perv Watch- Kentucky Fried GOP Predator
As of this moment the GOP controlled Kentucky legislature is attempting to pass HB 326 an anti-trans bill once again aimed at school kids
But if they are looking for the real predators, the Kentucky Republican Party needs to look in their own ranks for them because the predators you're looking for are #StillNotTrans
But we have overwhelming evidence of republican Party officials or legislators doing kinky things in public bathrooms or doing the things they screech at others not to do. .
The latest example of a GOP predator being busted for his crimes is in the state of Kentucky.
71 year old former Campbell County District Judge Timothy Nolan has pleaded guilty to numerous felony charges that included human trafficking of adults, promoting human trafficking of minors and unlawful transaction with minors.
He was indicted on 28 felony counts and two misdemeanor counts, but as part of a plea deal with Atty General Andy Beshear (D) Special Prosecutions Division, Nolan pleaded guilty to 21 counts against 19 victims for crimes that occurred between 2010 and 2017.
One of those crimes was coercing a child under age 18 to engage in commercial sexual activity
Nolan was an enthusiastic voice for the Tea Party on many local issues and a local campaigner for Donald Trump. Nolan was elected to the Campbell County School Board in 2016
Prosecutors recommended sentences totaling 20 years plus a $100,000 fine Nolan is being held in the Campbell County Detention center pending sentencing, which is scheduled to occur on March 29.
But we have overwhelming evidence of republican Party officials or legislators doing kinky things in public bathrooms or doing the things they screech at others not to do. .
The latest example of a GOP predator being busted for his crimes is in the state of Kentucky.
71 year old former Campbell County District Judge Timothy Nolan has pleaded guilty to numerous felony charges that included human trafficking of adults, promoting human trafficking of minors and unlawful transaction with minors.
He was indicted on 28 felony counts and two misdemeanor counts, but as part of a plea deal with Atty General Andy Beshear (D) Special Prosecutions Division, Nolan pleaded guilty to 21 counts against 19 victims for crimes that occurred between 2010 and 2017.
One of those crimes was coercing a child under age 18 to engage in commercial sexual activity
Nolan was an enthusiastic voice for the Tea Party on many local issues and a local campaigner for Donald Trump. Nolan was elected to the Campbell County School Board in 2016
Prosecutors recommended sentences totaling 20 years plus a $100,000 fine Nolan is being held in the Campbell County Detention center pending sentencing, which is scheduled to occur on March 29.
Labels:
Kentucky,
legal/justice,
TransGriot Perv Watch
Monday, June 05, 2017
Congrats Niece and Nephew For 200 Strange Fruit Shows!
One of the things I got to do when I took my 2014 Labor Day weekend vacation trip back to Louisville was head to the WFPL-FM studios in downtown Louisville to record an episode of Strange Fruit.
Strange Fruit in this case is the talk show and podcast hosted by Dr. Kaila Story and Jaison Gardiner, AKA known as Niece and Nephew to moi, that on a weekly basis discusses politics, pop culture and Black gay life.
And yeah, definitely need to show their wonderful producer Laura Ellis some love as well. So far I've been on Strange Fruit twice, with the 2014 studio appearance being the last time I was on it.
Been a little busy since September 2014 and so have they. Niece has gotten married since then and has her women and gender studies associate professor teaching gig at the University of Louisville to keep her busy.
And she was just named to the 2017 NBC Out #Pride30 list.
I did get to see and spend some quality time with Niece and Nephew when I went to Da Ville for my vacation last year.
They will be celebrating this upcoming broadcasting milestone of 200 shows on June 21 with a live taping and party.
Congrats Niece and Nephew for 200 amazing Strange Fruit shows! Thank you for not only inviting me to be a part of it and getting the chance to speak to you Fruitcakes (the nickname for their listeners) but for educating, entertaining and informing your WFPL-FM listeners and those who enjoy it via podcast for the last several years. .
May Strange Fruit continue its high standard of radio broadcast excellence in discussing the issues of importance to our community, and make it to the next broadcasting milestone of 300 shows.
Labels:
Kentucky,
Louisville,
milestones,
radio,
radio podcast
Saturday, March 11, 2017
20 Years To The 'F' On My License
One of the necessary tasks that we embark on during a gender transition is changing our identity documents to make them match the person we are. It is a costly and time consuming process to get the name, gender markers and other identity documents changed, and how fast it happens depends in large part on how much money you have in your wallet or purse to do so.
When I started my transition in 1994, money wasn't a problem. I was an airline employee making a nice living, so it was just a matter of getting the process started and if I incurred fees for doing so, reaching into my purse, pulling out my wallet and pulling out the cash to cover it.
But I also didn't think at the time I started the process it would take me nearly 20 years and living in two states to complete it.
I started with getting my Social Security card changed in 1998 since it is pretty much next to your drivers license a de facto national ID card. While the Social Security Administration won't change the SSN number for numerous reasons, they will change the gender marker and name on it.
Since Clinton was president when I did so, it was a no drama situation. During GW Bush's presidency, a problem arose with the SSA starting in 2002 to send 'No Match' letters that had the effect of outing trans people to their employers.
My next task was my Texas voter registration card. I was determined to be voting in the upcoming 2000 presidential election as Moni, and I successfully completed that in October 2000 just a month before that election. .Little did I know at the time that less than three months after I got that voter registration changed that I would be bounced from that airline job I'd been at for 14 years and was planning to retire from.
It was a seismic change to my life and my finances, and I now had to adjust to making half of the $40K a year I was making. While I was upset about it at the time, the September 2001 move to Louisville produced an unexpected blessing that happened two weeks after I moved there.
In Kentucky the name change process in Jefferson County where I now lived was a simple, one page administrative form in which I filled out the info, swore it was accurate and true, and when I was done signed it and paid my then $10 fee. It was then mailed to me a few days later stamped and signed by the court.
However, while my name now was officially Monica, the only way the gender marker was getting changed under Kentucky law at the time was if I had a 'gender altering surgery'. Because of my loss of the airline job and using the money I'd saved for surgery to pay bills in the six months I was unemployed in Texas prior to the move to Kentucky, SRS had now become a back burner luxury item
I knew I was going to need to change my birth certificate and file the name change I'd received in Kentucky back in Texas, but that also got put on the back burner as I spent time getting adjusted to my life in Da Ville and dealing with far less discretionary income in my bank account.
