Despite How the World Sees You
The night before the 2026 Oscars, Gabby Turner was watching television and noticed something that had nothing to do with awards season — and everything to do with a pattern she has been watching her entire life. In Despite How the World Sees You, Gabby connects a storyline from the ABC drama High Potential to the cultural conversation swirling around Ryan Coogler's Sinners and arrives at something worth naming out loud: the bar does not just move for Black people. It moves retroactively.
This episode opens with Ava, the biracial teenage daughter of High Potential's main character, who earns a coveted spot in a competitive fashion program — beating out sixty other candidates on merit alone. Before she can hold the win, a classmate posts online implying she only got in because she is Black. What follows is one of the more honest depictions of racial identity and parenting that network television has produced in recent memory, including a white mother who loves her daughter deeply and has the self-awareness to know that love is not always enough. Ava's story becomes the entry point for a larger conversation about what it costs to be excellent in a world that is always looking for a reason your excellence does not count.
From there, Gabby turns to Sinners — the film that dominated cultural conversation heading into the 2026 Academy Awards — and the rhetoric that had already begun forming before a single award was announced. When a high-profile comment from a competing film's star began circulating online, the discourse shifted almost immediately from whether Sinners was the best film of the year to whether it would only win because someone else stumbled. Gabby traces that shift in real time, naming the specific mechanics of how a Black win gets undermined before it is even official.
The through line is personal. Over a decade ago, Gabby posted a generic congratulations to classmates receiving college acceptance letters. A fellow senior — by her own description relatively unimpressive and below average — responded that he had not gotten into his dream school because of affirmative action. No evidence. No proof. Just the assumption that someone less deserving must have taken his spot. That moment, and the feeling it left behind, is exactly what she is still seeing play out on a much larger cultural stage.
This is what Gabby calls the retroactive bar drop. It is not just that the standard is higher for Black people — it is that even after meeting that standard, the standard gets redefined. The greatness that was produced stops being the story. The shortcut that was supposedly taken becomes the story instead. The accomplishment gets quietly replaced by the caveat.
Despite How the World Sees You closes where it began — with Ava, and with the advice she receives at the end of the episode from a Black woman who understands something about this particular weight. The words land differently after everything Gabby has unpacked, and she directs them outward: to Black listeners, to the cast and crew of Sinners, and to anyone who has ever had their win explained away before they could fully hold it.
While I've Got You is a short-form podcast about culture, identity, and the moments worth noticing, hosted by Gabby Turner. New episodes monthly.