don't want to spend too much time on it but talking about your time working in a strip club, for ensubstanceects with a lot of people, they go, tell me more, you worked in a strip club. >> it is interesting. >> trevor: it is interesting. i'll talk about it sometimes, whatever. i don't like to, but whatever. ( laughter ) , no, like, when you talked about the strippers as women, you talked about not every person who is stripping coming in with the same story, not always being a story of neglect, not always being a story of abuse. what tuning some of the misconceptions around that field of work are? >> well, i think, oftentimes, like most, you know, industries that focus or are run by women, it's largely seen as something that's, like, dismissed or the people engaging in the space are oftentimes objectified, so no one speaks to or engages with sex workers. for me, so much of my feminism not only comes from my grandmother's kitchen table but also by being backstage with these women who talk about their complicated lives, being mothers, of using this income to take care of their families. i'm sex