Which kathleen hanna are you




















How much of Kathleen Hanna's work have you seen? See more polls ». Known For. Not Another Teen Movie Soundtrack. Captain Fantastic Soundtrack. The Book of Life Soundtrack. Show all Hide all Show by Hide Show Actress 9 credits. Hide Show Producer 3 credits. Le Tigre on Tour Documentary producer. Hide Show Camera and Electrical Department 1 credit. Hide Show Soundtrack 43 credits. Show all 23 episodes. A Everything TV Series writer - 1 episode - The Mallpisode Hide Show Music department 1 credit.

Hide Show Thanks 3 credits. Hide Show Self 34 credits. I still have it, but I can't wear it because I gained a little weight. It's a gray sweater and it's monogram style and it says TCB, which stands for taking care of business. I wore it every single time I had to do business, like go to a meeting. It became this thing where if I had to do work I needed my business sweater. Where's my business sweater? When I went to high school in the '80s, we were really into the '60s.

I look now and its 20 years since the '90s, and I think oh, it's this year kind of cycle that things go in. I also think that for me, I think I was a little obsessed with the '60s in high school and beyond. If you look at some of the Riot Grrrl fashion, it's very influenced by the late '50s and early '60s. Part of that is that I was so young, I was born in '68, and I didn't really understand what that was going on, and I kind of wanted to return to that period.

That's when my parents were in their 20s, so in a way it's like I'm trying to dress like my mom in her 20s. It's almost like I'm trying to be my mom, or experience what my mom experienced though clothes. I go on Facebook and then click on stuff that people recommend.

I read a lot of British press. I really like this guy Earl Boykins' instagram, he actually makes shirts and they're all Jeremy Lin meets Bart Simpson. Which sounds totally crazy, because he's still into Jeremy Lin right now. Linteresting, Lintastic. That's the kind of thing I have time to get into. I'm not sure Riot Grrrl would have been as big a deal if the Internet had existed back then.

Because there's so much stuff on the Internet. People could have been like, oh, whatever, I'm going to go look at pictures of Barbie vaginas, you know what I mean? There's so many different things on the Internet, you read one article and then you read something linked off that article and you go down the rabbit hole.

It was really—I didn't think so at the time—but I look back at the time, and realize how special it was. I remember our first two fan letters. I still know those people. I feel that way in terms of abortion rights. I feel like that when I read certain feminist blogs or feminist magazines, where it's not even so much we've gone backwards, it's that I'm bored. Or it's like, oh wow, kids today are still dealing with the same exact issues. What I like so much about Rookie is Tavi [Gevinson] isn't freaked out with mixing her love of aesthetics and visual arts, which is what her fashion thing is all about, with discussions of sexual harassment of teenage girls.

I feel like that's so important, because if I was a teenage girl that's the website I'd actually go to. And maybe it's not entirely successful or entirely perfect, but starting the conversation is more important than being perfect. You ask questions, you don't give answers. I feel it's frustrating on one level, but then Bitch magazine still exists. But I do feel a lot of times, it's one step forward and two steps back. When I hear women in younger bands, going through the same kinds of stuff we went through, and I think, God.

Then again, they're talking about it. And that just wasn't done in the '90s. At least there's a public conversation. I felt lucky. At college she learned about feminism via friends. She is now listed as an ambassador on the Peace Sister website. Hanna realizes that some might criticize her involvement.

As is likely expected, Hanna has forceful opinions on Trump. Le Tigre played the day after George W Bush was elected. I need to not be in a band during the next election. People are token-ized. We own our label. Tobi [Vail, drummer] sends the mail order, her sister runs the business. I like not being looked at. Throughout her 20s, Hanna helped at shelters, on phones and in legal advocacy. She had to stop. I try to get people to call crisis lines. Hanna neglected her own trauma too.

A few weeks ago she received a video of one of the girls who had made her own art — a comedy skit poking fun at sexist men in the community.



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