Episodios

  • One Percent Better Pod EP 052 | A Breath of Fresh Air
    Mar 11 2026

    In this episode, the crew debates what it really means to want “diversity,” why Black spaces can feel like comfort to some and confinement to others, and how phrases like “a breath of fresh air” can reveal bigger tensions around race, safety, and belonging. From there, the conversation expands into Atlanta’s systemic issues — from public transportation and redlining to youth takeovers, the lack of third spaces for kids, and what true community responsibility should look like.

    Later, the episode shifts into parenting and culture, unpacking Mike Todd’s take on cursing, respect, and whether kids are being taught authenticity or shame. The crew also dives into the T.I., King, Damani, and 50 Cent back-and-forth, what “winning” really looks like in today’s rap culture, and why trolling without engagement feels corny. From there, they close out by talking music, showcases, preparation, Beyoncé’s greatness, Brandy’s vocals, and the difference between popularity and true excellence.

    This episode is funny, layered, and unexpectedly thoughtful — the kind of conversation that starts in one place and ends up saying something much bigger.

    If you’ve ever thought about what community should feel like, how kids are shaped by their environment, or why preparation always beats performance without substance, this one’s for you.



    Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

    Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
    Más Menos
    2 h y 20 m
  • One Percent Better 050 | Who Gonna Be The Men
    Feb 25 2026

    Full Convo on Youtube



    Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

    Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
    Más Menos
    2 h y 40 m
  • Swayvo Twain Talks Losing His Parents, Angie Stone & D'Angelo, Making a Name for Himself +More
    Feb 23 2026

    In this emotional and powerful conversation, Swayvo speaks on losing both of his parents — R&B legend Angie Stone and Grammy-winning icon D’Angelo — and what it means to carry that legacy while building a name for himself.

    Growing up as the son of two musical pioneers comes with pressure, expectation, and comparison. But grief changes everything. Swayvo reflects on the lessons he learned from his parents, the weight of their influence, and the responsibility he feels to honor their impact while carving out his own identity as an artist.

    He also addresses:

    The emotional toll of loss

    Therapy and mental health after tragedy

    His father’s complicated relationship with the music industry

    Why he refuses to live under anyone’s shadow

    What integrity in music really means today

    And how he plans to build something timeless in his own lane

    This isn’t just about legacy — it’s about identity.

    It’s about becoming your own man when the world already knows your last name.



    Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

    Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
    Más Menos
    56 m
  • One Percent Better Podcast 049 | Behind Enemy Lines
    Feb 19 2026

    In this episode of One Percent Better, the conversation moves beyond surface-level takes and into something deeper — what it really means to navigate systems that weren’t designed with you in mind.


    What starts as a discussion about holidays, religion, and questioning accepted traditions quickly evolves into a broader reflection on power, perception, and survival. The crew examines how stories change as they travel, how institutions shape what we believe, and how interpretation often becomes “truth” once the public runs with it.


    From fear-based Christianity and cultural narratives to hip-hop media machines, relationship privacy, step-parent tensions, and the importance of believing children, this episode explores what it feels like to operate inside structures that don’t always protect you.



    Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

    Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
    Más Menos
    2 h y 26 m
  • One Percent Better 048 | Social Experiment: What America Taught Us About Survival
    Feb 11 2026

    In this episode of One Percent Better, the conversation starts in one place — podcast metrics, music discourse, culture takes — but slowly unfolds into something much deeper.

    What begins as a debate about surface numbers and social media perception evolves into a powerful reflection on America, survival, distrust in institutions, and what it means to grow inside systems that were never built with you in mind.

    The crew dives into:

    • Why podcast “views” don’t tell the full story
    • How social media reshapes how we consume music and culture
    • The tension between safety and growth in Black communities
    • Survival parenting vs healthy parenting
    • Tulsa, distrust, and generational memory
    • Reparations, power, and moral responsibility
    • Whether America functions like a social experiment — and what that means for Black people navigating it

    At the heart of the episode is one central idea:

    Sometimes what keeps you safe also keeps you small.

    Social Experiment isn’t about blame — it’s about awareness. It’s about understanding how systems shape behavior, how fear influences decisions, and how survival logic can both protect and limit growth.

    This episode challenges listeners to ask:

    Are we reacting to noise… or responding to structure?

    One Percent Better is about growth through reflection — and sometimes that reflection forces you to examine the environment itself.



    Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

    Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
    Más Menos
    3 h y 21 m
  • One Percent Better (Bonus) | Clout Isn’t Currency
    Jan 29 2026

    In this bonus episode of One Percent Better, comedian Daphnique joins the conversation for a wide-ranging, unfiltered discussion about visibility, value, and what actually sustains a career in today’s attention-driven world.

    What starts with humor and viral culture quickly evolves into a deeper breakdown of clout versus competence, fake transparency, and why being seen doesn’t always mean being valuable. Daphnique shares her journey from the early Vine era to stand-up comedy, explaining why she stopped chasing platforms and focused on building real skill — and how that decision created long-term leverage.

