For rappers, podcasting has become what clothing companies were for them in the 90s and early 2000s.
Many have looked to define themselves outside of picking up the mic. Sure, social media may have given their fans viable options that peek into their personal lives, but with podcasting, the public gets a chance to see them in their element, address issues important to them, some of their celebrity friends, and the ones that do it well get paid for it.
AllHipHop.com has composed a list of rappers with podcasts that have been making noise over the last year entertaining the masses with intriguing conversations.
The Joe Budden Podcast with Rory and Mal
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In September of 2020, Joe Budden, Rory, Mal, and Parks officially left Spotify to set up his own platform to distribute the content that has had Hip-Hop podcasting in a firm grip. The Joe Budden Podcast Network might not have the gazillions of dollars associated with it like the streaming giant, but Budden and his partners have heart — and that’s all you need to win in Hip-Hop.
The JBN is so attractive that the successful all-female See, The Thing Is… podcast, hosted by singer Bridget Kelly, Mandii B, and DJ Olivia Dope, will be one of the first properties to join the collective.
“And NOW we get to have some fun,” Budden posted on Instagram. “I always say on the pod there are too many topics that we can’t and shouldn’t touch.. and that women get to have all the fun… So I’m extremely proud/eager to introduce our new podcast.”
He also noted that the show’s start would be on October 6th and continue on Tuesdays afterward.
He then posted, “You can hear these amazing ladies talk their shit (on most DSPs), not sure what they’ll say because I’m staying outta women’s business lol… But they’re bold, committed, opinionated, and have a lot to say…”
The LOX presents “Living Off Xperience” Podcast
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The Lox
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The LOX have had a hell of a year. After releasing their fourth studio album, Living Off Xperience, the Yonkers trio took their incredible chemistry to the net.
The biggest dilemma of 2020 for artists was that touring was limited or all the way shut down.
What is a group to do when not only do they make a sizable living off of performing shows, but promotional touring is the traditional way to pump a new project — a project that their fans have been begging for?
Well, The LOX tried to rock interviews on zoom and IG, telling folk why this new record is next level but oftentimes those conversations danced around their tremendous career and the relationships that have spawned from them being the first rap group on Bad Boy Records in the boutique label’s glory days.
Transitioning into the podcast world just made sense.
All three of the members are real businessmen and with the support of their manager Mike Brinkley, it makes sense (though not confirmed) that podcasting would be the obvious money move.
Even though Living Off Xperience is one of the newer podcasts on the list, they compete with their guest list too. Celebrities that have dropped by are as follows: Mary J. Blige, Angie Martinez, Rob Markman, Fat Joe, Memphis Bleek, DMX, and Swizz Beatz.
Questlove Supreme
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Questlove
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The founding member of Philly’s pride The Roots is an ethnomusicologist. With an encyclopedistic fervor, he is probably, on music, the most well-versed artist/stakeholder in rap culture. Thus, his podcast Questlove Supreme is everything fans might want to experience from the renowned musician (drummer and DJ).
Birthed from the popularity of his music courses at NYU, he started the podcast in September 2016.
In each episode he generously lets others into his brilliant mind, curating content to expand not just your understanding of the subject, or the person he has as a guest, but to push you to understand your own taste. He notes that he prepares for each episode by listening to around 200 songs.
Originally on Pandora and now on iHeartMedia, Questlove has hosted a top-shelf array of influencers that serves as evidence of his star power and reach.
A selected list of guests include: Maya Rudolph, Bob Power, Dante Ross, The Revolution, Alan Leeds, Stretch & Bobbito, Jungle Brothers, Freeway, Daniel Marley, Ray Parker Jr., Solange, Stephen Hill, Pete Rock, Marley Marl, Faith Newman, Q-Tip, Kevin Liles, Chris Rock, MC Serch, Usher, Tom Silverman, DJ Premier, Prodigy, Just Blaze, Babyface, The Emotions, Nelly Furtado, Jerrod Carmichael, Siedah Garrett, Jimmy Jam, Gilles Peterson, Roy Ayers, Angela Rye, Charlie Wilson, Heather Hunter, Donnie Simpson, Kathryn Bigelow, Biz Markie, Prince Paul, Spike Lee, Too Short, Deon Cole, Chaka Khan, Herb Alpert, Mtume, Michael McDonald, Michael Brauer, Bootsy Collins, Darius Rucker, Robin Thede, D-Nice, Sheila E, Gina Rodriguez, Jason Flom, Ty Dolla $ign, Leon Sylvers III, Rosario Dawson, Common, Joi, Cree Summers, Lalah Hathaway, “Weird Al” Yankovic, Scarface, Lena Waithe, Salaam Remi, Stokely Williams, The Smolletts (Jazz, Jake, Jurnee and Jussie Smollett), Jimmy Fallon, Kurtis Blow, Kim Fields, Seth Rogan, Esperanza Spalding, Tito Jackson, Rapsody, Huey Lewis, Estelle, James Taylor, Zoë Kravitz, Johnny Gill, Alan Leeds, Dawnn Lewis, The Family Stand, John Legend, Little Brother (Phonte and Rapper Big Pooh), Fat Joe, Norah Jones, Kenny Gamble, Jill Scott, CeeLo Green, Rich Rubin, Spike Lee, Musiq Soulchild, Big Lez, Larry Gold, Sunny Hostin, George Clinton, Robert Glasper, Jemele Hill, Alicia Keys and Bruce Hornsby.
And still, Quest Love is on all social media platforms deejaying almost every night and most recently has been raising money for Stacey Abrams, Fair Fight organization.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxV4mRc-sVM
My Expert Opinion with Math Hoffa
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Math Hoffa
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Math Hoffa has dedicated over a decade to a professional career to battle rapping.
The sport has yielded wonderous fruit for him but also dressed in a cloak of negativity. After a few high-profile fights (or sucker punches), many saw his meteoric climb to the culture’s Mt. Rushmore chiseled away.
For years, leagues would not book him, notably diminishing his star presence (even as it did not subtract from his history or his talent).
But something clicked for him in 2018 or 2019, and on his road back to the top of the competitive battle rap space, he started to remind fans why the kid from Brooklyn was/is such a threat in the game.
Yes, he took some battles and had some pretty dope contests – but it was his pairing up with HipHopIsReal owner, Knowledge the God, and Murda Ave. Qing, Ms. Fit to produce the hit series, My Expert Opinion with Math Hoffa, that he changed the game.
The Pac Juice rapper created the first battle rap talk show, hosted and developed by a battler.
There were other projects that others had, but none of them were fleshed out and executed with the same level of professionalism and star power as MEO. He and his co-hosts, all bringing equal value and distinguishable perspectives, pull out the craziest stories from their guests.
A select list of guests are as follows: C3, Murda Mook, Nicky “NBA” Jam, Bill Collector, Miles, Head Ice, J Murda, Big T, Holmzie da God, Blackface, Immortal Tech, Marvwon, Fonz, Oun P, Avocado, 40 BARRS, Swamp, Mickey Facts, Loaded Lux, John John da Don, Aye Verb, The Horsemen (Th3 Saga, Loso, A-Ward, Street Hymnz, Ooops), ARP, Pat Stay, Royce da 5’9, 40 Cal, Jerry Wess, T-Rex, Vague, Cortez, E-Hart, Myverse, Joe Budden, Ms. Hustle, Ahdi Boom, Mysonne, Goodz, Soul Khan, Cardan, Jay Blac, Debo, Un Kasa, Iron Solomon, Mike P and Method Man.
