Thought about using the term idol, but idolizing people who we’ll never meet is bad. Who’s a trans person that you look up to just for making it?

My pick has to be Rebecca Heineman. Rebecca was one of the founding members of Interplay. As in OG Fallout Interplay. She was one of the lead developers of Wasteland, the Bard’s Tale series, Out of This World and many others. After founding interplay, she went on to do a lot of port work. Her work on the 3DO version of DOOM is an insane story, Stop Skeletons From Fighting has an amazing video on it.

Later in life, she moved onto consultant work. From Wikipedia “During this time, she also provided consultancy work directly for other companies: She acted as “Senior Engineer III” for Electronic Arts, upgraded engine code for Barking Lizards Technologies and Ubisoft, optimized code for Sensory Sweep Studios, provided training on Xbox 360 development for Microsoft’s development studios, and worked on the kernel code for the PlayStation Portable and PlayStation 4 at Sony.” Nowadays, she runs a company called olde skuul, probably best known for porting Descent 1 & 2 to modern machines.

I just think her story is really cool. I also like the reminder that we’ve always been there, yk?

  • windowlicker [she/her]@hexbear.net
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    19
    ·
    1 year ago

    wendy carlos. an early pioneer of synthesizer music (she was a part of creating and popularizing the moog and even made a few synths of her own). she has lived out as a trans woman since 1968 and did the soundtracks for a clockwork orange, tron (1982), and the shining. i also own a copy of her album switched-on bach on tape and vinyl and it’s a masterpiece of synthesizer work. her website is also visually unchanged since the 90s.

    beth elliott. a lesbian trans woman who was a folk singer in the 70s and made a lot of awesome songs. she was a huge part of her local lesbian/feminist organizing in her area in the time, serving in the leadership of many orgs. but in the orgs she served with, she was consistently harassed and attacked mercilessly by TERFs from within the orgs. i think her story goes to show that we have been, since the early days, instrumental in organizing these spaces with other feminists and lesbians and yet even back then they’ve attacked us for it.

    i don’t know much about her life, but there’s a trans woman named linda phillips who wrote a little section about her life that ended up in feinberg’s “trans liberation: beyond pink or blue”. in it, she wrote a sentence that i think about every single day and one day i’ll get tattooed somewhere. “i have actually had the best of any life i could dream of”. in the face of medical professionals and transphobes and all saying how much it must suck to be trans and trying to define our existence by suffering, it is a bold statement that out of any of the lives she could have lived, this one where she lived out as herself was the best one she could have lived.

    • axont [she/her, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      12
      ·
      1 year ago

      I came here to mention Wendy Carlos. I know we shouldn’t attribute artistic movements to single people, but she is very much responsible for making electronic music go from being perceived as nerds doing beepboops, to serious music with sound theoretical foundations with artistic merit. She’s a musical genius and I’m collecting all her albums on vinyl.