I moved back to Houston in May 2010 to help take care of my grandmother, but that still meant that my income was limited to deal with the paperwork issue. I still had my Kentucky drivers license in my possession that wasn't expiring until June 2013 with correct name but wrong gender marker, but my Texas voter registration was correct.
But two events in June 2013 would galvanize me to get serious about completing my documentation and infuse it with a sense of urgency. The unjust ruling in the Shelby vs Holder SCOTUS case gutting Section 4 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act meant that the unjust Texas voter suppression law could be enforced, and if I wanted to vote in the upcoming November Houston city elections, I now needed a Texas drivers license.
We also had a family reunion coming up in Denver in June, when my Kentucky license was scheduled to expire. That process to simply renew my license in the time I'd been away from Texas had been made more difficult by our Texas GOP majority and it took me nine months to get my Texas drivers license. I also spent a very nervous trip every time it was my turn to get behind the wheel on our 1700 mile drive to that reunion that took us across Texas through Dallas, Oklahoma, Kansas and eastern Colorado to get to Denver and back
The urgency to have the Texas driver's license in my possession before the November Houston mayoral election did force me to get moving on filing my Kentucky name change in Austin. I ended up as a result of that nine month Lone Star bureaucracy battle with a new Texas birth certificate and a TDL with correct name but incorrect gender markers.
But it was a driver's license I didn't receive until two months after the election in January 2014, which meant I was voter suppressed out of it..
Fast forward to the 2016 election, the next event that ratcheted up my concern for finishing the process I'd started in 1998. Because I'm a frequent flier, I was also getting tired of showing my mismatched ID at TSA security and other locations and getting jacked up at times because of it.
But as a native Texan, I was going to need to go to court to change that gender marker, and in Harris County, many of our judges are Republicans who routinely deny name changes to trans people. Thanks to the blue wave that swept many of those regressive Harris County GOP judges out of office and replaced them with diverse Democratic judges, I hope that reprehensible pattern changes.
But it still costs money to make that name and gender marker process happen, and here's where another unexpected blessing happened that got me closer to completing that process.
The Trans National Alliance held a New Year's Eve Great Gatsby themed fundraiser party at Nikki Araguz Loyd's home in which the TNA was raising money to do name changes for trans people who are on limited incomes.
They raised enough money at that fundraiser to fund two name changes, and I was shocked and surprised to find out moments after we counted down the start of 2017 that I would be one of the people receiving that name change assistance along with Dee Dee Watters.
Two weeks ago Nikki, Dee Dee and I rolled to Austin. We made happen in the span of five hours getting Dee Dee's name and gender marker change process started, getting me fingerprinted at a nearby Passport Express location from the courthouse, the court order for the gender marker change, getting the request for my new corrected birth certificate submitted, and taking the photo for my new Texas drivers license with the only 'F' I've ever wanted at an Austin DPS office.
And before heading back to Houston, we celebrated the accomplishment while waiting for ATX rush hour traffic to die down with dinner.
Transgender National Alliance is having a dinner and drag bingo fundraiser on March 14 at Hamburger Mary's, so check it out, reserve a table and help TNA raise some money to make happen for other trans people with their identity documents what happened for me and Dee Dee.
Yesterday I received my new birth certificate and Texas driver's license in the mail. I cried joyful tears when I pulled them out of their respective envelopes and saw my full name with the 'F' and 'female' in the gender marker box on both documents.
Have a trip coming up at the end of the month to Orlando for the LGBT Media Journalists convening, and can't wait to show my drivers license to airline employees, TSA security and hotel desk personnel without having a sense of dread or acute embarrassment happening when I reluctantly pull it out of my wallet.
Now it's just getting my passport so I can finally do some international travel and some other records, and the journey will be complete. But the major mountain in terms of my identity documents has been climbed. .
It was a long journey to get to this point full of twists, turns, frustration and drama, but seeing and knowing that my documents finally line up with the person I know I am and the world sees me as is priceless.
.
When I started my transition in 1994, money wasn't a problem. I was an airline employee making a nice living, so it was just a matter of getting the process started and if I incurred fees for doing so, reaching into my purse, pulling out my wallet and pulling out the cash to cover it.
But I also didn't think at the time I started the process it would take me nearly 20 years and living in two states to complete it.
I started with getting my Social Security card changed in 1998 since it is pretty much next to your drivers license a de facto national ID card. While the Social Security Administration won't change the SSN number for numerous reasons, they will change the gender marker and name on it.
Since Clinton was president when I did so, it was a no drama situation. During GW Bush's presidency, a problem arose with the SSA starting in 2002 to send 'No Match' letters that had the effect of outing trans people to their employers.
My next task was my Texas voter registration card. I was determined to be voting in the upcoming 2000 presidential election as Moni, and I successfully completed that in October 2000 just a month before that election. .Little did I know at the time that less than three months after I got that voter registration changed that I would be bounced from that airline job I'd been at for 14 years and was planning to retire from.
It was a seismic change to my life and my finances, and I now had to adjust to making half of the $40K a year I was making. While I was upset about it at the time, the September 2001 move to Louisville produced an unexpected blessing that happened two weeks after I moved there.
In Kentucky the name change process in Jefferson County where I now lived was a simple, one page administrative form in which I filled out the info, swore it was accurate and true, and when I was done signed it and paid my then $10 fee. It was then mailed to me a few days later stamped and signed by the court.
However, while my name now was officially Monica, the only way the gender marker was getting changed under Kentucky law at the time was if I had a 'gender altering surgery'. Because of my loss of the airline job and using the money I'd saved for surgery to pay bills in the six months I was unemployed in Texas prior to the move to Kentucky, SRS had now become a back burner luxury item
I knew I was going to need to change my birth certificate and file the name change I'd received in Kentucky back in Texas, but that also got put on the back burner as I spent time getting adjusted to my life in Da Ville and dealing with far less discretionary income in my bank account.
I moved back to Houston in May 2010 to help take care of my grandmother, but that still meant that my income was limited to deal with the paperwork issue. I still had my Kentucky drivers license in my possession that wasn't expiring until June 2013 with correct name but wrong gender marker, but my Texas voter registration was correct.
But two events in June 2013 would galvanize me to get serious about completing my documentation and infuse it with a sense of urgency. The unjust ruling in the Shelby vs Holder SCOTUS case gutting Section 4 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act meant that the unjust Texas voter suppression law could be enforced, and if I wanted to vote in the upcoming November Houston city elections, I now needed a Texas drivers license.