Mind Power Mixtape with Common
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Common
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The Chicago rapper, whose real name is Lonnie Corant Jaman Shuka Rashid Lynn Jr., has recently launched his new six-episode series called Audible original “Mind Power Mixtape” exclusively on Audible, as part of the Audible Plus catalog.
One of the most popular episodes featured Nas.
On “Mind Power Mixtape,” Common got the Queensbridge emcee to talk about how he learned about systemic racism as a child. He told him that his mother broke down the serious bigotry that unfortunately will follow him all his days.
Nas further told the Academy Award-winner, “I knew [about racism] early because my mom would teach me all of that.”
“Be careful with a water gun, son, the cops kill Black kids for water guns,” he continued as he remembered his mother’s voice. “Be careful with toy guns, be careful with this, be careful with that, because they will want to lock you up.”
Because his mother was from North Carolina, she was concerned that her boys might get hemmed up by New York’s law enforcement, who have always seemed to have issues with young Black men.
“She was born in the south, in North Carolina, so she came to New York and that’s where I was born. She was telling me things to watch out for so I heard it from her first, and it just all made sense because when you look out and see what’s happening in your community, you go, this ain’t how cops act on TV.”
Nas further explained how he felt when he first realized that the social ramification of his race prohibited him to dream as big as the white kids his age.
“You’re like wait a minute, you go from being in kindergarten, I want to be a fireman, I want to be a police officer because the way people push it on TV or wherever … those are the nice guys … but then you see something else in your community,” he shared. “And you’re like, this is only happening here. Don’t get me wrong, there’s white people that are getting jammed up by police too, poor whites, but it’s going down in the hood. I saw that and it all made sense.”
Common also asked Nas what he would do if he, in fact, ruled the world referencing his 1996 hit song, “If I Ruled the World.”
The podcast has tons of gems like this.
Also interviewed in the series are the following: Oscar-winning actor Mahershala Ali, renowned ballerina Misty Copeland, comic Hasan Minhaj, activist-lawyer Bryan Stevenson, and his actress-comedian girlfriend Tiffany Haddish.
Common’s “Mind Power Mixtape” is exclusively on Audible, as part of the Audible Plus catalog.
Charlamagne Tha God, The Black Effect Network
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Charlamagne Tha God is an O.G. and possibly the Berry Gordy of podcasting.
Gone are the days when he was Wendy Williams sidekick. Now the homeboy one of the most influential and important voices in entertainment.
Whether it is on his morning show on terrestrial radio, MTV shows, and specials, bestselling books, or his Brilliant Idiot podcast, America wants to know what the Moncks Corner, South Carolinian has to say on just about anything.
Luckily, over the last few years, he has been talking about things that seem to elevate spaces that feed Black creatives, invests in Black creatives, and above all give Black creatives the freedom to create and own their creations.
In September 2020, he announced that he would be launching in partnership with iHeartMedia, a joint podcast publishing venture, The Black Effect Podcast Network.
The BEP promises to give to the world 18 podcasts, all selected and developed by Charlamagne, on iHeartRadio and other podcast platforms.
But in addition to that, it was announced in December 2020 that he will now be made the Senior Creative Officer of Culture content and programming for the number one radio company in the nation, reconfiguring his current deal with the entity.
Charlamagne has “renewed” and “extended” his deal another five years as a host for “The Breakfast Club,” the top nationally syndicated radio show in the country.
On “The Breakfast Club,” he was able to scoop two major moments in the 2020 presidential election: President-Elect Joe Biden flubbing up and saying “you ain’t Black if you don’t vote for me” and Vice President-Elect Kamala Harris saying she smoked weed in college while she was listening to Snoop and Tupac — before either of the rappers had released records.
With this new positioning, Charlamagne’s The Black Effect Network (which is living into its name) has the potential to put so many people into play that have voices that deserve to be heard.
“I give my sincerest thanks to iHeart for empowering me over the past decade to be the best talent that I can be, and for honoring me as an owner and executive,” said Charlamagne. “I love the audio business and iHeart is the biggest and best audio company in the world. As Co-Founder and Chief Creative Officer of the Black Effect Podcast Network and now Senior Creative Officer of Cultural Content and Programming at iHeart, all I want to do for the next five years is continuing to move the culture of radio and podcasting forward by curating a new era of voices, programming, and events. God is great! Now, it’s time to get back to work.”
The first solid show that The Black Effect Podcast Network can list on its content roster is the podcast version of The Breakfast Club.
But there are these names: comedian-actress Jess Hilarious, social justice activist Tamika Mallory, attorney and TV host Eboni K. Williams, N.O.R.E. and DJ EFN’s Drink Champs, Karlous Miller, DC Young Fly and Chico Bean’s The 85 South Show and NBA All-Stars Matt Barnes and Stephen Jackson’s All The Smoke podcast.
Oh, iHeart has opened the doors now! It’s that Black Effect.
Charlamagne also launched Black Privilege Publishing as a new partnership imprint from Atria Books at Simon & Schuster. BPP will drop social justice leader and activist Tamika D. Mallory’s debut book State of Emergency in May 2021. At the same time, he will debut his new show on Comedy Central.
The LOX presents “Living Off Xperience” Podcast
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The Lox
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The LOX have had a hell of a year. After releasing their fourth studio album, Living Off Xperience, the Yonkers trio took their incredible chemistry to the net.
The biggest dilemma of 2020 for artists was that touring was limited or all the way shut down.
What is a group to do when not only do they make a sizable living off of performing shows, but promotional touring is the traditional way to pump a new project — a project that their fans have been begging for?
Well, The LOX tried to rock interviews on zoom and IG, telling folk why this new record is next level but oftentimes those conversations danced around their tremendous career and the relationships that have spawned from them being the first rap group on Bad Boy Records in the boutique label’s glory days.
Transitioning into the podcast world just made sense.
All three of the members are real businessmen and with the support of their manager Mike Brinkley, it makes sense (though not confirmed) that podcasting would be the obvious money move.
Even though Living Off Xperience is one of the newer podcasts on the list, they compete with their guest list too. Celebrities that have dropped by are as follows: Mary J. Blige, Angie Martinez, Rob Markman, Fat Joe, Memphis Bleek, DMX, and Swizz Beatz.
Questlove Supreme
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Questlove
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The founding member of Philly’s pride The Roots is an ethnomusicologist. With an encyclopedistic fervor, he is probably, on music, the most well-versed artist/stakeholder in rap culture. Thus, his podcast Questlove Supreme is everything fans might want to experience from the renowned musician (drummer and DJ).
Birthed from the popularity of his music courses at NYU, he started the podcast in September 2016.
In each episode he generously lets others into his brilliant mind, curating content to expand not just your understanding of the subject, or the person he has as a guest, but to push you to understand your own taste. He notes that he prepares for each episode by listening to around 200 songs.
Originally on Pandora and now on iHeartMedia, Questlove has hosted a top-shelf array of influencers that serves as evidence of his star power and reach.
