Building ROC the Block and Juneteenth at Raymond James
Chop Shop Show episode 147 features a lively conversation with Bolaji Ajike, founder of R.O.C. the Block, about basketball, entrepreneurship, Black business ownership, community healing, and the building of Juneteenth at Raymond James into a full week of free cultural programming. The discussion opens with Bolaji's journey from Willingboro, New Jersey, to a full basketball scholarship at Mount St. Mary's, where the discipline, fundamentals, and work ethic she learned on the court shaped how she handles business and community leadership. After a heart surgery changed her athletic path, she rebuilt her life in Tampa and launched Afroganics, a fulfillment and marketplace concept aimed at being a "Black Amazon" and connecting people to Black farms, grocery stores, stylists, and other local resources. That mission eventually evolved into a podcast, a TV network, and Rock the Block, a production company built around cultural events and community reconditioning. Bolaji explains how Rock the Block grew from a 2021 Super Bowl pop-up into an annual Juneteenth celebration at Raymond James, funded through sponsorships, partnerships, ticketed events, and a lot of self-investment. She breaks down the week's lineup, including a free youth summit, health and wellness conference, community symposium, couture ball, Topgolf family day, and a music festival featuring Tom G, Jane Nova, and local Tampa artists. The hosts and guest also get into the realities of access, parking, city politics, land ownership, nonprofit funding, and why community events still cost money even when they are free to attend. Beyond the event promotion, the episode dives into deeper themes like trauma, self-love, family dynamics, the loss of village support, the pressure of social media, and the need for accountability and real partnership rather than performative support. Bolaji speaks candidly about protecting Black spaces, rejecting exploitation, honoring the people who helped her, and building infrastructure that serves the community without waiting for permission. The conversation blends humor, sports talk, and sharp cultural insight, making this a strong episode for listeners interested in entrepreneurship, Tampa community issues, Black-owned business advocacy, and the power of organizing with purpose.
Topic Segments
00:00 — Intro, host banter, and guest welcome.
02:18 — Bolaji's basketball background and scholarship path.
04:15 — Moving to Tampa and learning the city.
05:56 — Starting Afroganics and building Black business infrastructure.
06:47 — What Rock the Block is and how it began.
12:25 — Juneteenth at Raymond James and the first pop-up.
15:00 — Funding, sponsorships, parking, and access challenges.
20:02 — Full Juneteenth week schedule and event lineup.
26:00 — Community support, politics, and local leadership.
30:00 — Trauma, self-love, and Black community healing.
40:00 — Family dynamics, village culture, and parenting.
50:00 — Partnerships, reciprocity, and supporting Black businesses.
1:04:00 — Sports talk, basketball eras, and changing game culture.
1:33:00 — Closing shout-outs and final remarks.