Superficial Spirit
Superficial Spirit is a podcast where pop culture, queerness, and spirituality collide. Hosted by Canada’s OG gay pop star Peter Breeze, each episode explores the wild, weird, and wonderful ways we chase meaning through fame, music, identity, and everything in between.
Once a club kid turned underground pop star, Peter built a name in queer nightlife scenes across North America. Now, as he relaunches his music career, he’s inviting other queer pop stars, Canadian celebrities, and spiritual misfits to join him in raw, unfiltered conversations about life, love, ambition, and the forces that shape us.
From drag queens and reality stars to psychics, witches, and wellness rebels, The Superficial Spirit dives deep into modern spirituality with a wink—and a dance break.
Past themes include:
- The culty side of new-age spirituality 🌙
- Ayahuasca, manifestation, and plant medicine 🌿
- Fame, money, and the divine ✨
- Queer identity and spiritual rebellion 🏳️🌈
- Why Britney, Paris & The Housewives are low-key spiritual icons 👑
It’s part interview, part self-discovery, and all heart. Because sometimes, the most superficial things are where the spirit shines brightest.
Superficial Spirit
The O Files: Sissy Boy Era
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
The O-Files return with a true Vancouver nightlife time capsule: Carlotta Gurl at The Odyssey in the ’90s and early 2000s.
Long before drag went mainstream, Carlotta Gurl was holding court at The Odyssey — one of Vancouver’s most iconic clubs — during a time when club kids, queer nightlife, and performance culture were loud, weird, and completely unapologetic. We get into what that era actually felt like: the music, the characters, the freedom, the excess, and the community that made The Odyssey legendary.
Carlotta shares stories from behind the booth and behind the curtain, what it meant to build a drag career before social media (or Drag Race), and why that era of nightlife still looms so large in queer culture today.
If you were there, this will hit.
If you weren’t, this is the history lesson you needed.