The Idea of...

The Idea Of… Roasts, Race, and Public Consumption

1 h 41 min · 13 de may de 2026
portada del episodio The Idea Of… Roasts, Race, and Public Consumption

Descripción

This week, Bassey and Mike go deep into the cultural event that is the new Michael film—and what it unlocked emotionally for a generation that grew up watching Michael Jackson in real time. They unpack the brilliance of Jafar Jackson’s performance, the impossible weight of portraying Michael, the trauma and complexity of the Jackson family dynamic, and the reality that Michael wasn’t just a superstar—he was the internet before the internet existed. The conversation expands into parenting, Black family survival strategies, Joe Jackson, fragility versus discipline, and what happens when old-world survival tactics meet modern ideas about emotional care. Then the conversation pivots into the complicated world of comedy roasts, race, public consumption, and whether some forms of humor were ever meant for mass audiences in the social media era. This episode lives in memory, discomfort, nostalgia, grief, brilliance, and the blurry line between truth and performance.

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71 episodios

episode The Idea Of... Selling Crack artwork

The Idea Of... Selling Crack

This week on The Idea Of…, Bassey & Mike start with a conversation about podcasting, originality, and the strange feeling of hearing your ideas echoed back through culture. But what begins as a conversation about creativity and influence quickly turns into something much deeper. The two revisit last week’s heated Drake debate and unpack what was really happening beneath the surface: communication, perception, gender dynamics, emotional safety, and the tension between intent and impact. What follows is one of the most vulnerable conversations the podcast has had to date. Then the episode shifts into an honest and emotionally raw exploration of parenting Black sons in predominantly white spaces. Mike and Bassey reflect on soccer culture, identity, assimilation, disappointment, fear, protection, masculinity, and the impossible balance between preparing Black children for the world without making them afraid of it. This isn’t just an episode about Drake, parenting, or soccer. It’s about the emotional complexity of raising Black boys while watching them slowly become their own people. Funny, painful, nuanced, honest — and deeply human.

Ayer1 h 36 min
episode The Idea Of... Iceman artwork

The Idea Of... Iceman

This week, Bassey & Mike take a deeply personal trip back to Brooklyn — not just the borough, but the memories, emotions, and versions of themselves still living there. From Prospect Park scars and Nostrand Avenue apartments to the strange grief of watching places change while realizing you’ve changed too, the conversation becomes less about geography and more about identity. This episode started with Mike reflecting on running the Brooklyn Half Marathon and unexpectedly reconnecting with memories of his mother, Prospect Park, and the neighborhood that shaped him. What followed became a conversation about aging, nostalgia, reinvention, and trying to remember what actually makes you feel alive. Then, in classic The Idea Of… fashion, the conversation pivots hard into a passionate debate about Drake’s Iceman album, lyrical standards, hip-hop tribalism, and whether listeners hear music differently based on who they believe the artist to be. Not the lazy “Drake vs. Kendrick” internet conversation either. A real conversation about artistry, growth, ego, lyricism, perception, and why people hear the same album completely differently. The episode is funny, layered, emotional, petty, thoughtful, and very... us... Tune in!

20 de may de 20261 h 54 min
episode The Idea Of… Roasts, Race, and Public Consumption artwork

The Idea Of… Roasts, Race, and Public Consumption

This week, Bassey and Mike go deep into the cultural event that is the new Michael film—and what it unlocked emotionally for a generation that grew up watching Michael Jackson in real time. They unpack the brilliance of Jafar Jackson’s performance, the impossible weight of portraying Michael, the trauma and complexity of the Jackson family dynamic, and the reality that Michael wasn’t just a superstar—he was the internet before the internet existed. The conversation expands into parenting, Black family survival strategies, Joe Jackson, fragility versus discipline, and what happens when old-world survival tactics meet modern ideas about emotional care. Then the conversation pivots into the complicated world of comedy roasts, race, public consumption, and whether some forms of humor were ever meant for mass audiences in the social media era. This episode lives in memory, discomfort, nostalgia, grief, brilliance, and the blurry line between truth and performance.

13 de may de 20261 h 41 min
episode The Idea Of... Homie-Sexuals artwork

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This week, Bassey & Mike return with a conversation that starts in music—but doesn’t stay there. From revisiting Mos Def and Black Star to questioning what happens when artists are ahead of their time, the conversation quickly turns inward. Because somewhere along the way, the culture feels off. And that’s where “Homie-Sexuals” enters the chat. Not as a joke—but as a lens. What does it say about us when men show more loyalty, empathy, and emotional investment in each other than in the women in their lives? Why does pain experienced by women get debated, dismissed, or even celebrated—while men rally instantly around each other? And what happens when accountability gets replaced with distance—“that’s not me” instead of “what am I connected to?” This episode wrestles with some uncomfortable truths: * The gap between performance and maturity in hip-hop * Why “not all men” misses the point * How restraint—not dominance—might be the clearest marker of manhood * The role of online culture in amplifying the worst of us * And why we have to stop using celebrities as avatars for our own lives At its core, this is a conversation about alignment—between what we say we value, and how we actually show up. Because if the loudest energy we give is to defending each other, but not protecting or respecting women…then maybe “Homie-Sexuals” isn’t just a phrase. It’s a mirror.

6 de may de 20261 h 27 min
episode The Idea Of... Joe Jackson artwork

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In this solo episode, Mike steps in while Bassey is out and takes listeners through a layered reflection on culture, media, and fatherhood. He explores the surge of emotionally charged stories involving Black men and Black women, questioning whether timing, amplification, and media cycles are shaping how we interpret reality. Introducing the idea of “racialized noise governance,” he breaks down how outrage, fear, and spectacle can be manufactured or magnified. From there, the conversation turns inward. Mike reflects on his identity as a runner, the discipline it requires, and what it means to claim something that doesn’t always feel culturally “assigned.” Then the core question lands: What is the role of a father in pushing a child toward greatness? Using Joe Jackson, LeVar Ball, and his own parenting as entry points, Mike wrestles with the uncomfortable space between love, pressure, discipline, and legacy. He challenges listeners to reconsider how fathers are framed—and what might be lost when their role is misunderstood or minimized. This episode doesn’t offer clean answers. It offers perspective, tension, and an invitation to think deeper.

29 de abr de 202640 min