Couverture de Heard!: Afros & Audio Interview Series with Talib Jasir

Heard!: Afros & Audio Interview Series with Talib Jasir

Heard!: Afros & Audio Interview Series with Talib Jasir

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"Heard!", hosted by Talib Jasir, visionary founder of Afros & Audio is a key platform spotlighting the legacy and contributions of Black professionals in podcasting and audio. Join Talib as he engages with Black podcasters, audio creators, and industry experts, delivering essential insights and forward-thinking perspectives on the future of podcasting. "Heard!" is where indie creativity meets industry expertise. Each episode offers actionable advice, explores emerging trends, and uncovers real opportunities for growth in the podcasting space. Whether it's mastering audio storytelling or leveraging the latest podcasting tech, you'll find practical takeaways to enhance your craft. Subscribe to "Heard! Afros & Audio Interview Series with Talib Jasir" and be part of a movement dedicated to amplifying diverse voices and pushing podcasting forward.All Rights Reserved. (C) 2024 Direction Economie Management et direction Sciences sociales
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    Épisodes
    • Cultural Bridges, Global Storytelling & Creative Sovereignty with Toni Blackman
      Feb 20 2026

      In Episode 20 of the Heard! Afros & Audio Interview Series, Talib Jasir sits with Toni Blackman to explore cultural bridges, global storytelling, and creative sovereignty through music and media.

      Toni shares the vision behind her upcoming podcast TOALA, short for Travels of a Lyrical Ambassador, an audio project centered on African music, Afrobeats, hip hop culture, and diaspora connection. Drawing from her experiences traveling across Senegal, Ghana, Kenya, Angola, China, and beyond, she reflects on how artists build cultural bridges that transcend geography.

      This conversation moves through African music's global impact, diaspora identity, creative discipline, and the responsibility that comes with storytelling across borders. Toni speaks about trusting intuition over validation, practicing as a daily discipline, and protecting creative sovereignty in an attention-driven media landscape.

      We also discuss Bloom Afrique Microfund and her work supporting African entrepreneurs, the role of artists in shaping cultural narratives, and why global storytelling requires both humility and leadership.

      This episode is for podcasters, artists, cultural strategists, and entrepreneurs interested in African music, diaspora storytelling, creative leadership, and building media platforms rooted in vision.

      Listen and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you stream.

      Podcast: TOALA (Travels of a Lyrical Ambassador)

      Timestamps

      00:00 – Introduction: Toni Blackman, First U.S. Hip Hop Ambassador
      05:00 – African Music, Senegal & Expanding the Diaspora Through Sound
      10:00 – Touring Africa, Global Hip Hop & Cultural Diplomacy
      15:00 – Diaspora Identity, Afrobeats & Reframing Black History
      20:00 – Creative Discipline, Freestyle Speaking & Practice Over Performance
      25:00 – Trusting Vision, Micro Content Strategy & Launching TOALA
      30:00 – Artists vs Institutions: Why Creators Build Connection Differently
      35:00 – Bloom Afrique Microfund & Investing in African Entrepreneurs
      40:00 – Leadership, Fear, Mentorship & Generational Disruption
      45:00 – Opening Your World Through Music & Diaspora Exploration
      50:00 – Meditation Projects, Healing Work & Final Reflections

      Spotify Artist Link: https://open.spotify.com/artist/48ho4Mg0LK4KH5D7y6tOEs?si=IUY1TEThT_6XSZja-tyI_g

      Connect with Toni Blackman: Bloom Afrique Microfund and collaborations: hello@toniblackman.com

      Follow on Social Media: https://www.instagram.com/toniblackman/

      Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MissBlackman1/

      TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@toniblackman5

      LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/toniblackman/

      Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ToniBlackman

      Check the links below to learn more about the artists Toni mentioned in the episode:

      Orchestra Baobab: https://youtu.be/m4yFmRNcX3I?si=quMufW_iHbk1jPFH

      M.anifest: https://youtu.be/ibEc2aLamCk?si=cdKzlWyQJPl9YeLZ

      Fritz Francois: https://youtu.be/aXjYp8GIGos?si=oek_Scj_dlIT0GE5

      Breez Evahflowin': https://youtu.be/pm_Zv2ZCinY?si=EVDTOYnqmoww48fc

      Rhyme Like a Girl Nairobi: https://youtu.be/SYK7_JmgKkE?si=DLfn0LPw3DmDDTu9

      Franck Biyong: https://youtu.be/c6nUhLVcSSk?si=CeyoLoohOWwOygeT

      Fid Q: https://youtu.be/e5Imz9qzxFw?si=JS-nF-J6W5wMYjvX

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      51 min
    • The Power of Comfort TV: Eteng Ettah on Media, Nostalgia & Building Your Own Cultural Ecosystem
      Feb 19 2026

      In Episode 19 of the Heard! Afros & Audio Interview Series, Talib Jasir sits with Eteng Ettah, host of Consider This for Comfort, a podcast exploring comfort TV, media literacy, and cultural commentary.

