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Out of This World
Forming the SassyBlack Universe
Sometimes on a Sunday night you find yourself holding a woman up by the soles of her feet.
I gripped Stevie Escobedo, 33, by her white sneaker. Beside me, Anthony Alston, 53, cradled her other shoe. He breathed the counts of the routine we had just rehearsed in pantomime. I couldnât remember the counts, so I mimicked Alston, keeping one eye on him and the other on Escobedo, who, from my vantage point, was all leg. Her torso and head poked out from above her knee. Iâd never seen a person from this perspective. âThatâs fun,â I thought. Similarly, no one had ever trusted me with their life like this. And, should they have?
âSix, seven, eight,â Alston called. We raised Escobedo up, then down. My fingers turned white from squeezing her shoe so hard. Any wobble and sheâd topple. Somehow, she dismounted in one piece.
Le Carr, 32, who had been spotting from the back as an aptly named âback spot,â turned to me. âAre you ready to get up there?â
I shrugged. Why not?
For my latest exploration into Seattle subcultures, I hoisted myself onto the shoulders of Cheer Seattleâs âqueerleadersâ to figure out what this majority-LGBTQIA nonprofit was all about and to determine the origin of the pep in its step.
In doing so, I met a group of people changing a historically gendered sport by stripping away its more restrictive rules and stereotypes. Whatâs left behind is all the elements of cheerleading glossed over in pop-culture: the positivity, the enthusiasm, the teamwork, the trust.
Formed in 2014, Cheer Seattle is part of the 14-team nationwide Pride Cheerleading Association. The group aims to allow LGBTQ+ members and their allies to perform while raising money for good causes and awareness about the queer community.
Cheer Seattle hosts three teams: a stunt team (Sapphire), a dance team (Emerald), and a production team (Diamond), so anyone whoâs interested in cheer has a place. They cheer at sporting events, they volunteer at fundraisers and races, and they perform at Pride. This year, Cheer Seattleâs raised funds will go toward The Lavender Rights Project, a Washington-based group focused on Black trans women.
âIt [feels] like using my powers for good,â Alston said. âGoing to Pride events year after year is one thing, but being in the parade and raising money for a local charity is really inspiring and motivating.â
Alston was one of three people who started Cheer Seattle 10 years ago. The groupâs origin, however, starts in San Francisco.
Alston joined Cheer San Francisco, the first of the PCA teams, back in 2001. A gay Seattle transplant adrift in a post-dot-com-bust and post-9/11-world, he needed community. As a lifelong self-proclaimed band geek marching on football fields next to cheer squads, he said heâd always harbored a desire to take up a pair of pom-poms of his own.
âI always saw the cheerleaders, and I was like, âOne day, that would be cool,ââ he said. âBut I thought I was too old.â
When Cheer San Francisco started recruiting back spots, he joined.
âWearing that uniform was awesome,â he said. âIâm getting chills just telling you about it because it brings back a flood of memories.â
He led the San Francisco Pride parade for six years, driving his truck equipped with blaring freight train horns and leading 300 cheerleaders from San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Sacramento, all doing stunts along the way.
âLooking down Market Street and everyone is waiting for us to start the parade, the anticipation, the energy, the excitement, and then youâd see basket tosses! Basket tosses! Basket tosses!â He said, gesturing with his hands, his fingernails painted blue and green. âWhen youâre performing, youâre connecting with your community, youâre connecting with the crowds, youâre hyping them up, youâre giving them something.â
As he gets older, performing takes more of a toll on his bodyââIâve sacrificed both my biceps to cheer,â he said, yet he still canât give it up.
âThereâs no other high that satisfies me that much,â he said.
When he moved back to Seattle, he knew he needed to start a PCA team. So he did. Now, while performing still gives him that high, he also derives satisfaction from watching people grow because of this thing he started.
âWhat they were getting out of the experienceâpeople who had never cheered before, who wanted to fly, who wanted to base, who wanted to dance and performâthey got those experiences through Cheer Seattle,â he said. âIâm glad to facilitate that. Itâs like a proud papa moment.â
A Gayer High School Do-Over

Escobedo recently moved to Seattle from Colorado after realizing she was queer. Determined to explore that, she made the difficult choice to part ways with her then-husband, who is still her best friend, and branch out on her own.
âI was trying to figure out who I am as an adult, as a human,â she said. She found Cheer Seattle last October.
Escobedo cheered in high school, but she hadnât picked up any pom-poms since. Picking them up again as an adult felt like a high school do-overâexcept, this time way gayer.
âI definitely feel like Iâve been going through my queer adolescence this whole time,â she said. âIâm reliving high school in such a different space.â
As a late-blooming queer person, she says things like the act of coming into your sexuality during the prime of adulthood can often be difficult and lonely.
âItâs rough just as it was the first time, as it was in high school; the pains, the awkwardness, the discomfort ⌠Even coming onto a cheerleading team and being 33âthatâs probably not the most comfortable thing, but the more you can live in that discomfort, the more youâre going to experience life,â she said.
Rediscovering a sport she loved alongside a team full of fellow LGBTQ+ people helped her grow, and now she wants to help Cheer Seattle change and grow, too.