We also had a family reunion coming up in Denver in June, when my Kentucky license was scheduled to expire. That process to simply renew my license in the time I'd been away from Texas had been made more difficult by our Texas GOP majority and it took me nine months to get my Texas drivers license. I also spent a very nervous trip every time it was my turn to get behind the wheel on our 1700 mile drive to that reunion that took us across Texas through Dallas, Oklahoma, Kansas and eastern Colorado to get to Denver and back
The urgency to have the Texas driver's license in my possession before the November Houston mayoral election did force me to get moving on filing my Kentucky name change in Austin. I ended up as a result of that nine month Lone Star bureaucracy battle with a new Texas birth certificate and a TDL with correct name but incorrect gender markers.
But it was a driver's license I didn't receive until two months after the election in January 2014, which meant I was voter suppressed out of it..
Fast forward to the 2016 election, the next event that ratcheted up my concern for finishing the process I'd started in 1998. Because I'm a frequent flier, I was also getting tired of showing my mismatched ID at TSA security and other locations and getting jacked up at times because of it.
But it still costs money to make that name and gender marker process happen, and here's where another unexpected blessing happened that got me closer to completing that process.
The Trans National Alliance held a New Year's Eve Great Gatsby themed fundraiser party at Nikki Araguz Loyd's home in which the TNA was raising money to do name changes for trans people who are on limited incomes.
They raised enough money at that fundraiser to fund two name changes, and I was shocked and surprised to find out moments after we counted down the start of 2017 that I would be one of the people receiving that name change assistance along with Dee Dee Watters. Two weeks ago Nikki, Dee Dee and I rolled to Austin. We made happen in the span of five hours getting Dee Dee's name and gender marker change process started, getting me fingerprinted at a nearby Passport Express location from the courthouse, the court order for the gender marker change, getting the request for my new corrected birth certificate submitted, and taking the photo for my new Texas drivers license with the only 'F' I've ever wanted at an Austin DPS office.
And before heading back to Houston, we celebrated the accomplishment while waiting for ATX rush hour traffic to die down with dinner.
Transgender National Alliance is having a dinner and drag bingo fundraiser on March 14 at Hamburger Mary's, so check it out, reserve a table and help TNA raise some money to make happen for other trans people with their identity documents what happened for me and Dee Dee.
Yesterday I received my new birth certificate and Texas driver's license in the mail. I cried joyful tears when I pulled them out of their respective envelopes and saw my full name with the 'F' and 'female' in the gender marker box on both documents.
Have a trip coming up at the end of the month to Orlando for the LGBT Media Journalists convening, and can't wait to show my drivers license to airline employees, TSA security and hotel desk personnel without having a sense of dread or acute embarrassment happening when I reluctantly pull it out of my wallet.
Now it's just getting my passport so I can finally do some international travel and some other records, and the journey will be complete. But the major mountain in terms of my identity documents has been climbed. .
It was a long journey to get to this point full of twists, turns, frustration and drama, but seeing and knowing that my documents finally line up with the person I know I am and the world sees me as is priceless.
.
Labels:
gender identity,
identification,
Kentucky,
Moni's musings,
Texas
Friday, December 02, 2016
25 Things I Miss About Louisville
TransGriot's early years were focused on my Texan in Exile life in Louisville, and while living there and feeling homesick in 2007, I wrote a post about the 25 things I missed about Houston.
From time to time I've written about how much I miss Louisville, and certain events and dates will trigger another flood of memories of life in as the right wing haters call it, 'Sodom on the Ohio'.
Note to those haters: don't diss the town that provides much of your state's tax revenue when people come to visit it and Lexington for starters and not your backwoods idiocy.
I'm now approaching the same six year period it has been since I drove the moving van onto I-65 south four days after my birthday in May 2010 and headed back to the Lone Star State.
In the nearly nine years I lived there, Da Ville grew on me to the point where I not only made friends there in addition to the ones I had who lived there prior to my September 2001 move, but I grew to appreciate some of Kentucky's charms.
Bardstown Road Aglow happening tomorrow is also triggering I miss Da Ville memories for me as well, so I decided to write a post similar to the 2007 one I wrote, but this time focusing on Louisville.
Here are the 25 things I miss about Louisville besides my chosen family up there.
1. Dawne Gee
Dawne Gee is a native Louisvillian who is one of the 5 and 7 PM newscast anchors at WAVE-3 TV. WAVE 3 is the NBC affiliate there and it became one of my local news stations I frequently watched thanks to large part to meeting her.
I met her when I was working at Macy's and she was looking for Christmas gifts for her son Alex. We kept bumping into each other either at the store or at local charity events like the AIDS Walk or others around town and became friends as a result.
You have to also admire someone like Dawne who has two degrees (in communications and biology), applied three times at WAVE-3 before she finally got that job there in 1994 and quickly ascended to anchoring their local newscasts , beat cancer and just survived an on air stroke.
Speedy healing and recovery, Dawne.
And yeah, I also love her because she's a Taurus and our birthdays are just four days apart.
1A. Angie Fenton
I'd actually run into Angie before I finally met her. I was attending a local TBLGQ Derby Party at The Olmstead in 2003 that she was covering for the Courier-Journal while stylishly dressed in a pink skirted suit with matching pumps and a pink Derby hat.
We didn't meet that day, but our paths would eventually cross again.
She's also a local media icon in print and television, does segments on WHAS-TV's Great Day Live in addition to being editor in chief at Extol magazine, a motivational speaker, and mom to her daughter Olive..
So how did I meet this amazing woman? It was in 2005 when she wrote a Courier-Journal article about the local trans community that featured me and Dawn Wilson in it. Both of us moved to Da Ville from other places, so we had that in common along with our mutual love of writing.
2. Impellizzeri's Pizza
One of the Louisville specific food outlets that I got introduced to before I moved there. Love their pizza and especially their breadsticks and the garlic butter you can dip them in.
3. 'Niece and Nephew'
AKA Dr. Kaila Story-Jackson and Jaison Gardiner, the broadcast team at WFPL-FM's. Strange Fruit radio show. In her day job Kaila is the Audre Lorde Chair in Race, Class Gender and Sexuality Studies at the University of Louisville and teaches women and gender and Pan-African studies there.
