Culture Connection: Damien “Dame” Ritter

Listen in as Brother Malcolm chats with Damien “Dame” Ritter, visionary co-founder of hip hop music label Funk Volume. Click here to find out more information about Funk Volume and their artists! Check out the trailer for the upcoming Funk Volume documentary, Independent Living!

For comments or questions about this or any episode, call the hotline at (323) 455-4219. You can also follow Malcolm on Twitter and Instagram @caliyalie. Don’t forget #cultureconnection!

LA EVENTS: Popstax

This Sunday, September 29th Leimert Park ArtWalk presents POPSTAX, a celebration of the 40th anniversary of the legendary Wattstax music festival (1972) and documentary (1973). This event is free for all and features performances by Andy Vargas of Santana, The House Click Society, Ali & His Funk Experience, Dave Williams, and Waberi Jordon. This event will be deejayed by none other than Stone Groove Radio aka DJ A-ski and Tailwind Turner! Special recognition/honors will be given to George Duke and Steve Arrington, amongst others. Additionally, a FREE screening of the Wattstax documentary will take place in Vision Theatre at 6PM. This is a wonderful family and community event so please come out and support it! See you Sunday!

Culture Connection: 7 Ways to Become a Culture Vulture

Listen in as Malcolm shares 7 ways to step your culture game up! There are many FREE opportunities happening in your city right now, so take advantage! You can follow Malcolm on Twitter @caliyalie.

For more information on this and other episodes, feel free to call the hotline at (323) 455-4219!

The Break: Miley Butler – DOUBLE EPISODE!

Listen in as we are bringing you TWO podcasts in one! KC and the family have a conversation inspired by the Miley Cyrus performance on the VMA’s and a quick chat about Lee Daniels’ The Butler. Podcast guests include Chris, Toria, John, Malcolm, Mr. CEO and special guest Sean.

For comments or questions about this episode, call the hotline at (323) 455 -4219!

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Twitter: @BLACKISONLINE

Culture Connection: Radar L.A. Festival 2013

Listen in as Brother Malcolm tells us about the upcoming Radar L.A. Festival coming to Los Angeles from September 24 – October 1, 2013! This event is an opportunity to be exposed to innovative visual, performing, and media arts, so posse up and support this festival!

For those listeners interested in sending in a submission for the Culture Connection theme song, please email us at cultureconnection@blackisonline.com!

Got a comment or question about this episode? Call the hotline at (323) 455-4219!

Culture Connection: West Indian American Day Carnival

Listen in as Brother Malcolm discusses his first time experiencing the West Indian American Day Carnival in New  York City during Labor Day Weekend! You can follow Malcolm on Twitter and Instagram @caliyalie.

For comments/questions about this episode call the hotline at (323) 455-4219!

Culture Connection: Lee Daniels’ The Butler

Listen in as Malcolm discusses the film, Lee Daniels’ The Butler with Chris and KC Lehman, the performances by the stellar cast, and its depiction of American history. You can follow Malcolm on Twitter for more bites of culture @caliyalie.

For more information about this episode, please call the hotline at (323) 455-4219!

No Rewards

What if there was no reward in the end?  By no reward I mean- No money. No fame. No accolades. You just create, and that’s it. Just you and what you’ve created; and knowledge of your work only exists between you, the creation, and God?

Would you still be doing it, or would you feel like it’s no longer worth the time and effort?

For a little over a week now, I’ve been fasting from sugar. 6 days a week I go without sugar, and have one day of my choice to splurge if I want. Otherwise, no junk food, no sugar in my coffee or tea. None. The first few days it was hard. Then I started noticing how much junk food was everywhere! I heard a podcast with a Dr. Robert Lustig who said that high fructose corn syrup is an ingredient in almost everything we eat. From candy to hamburger buns. And the reason why is because many companies know that our brains naturally react to sugar. Sugar goes off in the “reward center” in our brain. It makes us happy. It gives us a rush. And then we crash from the sugar rush. And to get that “high” again, we eat more sugar. It’s starts to disrupt our natural processes. You notice how fruits and things with natural sugar have fiber in them, or not that much sugar at all? Things don’t naturally exist in the world tasting like Kool-Aid. But apparently, especially in America, we are addicted to sugar and fatty foods. I’m not going to belabor the issue with a health post here, I’m just saying…After knowing all this, especially in the detail Dr. Lustig told it in, I knew it was time to make some sort of real change.

