Trickin', NLE Choppa vs. Jonathan Majors, & Remembering Singer D'Angelo
Update: 2025-10-15
Description
This week on Mental Man Monday, Izzy is joined by AMROCK, host of the HL Podcast, for a multi-layered conversation that challenges cultural norms, honors legacy, and calls men into deeper accountability. From the first minute, it’s clear this isn’t just another episode — it’s a necessary one. The two begin by continuing last week’s heated topic around trickin’. What’s the line between providing and performing? Is “trickin’” really about power, or is it about unhealed men seeking validation through material gestures?
Izzy and AMROCK don’t just ask these questions — they unpack them through personal experience and cultural critique. Midway through the conversation, the episode takes a more somber turn. The sudden and tragic death of R&B icon D’Angelo is discussed, not from a gossip angle, but through the lens of grief, masculinity, and preventative health. D’Angelo, who passed from pancreatic cancer, leaves behind a son who now joins the many men navigating life without both parents. This segment becomes a moment of real-life therapy, a call for Black men to take their health seriously, to grieve openly, and to talk about the pain we often suppress.
In the final portion of the episode, the conversation pivots again — this time toward faith, controversy, and cultural tension. Izzy and AMROCK react to a now-viral moment from Kirk Franklin’s podcast where rapper NLE Choppa shares a controversial opinion, calling Jesus “our brother, not our savior.” Actor Jonathan Majors, who was also present, immediately pushes back. While neither Kirk nor Majors appear in this episode, their interaction sparks a discussion that’s deeply relevant. The episode raises an honest question: what happens when our version of spirituality is built more on vibes than on truth? The name Charlie Kirk also comes up, not as a guest, but as a symbol of the ideological chaos and division that has even infiltrated the faith conversation.
Together, AMROCK and Izzy reflect on how masculinity, media, mental health, and misguided theology all intersect. Whether you agree or disagree with everything said, one thing’s for sure: this episode forces men to confront their beliefs, their grief, and their need for authentic healing. It’s part podcast, part barbershop talk, and part altar call. Listen closely because these are the kinds of conversations that shift the culture.
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.
TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad
🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
Izzy and AMROCK don’t just ask these questions — they unpack them through personal experience and cultural critique. Midway through the conversation, the episode takes a more somber turn. The sudden and tragic death of R&B icon D’Angelo is discussed, not from a gossip angle, but through the lens of grief, masculinity, and preventative health. D’Angelo, who passed from pancreatic cancer, leaves behind a son who now joins the many men navigating life without both parents. This segment becomes a moment of real-life therapy, a call for Black men to take their health seriously, to grieve openly, and to talk about the pain we often suppress.
In the final portion of the episode, the conversation pivots again — this time toward faith, controversy, and cultural tension. Izzy and AMROCK react to a now-viral moment from Kirk Franklin’s podcast where rapper NLE Choppa shares a controversial opinion, calling Jesus “our brother, not our savior.” Actor Jonathan Majors, who was also present, immediately pushes back. While neither Kirk nor Majors appear in this episode, their interaction sparks a discussion that’s deeply relevant. The episode raises an honest question: what happens when our version of spirituality is built more on vibes than on truth? The name Charlie Kirk also comes up, not as a guest, but as a symbol of the ideological chaos and division that has even infiltrated the faith conversation.
Together, AMROCK and Izzy reflect on how masculinity, media, mental health, and misguided theology all intersect. Whether you agree or disagree with everything said, one thing’s for sure: this episode forces men to confront their beliefs, their grief, and their need for authentic healing. It’s part podcast, part barbershop talk, and part altar call. Listen closely because these are the kinds of conversations that shift the culture.
Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.
TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad
🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
Comments
In Channel