Listen

Description

Why has horror always felt so familiar to queer audiences?

In this episode of The Queerest Podcast, host Andraé BVR is joined by writer-director Amir Moini to explore why fear, transformation, and otherness sit at the heart of LGBTQ+ storytelling. Long before representation was explicit, horror offered queer viewers coded mirrors — outsiders, monsters, and survivors navigating worlds that wanted them erased.

From Frankenstein’s forbidden longing to the self-aware slashers of Scream, queer audiences have always recognized themselves in horror’s margins. Amir, the award-winning creator of the short film Slashr, shares how intimacy, vulnerability, and queer trauma shape his work — and why horror allows storytellers to confront what we’re taught to suppress.

Together, Andraé and Amir examine how queer horror reframes fear as power, survival as performance, and monsters as mirrors. This episode looks at horror not as a season or a gimmick, but as a language queer people have been fluent in all along.

🎧 Subscribe for more conversations on LGBTQ+ culture, media, and identity.