Detroit is Different

  • Latest episode: “You Have to Do the Work; Yelena Ramautar on Caribbean Identity, Black Detroit, & Community”
  • Latest episode: “Brick by Brick: Alonzo Bell’s East Side Mission & Beyond”
  • Latest episode: “Bigger Than the Original Vision: Tiara Jones on Family, Faith, and Black Legacy”

  • Latest episode: “You Have to Do the Work; Yelena Ramautar on Caribbean Identity, Black Detroit, & Community”
  • Latest episode: “Brick by Brick: Alonzo Bell’s East Side Mission & Beyond”
  • Latest episode: “Bigger Than the Original Vision: Tiara Jones on Family, Faith, and Black Legacy”

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What Detroiters Should Expect if Mary Sheffield Becomes Mayor

“I came here from her love an spirit of Detroit”—that truth opens a powerful Detroit is Different conversation with Yelena Ramautar, Community Engager for the Caribbean Community Service Center, about migration, belonging, memory, and the work required to truly become part of a community. Yelena traces her journey from Guyana to the Bronx, then to Detroit in 2015 after her adoptive mother told her, “I got a home. Just come on. You can find your way and figure it out.” She reflects on New York gentrification, school closures, immigrant identity, and the shock of being “othered” at a predominantly white college after growing up among Black, Caribbean, Latino, and African communities. In Detroit, she learned that relationships may crack the door open, “but you have to do the work to show that you’re invested.” Her mother’s Detroit story—Cass Tech, Wayne State, teaching, and hearing Dr. King speak on Woodward—connects Black excellence, movement history, and family legacy. This episode asks what responsible cultural connection looks like as neighborhoods change and diasporic communities meet. Yelena’s story reminds us that Detroit’s future depends on honoring memory, resisting extraction, building trust, and turning migration into meaningful commitment to people, place, and shared liberation across generations.

“Sometimes people think that because it don’t happen overnight, they’re not doing well… keep going. Don’t stop.” In this powerful Detroit is Different conversation, Rev. Alonzo Bell, Executive Director of The Redeem Team, traces a life shaped by East Side Detroit, faith, family, discipline, and the long work of community service. Bell takes listeners from his family’s Arkansas roots and Black Bottom beginnings to Gratiot, where poverty was real but love, church, and neighborhood connection gave children a foundation. He reflects on Martin Evers Missionary Baptist Church, Pastor Austin Byrd Jr.’s civil-rights vision, the changing East Side of the 1980s, and the perseverance required to keep building when resources are scarce. “It comes a certain point of time where you just put enough time in and then the scales begin to move in your direction,” Bell explains. His story connects Detroit’s past—migration, Black church leadership, neighborhood pride, factory loss, and survival—to its future: patient institution-building, youth guidance, faith-centered organizing, and leadership rooted in service. This episode reminds us that community transformation is not a sudden breakthrough; it is brick-by-brick work, witnessed by the people, strengthened through relationships, and sustained by those committed enough to keep fighting for generations ahead.

“You carry this brilliance in you—this is something that’s in your DNA.” In this moving Detroit is Different conversation, Tiara Jones, owner of Black Beautiful & Brilliant, shares how love, grief, family, and purpose shaped her decision to continue the brand created by her late husband. Tiara traces her roots from Inkster to Alabama, connecting her family’s Great Migration story and the trauma of racial violence to the strength that generations carried into Metro Detroit. She reflects on meeting her husband during the COVID era, building a life together, and choosing to preserve his vision after his passing: “I’m going to pick this brand back up, because it can be bigger than what he envisioned.” More than clothing or a slogan, Black Beautiful & Brilliant becomes a lesson for their son and daughter about “what love looks like,” commitment, loyalty, and cultural pride. Tiara also speaks honestly about grief, finding her voice, supporting Black women, and reminding the community that brilliance is not something granted from outside—it already lives within us. This episode connects the past to the future by showing how ancestral survival, neighborhood memory, Black enterprise, and family legacy can become tools for healing, ownership, and collective possibility.

“What If? …Detroit” is where history pulls up in a black Cadillac, asks for a seat at the table, and says, “Now let’s tell the story right.” Hosted by Khary Frazier and Kahn Santori, this Detroit is Different series takes real possibilities that almost happened and turns them into bold, funny, fact-based imagination.

This episode asks the big one: What if Don Barden and Michael Jackson opened their casino in Detroit? Not just a casino — a Black-owned entertainment empire on the riverfront. A place where casino money, Motown roots, hip-hop business, family entertainment, and Black contracting could have changed the whole power map of the city. As the conversation reminds us, these were not “wild ideas” but “real Detroit possibilities that almost happened.”

Khary and Kahn bring the perfect mix: neighborhood memory, political context, business history, jokes from the barbershop, and the kind of Detroit detail you only get from people who actually know the city. They ask the questions that make you laugh and think: Would Aretha have had Sunday gospel shows there? Would Quincy Jones bring a whole jazz month? Would Jay-Z, Master P, or Beyoncé step in after Michael? Would Black restaurants, builders, and community groups finally get a real piece?

“What If? …Detroit” is history with rhythm, speculation with receipts, and Black Detroit imagination turned all the way up. It is smart, soulful, hilarious, and serious about one question: how different would Detroit be if the moves that almost happened actually did?

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