I've spent more than a few times while I lived there as a panelist in Kaila's class or at other events coordinated by her on the U of L campus when I lived there talking about trans issues from a POC perspective.
Jaison I met as part of the Fairness Campaign crew, and he's involved in Black Lives Matter and other progressive causes.
Jaison is also the one who started calling me Auntie Monica, so I used to call him Nephew in response. When he and Kaila started doing Strange Fruit, she became Niece
4. Indi's
Every city has a local food chain that is unique to it, and in Louisville, that is Indi' s.
There are only three Indi's locations in Da Ville, so that meant I had to drive to get to them since the closest location to my east side Crescent Hill neighborhood was in the West End on Broadway just west of downtown. But the food was worth the trip
It is quintessentially Louisville and quickly became one of my fave places. I loved their monster potato wedges and chicken, and would happily devour their wings.. Their spicy recipe one will definitely make someone from New Orleans happy and they have a wide variety of side dishes
The prices you pay for that food isn't bad either, but they only accept cash for it.
5. Louisville Fencing Center
When Dawn began to get involved in competitive fencing, that's when much of the fencing world entered my life, including Maestro Les Stawicki, the legendary fencing coach who not only was the Polish national and Olympic coach from 1972-1990, but trains the US Paralympic Games fencers.
I got to meet many of the wonderful people connected to LFC and other fencing salles in the Louisville and Kentucky region along with many of the Veteran fencers, referees and others in the USFA Great Lakes Region . It's also how I met Olympian Lee Kiefer and her family. Ken and Angela Hagen, Linda Dunn, Tom Monarch, 'The Baby Vets' AKA the Vet 40 fencers, The Senior Mamas' AKA the Vet 50 fencers and Lou Felty just to name a few.
It also taught me a lesson in first impressions. I didn't think I had an impact on anyone since I was there simply to support my friend, but others disagreed. There was also a junior tournament that was held in Louisville while I was there in which I served as the MC of it. Some of the parents and kids who were in attendance or participated in it still ask about me years later.
When I went to visit LFC, I also got a big hug from Maestro Stawicki ,Tom and everyone who remembered me
6. Edenside Christian Church
I definitely missed 'slllliiiiiiiiding into Edenside' after I left, because it was my open and affirming church home during my time in Da Ville, It was part of the Disciples of Christ denomination, and it was one of the places in which I first started to meet people after I moved there.
I loved its social justice mission, the AIDS services, participating as a worship leader, being part of Bardstown Road Aglow, the jazz concerts and it being a century old. One of the first events I participated in mere days after I moved there was an AIDS Walk
Sadly it closed after 106 years of service to the Highland community, and I couldn't make it up there for the final service in that building..
7. Rev. Sally McClain
Rev Sally was one of the first people I met after I arrived in Louisville, and you have to love a minter who not only has a gregarious personality, it's combined with a formidable intellect and a wicked sense of humor.
Her male theological counterparts on The Moral Side Of the News show that she was a panelist on found out quickly about that formidable intellect.
I loved the stuffed Cartman doll on her church office bookshelf, and I also love the fact that Rev. Sally's sermons were to the point. She could say in 10 to 15 minutes what would take the average Baptist preacher hours to do.
She's now retired, but is still a panelist on The Moral Side of the News giving the boys fits.
8. Fairness Campaign
That building on Frankfort Avenue which is the home of Louisville and Kentucky's premier TBLGQ organization was the epicenter of my Louisville activism. I did phone banks in it. taught Lobbying 101 to rookie activists, did candidate screenings there and attended many meetings in its walls when I served on the Fairness Campaign board and its C-FAIR PAC board as its secretary
I also was a finalist to become the head of the Fairness Campaign, which unfortunately I didn't get.
The time I spent with Fairness folks was instrumental in me becoming and being a better advocate when I returned home, and still have much love for the Fairness peeps I met there.
9. The Cards vs Cats hatefest
One of the questions I was asked that I deflected with the comment "I like both" until I pointed the moving van south was which one of Kentucky's universities was I a fan of in either the Louisville Cardinals or the Kentucky Wildcats.
The Cards-Cats hatefest is the University of Texas-Texas A&M rivalry on steroids. The schools are only 60 miles apart on I-64 in Louisville and Lexington, play in different conferences (SEC and ACC), but they reflect the culture of their cities and their rabid fan bases.
I used to get a chuckle out of watching peeps on both sides try to repeatedly recruit me to Cats or Cards Nation as they threw shady insults at each other. I had friends in both Cats and Cards Nation, and it was entertaining to me watching their reactions when UK and U of L played each other.
You can bet that no matter what sport they play, the game, especially if it's their annual post-Christmas basketball showdown, will be sold out at either The Yum Center or Rupp Arena and the trash talking will go on until next year's game, at family picnics and other events..
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10, The drives to nearby cities
One of the benefits of living in Louisville was because of its geographic location on the Ohio River on the Indiana-Kentucky border and sitting at the junction of I-64, I-65 and I-71, I gained the ability to do road trips to nearby cities in the Midwest, South and East Coast from there
Louisville was only an hour from Lexington, 1.5 hours from Indianapolis and Cincinnati, 2 hours from Nashville, 3 hours from Columbus and St Louis, 5 hours from Memphis and Chicago, 6 hours from Atlanta, 7 hours to Charlotte, Cleveland ,and Milwaukee. and 10 hours to Washington DC, Baltimore and Philadelphia
There were more than a few road trips I took with Dawn, Polar and other folks, some of which I talked about on the blog
11. KingFish
Another one of my fave places to eat in Louisville that was unique to the city. It's a seafood restaurant, and I used to love the location on River Road that had views of the Ohio River from its dining room and the barges gliding by as you dined
12. Derby Week
In the runup to the Kentucky Oaks and the Kentucky Derby, there is a multiweek festival chock full of events that is kicked off by the massive Thunder over Louisville fireworks show and a military airshow during the day over the river.
I also like the Kentucky Derby because every few years, it falls on my birthday. It was apropos that the 2002 Derby, the first one I got to witness as a Louisville resident, also fell on my 40th birthday.
In addition to the parades and balls, you had celebrities flying into town for the Oaks and Derby and all the parties and balls hosted by various people and organizations in venues all over Louisville..
