The Blueprint with Dr. Jelani I. Reid

Lovell Francis on Reparations: "It's Not About Money. It's About Self-Repair." The Blueprint ] Ep 34

1 h 10 min · 23. apr. 2026
episode Lovell Francis on Reparations: "It's Not About Money. It's About Self-Repair." The Blueprint ] Ep 34 cover

Description

e was the carpenter's son who became a minister. Then he was rejected by his own party. Now he's fighting to come back. Lovell Francis grew up in Moruga, toting water from a standpipe at 2 a.m., watching his carpenter father and maid mother invest everything in his education. Their gamble paid off: he became a history lecturer at UWI, then MP for Moruga/Tableland (2015-2020), Minister of State in Education, and finally Trinidad and Tobago's High Commissioner to South Africa . But his story is not a straight line to success. In this episode of The Blueprint Podcast, Lovell sits down with Dr. Jelani Reid for a raw, unfiltered conversation about politics, rejection, and the courage to be yourself in a system that rewards conformity. He opens up about the 2020 election when his own party did not select him to contest the seat he had won and held for five years—and the constituents who blocked roads with burning debris in protest . He reflects on his July 2024 letter seeking nomination to run again, admitting: "I have a whole chocolate bar now. I've been insulted. But I still reconcile that we need to win the seat" . He doesn't hold back on what's wrong with Trinidad's education system: "We produce too many doctors that we have no space for, while industries are dying because we have no joiners, no masons, no skilled labour" . He shares his philosophy on discipline: "It's not about controlling children. It's about teaching them to control themselves" . And he reveals the personal mantra that keeps him grounded: "Value your own. Seeing Africans value themselves taught me to value myself, my culture, my context." Lovell is a trained historian who made students laugh while teaching slavery—because he believes education should create meaning, not trauma. He's a former "bad lad" who was promoted two classes because he was bored. And he's one of the few politicians willing to say that the PNM's brand is damaged and needs to cut off "dead flesh" to survive. This is a conversation about agency, identity, and what it really takes to build a better Trinidad and Tobago. Listen now.

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42 episodes

episode 90% of Crime Victims Are Men—And We're Still Not Talking About It | Blueprint Podcast Ep 41. artwork

90% of Crime Victims Are Men—And We're Still Not Talking About It | Blueprint Podcast Ep 41.

He was helping everyone else. Then his father asked: "What about me?" Garth Voisin is a fitness trainer by trade, but his real work is in the minds of men. After a conversation with his father that shifted his entire perspective, Garth dedicated himself to creating spaces where men—young and old—could finally have the conversations they were never taught to have. In this episode of The Blueprint Podcast, Garth sits down with Dr. Jelani Reid for a raw, unfiltered conversation about men, mental health, and the urgent need for change in Trinidad and Tobago. He doesn't sugarcoat it. He points to the statistics: 90% of crime victims are men. 83% of suicides are men. And yet, the cultural response remains the same: "Be a man. Keep it inside." Garth challenges that narrative. He argues that men have been choosing to be victims—waiting for sympathy instead of taking action. He calls out the lack of community, the absence of male mentors, and the way we've built a culture of correction instead of compassion. But he also offers solutions. He refuses to host traditional "workshops" where men sit in circles and talk about their feelings. Instead, he brings men together through activities they actually enjoy: ATV rides, cookouts, fitness. And in schools, he runs The Blueprint Program—meeting young men where they already are, giving them tools for emotional intelligence, conflict resolution, and financial literacy. He speaks candidly about being a father, about the moment his son called him out for repeating old patterns, and about why he would change nothing about his past—because then his son wouldn't be here. This is a conversation about brotherhood, accountability, and the courage it takes to finally say: "I need help." Listen now.

3. juli 20261 h 7 min
episode The Illusion of Sovereignty: Power, Integrity, And The System of Justice| Blueprint Podcast | EP 40 artwork

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episode Ep 39: The Myth of Geography, Rebuilding from Scratch & Scaling a Remote Business | Dr. Ayanna Miller artwork

Ep 39: The Myth of Geography, Rebuilding from Scratch & Scaling a Remote Business | Dr. Ayanna Miller

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They Tried to Cover it up, He said NO! Leadership, Safety & Systems We Ignore Ep 38| The Blueprint

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episode From Laventille to Skinner Park: Chuck Gordon on Culture & Community |EP 37| Blueprint Podcast artwork

From Laventille to Skinner Park: Chuck Gordon on Culture & Community |EP 37| Blueprint Podcast

*He was raised in Laventille, surrounded by calypso royalty. By 18, he was in both the Calypso Monarch and Soca Monarch finals. In 2026, he became the center of a national conversation about judging, gatekeeping, and the future of the art form.* Chuck Gordon is not your typical calypsonian. He holds a degree in social work, has worked in the children's court, and views his music as advocacy. His concept of "Jiggy Calypso" rejects the artificial separation between soca and calypso, harkening back to an era when artists like Sparrow, Duke, Shadow, and Stalin sang both social commentary and party music. In this episode of The Blueprint Podcast, Chuck sits down with Dr. Jelani Reid for a conversation about identity, culture, and the soul of Trinidad and Tobago. He opens up about growing up in Laventille—a place he calls "a portal" of creative energy—and the family of cultural pioneers who shaped him. He explains the history of calypso tents, the road to Skinner Park, and why the judging system has come under fire. He doesn't hold back: the 2026 elimination that shocked audiences, the inconsistent scores, and why he went public. "I didn't anticipate it blowing up. But the society needs calypso again." Along the way, he shares his vision for the art form: calypsonians creating their own products and brands, entertaining while still commenting, and reclaiming the tradition of the full circle artist. This is a conversation for anyone who loves calypso, cares about culture, or wonders where Trinidad and Tobago is headed next. *Listen now.*

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