A selected list of guests include: Maya Rudolph, Bob Power, Dante Ross, The Revolution, Alan Leeds, Stretch & Bobbito, Jungle Brothers, Freeway, Daniel Marley, Ray Parker Jr., Solange, Stephen Hill, Pete Rock, Marley Marl, Faith Newman, Q-Tip, Kevin Liles, Chris Rock, MC Serch, Usher, Tom Silverman, DJ Premier, Prodigy, Just Blaze, Babyface, The Emotions, Nelly Furtado, Jerrod Carmichael, Siedah Garrett, Jimmy Jam, Gilles Peterson, Roy Ayers, Angela Rye, Charlie Wilson, Heather Hunter, Donnie Simpson, Kathryn Bigelow, Biz Markie, Prince Paul, Spike Lee, Too Short, Deon Cole, Chaka Khan, Herb Alpert, Mtume, Michael McDonald, Michael Brauer, Bootsy Collins, Darius Rucker, Robin Thede, D-Nice, Sheila E, Gina Rodriguez, Jason Flom, Ty Dolla $ign, Leon Sylvers III, Rosario Dawson, Common, Joi, Cree Summers, Lalah Hathaway, “Weird Al” Yankovic, Scarface, Lena Waithe, Salaam Remi, Stokely Williams, The Smolletts (Jazz, Jake, Jurnee and Jussie Smollett), Jimmy Fallon, Kurtis Blow, Kim Fields, Seth Rogan, Esperanza Spalding, Tito Jackson, Rapsody, Huey Lewis, Estelle, James Taylor, Zoë Kravitz, Johnny Gill, Alan Leeds, Dawnn Lewis, The Family Stand, John Legend, Little Brother (Phonte and Rapper Big Pooh), Fat Joe, Norah Jones, Kenny Gamble, Jill Scott, CeeLo Green, Rich Rubin, Spike Lee, Musiq Soulchild, Big Lez, Larry Gold, Sunny Hostin, George Clinton, Robert Glasper, Jemele Hill, Alicia Keys and Bruce Hornsby.
And still, Quest Love is on all social media platforms deejaying almost every night and most recently has been raising money for Stacey Abrams, Fair Fight organization.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxV4mRc-sVM
My Expert Opinion with Math Hoffa
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Math Hoffa
Advertisement
Math Hoffa has dedicated over a decade to a professional career to battle rapping.
The sport has yielded wonderous fruit for him but also dressed in a cloak of negativity. After a few high-profile fights (or sucker punches), many saw his meteoric climb to the culture’s Mt. Rushmore chiseled away.
For years, leagues would not book him, notably diminishing his star presence (even as it did not subtract from his history or his talent).
But something clicked for him in 2018 or 2019, and on his road back to the top of the competitive battle rap space, he started to remind fans why the kid from Brooklyn was/is such a threat in the game.
Yes, he took some battles and had some pretty dope contests – but it was his pairing up with HipHopIsReal owner, Knowledge the God, and Murda Ave. Qing, Ms. Fit to produce the hit series, My Expert Opinion with Math Hoffa, that he changed the game.
The Pac Juice rapper created the first battle rap talk show, hosted and developed by a battler.
There were other projects that others had, but none of them were fleshed out and executed with the same level of professionalism and star power as MEO. He and his co-hosts, all bringing equal value and distinguishable perspectives, pull out the craziest stories from their guests.
A select list of guests are as follows: C3, Murda Mook, Nicky “NBA” Jam, Bill Collector, Miles, Head Ice, J Murda, Big T, Holmzie da God, Blackface, Immortal Tech, Marvwon, Fonz, Oun P, Avocado, 40 BARRS, Swamp, Mickey Facts, Loaded Lux, John John da Don, Aye Verb, The Horsemen (Th3 Saga, Loso, A-Ward, Street Hymnz, Ooops), ARP, Pat Stay, Royce da 5’9, 40 Cal, Jerry Wess, T-Rex, Vague, Cortez, E-Hart, Myverse, Joe Budden, Ms. Hustle, Ahdi Boom, Mysonne, Goodz, Soul Khan, Cardan, Jay Blac, Debo, Un Kasa, Iron Solomon, Mike P and Method Man.
Mind Power Mixtape with Common
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Common
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The Chicago rapper, whose real name is Lonnie Corant Jaman Shuka Rashid Lynn Jr., has recently launched his new six-episode series called Audible original “Mind Power Mixtape” exclusively on Audible, as part of the Audible Plus catalog.
One of the most popular episodes featured Nas.
On “Mind Power Mixtape,” Common got the Queensbridge emcee to talk about how he learned about systemic racism as a child. He told him that his mother broke down the serious bigotry that unfortunately will follow him all his days.
Nas further told the Academy Award-winner, “I knew [about racism] early because my mom would teach me all of that.”
“Be careful with a water gun, son, the cops kill Black kids for water guns,” he continued as he remembered his mother’s voice. “Be careful with toy guns, be careful with this, be careful with that, because they will want to lock you up.”
Because his mother was from North Carolina, she was concerned that her boys might get hemmed up by New York’s law enforcement, who have always seemed to have issues with young Black men.
“She was born in the south, in North Carolina, so she came to New York and that’s where I was born. She was telling me things to watch out for so I heard it from her first, and it just all made sense because when you look out and see what’s happening in your community, you go, this ain’t how cops act on TV.”
Nas further explained how he felt when he first realized that the social ramification of his race prohibited him to dream as big as the white kids his age.
“You’re like wait a minute, you go from being in kindergarten, I want to be a fireman, I want to be a police officer because the way people push it on TV or wherever … those are the nice guys … but then you see something else in your community,” he shared. “And you’re like, this is only happening here. Don’t get me wrong, there’s white people that are getting jammed up by police too, poor whites, but it’s going down in the hood. I saw that and it all made sense.”
Common also asked Nas what he would do if he, in fact, ruled the world referencing his 1996 hit song, “If I Ruled the World.”
The podcast has tons of gems like this.
Also interviewed in the series are the following: Oscar-winning actor Mahershala Ali, renowned ballerina Misty Copeland, comic Hasan Minhaj, activist-lawyer Bryan Stevenson, and his actress-comedian girlfriend Tiffany Haddish.
Common’s “Mind Power Mixtape” is exclusively on Audible, as part of the Audible Plus catalog.
Million Dollaz Worth of Game with Gillie da King and Wallo 267
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Gillie Da Kid and Wallo
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Imagine spending the majority of your life incarcerated, after founding one of the illest Philly rap collectives ever to pop off.
Consider the cousin that you encouraged to rap, emerged from that clique as the leader, used that platform to create a lucrative career as a ghostwriter and you stuck behind bars?
That could have messed up your mind. Or it could have motivated you to be the best version of yourself. Wallo 267 took the road less traveled and with his cousin Gillie da King (formerly known as Gillie da Kid).
The two now are able to give his supporters, his fans, family, and friends more than a million dollars’ worth of game on his podcast.
Presented by Barstool Sports, on their Million Dollaz Worth of Game series, Gillie and Wallo spend their sessions focusing each episode around true life and giving out game.
They describe the show as manifesting “authenticity, empathy, and truth to yourself while injecting humor into every aspect of conversation. GAME is more of a life story than an expression.” But folks would honestly say that this top-charting podcast is a stone-cold gas of a time.
The Fat Joe Show
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Fat Joe
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During the onset of quarantine, Bronx rapper Fat Joe started to experience anxiety. To answer his angst, he hopped on social media and to talk to friends.
The goal was to find comfort in old stories and catching up. But it is never just that simple with Crack. Anyone who knows Fat Joe, even for a short while, knows that it is a party and a half when he gets to talking.
What started as a virtual hang-out has turned into a multi-million dollar deal with Revolt TV, where a version of his IG show comes on every Tuesday at 10 pm EST.