One of the major ones happened mere blocks from where I used to live. Priscilla Barnstable Brown (one of the 1970's Doublemint gum twins who were both from Da Ville) hosts a Derby party that draws Hollywood celebrities and local celeb watchers
Even our local TBLGQ community had our own party that used to happen before and during the Derby, but got shifted to the later evening.
13. Crescent Hill
It's the neighborhood I lived in from late 2003 until I moved back home, and I lived on Grinstead Drive across the street from the odious Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.
Besides the negative of waking up and flipping the finger at the transphobic seminary that was outside and across the street from my upstairs bedroom window, I was around the corner from the Crescent Hill Reservoir, the library, all those amazing restaurants, coffeehouses and shops on Frankfort Avenue. I also had some cool neighbors like the Burchfield's. The best part was I was in walking distance of a Walgreen's that sold Blue Bell.
14. Louisville Slugger Field
Louisville's Triple A baseball stadium that was on the river in the shadow of downtown and I-65 and the home of the Louisville Bats, the Cincinnati Reds farm club.
It's named for the Louisville Slugger bat, which is manufactured a few blocks west of the ballpark. It has an amazing museum and tour of the facility in which upon its conclusion you get a mini Slugger bat
But don't take that mini bat in your carryon luggage. It is considered a weapon and WILL get snatched by TSA security at the airport.
Went to a few Bats games while I lived there and did get to see Joey Votto and Aroldis Chapman play there before they headed up I-71 to play for the Reds.
Slugger Field will be the host of this year's (I consider 2017 this year) ACC Baseball tournament that got relocated because of HB 2. Mayor Fischer and the city of Louisville thank you for that and all the bonus tax money they'll get for hosting it, Pat McCrory.
15. Rep. John Yarmuth
My congressman for the remaining time I lived in Da Ville who snatched the seat from Rep. AnneThrowup, Northup (R-KY).
Until 2006, Northup managed to keep her seat in heavily Democratic Louisville by hoodwinking and bamboozling fools at two Black megachurches (St Stephen and Canaan) and several sellout ministers into thinking she was a human rights warrior when that 'F' on her NAACP Congressional Report card said otherwise.
Those hoodwinked Black voters were the difference in many of her wins in the 10 years she managed to hold that centered on Louisville congressional seat.
Yarmuth founded and owned the alternative weekly the Louisville Eccentric Observer, AKA the LEO, and was a relentless critic of Northrup before he ousted her from that congressional seat.
He donates his congressional salary to local liberal progressive organizations, and I had more than a few conversations and positive interactions with him before I came home
16. The Highlands
The first Louisville neighborhood I lived in and loved because it was diverse and like Crescent Hill had a nice mix of shops and businesses. I also loved the fact (but my waistline didn't) I had a Dairy Queen, KFC, Arby's, a 24 hour Mickey D's, Speedway and Buffalo Wild Wings and restaurants in walking distance of the old house.
17. Bardstown Road Aglow
The neighborhood festival along the Bardstown Road corridor in the Highlands that kicks off the Christmas season. It happens the first Saturday of December rain. snow or shine. Businesses, organizations and churches open their doors to the folks walking up and down the road as carolers and vendors handled their business.
What Edenside would do is open our door and offer hot cider, Christmas cookies and other snacks.
DJ Moni spinning Christmas tunes with soul came later.
18. Kizito's Cookies
I got introduced to this delightful treat before I moved there in September 2001, and lived next door for two years to their creator in Ugandan born Elizabeth Kizito.
'The Cookie Lady' as Kizito is known in Da Ville, came to the US in 1975 to attend school, and moved to Louisville in 1978.
In addition to this award winning businesswoman selling African crafts out of her Bardstown Road store that is also the bakery for their wide assortment of baked goods, she sold them at Slugger Field, the St James Art Festival, the Derby Festival and other events around town while wearing a basket full of her delicious treats on her head.
She started the cookie business in 1987, and now 30 years later Kizito's treats are now sold in stores all over Louisville and online.
That reminds me, need to order some more snickerdoodles and chocolate chip ones.
19. University of Louisville and the LGBT Center
While I'm still waiting for that opportunity to be tapped as a keynote speaker for U of L's Pride Week (hint, hint), I did get a few opportunities to be either part of panels or attend events on their campus in the time I lived there.
Got to know Brian Buford, who is the head of the LGBT Center, law professor Sam Marcosson, who I had some interesting discussion with during my time there and actually did a panel with in the wake of the 2008 election. Y'all already know I have much love and respect for Dr Story, and miss the late Dr. Blaine Hudson, who I loved as a historian and who got me up to speed on my Louisville Black history, I also got to witness while I was there U of L take the steps it did to become one of the most LGBTQ freindly campuses in the South and get much deserved recognition for it.
20. The Louisville trans community
Some of you longtime TransGriot readers have seen my posts about my award winning roommate trans leader, and homegirl Dawn Wilson, who was responsible along with Polar for getting me to move there instead of the ATL and is now a human rights commissioner in the city.
She and Polar also took time out of their lives to come to Houston and help me move there, and a contingent of Louisville community trans folks was there when I arrived to help me move into the old Grinstead house in the Cave Hill Cemetery curve and welcome me to the area.
Cave Hill Cemetery BTW, is where Colonel Harlan Sanders, the KFC founder was laid to rest.
But she was just one of the wonderful trans people I got to know once I moved there like Amirage Saling, Alana Montgomery, LynAnne Evans, Erica, Shemiyia O'Bannon-Sweeney, Holly Knight, Cindy Lee and others who crossed my path during my time there.
Joshua Holiday also moved there for a while from New York . There were Sienna meetings I attended from time to time, and a memorable outing to a Halloween Rocky Horror screening weeks after I moved there.
Unfortunately one of the people I met there is no longer with us and is one of the people we memorialized during the 2008 TDOR in Nakhia Williams. The waste of DNA who killed her is now rotting in jail.
21. Halloween On Hillcrest Avenue
There was a cluster of homes on Hillcrest Ave between Frankfort Ave and Brownsboro Road that in the runup to Halloween would go all out in decorating for it. Some of the decorations were political, which thrilled me even more besides my fave house on the street in Dante's Disco Inferno.
It got so popular that LMPD ended up blocking off Hillcrest on the Frankfort Ave and Brownsboro road ends of Hillcrest Avenue to accommodate all the people from around the area who wanted to see as I called it Nightmare on Hillcrest Avenue..
