Detroit is Different

  • Latest episode: “I Remembered I Wanted to Be a Teacher — Mama Nozibele on Love, Legacy, and Black Education”
  • Latest episode: “I Knew I Wanted to Invest Back Into Puritan: Jerjuan Howard’s Next Chapter, Howard Family Bookstore”
  • Latest episode: “Land is Wealth: Attorney Anthony Adams on Home Ownership, Deed Fraud, and Protecting Black Detroit”

  • Latest episode: “I Remembered I Wanted to Be a Teacher — Mama Nozibele on Love, Legacy, and Black Education”
  • Latest episode: “I Knew I Wanted to Invest Back Into Puritan: Jerjuan Howard’s Next Chapter, Howard Family Bookstore”
  • Latest episode: “Land is Wealth: Attorney Anthony Adams on Home Ownership, Deed Fraud, and Protecting Black Detroit”

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What Detroiters Should Expect if Mary Sheffield Becomes Mayor

“I remembered that I wanted to be a teacher” is the kind of line that grabs you because Mama Nozibele’s (Susan Kelsey-Brewton) story is not just about a career, it is about a calling. In this rich Detroit is Different conversation, the Michigan Department of Education’s 2025 Regional Teacher of the Year for Detroit (Region 10) reflects on roots in Black Bottom, growing up on Detroit’s east side, learning through sports, family, and neighborhood life, and building a path from Head Start to the transformative space of Aisha Shule under the love and leadership of Mama Imani Humphrey. With warmth and wisdom, she shares how education, athletics, and culture shaped her belief that “we can do multiple things,” and how teachers can pull gifts out of young people with intention and care. The episode also opens another side of her artistry through her love for crochet, showing how creativity and teaching are stitched together in Black community life. This is a conversation about the past that raised us and the future we still must build—one where children are seen, culture is centered, and community remains the classroom. Connect with her at Crochet with Nozibele: crochetwithnozibele@gmail.com.

“As you know, literacy rates in Detroit are low… we needed a third space,” Jerjuan Howard says, and that conviction powers this special on-location episode of Detroit is Different from inside the Howard Family Bookstore. Raised in this very community, Jerjuan takes listeners into a vision rooted in memory, mission, and neighborhood love as he shares how a boarded-up building at 13803 Puritan Ave became a living dream through patience, craftsmanship, and collective support. “When I came home from college… I knew I wanted to invest back into Puritan,” he explains, connecting this bookstore to the same community-centered energy that has driven his work with Umoja Village and the Umoja Debate League. More than a place to buy books, this emerging space is being shaped as an essential Black Detroit third space for coffee, tea, poetry, youth discovery, local authors, and everyday connection. With stories of legacy, literacy, ownership, and the power of neighbors building with their own hands, this conversation captures both the past and future of community on Puritan—just weeks before the grand opening on April 25, 2026 at 11 a.m.

“Land is wealth,” and in Detroit that truth hits different. In this powerful Detroit is Different conversation, Attorney Anthony Adams joins Khary Frazier to break down what home ownership really means in Detroit today—not just living in a house, but having “legal title to the property,” clear paperwork, and the protection to hold on to what our families worked for. Adams explains how Detroit went from a city rooted in Black homeownership to one facing what he calls an “economic tsunami,” where overassessment, foreclosure, land contracts, and fraudulent deeds have put generations of Detroiters at risk. He makes deed fraud plain: “someone who has no claim of interest in a property gets possession of a property and transfers it to someone else,” often leaving families shocked to learn a home has been stolen on paper. This episode is essential listening for anybody buying, inheriting, protecting, or fighting for a house in Detroit, as Adams lays out why title work matters, why “you can’t get title from someone who’s never owned it,” and what families must do right now to defend their legacy. From elders in nursing homes to homes passed down without clear deeds, this is a deep, practical, and urgent conversation about wealth, vigilance, and community survival. The past taught Detroit that homeownership builds stability; this episode shows how protecting it shapes our future.

Attorney Anthony Adams practices at Marine Adams Law PC, marineadamslawpc.com, (313) 961-5535.

“Our job now is to help people unlearn the stuff that is not serving them, help them tap into the remembrance of the (inspirational) things that lie within our DNA.” Dr. Rose Moten’s story is one of bloom—of growing through responsibility, grief, faith, and purpose into a life devoted to healing others. In this powerful Detroit Is Different conversation, Dr. Rose—clinical psychologist, author, speaker, life-transformation specialist, and founder of Life in Full Bloom—reflects on the roots that shaped her, from her family’s deep foundation of love, education, and community to the life-changing experience of helping care for her father as a teenager after his health declined. What began as a daughter’s need to understand “what happened to my father’s brain” became a lifelong calling to explore the relationship between the mind, the brain, trauma, emotion, and wellness. She shares how those early experiences shaped not only her path into psychology, but her broader approach to healing—one that honors presence, emotional awareness, trauma release, and the possibility of transformation at every stage of life. This episode is a meditation on what it means to bloom through hardship, to turn pain into purpose, and to help others come back to themselves with compassion, clarity, and care.

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