Fun fact about the show is Joe’s infectious personality always yields what people call a “Joeprah Moment.”
These exclusives have given the fans, albeit, through his relationships, a peek into the lives of some of the world’s biggest stars ranging from rappers, athletes, actors, activists, media personalities, and politicians.
This sparked Puff to air Fat Joe Presents Primetime Joeprah: The Biggest Moments. An even more funnier fact is that the executive producer of the show is his 14-year-old daughter.
A partial list of his guests are as follows: Luis Guzmán, Rev. Run, Beanie Sigel, Vanessa Williams, Mya, Mike Tyson, Ludacris, Roxanne Shante, Remy Ma, Jim Jones, Treach, Juelz Santana, Bobby Brown, Faith Evans, Maino, J. Prince, Damian Lillard, DJ ENVY, Shine, B-Real, Busta Rhymes, Lil Wayne, Irv Gotti, Ja Rule, Erick Sermon, Trick Daddy, Teddy Riley, T-Pain, Lil Kim, Goodie Mob, Patti Labelle, Jamie Foxx, Shaquille O’Neal, Chris Brown, Akon, Trina, NORE, Crazy Legs, Bizzy Bone, Charlamagne Tha God, Jermaine Dupri, T.I., Floyd Mayweather, Method Man, LL Cool J, Jalen Rose, Big Sean, Royce Da 5’9”, Damian Lillard, Benny the Butcher, DJ Khaled, Snoop Dog, Vince Carter, Dwayne Wade, Saweetie, Stephen A. Smith, Ashanti, Mike Vick, Rakim, Tyrese, Doja Cat and so many more.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlgrw2YyZ8A
The People’s Party with Talib Kweli
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Talib Kweli
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Everyone who has been paying attention to Hip-Hop over the last three decades should know that Talib Kweli, a member of both Black Star and Reflection Eternal, is one of the most interesting personalities in rap culture.
He is bright. He is talented. He is connected. He is fearless. He is also inquisitive. That combination makes him perfect as a podcast host … and makes what he and his co-host Jasmin Leigh do on The People’s Party with Talib Kweli extraordinary.
There are things that Kwa does uniquely that pushes the envelope as Hip-Hop’s Ed Bradley.
As someone who has “Smart AF” tattooed on his spirit, he simply knows a whole bunch of stuff that stretches his guests to get stuff that no one has ever known. He also is a researcher, so he gets history on folk which helps the interview.
Moreover, he asks tough questions oftentimes without fear of reproach… because… he has those relationships.
This year, he hosted folk like Kurupt, Papoose, Mannie Fresh, DMX, Inspectah Deck, Diamond D, Orlando Jones, Capone, Royce da 5’9, Hannibal Buress, Miguel, Monie Love, Cipha Sounds, Wyclef Jean, Tiffany Haddish, Common, Don Lemon, Jessica Care Moore, Method Man, Michael Che, Reggie Hudlin, John Salley, Jessy Terrero, Everlast, Chuck D, D Smoke, Jada Kiss, MC Eiht, Rapsody, Affion Crockett, John Forte, Michael Rapaport, Ice Cube, Yvette Nicole Brown, Anthony Anderson, Zaytoven and more.
expediTIously with Tip “T.I.” Harris
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T.I.
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If Talib Kweli is Ed Bradley, T.I. Harris would be the Bryant Gumbel of Hip-Hop podcasting.
The series has had a very interesting start. As one of the most profound voices in the culture, he is going to bring all of his charisma — which has yielded fruit in television, film, and his music — to the table.
The 40-year-old multi-hyphenate approaches his interviews with a particular man-ish energy that fills up the room.
While last year, his old school ways got him in trouble, this year, he has stepped into more diverse terrain and expanded the conversations. While other shows have guests that have had significant careers in from the 80s to the early 2000s, he is locked in with the pulse of the new South and the newer Hip-Hopper.
Culturally important, there are episodes of expediTIously that help further shatter the myth that because southerners speak with a slow drawl that they are not swift-witted.
He demolishes that stereotype to smithereens with in-depth conversations with David Banner on the Parchman Mississippi Prison, Daymond John on business, former Surgeon General Dr. Regina Benjamin and Daily Blast Live’s Erica Cobb on COVID-19’s impact on African Americans.
He has also hosted the producer of the documentary One Child Left Behind: The Atlanta Public School Scandal, social scientist Jane Elliot, Georgia Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard, and former Fulton County assistant DA Christian Wise Smith to talk about the death of Rayshard Brooks.
T.I.’s long list of guests also includes John Hope Bryant, CEO of The Promise Homes Company, the largest for-profit minority-controlled owners of single-family residential rental homes. Add Gary L. Davis, creator and founder of the Next Level Boys Academy and Killer Mike to discuss his new Greenwood banking platform to the list.
This year, some of the sports and entertainment guests that appeared on his podcast has included Stephen A. Smith, 21 Savage, Goodie Mob for their 25th Anniversary, Benny the Butcher, Young Thug, Jada Kiss, Rapsody, Karlous Miller, Big Sean, Ice Cube, The Dream, Rozanda “Chilli” Thomas and Tionne “T-Boz” Watkins, Uncle Luke, Mo’Nique & Sidney Hicks, LL Cool J, Royce Da 5’9”, MC Lyte, Lecrae, Lil Duval, Vince Carter, Kenya Barris, Griselda, Jermaine Dupri, Michael Colyar, Tyler Perry, Luenell, Daymond John, Bonecrusher, the LOX, Boris Kodjoe and Nicole Ari Parker, Fab, Jeezy, 2 Chainz, Will Packer, Omari Hardwick, Taraji P. Henson, and Mike Tyson.
Charlamagne Tha God, The Black Effect Network
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Charlamagne Tha God is an O.G. and possibly the Berry Gordy of podcasting.
Gone are the days when he was Wendy Williams sidekick. Now the homeboy one of the most influential and important voices in entertainment.
Whether it is on his morning show on terrestrial radio, MTV shows, and specials, bestselling books, or his Brilliant Idiot podcast, America wants to know what the Moncks Corner, South Carolinian has to say on just about anything.
Luckily, over the last few years, he has been talking about things that seem to elevate spaces that feed Black creatives, invests in Black creatives, and above all give Black creatives the freedom to create and own their creations.
In September 2020, he announced that he would be launching in partnership with iHeartMedia, a joint podcast publishing venture, The Black Effect Podcast Network.
The BEP promises to give to the world 18 podcasts, all selected and developed by Charlamagne, on iHeartRadio and other podcast platforms.
But in addition to that, it was announced in December 2020 that he will now be made the Senior Creative Officer of Culture content and programming for the number one radio company in the nation, reconfiguring his current deal with the entity.
Charlamagne has “renewed” and “extended” his deal another five years as a host for “The Breakfast Club,” the top nationally syndicated radio show in the country.
On “The Breakfast Club,” he was able to scoop two major moments in the 2020 presidential election: President-Elect Joe Biden flubbing up and saying “you ain’t Black if you don’t vote for me” and Vice President-Elect Kamala Harris saying she smoked weed in college while she was listening to Snoop and Tupac — before either of the rappers had released records.
With this new positioning, Charlamagne’s The Black Effect Network (which is living into its name) has the potential to put so many people into play that have voices that deserve to be heard.