âEverything has been passed down in cheerleading,â she said, speaking of the traditions and the status quo of the sport. âBut weâre the queer community, weâre the queer community in Seattle,â she snapped her fingers. âLetâs cunt it up!â
Binary Bustinâ
Since the pandemic, Cheer Seattle has gone through some big changes of its own. One big change has been around fliers.
Spencer Watson, 30, came out as gay in Boise, Idaho when he was 12. Right around that time, he joined his first cheerleading team. He was the only boy, but he didnât care. He fell in love with cheerleading and it changed his life, both personally and geographically.
He left Idaho after senior year to join an all-star cheer team in Kent, Washington.
âThe driver [for my move] was Seattle; like, Iâm gonna bloom as a big olâ gay boy here, not in Idaho,â he said.
Throughout his 18 years of performing cheer and his 15 years of coaching it, Watson, now a coach at Cheer Seattle, never flew, the position in cheerleading where youâre tossed in the air like a little sack of potatoes with pointed toes. Despite teaching the skill, Watson never tried it. He wasnât allowed.
Traditional cheerleading harbors a stereotype where âboys donât fly,â only women fly. âThatâs their role,â Watson said. âItâs this binary gender role that Iâm not here for.â
When he first started coaching at Cheer Seattle four years ago, he tried to change the flier rules. Even in a progressive, boundary-pushing organization, it took years for the change to catch on universally versus on a case-by-case basis. In the last four years, thatâs changed.
âItâs been such an inspiration for all the other members who had wanted to fly but didnât feel they had not only the gender to fly but the body type to fly,â Watson said. âThere are so many other factors that play a role in flying than weight, or, fuck, your gender.â
Tony Thompson, 37, never cheered in his life before joining Cheer Seattle. Now, as a performer, he wants to do it all.
âIâm mainly a backspot, I help lift the flier into the air,â Thompson said. âBut, Iâm trying to be a triple threat. I also want to be a base, and I also want to fly next season. The fliers get most of the face time, and having a queer male flier out there would be really good. Iâm trying to bring more representation into the air.â
He continued: âIâm not trying to throw a Showgirls moment, but I will do a Showgirls moment.â
All body types and all genders can fly at Cheer Seattle. Thompson says that Cheer Seattle is the âmost queer-diverseâ of the cheerleading teams.
âWe push that envelope,â he said.
For the Enbys

Speaking of breaking cheerleading norms, Cheer Seattle recently started offering gender neutral uniform options.
âWe try to get away from the binary,â Thompson said. âWe can wear whatever we want to wear.â Maybe thatâs a skirt, maybe thatâs leggings.
Itâs one way of dismantling rules around a sport which, for decades, was been built on norms around femininity.
Carr, who I originally met when they taught me how to powerlift, grew up cheerleading at a highly competitive level before an injury ended their cheer career.
âI obviously really value the competition and the sportiness of it, but I also really struggled with a lot of the feelings of belonging, at least when I did it back in Georgia,â Carr said
Carr came out as nonbinary in the years since they last did a back handspring.
Last summer, they found Cheer Seattle after drunkenly googling âqueer cheerleadingâ at Queer/Bar. They sent in an application at 2 am and have been with the squad ever since.
Carr described Cheer Seattle as âa way of cheerleading that has all the positives.â
The team serves as a foil to the stereotypical perception of cheerleading; you know, the mean girls, the cliques, the drama.
âIt is absolutely not intimidating and it is not exclusive,â Carr said. âIt doesnât matter if youâve had 12-plus years of experience or never cheered before in your life.â
They told me this, and thenâtrue to their wordâthey coaxed me to fly.
On Top of the Pyramid
I gripped Carrâs and Altonâs shoulders. With my arms straight, I leaned all my weight onto their bodies and pulled myself into a ball, my knees level with their ears.
All I could focus on was the thought of causing them pain.
âAm I hurting you?â I asked.
They both told me no, I was fine. Beneath me, their bodies braced. They felt solid. This was why they were called bases.
âThree and four andâŚâ someoneâmaybe everyoneâcounted, and I swung my feet into each of their hands. They held me aloft. âWhat the hell, what the hell,â I thought. How was I going to stand up?
A different person called: âKeep your arms by your sides and straighten your arms!â As someone most comfortable within the confines of rules and instructions, I obeyed happily.
Then, even though I knew it was coming, I completely forgot the part where Carr and Alston would heft me up while I stood on their hands. Unexpectedly, they propelled me upward so I was towering above the School of Acrobatics and New Circus Artsâ practice area. My stomach dropped, my heart fluttered, everyone looked up at me while I looked down on them. This was a new perspective, too. I stretched my arms up, keeping my body as straight and grounded as I could.
I stretched my arms out wide, my fists curled loosely like cinnamon rolls, like a cheerleader.
Around me, the rest of the squad practiced legitimate basket tosses, throwing their fliers into the air and catching them.
Despite the new heights, I never worried about falling. The team below me, most of whom Iâd just met, would catch meâI was sure of that. The trust required for this sport seemed greater than the athleticism, I thought. And yet, depending on these people felt like second nature.
Gently, the bases lowered me down and eased me into a dismount.
As I stood on the ground, my body vibrated. I simultaneously felt like Iâd just walked off a rollercoaster and like Iâd just chugged a coffee on an empty stomach. My head swam, my pulse raced. Everyone around me patted me on the back, showering me with compliments. I could see how cheerleading could become an addiction.
âWeâll teach you tumbling next,â Carr said.
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