22. The Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary
It's interesting to note that the LPTS and SBTS are less than a mile apart distance wise, but light years apart in terms of their acceptance of the humanity and human rights of trans people. "The Good Seminary' as we call LPTS, has been since 2002 the host of the Louisville TDOR events.
I was honored to be the keynote speaker for their inaugural TDOR in 2002 and again in 2003, the first one we held inside the Caldwell Chapel, part of the planning committee for a few of them, and on some Trans 101 panels on the LPTS campus.
23. Horse country
Sometime when we would visit Dawn's relatives in Lexington or were there in the city for various events, we'd detour for a few miles before jumping back on I-64 to see the horse farms in the area.
It was fun not only looking at those farms but occasionally seeing the colts and fillies running through the grass or grazing
24. Keeneland
Since Dawn grew up in Lexington, we would make a trip to Keeneland at the beginning of their fall racing season
The best part of going to Keeneland in the fall was checking out the fall foliage on the trees in the backside curve and people watching.
I used to love Keeneland's announcer. On one of our trips a horse named Scripture stumbled out of the gate as the race started, and he said "Scripture kneels to pray at the start.'"
Turned out that stumble was more serious than it looked when the horse ambulance rolled over there to the starting gate area when the race was completed, and they had to euthanize him later because he broke both his front legs.
In addition to getting to hang out with my chosen family and getting to leave the city for a few hours, occasionally I won enough for dinner at Columbia Steak House after our day at the races.
25. The Comfy Cow
It opened not long after I left Louisville, but the concept for it was percolating in its founders minds while I lived here starting in 2007. I got introduced to their ice cream during my 2014 visit.
The Comfy Cow was another mandatory Louisville foodie stop I had to make when I recently visited the city, and I destroyed some of their salted caramel ice cream.
Yep, they sell it online. I may have to get some as a Christmas present or if somebody is feeling the holiday spirit, they can ship me some.
From time to time I've written about how much I miss Louisville, and certain events and dates will trigger another flood of memories of life in as the right wing haters call it, 'Sodom on the Ohio'.
Note to those haters: don't diss the town that provides much of your state's tax revenue when people come to visit it and Lexington for starters and not your backwoods idiocy.
I'm now approaching the same six year period it has been since I drove the moving van onto I-65 south four days after my birthday in May 2010 and headed back to the Lone Star State.
In the nearly nine years I lived there, Da Ville grew on me to the point where I not only made friends there in addition to the ones I had who lived there prior to my September 2001 move, but I grew to appreciate some of Kentucky's charms.
Bardstown Road Aglow happening tomorrow is also triggering I miss Da Ville memories for me as well, so I decided to write a post similar to the 2007 one I wrote, but this time focusing on Louisville.
1. Dawne Gee
Dawne Gee is a native Louisvillian who is one of the 5 and 7 PM newscast anchors at WAVE-3 TV. WAVE 3 is the NBC affiliate there and it became one of my local news stations I frequently watched thanks to large part to meeting her.
I met her when I was working at Macy's and she was looking for Christmas gifts for her son Alex. We kept bumping into each other either at the store or at local charity events like the AIDS Walk or others around town and became friends as a result.
You have to also admire someone like Dawne who has two degrees (in communications and biology), applied three times at WAVE-3 before she finally got that job there in 1994 and quickly ascended to anchoring their local newscasts , beat cancer and just survived an on air stroke.
Speedy healing and recovery, Dawne.
And yeah, I also love her because she's a Taurus and our birthdays are just four days apart.
1A. Angie Fenton
I'd actually run into Angie before I finally met her. I was attending a local TBLGQ Derby Party at The Olmstead in 2003 that she was covering for the Courier-Journal while stylishly dressed in a pink skirted suit with matching pumps and a pink Derby hat.
We didn't meet that day, but our paths would eventually cross again.
She's also a local media icon in print and television, does segments on WHAS-TV's Great Day Live in addition to being editor in chief at Extol magazine, a motivational speaker, and mom to her daughter Olive..
So how did I meet this amazing woman? It was in 2005 when she wrote a Courier-Journal article about the local trans community that featured me and Dawn Wilson in it. Both of us moved to Da Ville from other places, so we had that in common along with our mutual love of writing.
2. Impellizzeri's Pizza
One of the Louisville specific food outlets that I got introduced to before I moved there. Love their pizza and especially their breadsticks and the garlic butter you can dip them in.
3. 'Niece and Nephew'
AKA Dr. Kaila Story-Jackson and Jaison Gardiner, the broadcast team at WFPL-FM's. Strange Fruit radio show. In her day job Kaila is the Audre Lorde Chair in Race, Class Gender and Sexuality Studies at the University of Louisville and teaches women and gender and Pan-African studies there.
I've spent more than a few times while I lived there as a panelist in Kaila's class or at other events coordinated by her on the U of L campus when I lived there talking about trans issues from a POC perspective.
Jaison I met as part of the Fairness Campaign crew, and he's involved in Black Lives Matter and other progressive causes.
Jaison is also the one who started calling me Auntie Monica, so I used to call him Nephew in response. When he and Kaila started doing Strange Fruit, she became Niece
4. Indi's
Every city has a local food chain that is unique to it, and in Louisville, that is Indi' s.
There are only three Indi's locations in Da Ville, so that meant I had to drive to get to them since the closest location to my east side Crescent Hill neighborhood was in the West End on Broadway just west of downtown. But the food was worth the trip
It is quintessentially Louisville and quickly became one of my fave places. I loved their monster potato wedges and chicken, and would happily devour their wings.. Their spicy recipe one will definitely make someone from New Orleans happy and they have a wide variety of side dishes
The prices you pay for that food isn't bad either, but they only accept cash for it.
5. Louisville Fencing Center
When Dawn began to get involved in competitive fencing, that's when much of the fencing world entered my life, including Maestro Les Stawicki, the legendary fencing coach who not only was the Polish national and Olympic coach from 1972-1990, but trains the US Paralympic Games fencers.
I got to meet many of the wonderful people connected to LFC and other fencing salles in the Louisville and Kentucky region along with many of the Veteran fencers, referees and others in the USFA Great Lakes Region . It's also how I met Olympian Lee Kiefer and her family. Ken and Angela Hagen, Linda Dunn, Tom Monarch, 'The Baby Vets' AKA the Vet 40 fencers, The Senior Mamas' AKA the Vet 50 fencers and Lou Felty just to name a few.