“I give my sincerest thanks to iHeart for empowering me over the past decade to be the best talent that I can be, and for honoring me as an owner and executive,” said Charlamagne. “I love the audio business and iHeart is the biggest and best audio company in the world. As Co-Founder and Chief Creative Officer of the Black Effect Podcast Network and now Senior Creative Officer of Cultural Content and Programming at iHeart, all I want to do for the next five years is continuing to move the culture of radio and podcasting forward by curating a new era of voices, programming, and events. God is great! Now, it’s time to get back to work.”
The first solid show that The Black Effect Podcast Network can list on its content roster is the podcast version of The Breakfast Club.
But there are these names: comedian-actress Jess Hilarious, social justice activist Tamika Mallory, attorney and TV host Eboni K. Williams, N.O.R.E. and DJ EFN’s Drink Champs, Karlous Miller, DC Young Fly and Chico Bean’s The 85 South Show and NBA All-Stars Matt Barnes and Stephen Jackson’s All The Smoke podcast.
Oh, iHeart has opened the doors now! It’s that Black Effect.
Charlamagne also launched Black Privilege Publishing as a new partnership imprint from Atria Books at Simon & Schuster. BPP will drop social justice leader and activist Tamika D. Mallory’s debut book State of Emergency in May 2021. At the same time, he will debut his new show on Comedy Central.
The LOX presents “Living Off Xperience” Podcast
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The Lox
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The LOX have had a hell of a year. After releasing their fourth studio album, Living Off Xperience, the Yonkers trio took their incredible chemistry to the net.
The biggest dilemma of 2020 for artists was that touring was limited or all the way shut down.
What is a group to do when not only do they make a sizable living off of performing shows, but promotional touring is the traditional way to pump a new project — a project that their fans have been begging for?
Well, The LOX tried to rock interviews on zoom and IG, telling folk why this new record is next level but oftentimes those conversations danced around their tremendous career and the relationships that have spawned from them being the first rap group on Bad Boy Records in the boutique label’s glory days.
Transitioning into the podcast world just made sense.
All three of the members are real businessmen and with the support of their manager Mike Brinkley, it makes sense (though not confirmed) that podcasting would be the obvious money move.
Even though Living Off Xperience is one of the newer podcasts on the list, they compete with their guest list too. Celebrities that have dropped by are as follows: Mary J. Blige, Angie Martinez, Rob Markman, Fat Joe, Memphis Bleek, DMX, and Swizz Beatz.
Questlove Supreme
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Questlove
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The founding member of Philly’s pride The Roots is an ethnomusicologist. With an encyclopedistic fervor, he is probably, on music, the most well-versed artist/stakeholder in rap culture. Thus, his podcast Questlove Supreme is everything fans might want to experience from the renowned musician (drummer and DJ).
Birthed from the popularity of his music courses at NYU, he started the podcast in September 2016.
In each episode he generously lets others into his brilliant mind, curating content to expand not just your understanding of the subject, or the person he has as a guest, but to push you to understand your own taste. He notes that he prepares for each episode by listening to around 200 songs.
Originally on Pandora and now on iHeartMedia, Questlove has hosted a top-shelf array of influencers that serves as evidence of his star power and reach.
A selected list of guests include: Maya Rudolph, Bob Power, Dante Ross, The Revolution, Alan Leeds, Stretch & Bobbito, Jungle Brothers, Freeway, Daniel Marley, Ray Parker Jr., Solange, Stephen Hill, Pete Rock, Marley Marl, Faith Newman, Q-Tip, Kevin Liles, Chris Rock, MC Serch, Usher, Tom Silverman, DJ Premier, Prodigy, Just Blaze, Babyface, The Emotions, Nelly Furtado, Jerrod Carmichael, Siedah Garrett, Jimmy Jam, Gilles Peterson, Roy Ayers, Angela Rye, Charlie Wilson, Heather Hunter, Donnie Simpson, Kathryn Bigelow, Biz Markie, Prince Paul, Spike Lee, Too Short, Deon Cole, Chaka Khan, Herb Alpert, Mtume, Michael McDonald, Michael Brauer, Bootsy Collins, Darius Rucker, Robin Thede, D-Nice, Sheila E, Gina Rodriguez, Jason Flom, Ty Dolla $ign, Leon Sylvers III, Rosario Dawson, Common, Joi, Cree Summers, Lalah Hathaway, “Weird Al” Yankovic, Scarface, Lena Waithe, Salaam Remi, Stokely Williams, The Smolletts (Jazz, Jake, Jurnee and Jussie Smollett), Jimmy Fallon, Kurtis Blow, Kim Fields, Seth Rogan, Esperanza Spalding, Tito Jackson, Rapsody, Huey Lewis, Estelle, James Taylor, Zoë Kravitz, Johnny Gill, Alan Leeds, Dawnn Lewis, The Family Stand, John Legend, Little Brother (Phonte and Rapper Big Pooh), Fat Joe, Norah Jones, Kenny Gamble, Jill Scott, CeeLo Green, Rich Rubin, Spike Lee, Musiq Soulchild, Big Lez, Larry Gold, Sunny Hostin, George Clinton, Robert Glasper, Jemele Hill, Alicia Keys and Bruce Hornsby.
And still, Quest Love is on all social media platforms deejaying almost every night and most recently has been raising money for Stacey Abrams, Fair Fight organization.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxV4mRc-sVM
My Expert Opinion with Math Hoffa
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Math Hoffa
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Math Hoffa has dedicated over a decade to a professional career to battle rapping.
The sport has yielded wonderous fruit for him but also dressed in a cloak of negativity. After a few high-profile fights (or sucker punches), many saw his meteoric climb to the culture’s Mt. Rushmore chiseled away.
For years, leagues would not book him, notably diminishing his star presence (even as it did not subtract from his history or his talent).
But something clicked for him in 2018 or 2019, and on his road back to the top of the competitive battle rap space, he started to remind fans why the kid from Brooklyn was/is such a threat in the game.
Yes, he took some battles and had some pretty dope contests – but it was his pairing up with HipHopIsReal owner, Knowledge the God, and Murda Ave. Qing, Ms. Fit to produce the hit series, My Expert Opinion with Math Hoffa, that he changed the game.
The Pac Juice rapper created the first battle rap talk show, hosted and developed by a battler.
There were other projects that others had, but none of them were fleshed out and executed with the same level of professionalism and star power as MEO. He and his co-hosts, all bringing equal value and distinguishable perspectives, pull out the craziest stories from their guests.
A select list of guests are as follows: C3, Murda Mook, Nicky “NBA” Jam, Bill Collector, Miles, Head Ice, J Murda, Big T, Holmzie da God, Blackface, Immortal Tech, Marvwon, Fonz, Oun P, Avocado, 40 BARRS, Swamp, Mickey Facts, Loaded Lux, John John da Don, Aye Verb, The Horsemen (Th3 Saga, Loso, A-Ward, Street Hymnz, Ooops), ARP, Pat Stay, Royce da 5’9, 40 Cal, Jerry Wess, T-Rex, Vague, Cortez, E-Hart, Myverse, Joe Budden, Ms. Hustle, Ahdi Boom, Mysonne, Goodz, Soul Khan, Cardan, Jay Blac, Debo, Un Kasa, Iron Solomon, Mike P and Method Man.
Mind Power Mixtape with Common
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Common
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The Chicago rapper, whose real name is Lonnie Corant Jaman Shuka Rashid Lynn Jr., has recently launched his new six-episode series called Audible original “Mind Power Mixtape” exclusively on Audible, as part of the Audible Plus catalog.
