Saturday, November 29, 2025 | By: Velvet Lenae
Sweet·Raw·Sticky- November Series, Part 3 (Read Part 2 Here)
Grateful for the Girls Who Got Banned
November is doing what November does...making me reflective, soft, and a little loud at the same time. I wanted to honor the women whose work made mine possible. I'm an Erotic Photographer, Erotic Author and a Certified Sex Coach, which means I live in the space people still try to shame pleasure, sensual storytelling, Black bodies, and desire. So for November, this Banned and Bold series felt like the most honest thing to touch, especially after Part 1 "Banned But We Sang Anyway" and Part 2 "From 'Shave 'Em Dry' to City Girls." If you haven't read those yet, circle back...this one is the love letter.
This month, I just want to say it plainly...
I am grateful for the Black Women who got banned so we could be bold.
Grateful for the singers who had to record the "clean" version for the label and the real version for the people.
Grateful for the women who sang queer blues in 1935 when it was dangerous to even hint at it.
Grateful for the ones who tucked sex inside recipes, food, church, jazz, and comedy so they wouldn't get pulled off stage.
Grateful for the ones who were called vulgar, loose, too sexual, too free...because that's the lineage I want.
People act like explicit, sensual, body honoring music started with the internet. It didn't. Black Women's erotic music has been here for a century. It was just censored, mislabeled, or left out of the history books. That's why I wanted this November blog series on banned and bold Black Women. Not because it's messy, but because it's righteous.
Why this matters for Sweet·Raw·Sticky
As an erotic author, I know what it is to write desire in first person and wonder, "Is the world ready?" These women did that, in 1930 something with no IG and no content warnings.
When I talk about Sweet·Raw·Sticky, I'm not pulling a cute brand out of thin air. I'm naming an inheritance.
That's what those banned girls did. They left residue.
Lucille, Bessie, Ma, Dinah...they were sweet in tone, raw in message, and sticky in legacy.
So if you've ever been told you're "doing too much...
if somebody called your reels "too sexy" and they get reported...
if your erotic writing makes folks clutch their pearls...
if family told you "you don't have to show all that"...
congratulations...you're in the right lineage.
You're not wild. You're historic.
Because this is the pattern:
Why they got banned (and why we still get shadowbanned)
Black Women got banned for singing about sex, pleasure, queer love, mistresses, bodies, and desire. Today Black Women get shadowbanned, reported, or policed online for teaching sex education, posting boudoir, talking about kink, or just existing in a soft body. Different era, same anxiety:
"What happens if Black Women enjoy themselves too much in public?"
That's the real fear. Not the lyrics. Not the outfit. The joy.
Birthday month gratitude
Because it's my birthday month, I'm letting myself be loud about this.
I get to help women feel sexy on camera because somebody in 1935 decided to be "improper."
I get to coach people through pleasure shame because somebody before me sang about pleasure when it was risky.
I get to create Sweet·Raw·Sticky because they didn't let it dry up.
So yes. I celebrate them, even the "problematic" ones, even the "too vulgar" ones. They cracked the door. I'm just walking through it in heels and honey.
Drop one woman that's an artist, ancestor, aunty, creator, choir soloist, blues mama, TikTok storyteller, that you're grateful for. I want to add her name to this series and keep this lineage spoken. And if you haven't yet, go back and read Part 1 and Part 2 so you can see how deep this runs.
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