It also taught me a lesson in first impressions. I didn't think I had an impact on anyone since I was there simply to support my friend, but others disagreed. There was also a junior tournament that was held in Louisville while I was there in which I served as the MC of it. Some of the parents and kids who were in attendance or participated in it still ask about me years later.
When I went to visit LFC, I also got a big hug from Maestro Stawicki ,Tom and everyone who remembered me
6. Edenside Christian Church
I definitely missed 'slllliiiiiiiiding into Edenside' after I left, because it was my open and affirming church home during my time in Da Ville, It was part of the Disciples of Christ denomination, and it was one of the places in which I first started to meet people after I moved there.
I loved its social justice mission, the AIDS services, participating as a worship leader, being part of Bardstown Road Aglow, the jazz concerts and it being a century old. One of the first events I participated in mere days after I moved there was an AIDS Walk
Sadly it closed after 106 years of service to the Highland community, and I couldn't make it up there for the final service in that building..
7. Rev. Sally McClain
Rev Sally was one of the first people I met after I arrived in Louisville, and you have to love a minter who not only has a gregarious personality, it's combined with a formidable intellect and a wicked sense of humor.
Her male theological counterparts on The Moral Side Of the News show that she was a panelist on found out quickly about that formidable intellect.
I loved the stuffed Cartman doll on her church office bookshelf, and I also love the fact that Rev. Sally's sermons were to the point. She could say in 10 to 15 minutes what would take the average Baptist preacher hours to do.
She's now retired, but is still a panelist on The Moral Side of the News giving the boys fits.
8. Fairness Campaign
That building on Frankfort Avenue which is the home of Louisville and Kentucky's premier TBLGQ organization was the epicenter of my Louisville activism. I did phone banks in it. taught Lobbying 101 to rookie activists, did candidate screenings there and attended many meetings in its walls when I served on the Fairness Campaign board and its C-FAIR PAC board as its secretary
I also was a finalist to become the head of the Fairness Campaign, which unfortunately I didn't get.
The time I spent with Fairness folks was instrumental in me becoming and being a better advocate when I returned home, and still have much love for the Fairness peeps I met there.
9. The Cards vs Cats hatefest
One of the questions I was asked that I deflected with the comment "I like both" until I pointed the moving van south was which one of Kentucky's universities was I a fan of in either the Louisville Cardinals or the Kentucky Wildcats.
The Cards-Cats hatefest is the University of Texas-Texas A&M rivalry on steroids. The schools are only 60 miles apart on I-64 in Louisville and Lexington, play in different conferences (SEC and ACC), but they reflect the culture of their cities and their rabid fan bases.
I used to get a chuckle out of watching peeps on both sides try to repeatedly recruit me to Cats or Cards Nation as they threw shady insults at each other. I had friends in both Cats and Cards Nation, and it was entertaining to me watching their reactions when UK and U of L played each other.
You can bet that no matter what sport they play, the game, especially if it's their annual post-Christmas basketball showdown, will be sold out at either The Yum Center or Rupp Arena and the trash talking will go on until next year's game, at family picnics and other events..
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One of the benefits of living in Louisville was because of its geographic location on the Ohio River on the Indiana-Kentucky border and sitting at the junction of I-64, I-65 and I-71, I gained the ability to do road trips to nearby cities in the Midwest, South and East Coast from there
Louisville was only an hour from Lexington, 1.5 hours from Indianapolis and Cincinnati, 2 hours from Nashville, 3 hours from Columbus and St Louis, 5 hours from Memphis and Chicago, 6 hours from Atlanta, 7 hours to Charlotte, Cleveland ,and Milwaukee. and 10 hours to Washington DC, Baltimore and Philadelphia
There were more than a few road trips I took with Dawn, Polar and other folks, some of which I talked about on the blog
11. KingFish
Another one of my fave places to eat in Louisville that was unique to the city. It's a seafood restaurant, and I used to love the location on River Road that had views of the Ohio River from its dining room and the barges gliding by as you dined
12. Derby Week
In the runup to the Kentucky Oaks and the Kentucky Derby, there is a multiweek festival chock full of events that is kicked off by the massive Thunder over Louisville fireworks show and a military airshow during the day over the river.
I also like the Kentucky Derby because every few years, it falls on my birthday. It was apropos that the 2002 Derby, the first one I got to witness as a Louisville resident, also fell on my 40th birthday.
In addition to the parades and balls, you had celebrities flying into town for the Oaks and Derby and all the parties and balls hosted by various people and organizations in venues all over Louisville..
One of the major ones happened mere blocks from where I used to live. Priscilla Barnstable Brown (one of the 1970's Doublemint gum twins who were both from Da Ville) hosts a Derby party that draws Hollywood celebrities and local celeb watchers
Even our local TBLGQ community had our own party that used to happen before and during the Derby, but got shifted to the later evening.
13. Crescent Hill
It's the neighborhood I lived in from late 2003 until I moved back home, and I lived on Grinstead Drive across the street from the odious Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.
Besides the negative of waking up and flipping the finger at the transphobic seminary that was outside and across the street from my upstairs bedroom window, I was around the corner from the Crescent Hill Reservoir, the library, all those amazing restaurants, coffeehouses and shops on Frankfort Avenue. I also had some cool neighbors like the Burchfield's. The best part was I was in walking distance of a Walgreen's that sold Blue Bell.
14. Louisville Slugger Field
Louisville's Triple A baseball stadium that was on the river in the shadow of downtown and I-65 and the home of the Louisville Bats, the Cincinnati Reds farm club.
It's named for the Louisville Slugger bat, which is manufactured a few blocks west of the ballpark. It has an amazing museum and tour of the facility in which upon its conclusion you get a mini Slugger batBut don't take that mini bat in your carryon luggage. It is considered a weapon and WILL get snatched by TSA security at the airport.
Went to a few Bats games while I lived there and did get to see Joey Votto and Aroldis Chapman play there before they headed up I-71 to play for the Reds.
Slugger Field will be the host of this year's (I consider 2017 this year) ACC Baseball tournament that got relocated because of HB 2. Mayor Fischer and the city of Louisville thank you for that and all the bonus tax money they'll get for hosting it, Pat McCrory.
My congressman for the remaining time I lived in Da Ville who snatched the seat from Rep. Anne
Until 2006, Northup managed to keep her seat in heavily Democratic Louisville by hoodwinking and bamboozling fools at two Black megachurches (St Stephen and Canaan) and several sellout ministers into thinking she was a human rights warrior when that 'F' on her NAACP Congressional Report card said otherwise.