One of the most popular episodes featured Nas.
On “Mind Power Mixtape,” Common got the Queensbridge emcee to talk about how he learned about systemic racism as a child. He told him that his mother broke down the serious bigotry that unfortunately will follow him all his days.
Nas further told the Academy Award-winner, “I knew [about racism] early because my mom would teach me all of that.”
“Be careful with a water gun, son, the cops kill Black kids for water guns,” he continued as he remembered his mother’s voice. “Be careful with toy guns, be careful with this, be careful with that, because they will want to lock you up.”
Because his mother was from North Carolina, she was concerned that her boys might get hemmed up by New York’s law enforcement, who have always seemed to have issues with young Black men.
“She was born in the south, in North Carolina, so she came to New York and that’s where I was born. She was telling me things to watch out for so I heard it from her first, and it just all made sense because when you look out and see what’s happening in your community, you go, this ain’t how cops act on TV.”
Nas further explained how he felt when he first realized that the social ramification of his race prohibited him to dream as big as the white kids his age.
“You’re like wait a minute, you go from being in kindergarten, I want to be a fireman, I want to be a police officer because the way people push it on TV or wherever … those are the nice guys … but then you see something else in your community,” he shared. “And you’re like, this is only happening here. Don’t get me wrong, there’s white people that are getting jammed up by police too, poor whites, but it’s going down in the hood. I saw that and it all made sense.”
Common also asked Nas what he would do if he, in fact, ruled the world referencing his 1996 hit song, “If I Ruled the World.”
The podcast has tons of gems like this.
Also interviewed in the series are the following: Oscar-winning actor Mahershala Ali, renowned ballerina Misty Copeland, comic Hasan Minhaj, activist-lawyer Bryan Stevenson, and his actress-comedian girlfriend Tiffany Haddish.
Common’s “Mind Power Mixtape” is exclusively on Audible, as part of the Audible Plus catalog.
His podcast continues to break new boundaries talking about music, pop culture, and allowing the Slaughterhouse alum to be as wild as ever — well maybe not as wild as he is on Clubhouse, but you get the drift.
https://www.instagram.com/p/CFe8XQ3hI6f/
N.O.R.E. and EFN Presents Drink Champs
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N.O.R.E.
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One of the most entertaining and informative shows on podcast-land is Drink Champs.
The decoration is not extraordinary. There is no elaborate set design, but what producers probably break the bank on is the extraordinary array of spirits, champagne, Tiger Bone, and weed. The intoxicants are the third host, backing Mr. Superthug and the Crazy Hood Cuban.
Their website tags them as “the most professional, unprofessional podcast … PERIOD!” Each and every Friday at 12 AM EST, Queens rapper N.O.R.E. and his Miami partner DJ EFN drops a new episode of the series that is uniquely targeted to Generation X featuring the stars that made our Hip-Hop lives so undeniably rich.
N.O.R.E. says it over and over again, the purpose of the show is to give flowers to the great Hip-Hop artists and architects that made the culture the #1 genre in the world.
While the coronavirus presented many obstacles, Drink Champs continued to thrive giving fans a few epic moments and making some real business movements on their own.
Just people his guests over the last year: Lil Wayne, Steve Rifkind, Floyd Mayweather, Lil Flip, Three 6 Mafia, Lil Shawn, Jaz-O, Lamar Odom, Jim Jones, Math Hoffa, Havoc, DMX, Timbaland, Swizz Beatz, Jada Kiss, Lenny S, Fat Joe, Styles P, Akinyele and Killer Mike on the same episode, D-Nice, Gillie Da Kid and Wallo, Bun B, Talib Kweli, Mysonne, DJ Khaled, The Dogg Pound, Capone, Freddie Gibbs, Wacka Flocka, Dave East, Pitbull, Eric Nicks and James Cruz (a special Chris Lighty tribute), Hakeem Green, Nature, Mic Geronimo, Royal Flush, J. Prince, Conway the Machine, Tragedy Khadafi, Busta Rhymes, Saigon, Murda Mook Loaded Lux and more.
Million Dollaz Worth of Game with Gillie da King and Wallo 267
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Gillie Da Kid and Wallo
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Imagine spending the majority of your life incarcerated, after founding one of the illest Philly rap collectives ever to pop off.
Consider the cousin that you encouraged to rap, emerged from that clique as the leader, used that platform to create a lucrative career as a ghostwriter and you stuck behind bars?
That could have messed up your mind. Or it could have motivated you to be the best version of yourself. Wallo 267 took the road less traveled and with his cousin Gillie da King (formerly known as Gillie da Kid).
The two now are able to give his supporters, his fans, family, and friends more than a million dollars’ worth of game on his podcast.
Presented by Barstool Sports, on their Million Dollaz Worth of Game series, Gillie and Wallo spend their sessions focusing each episode around true life and giving out game.
They describe the show as manifesting “authenticity, empathy, and truth to yourself while injecting humor into every aspect of conversation. GAME is more of a life story than an expression.” But folks would honestly say that this top-charting podcast is a stone-cold gas of a time.
The Fat Joe Show
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Fat Joe
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During the onset of quarantine, Bronx rapper Fat Joe started to experience anxiety. To answer his angst, he hopped on social media and to talk to friends.
The goal was to find comfort in old stories and catching up. But it is never just that simple with Crack. Anyone who knows Fat Joe, even for a short while, knows that it is a party and a half when he gets to talking.
What started as a virtual hang-out has turned into a multi-million dollar deal with Revolt TV, where a version of his IG show comes on every Tuesday at 10 pm EST.
Fun fact about the show is Joe’s infectious personality always yields what people call a “Joeprah Moment.”
These exclusives have given the fans, albeit, through his relationships, a peek into the lives of some of the world’s biggest stars ranging from rappers, athletes, actors, activists, media personalities, and politicians.
This sparked Puff to air Fat Joe Presents Primetime Joeprah: The Biggest Moments. An even more funnier fact is that the executive producer of the show is his 14-year-old daughter.
A partial list of his guests are as follows: Luis Guzmán, Rev. Run, Beanie Sigel, Vanessa Williams, Mya, Mike Tyson, Ludacris, Roxanne Shante, Remy Ma, Jim Jones, Treach, Juelz Santana, Bobby Brown, Faith Evans, Maino, J. Prince, Damian Lillard, DJ ENVY, Shine, B-Real, Busta Rhymes, Lil Wayne, Irv Gotti, Ja Rule, Erick Sermon, Trick Daddy, Teddy Riley, T-Pain, Lil Kim, Goodie Mob, Patti Labelle, Jamie Foxx, Shaquille O’Neal, Chris Brown, Akon, Trina, NORE, Crazy Legs, Bizzy Bone, Charlamagne Tha God, Jermaine Dupri, T.I., Floyd Mayweather, Method Man, LL Cool J, Jalen Rose, Big Sean, Royce Da 5’9”, Damian Lillard, Benny the Butcher, DJ Khaled, Snoop Dog, Vince Carter, Dwayne Wade, Saweetie, Stephen A. Smith, Ashanti, Mike Vick, Rakim, Tyrese, Doja Cat and so many more.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlgrw2YyZ8A
The People’s Party with Talib Kweli
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Talib Kweli
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Everyone who has been paying attention to Hip-Hop over the last three decades should know that Talib Kweli, a member of both Black Star and Reflection Eternal, is one of the most interesting personalities in rap culture.