      Why do certain television shows become emotional refuge?
      What does comfort TV reveal about nostalgia, connection, and identity?
      How does pop culture shape the way we understand society?

      Eteng is a brand and cultural strategist who examines the intersection of television, media, and social meaning. In this conversation, she explains how comfort television can regulate emotion, create communal experiences, and offer insight into what people are carrying in uncertain times.

      We discuss media literacy in the age of misinformation, doom scrolling versus intentional consumption, the power of nostalgia in streaming culture, and why creators must build from what they genuinely want to make instead of chasing trends.

      Eteng also shares how she structures Consider This for Comfort using a seasonal format, experiments with collaborative award-season episodes, and expands her work into a companion newsletter, Ateng's Edit, to build a broader cultural ecosystem.

      This episode is for podcasters, newsletter writers, media creators, cultural commentators, and anyone interested in comfort TV, pop culture analysis, and building independent media platforms with intention.

      Timestamps

      00:00 – Introduction to Eteng Ettah & Consider This for Comfort
      05:00 – Media Responsibility, Journalism & Podcasting Access
      10:00 – What Is Comfort TV and Why It Resonates
      15:00 – Emotional Refuge, Nervous System Regulation & Storytelling
      20:00 – Creative Control, Ownership & Building a Podcast From Scratch
      25:00 – Moving Beyond Friends & Family Guests
      30:00 – Experimenting With Emmy Specials & Collaborative Episodes
      35:00 – Creating What You Want vs Chasing Trends
      40:00 – Comfort TV, Nostalgia & The Need for Connection
      45:00 – Expanding Into Newsletters & Building a Cultural Ecosystem
      50:00 – Collaboration, Creative Sovereignty & What's Next

      To learn more about Eteng Ettah visit: https://www.etengettah.com

      Listen to Consider This for Comfort on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6FyAIKf2vjkjoC7eFRYFTp?

      Follow on Instagram: www.instagram.com/considercomfortpod

      This episode is brought to you by CON417 "Where Music Never Sleeps!"

      Visit: www.edgarsdiaz.com

      Follow on Instagram @edgarsdiazmusic

      Listen and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you stream.

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      50 min
    • What Is a Black Podcast? | Dr. Briana Barner on Black Podcast Studies & Cultural Preservation
      Feb 18 2026

      In Episode 18 of the Heard! Afros & Audio Interview Series, Talib Jasir speaks with Dr. Briana Barner, Assistant Professor of Communication at the University of Maryland and creator of the Black Podcast course.

      What is a Black podcast?
      How should Black podcasts be preserved?
      What does it mean to study podcasting through race, identity, and cultural production?

      Dr. Barner teaches a university course focused on Black podcasts as cultural artifacts. In this conversation, she explains how podcasting functions as an extension of Black oral storytelling traditions, why representation in media still matters, and how students navigate race, code-switching, and identity in academic spaces.

      We also discuss:

      • Defining Black podcasts beyond the race of the host
      • Combat Jack and the preservation of hip hop podcast history
      • Why Serial is often credited as the beginning of podcasting and what that erases
      • Misogynoir, digital media, and the cancellation of Louder Than a Riot
      • The politics of editing, authenticity, and "brand safety"
      • Why podcast archiving is urgent in a shifting political and digital landscape

      This episode is essential listening for podcast creators, media scholars, journalism students, digital archivists, and anyone interested in Black podcast history and cultural criticism.

      Dr. Briana Barner's research focuses on Black podcasts, digital media, preservation, and Black feminism. She is currently writing a book on Black podcasting as cultural production.

      Timestamps

      00:00 – Introduction to Dr. Briana Barner & Black Podcast Studies
      05:00 – What Makes a Podcast "Black"? Challenging Definitions
      10:00 – Teaching Black Podcasting in a Majority-White Classroom
      15:00 – Cultural Production, Sound, and Audience Identity
      20:00 – Representation, Bad Bunny, and Cultural Moments in Media
      25:00 – Students Producing Podcasts in Real Time
      30:00 – Code-Switching, Identity, and Classroom Breakthroughs
      35:00 – Combat Jack and Preserving Black Podcast History
      40:00 – Louder Than a Riot, Misogynoir & NPR Cancellation
      45:00 – Black Feminism, Digital Harm & Podcast Freedom
      50:00 – Authenticity, Editing Choices & The Politics of Sound
      55:00 – Why Black Podcast Archiving Matters Now
      1:00:00 – Final Reflections on Media, Identity & Creator Autonomy

      Listen to the Black Podclass on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/black-pod-class/id1733359998

      Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blackpodclass

      Listen, subscribe, and share.

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      1 h et 10 min
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