    The group also dives into:

    Why clout doesn’t guarantee longevity

    How people perform success without building substance

    The double standard women face in comedy and public expression

    Why “potential” isn’t enough without execution

    The difference between resources being available and people being ready

    How skill, usefulness, and standards separate those who last from those who fade

    Throughout the episode, one truth keeps surfacing: attention may open doors, but value keeps them open.

    This bonus conversation blends humor, honesty, and real-world insight — reminding listeners that relevance isn’t built through performance alone, but through consistency, skill, and substance.

    One Percent Better is about growth beyond hype — and this episode is a reminder that clout fades, but value compounds.n this bonus episode of One Percent Better, comedian Daphnique joins the conversation for a wide-ranging, unfiltered discussion about visibility, value, and what actually sustains a career in today’s attention-driven world.

    What starts with humor and viral culture quickly evolves into a deeper breakdown of clout versus competence, fake transparency, and why being seen doesn’t always mean being valuable. Daphnique shares her journey from the early Vine era to stand-up comedy, explaining why she stopped chasing platforms and focused on building real skill — and how that decision created long-term leverage.

    The group also dives into:

    Why clout doesn’t guarantee longevity

    How people perform success without building substance

    The double standard women face in comedy and public expression

    Why “potential” isn’t enough without execution

    The difference between resources being available and people being ready

    How skill, usefulness, and standards separate those who last from those who fade

    Throughout the episode, one truth keeps surfacing: attention may open doors, but value keeps them open.

    This bonus conversation blends humor, honesty, and real-world insight — reminding listeners that relevance isn’t built through performance alone, but through consistency, skill, and substance.

    One Percent Better is about growth beyond hype — and this episode is a reminder that clout fades, but value compounds.



    Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

    Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
    Más Menos
    1 h y 32 m
  • One Percent Better 045 | Separate but Equal: How Power Created the Gender Divide
    Jan 7 2026

    In this episode of One Percent Better, the conversation digs into one of the most uncomfortable realities shaping modern relationships and society: the gender divide isn’t accidental — it was built through power, hierarchy, and control.

    What begins as a discussion about communication and misunderstanding between men and women quickly expands into a deeper examination of how systems — religion, culture, capitalism, and tradition — have reinforced separation while labeling it “balance” or “order.”

    The group unpacks how power has historically determined:

    • who leads and who follows
    • who provides and who sacrifices
    • who is protected and who is blamed
    • and who is expected to carry emotional, physical, and moral responsibility

    Rather than framing men vs. women as enemies, the episode challenges the structures that benefit from division — exposing how hierarchy thrives when accountability is uneven and empathy is conditional.

    Throughout the conversation, they explore:

    • How religion and tradition are often used to justify gender roles
    • Why “separate but equal” thinking still shapes expectations today
    • The difference between partnership and power
    • How responsibility has been unevenly assigned across genders
    • Why division feels normal when it’s inherited
    • And what happens when people start questioning the systems they were taught not to

    This episode isn’t about choosing sides.

    It’s about understanding how we got here — and why healing the divide requires more honesty than comfort.



    Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

    Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
    Más Menos
    2 h y 40 m
  • One Percent Better 043 | Special Delivery: Parenthood, Pressure & the Moments That Change Everything
    Dec 31 2025

    n this episode of One Percent Better, the conversation starts where real life often hits hardest: raising a toddler and realizing just how unprepared you feel — even when you’re doing your best.

    What begins as a discussion about tantrums, patience, and emotional regulation slowly unfolds into something much deeper. The crew reflects on how parenting reshapes your perspective — from letting go of public judgment, to understanding that kids need presence more than perfection.

    From there, the episode takes a powerful turn into the delivery room — unpacking the fear, pressure, and trauma that can come with childbirth. Jay shares what it’s like witnessing emergency procedures unfold in real time, while Jamila brings essential perspective as a doula, explaining how language, preparation, and advocacy can completely change a birth experience.

    Together, they explore:

    • Why toddler meltdowns are about communication, not defiance
    • How parents learn emotional regulation alongside their children
    • Letting go of public judgment and parenting with confidence
    • The realities of labor, emergency C-sections, and postpartum risk
    • Why “natural vs unnatural” birth language causes harm
    • The role doulas play as advocates, not accessories
    • Black maternal health, medical neglect, and systemic gaps
    • How presence before, during, and after birth shapes everything
    “Kids don’t need perfection — they need presence.”“Every birth story matters.”“Life doesn’t just arrive… it’s delivered.”

    Special Delivery is about the moments that change you — the ones that don’t come with instructions, but demand responsibility, humility, and growth.

    This episode is a reminder that becoming one percent better isn’t about having all the answers — it’s about showing up when it matters most.



    Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands

    Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
    Más Menos
    2 h y 44 m