He is bright. He is talented. He is connected. He is fearless. He is also inquisitive. That combination makes him perfect as a podcast host … and makes what he and his co-host Jasmin Leigh do on The People’s Party with Talib Kweli extraordinary.
There are things that Kwa does uniquely that pushes the envelope as Hip-Hop’s Ed Bradley.
As someone who has “Smart AF” tattooed on his spirit, he simply knows a whole bunch of stuff that stretches his guests to get stuff that no one has ever known. He also is a researcher, so he gets history on folk which helps the interview.
Moreover, he asks tough questions oftentimes without fear of reproach… because… he has those relationships.
This year, he hosted folk like Kurupt, Papoose, Mannie Fresh, DMX, Inspectah Deck, Diamond D, Orlando Jones, Capone, Royce da 5’9, Hannibal Buress, Miguel, Monie Love, Cipha Sounds, Wyclef Jean, Tiffany Haddish, Common, Don Lemon, Jessica Care Moore, Method Man, Michael Che, Reggie Hudlin, John Salley, Jessy Terrero, Everlast, Chuck D, D Smoke, Jada Kiss, MC Eiht, Rapsody, Affion Crockett, John Forte, Michael Rapaport, Ice Cube, Yvette Nicole Brown, Anthony Anderson, Zaytoven and more.
expediTIously with Tip “T.I.” Harris
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T.I.
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If Talib Kweli is Ed Bradley, T.I. Harris would be the Bryant Gumbel of Hip-Hop podcasting.
The series has had a very interesting start. As one of the most profound voices in the culture, he is going to bring all of his charisma — which has yielded fruit in television, film, and his music — to the table.
The 40-year-old multi-hyphenate approaches his interviews with a particular man-ish energy that fills up the room.
While last year, his old school ways got him in trouble, this year, he has stepped into more diverse terrain and expanded the conversations. While other shows have guests that have had significant careers in from the 80s to the early 2000s, he is locked in with the pulse of the new South and the newer Hip-Hopper.
Culturally important, there are episodes of expediTIously that help further shatter the myth that because southerners speak with a slow drawl that they are not swift-witted.
He demolishes that stereotype to smithereens with in-depth conversations with David Banner on the Parchman Mississippi Prison, Daymond John on business, former Surgeon General Dr. Regina Benjamin and Daily Blast Live’s Erica Cobb on COVID-19’s impact on African Americans.
He has also hosted the producer of the documentary One Child Left Behind: The Atlanta Public School Scandal, social scientist Jane Elliot, Georgia Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard, and former Fulton County assistant DA Christian Wise Smith to talk about the death of Rayshard Brooks.
T.I.’s long list of guests also includes John Hope Bryant, CEO of The Promise Homes Company, the largest for-profit minority-controlled owners of single-family residential rental homes. Add Gary L. Davis, creator and founder of the Next Level Boys Academy and Killer Mike to discuss his new Greenwood banking platform to the list.
This year, some of the sports and entertainment guests that appeared on his podcast has included Stephen A. Smith, 21 Savage, Goodie Mob for their 25th Anniversary, Benny the Butcher, Young Thug, Jada Kiss, Rapsody, Karlous Miller, Big Sean, Ice Cube, The Dream, Rozanda “Chilli” Thomas and Tionne “T-Boz” Watkins, Uncle Luke, Mo’Nique & Sidney Hicks, LL Cool J, Royce Da 5’9”, MC Lyte, Lecrae, Lil Duval, Vince Carter, Kenya Barris, Griselda, Jermaine Dupri, Michael Colyar, Tyler Perry, Luenell, Daymond John, Bonecrusher, the LOX, Boris Kodjoe and Nicole Ari Parker, Fab, Jeezy, 2 Chainz, Will Packer, Omari Hardwick, Taraji P. Henson, and Mike Tyson.
Charlamagne Tha God, The Black Effect Network
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Charlamagne Tha God is an O.G. and possibly the Berry Gordy of podcasting.
Gone are the days when he was Wendy Williams sidekick. Now the homeboy one of the most influential and important voices in entertainment.
Whether it is on his morning show on terrestrial radio, MTV shows, and specials, bestselling books, or his Brilliant Idiot podcast, America wants to know what the Moncks Corner, South Carolinian has to say on just about anything.
Luckily, over the last few years, he has been talking about things that seem to elevate spaces that feed Black creatives, invests in Black creatives, and above all give Black creatives the freedom to create and own their creations.
In September 2020, he announced that he would be launching in partnership with iHeartMedia, a joint podcast publishing venture, The Black Effect Podcast Network.
The BEP promises to give to the world 18 podcasts, all selected and developed by Charlamagne, on iHeartRadio and other podcast platforms.
But in addition to that, it was announced in December 2020 that he will now be made the Senior Creative Officer of Culture content and programming for the number one radio company in the nation, reconfiguring his current deal with the entity.
Charlamagne has “renewed” and “extended” his deal another five years as a host for “The Breakfast Club,” the top nationally syndicated radio show in the country.
On “The Breakfast Club,” he was able to scoop two major moments in the 2020 presidential election: President-Elect Joe Biden flubbing up and saying “you ain’t Black if you don’t vote for me” and Vice President-Elect Kamala Harris saying she smoked weed in college while she was listening to Snoop and Tupac — before either of the rappers had released records.
With this new positioning, Charlamagne’s The Black Effect Network (which is living into its name) has the potential to put so many people into play that have voices that deserve to be heard.
“I give my sincerest thanks to iHeart for empowering me over the past decade to be the best talent that I can be, and for honoring me as an owner and executive,” said Charlamagne. “I love the audio business and iHeart is the biggest and best audio company in the world. As Co-Founder and Chief Creative Officer of the Black Effect Podcast Network and now Senior Creative Officer of Cultural Content and Programming at iHeart, all I want to do for the next five years is continuing to move the culture of radio and podcasting forward by curating a new era of voices, programming, and events. God is great! Now, it’s time to get back to work.”
The first solid show that The Black Effect Podcast Network can list on its content roster is the podcast version of The Breakfast Club.
But there are these names: comedian-actress Jess Hilarious, social justice activist Tamika Mallory, attorney and TV host Eboni K. Williams, N.O.R.E. and DJ EFN’s Drink Champs, Karlous Miller, DC Young Fly and Chico Bean’s The 85 South Show and NBA All-Stars Matt Barnes and Stephen Jackson’s All The Smoke podcast.
Oh, iHeart has opened the doors now! It’s that Black Effect.
Charlamagne also launched Black Privilege Publishing as a new partnership imprint from Atria Books at Simon & Schuster. BPP will drop social justice leader and activist Tamika D. Mallory’s debut book State of Emergency in May 2021. At the same time, he will debut his new show on Comedy Central.
The LOX presents “Living Off Xperience” Podcast
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The Lox
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The LOX have had a hell of a year. After releasing their fourth studio album, Living Off Xperience, the Yonkers trio took their incredible chemistry to the net.
The biggest dilemma of 2020 for artists was that touring was limited or all the way shut down.
What is a group to do when not only do they make a sizable living off of performing shows, but promotional touring is the traditional way to pump a new project — a project that their fans have been begging for?
Well, The LOX tried to rock interviews on zoom and IG, telling folk why this new record is next level but oftentimes those conversations danced around their tremendous career and the relationships that have spawned from them being the first rap group on Bad Boy Records in the boutique label’s glory days.
Transitioning into the podcast world just made sense.