Those hoodwinked Black voters were the difference in many of her wins in the 10 years she managed to hold that centered on Louisville congressional seat.
Yarmuth founded and owned the alternative weekly the Louisville Eccentric Observer, AKA the LEO, and was a relentless critic of Northrup before he ousted her from that congressional seat.
He donates his congressional salary to local liberal progressive organizations, and I had more than a few conversations and positive interactions with him before I came home
16. The Highlands
The first Louisville neighborhood I lived in and loved because it was diverse and like Crescent Hill had a nice mix of shops and businesses. I also loved the fact (but my waistline didn't) I had a Dairy Queen, KFC, Arby's, a 24 hour Mickey D's, Speedway and Buffalo Wild Wings and restaurants in walking distance of the old house.
17. Bardstown Road Aglow
The neighborhood festival along the Bardstown Road corridor in the Highlands that kicks off the Christmas season. It happens the first Saturday of December rain. snow or shine. Businesses, organizations and churches open their doors to the folks walking up and down the road as carolers and vendors handled their business.
What Edenside would do is open our door and offer hot cider, Christmas cookies and other snacks.
DJ Moni spinning Christmas tunes with soul came later.
18. Kizito's CookiesI got introduced to this delightful treat before I moved there in September 2001, and lived next door for two years to their creator in Ugandan born Elizabeth Kizito.
'The Cookie Lady' as Kizito is known in Da Ville, came to the US in 1975 to attend school, and moved to Louisville in 1978.
In addition to this award winning businesswoman selling African crafts out of her Bardstown Road store that is also the bakery for their wide assortment of baked goods, she sold them at Slugger Field, the St James Art Festival, the Derby Festival and other events around town while wearing a basket full of her delicious treats on her head.
She started the cookie business in 1987, and now 30 years later Kizito's treats are now sold in stores all over Louisville and online.
That reminds me, need to order some more snickerdoodles and chocolate chip ones.
19. University of Louisville and the LGBT Center
While I'm still waiting for that opportunity to be tapped as a keynote speaker for U of L's Pride Week (hint, hint), I did get a few opportunities to be either part of panels or attend events on their campus in the time I lived there.
Got to know Brian Buford, who is the head of the LGBT Center, law professor Sam Marcosson, who I had some interesting discussion with during my time there and actually did a panel with in the wake of the 2008 election. Y'all already know I have much love and respect for Dr Story, and miss the late Dr. Blaine Hudson, who I loved as a historian and who got me up to speed on my Louisville Black history, I also got to witness while I was there U of L take the steps it did to become one of the most LGBTQ freindly campuses in the South and get much deserved recognition for it.
20. The Louisville trans community
Some of you longtime TransGriot readers have seen my posts about my award winning roommate trans leader, and homegirl Dawn Wilson, who was responsible along with Polar for getting me to move there instead of the ATL and is now a human rights commissioner in the city.
She and Polar also took time out of their lives to come to Houston and help me move there, and a contingent of Louisville community trans folks was there when I arrived to help me move into the old Grinstead house in the Cave Hill Cemetery curve and welcome me to the area.
Cave Hill Cemetery BTW, is where Colonel Harlan Sanders, the KFC founder was laid to rest.
But she was just one of the wonderful trans people I got to know once I moved there like Amirage Saling, Alana Montgomery, LynAnne Evans, Erica, Shemiyia O'Bannon-Sweeney, Holly Knight, Cindy Lee and others who crossed my path during my time there.
Joshua Holiday also moved there for a while from New York . There were Sienna meetings I attended from time to time, and a memorable outing to a Halloween Rocky Horror screening weeks after I moved there.
Unfortunately one of the people I met there is no longer with us and is one of the people we memorialized during the 2008 TDOR in Nakhia Williams. The waste of DNA who killed her is now rotting in jail.
21. Halloween On Hillcrest Avenue
There was a cluster of homes on Hillcrest Ave between Frankfort Ave and Brownsboro Road that in the runup to Halloween would go all out in decorating for it. Some of the decorations were political, which thrilled me even more besides my fave house on the street in Dante's Disco Inferno.
It got so popular that LMPD ended up blocking off Hillcrest on the Frankfort Ave and Brownsboro road ends of Hillcrest Avenue to accommodate all the people from around the area who wanted to see as I called it Nightmare on Hillcrest Avenue..
22. The Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary
It's interesting to note that the LPTS and SBTS are less than a mile apart distance wise, but light years apart in terms of their acceptance of the humanity and human rights of trans people. "The Good Seminary' as we call LPTS, has been since 2002 the host of the Louisville TDOR events.
I was honored to be the keynote speaker for their inaugural TDOR in 2002 and again in 2003, the first one we held inside the Caldwell Chapel, part of the planning committee for a few of them, and on some Trans 101 panels on the LPTS campus.
23. Horse country
Sometime when we would visit Dawn's relatives in Lexington or were there in the city for various events, we'd detour for a few miles before jumping back on I-64 to see the horse farms in the area.
It was fun not only looking at those farms but occasionally seeing the colts and fillies running through the grass or grazing
24. Keeneland
Since Dawn grew up in Lexington, we would make a trip to Keeneland at the beginning of their fall racing seasonThe best part of going to Keeneland in the fall was checking out the fall foliage on the trees in the backside curve and people watching.
I used to love Keeneland's announcer. On one of our trips a horse named Scripture stumbled out of the gate as the race started, and he said "Scripture kneels to pray at the start.'"
Turned out that stumble was more serious than it looked when the horse ambulance rolled over there to the starting gate area when the race was completed, and they had to euthanize him later because he broke both his front legs.
In addition to getting to hang out with my chosen family and getting to leave the city for a few hours, occasionally I won enough for dinner at Columbia Steak House after our day at the races.
25. The Comfy Cow
It opened not long after I left Louisville, but the concept for it was percolating in its founders minds while I lived here starting in 2007. I got introduced to their ice cream during my 2014 visit.
The Comfy Cow was another mandatory Louisville foodie stop I had to make when I recently visited the city, and I destroyed some of their salted caramel ice cream.
Yep, they sell it online. I may have to get some as a Christmas present or if somebody is feeling the holiday spirit, they can ship me some.
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