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The Offshoot Podcast
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It was just after her first birthday that the parents of Journee Perry noticed that she was not verbalizing as expected for a one-year-old. Her father, Ira Perry, comes to The Offshoot Podcast to tell what it was like learning that his youngest child of nine was on the spectrum for autism. There was a lot of waiting for professional assistance and a lack of resources, so instead of passing the time waiting for appointments, he turned to artificial intelligence. Perry is uti...
Emmy nominated and executive producer of movies and television shows like "A Match Made In Heaven," "Call Me Zaddy," "False Advertisement," and "Sorry About That," Lena Jenkins-Smith doesn't give a lot of interviews. She is more comfortable being behind the camera, managing a team of creatives, to produce non-traditional content - films different from typical Hollywood stories. She has been in the game for more than 20 years, having got her big break working for ...
Dating isn't what it used to be - at least not prior to the advent of social media and reality TV dating shows. It seems that in today's world of dating, there is an over emphasis on romance, which is not always a bad thing, when it is genuine, but it is certainly not a good thing when it is expected to be what is seen in the fictional world of motion pictures. On this episode of The Offshoot, the discussion is about the fantasies surrounding dating in a time of heavy social media...
Baltimore, that once thriving industrial city caught between the nation's capitol of Washington, D.C. and the city of brotherly love Philadelphia, is again making noise with music. A new form a house music and club music, that is unique to Baltimore, is drawing dancers and club goers to the city, and the musicians behind it all are now taking their creations to wider audiences globally. DJ and producer S.DOT is among the artists bringing attention to Baltimore's new and growing mu...
I am going to venture and bet that there are many of us who went through the public education system, and perhaps throughout college and grad school, did not have many, if any, Black men as educators. I would venture and add that for those individuals that attended private schools, there were not many Black men educators in their classrooms either. The lack of Black men in the classroom, direct correlation or not, seems to have impact on many youth in schools today. The impact see...
For young Black men, their voices are not often heard, and often times if their voices are head it is typically a soundbite, misconstrued and/or taken out of context. Additionally, their voices seem to not matter unless it is via music (particularly Hip Hop), and sports, and even via music and sports, their voices are often dismissed as being irrelevant or less important because they are Black and young. Why is that? Why is that the given despite their small size in number t...
Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives, the U.S. Senate, and in The White House have put out statements, made comments, and put forth legislation targeting Washington, DC under the premise that the District is a failing jurisdiction. They are trying to put forth a narrative, a false notion, that the city is full of crime and has a corrupt government. The truth of the matter is Washington, DC is a vibrant, beautiful city that has its share of issues, and strives despite c...
Buying and selling a home can be a daunting task, especially when it is your first. There are so many things to know, and one individual can't expect to know it all. Now, throw in a change in politics that comes with much ambiguity and you get a lot of unknowns when it comes to buying and/or selling a home. This creates fear for some people - no matter it be their first time buying or their second or third. To help ease the fear, three experts in the field of real estate take part in a...
Most people can't define trauma let alone recognize it - even when they've experienced trauma themselves. Too often, we ignore and dismiss incidents and experiences that truly are traumatic under the auspices that it will pass and things will be fine. But the trauma is still there, and we often don't realize until after that fact or until it's too late the need to acknowledge the trauma and process it. On this episode of The Offshoot, trauma expert Cory George answers the q...
This episode of The Offshoot is 10 years in the making. It began a few years after the passing of my grandmother Irene Moody Nelson, at a time when I was beginning to question friendships - particularly friendships as relationships. My grandmother had the best friends, and there were many friendships she cultivated. To better my friendships, to work on them as friendship, I wanted to know what made her relationship with her friends so great. How were they able to be and remain suc...
Despite the success of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), better known as Obamacare, there are still a number of Black men not getting and/or taking advantage of the healthcare options available to them. Grave and serious disparities remain. Dr. Okey Enyia, an expert on healthcare and policy, particularly as the topic relates to Black men, comes to The Offshoot Podcast to explain the disparity. He comes with a plan to increase the rate of Black men taking advantage of healthcare progr...
The war between Israel and Hamas has a lot of people talking and it has an equal, if not greater, amount of people not talking ... at least not publicly. In the Black/African American community, there has been a lot of the later. Why? That's a question no one individual or groups of individuals can answer as if there is a homogeneous Black community in which one persona or consortium can speak for. But, however, there is a deeper issue within the conflict that some Black Americans are s...
With seven children, Bridget Desmukes and her husband, Jeffrey, wanted to give all their offsprings the best education. They wanted to ensure that their children learned about the world, business, the economy, languages and other cultures. Additionally, they wanted their children to have positive social experiences with other children and educators while at school. They had their children in the District of Columbia Public School system, which for a while seemed to support their c...
From Angela Harper, daughter of Archie Harper Archie Harper is 91 and still hitting the gym three times a week. That tells you something about his approach to life. Growing up in Kansas City, Missouri, he made a decision at 18 that would shape everything: he joined the U.S. Air Force. What followed was three decades in uniform, with deployments that took him across the globe - including service during the Vietnam War. After military retirement, his service continued: first as a procurement s...
Not forgiving someone for a wrong is never discussed as often as forgiving someone for a wrong. The mantra is to forgive and move on, but what if not forgiving someone who has perpetrated an act of betrayal, violence, broken trust or theft , which could lead to triggers or trauma, is healing? What if it is not? On this episode of The Offshoot Podcast, Dr. Yve Michaels flips the script and has me, the host, on her couch, as we talk about not forgiving versus forgiving as par...
On this episode of The Offshoot Podcast, three incredible chefs define what makes food good, and it turns out good food is more than just about taste. Chef Sherise, the owner of Sweet Sage Catering, Chef Steven Steven German-Jones the co-owner of Palate202 Catering, and Chef Maine, the owner of The Maine Course, define what is good food by telling stories about their grandmothers' cooking, the family connections, the history of Black food, and rising costs to prepares dishes like collar...
Are you Black Indian? Well, if you're from South Carolina and you have Gullah Geechee roots, then there is a likely possibility that you are Black Indian - from a tribe called the Yamassee. Though small in number today, in the 1600s and 1700s, the Yamassee Tribe was a force of nature. The tribe battled perpetrators on their land, now known as The United States of America, specifically South Carolina, and they fought to protect and help all people, particularly the Gullah Geechee peoples...
The president of the United States of America, in a recent press conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, accused the visiting diplomat of wanting a third world war. Zelenskyy rejected that notion, and his disbelief of the comment was self-evident given his response - his faced looked of shock. The behavior from the American president was unbecoming of any world leader, but what the behavior exposed was the American president's call for World War III by using a tac...
The brief interruption of access to TikTok prompted many Americans to find alternatives like RedNote, and what Americans found were images of China they had never seen before. Not surprising to me, they were shocked as to how developed the country has become - especially compared to the United States of America. Then it got me thinking, why were people so shocked? Then I realized it's because most Americans have never traveled outside the country. And in thinking further, it...
From The Offshoot Podcast is another segment called "Thoughts." Life is Fair. Support the show






















