“Had the government stepped in and done its job, had they not advocated against vaccines and mask mandates, we wouldn't have been frantically gathering our children to cut up bedsheets to make masks for medical workers and everyone else.” That’s Kristina Wong, performance artist, comedian, and writer. This week, Wong tells the story of how she created a network of “aunties,” who were primarily Asian American, in a mutual aid project that ended up making and distributing over 500 thousand masks during the first year of the pandemic. In November 2021, she opened Kristina Wong, Sweatshop Overlord, which played to sold-out audiences at the New York Theatre Workshop. Now Wong, legendary writer Rebecca Solnit, and several other members of The Auntie Sewing Squad have co-authored a book: The Auntie Sewing Squad Guide to Mask Making, Radical Care, and Racial Justice. Here to discuss the show, the book, the phenomenon of mutual aid in times of disaster, and how racial justice and feminism underlie it all are Aunties Kristina Wong and Rebecca Solnit. A regular contributor to the Guardian, Solnit is the author of Hope in the Dark from Haymarket Books, among twenty other publications.
For more information on the Auntie Sewing Squad: http://auntiesewingsquad.com/
CREDITS Executive Producer: Laura Flanders Creative Director: Matt Colaciello Communications Director: Jeremiah Cothren Editors: Nat Needham, David Neumann Radio & Podcast Producer: Jeannie Hopper Co-Director Development: Dominic Marcella Story Producer: Sabrina Artel Motion Graphics: Nat Needham Digital Content Creator: Leigh Friedman Production Assistant: Ryan Hotes Interns: Janet Hernandez
Special Thanks: New York Theatre Workshop
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