About 2 years ago I cut alcohol for 90 days. It was tough at times because suddenly that was when all the parties at clubs had open bars, and people had drinks flowing at house parties. When I would turn down a drink people would ask “Are you religious?” When I told them no, I was just giving up alcohol for 90 days, many of them said “I could never do that. Too hard.”  To self impose the discipline to not reward themselves, or to not lean on their crutch was too much. The thought of it was daunting to them.  But with this sugar fast, something that we know has a direct conenction to the reward center of our brain, it made me wonder- how many of us would do what we do creatively if there was no reward?

Everyday, a song runs through my head. A rhyme. An idea. A concept. Some kind of vision. I can’t help it. I can’t really turn it off. All I can do is write it down and stall acting on it until I have the money or flushed the idea thoroughly out to figure out how to take the fragment and put it together in the puzzle. I have things I’ve written that no one has seen. And in my own head the ideas play, and I watch them in my mind’s eye. I’m entertained but some of it. Some things I discard once I revisit them because they don’t entertain me like they did initially. No one may ever see them. It would be a shame to not share the good stuff with the world, I know this. But if I never made any money from them, if no one ever told me it was good, if people saw it and never said a word, how would I feel?  Maybe insecure at first.  The mark of a good artist is usually the number of people that “like” their work. But what if I’m never rewarded?  What if I get nothing in return?  Is the creation itself a reward?

I’ve been tasting food differently now. Tea without sugar doesn’t taste so bad. Salads don’t bother me if I don’t have any dressing (yes, that has sugar in it too). I don’t really miss burgers, though I would love some toast with jam!  But when I look at the $.50 sodas at my job, and know what it will do to me, I’m not that interested. On the splurge days, when I do have sugar, I don’t really have that much.  When you experiement with your own habits, you begin to discover new things.

So I ask you artists, have you ever thought about what would happen if no one ever saw your work? Or does that idea frighten you and sound like death? If you had to do a monologue and act it out with passion in front of empty room after empty room, would you still love it? They call that “paying dues”. What if no one ever discovered your work until after your death? And you weren’t alive to see all the royalty checks, or to be interviewed on television? Your work would be taught in schools, shared amongst groups of friends, and YOU don’t get anything except the praise of your name spoken into the air. Would that satisfy you?  I can’t lie, that last scenario actually kinda scares me. I want to have my roses while I can still smell them. But then again, it’s not always about what I want, but what needs to happen. Not having sugar has shown me that there are other ways of being rewarded, and sometimes those less immediate rewards can be better for you.

What do you usually give yourself for a job well done? How do you reward yourself? Go without that reward for 2 weeks and see if you can handle it. Ask yourself, “Do I live for rewards, or do I live for the work?”

“I’m an actor. First of all, I don’t take myself that seriously. I take what I do seriously, and I try to do a good job.” – Denzel Washington

LA EVENTS: One Night In Miami

February 25, 1964 was supposed to be a great day for boxing fans. It was the day a loudmouth, 22-year-old fighter named Cassius Clay was finally supposed to have his bragging stopped by fearsome heavyweight champ Sonny Liston. That was not to be, and after the young Clay’s shocking victory, there was no celebration planned, since no one thought he would actually win. No one except his three friends, activist Malcolm X, singer Sam Cooke and football player Jim Brown. The foursome threw together a party in Malcolm’s tiny hotel room in Overtown, the city’s downtrodden black ghetto. The next morning, Cassius would make an announcement that would shock the world yet again. One Night in Miami… imagines what might have transpired on that very real, very fateful night in Malcolm’s motel room in 1964. The civil rights struggle was ready to boil over. And in less than a year, two of these friends would be dead. But on this night, the possibilities seemed endless.

The World Premiere of

One Night in Miami…

by Kemp Powers

Directed by Carl Cofield

Featuring Kevin Daniels, Jason Delane, Matt Jones, Ty Jones, Jason E. Kelley, Burl Moseley, Giovanni Adams, and Jah Shams

Scenic Design by Stephanie Kerley Schwartz

Lighting Design by Leigh Allen

Sound Design by Christopher Moscatiello

Costume Design by Naila Aladdin Sanders

Prop Design by Katherine Hunt

Stage Manager: Daniel Coronel

Buy your tickets NOW!

Culture Connection: Cheryl Boone Isaacs

Listen in as Brother Malcolm, Chris and KC discuss the implications of having an African American woman as the president of the Academy Awards, the impact it might have on Black film recognition and upcoming offerings in Black cinema. For comments and/or questions about the episode, contact the hotline at (323) 455-4219!