All three of the members are real businessmen and with the support of their manager Mike Brinkley, it makes sense (though not confirmed) that podcasting would be the obvious money move.
Even though Living Off Xperience is one of the newer podcasts on the list, they compete with their guest list too. Celebrities that have dropped by are as follows: Mary J. Blige, Angie Martinez, Rob Markman, Fat Joe, Memphis Bleek, DMX, and Swizz Beatz.
Questlove Supreme
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Questlove
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The founding member of Philly’s pride The Roots is an ethnomusicologist. With an encyclopedistic fervor, he is probably, on music, the most well-versed artist/stakeholder in rap culture. Thus, his podcast Questlove Supreme is everything fans might want to experience from the renowned musician (drummer and DJ).
Birthed from the popularity of his music courses at NYU, he started the podcast in September 2016.
In each episode he generously lets others into his brilliant mind, curating content to expand not just your understanding of the subject, or the person he has as a guest, but to push you to understand your own taste. He notes that he prepares for each episode by listening to around 200 songs.
Originally on Pandora and now on iHeartMedia, Questlove has hosted a top-shelf array of influencers that serves as evidence of his star power and reach.
A selected list of guests include: Maya Rudolph, Bob Power, Dante Ross, The Revolution, Alan Leeds, Stretch & Bobbito, Jungle Brothers, Freeway, Daniel Marley, Ray Parker Jr., Solange, Stephen Hill, Pete Rock, Marley Marl, Faith Newman, Q-Tip, Kevin Liles, Chris Rock, MC Serch, Usher, Tom Silverman, DJ Premier, Prodigy, Just Blaze, Babyface, The Emotions, Nelly Furtado, Jerrod Carmichael, Siedah Garrett, Jimmy Jam, Gilles Peterson, Roy Ayers, Angela Rye, Charlie Wilson, Heather Hunter, Donnie Simpson, Kathryn Bigelow, Biz Markie, Prince Paul, Spike Lee, Too Short, Deon Cole, Chaka Khan, Herb Alpert, Mtume, Michael McDonald, Michael Brauer, Bootsy Collins, Darius Rucker, Robin Thede, D-Nice, Sheila E, Gina Rodriguez, Jason Flom, Ty Dolla $ign, Leon Sylvers III, Rosario Dawson, Common, Joi, Cree Summers, Lalah Hathaway, “Weird Al” Yankovic, Scarface, Lena Waithe, Salaam Remi, Stokely Williams, The Smolletts (Jazz, Jake, Jurnee and Jussie Smollett), Jimmy Fallon, Kurtis Blow, Kim Fields, Seth Rogan, Esperanza Spalding, Tito Jackson, Rapsody, Huey Lewis, Estelle, James Taylor, Zoë Kravitz, Johnny Gill, Alan Leeds, Dawnn Lewis, The Family Stand, John Legend, Little Brother (Phonte and Rapper Big Pooh), Fat Joe, Norah Jones, Kenny Gamble, Jill Scott, CeeLo Green, Rich Rubin, Spike Lee, Musiq Soulchild, Big Lez, Larry Gold, Sunny Hostin, George Clinton, Robert Glasper, Jemele Hill, Alicia Keys and Bruce Hornsby.
And still, Quest Love is on all social media platforms deejaying almost every night and most recently has been raising money for Stacey Abrams, Fair Fight organization.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxV4mRc-sVM
My Expert Opinion with Math Hoffa
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Math Hoffa
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Math Hoffa has dedicated over a decade to a professional career to battle rapping.
The sport has yielded wonderous fruit for him but also dressed in a cloak of negativity. After a few high-profile fights (or sucker punches), many saw his meteoric climb to the culture’s Mt. Rushmore chiseled away.
For years, leagues would not book him, notably diminishing his star presence (even as it did not subtract from his history or his talent).
But something clicked for him in 2018 or 2019, and on his road back to the top of the competitive battle rap space, he started to remind fans why the kid from Brooklyn was/is such a threat in the game.
Yes, he took some battles and had some pretty dope contests – but it was his pairing up with HipHopIsReal owner, Knowledge the God, and Murda Ave. Qing, Ms. Fit to produce the hit series, My Expert Opinion with Math Hoffa, that he changed the game.
The Pac Juice rapper created the first battle rap talk show, hosted and developed by a battler.
There were other projects that others had, but none of them were fleshed out and executed with the same level of professionalism and star power as MEO. He and his co-hosts, all bringing equal value and distinguishable perspectives, pull out the craziest stories from their guests.
A select list of guests are as follows: C3, Murda Mook, Nicky “NBA” Jam, Bill Collector, Miles, Head Ice, J Murda, Big T, Holmzie da God, Blackface, Immortal Tech, Marvwon, Fonz, Oun P, Avocado, 40 BARRS, Swamp, Mickey Facts, Loaded Lux, John John da Don, Aye Verb, The Horsemen (Th3 Saga, Loso, A-Ward, Street Hymnz, Ooops), ARP, Pat Stay, Royce da 5’9, 40 Cal, Jerry Wess, T-Rex, Vague, Cortez, E-Hart, Myverse, Joe Budden, Ms. Hustle, Ahdi Boom, Mysonne, Goodz, Soul Khan, Cardan, Jay Blac, Debo, Un Kasa, Iron Solomon, Mike P and Method Man.
Mind Power Mixtape with Common
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Common
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The Chicago rapper, whose real name is Lonnie Corant Jaman Shuka Rashid Lynn Jr., has recently launched his new six-episode series called Audible original “Mind Power Mixtape” exclusively on Audible, as part of the Audible Plus catalog.
One of the most popular episodes featured Nas.
On “Mind Power Mixtape,” Common got the Queensbridge emcee to talk about how he learned about systemic racism as a child. He told him that his mother broke down the serious bigotry that unfortunately will follow him all his days.
Nas further told the Academy Award-winner, “I knew [about racism] early because my mom would teach me all of that.”
“Be careful with a water gun, son, the cops kill Black kids for water guns,” he continued as he remembered his mother’s voice. “Be careful with toy guns, be careful with this, be careful with that, because they will want to lock you up.”
Because his mother was from North Carolina, she was concerned that her boys might get hemmed up by New York’s law enforcement, who have always seemed to have issues with young Black men.
“She was born in the south, in North Carolina, so she came to New York and that’s where I was born. She was telling me things to watch out for so I heard it from her first, and it just all made sense because when you look out and see what’s happening in your community, you go, this ain’t how cops act on TV.”
Nas further explained how he felt when he first realized that the social ramification of his race prohibited him to dream as big as the white kids his age.
“You’re like wait a minute, you go from being in kindergarten, I want to be a fireman, I want to be a police officer because the way people push it on TV or wherever … those are the nice guys … but then you see something else in your community,” he shared. “And you’re like, this is only happening here. Don’t get me wrong, there’s white people that are getting jammed up by police too, poor whites, but it’s going down in the hood. I saw that and it all made sense.”
Common also asked Nas what he would do if he, in fact, ruled the world referencing his 1996 hit song, “If I Ruled the World.”
The podcast has tons of gems like this.
Also interviewed in the series are the following: Oscar-winning actor Mahershala Ali, renowned ballerina Misty Copeland, comic Hasan Minhaj, activist-lawyer Bryan Stevenson, and his actress-comedian girlfriend Tiffany Haddish.
Common’s “Mind Power Mixtape” is exclusively on Audible, as part of the Audible Plus catalog.