Detroit is Different

  • Latest episode: “From Redistricting to the Ombudsman: Sherry Gay-Dagnogo on Power, Schools & Service”
  • Latest episode: “Water We Inherit: Entrepreneurship, AI, and Detroit’s Blue Economy with Brittany Vanderbeek”
  • Latest episode: “We Can Do Our Own Planning: Lauren Hood & the Institute for Afro-Urbanism”

  • Latest episode: “From Redistricting to the Ombudsman: Sherry Gay-Dagnogo on Power, Schools & Service”
  • Latest episode: “Water We Inherit: Entrepreneurship, AI, and Detroit’s Blue Economy with Brittany Vanderbeek”
  • Latest episode: “We Can Do Our Own Planning: Lauren Hood & the Institute for Afro-Urbanism”

“Solar power is just sunlight hitting your skin, because your skin is a semiconductor too.” That quote from Ali Dirul of Ryter Cooperative Industries launches a Detroit is Different conversation that electrifies history and reimagines the future. In this powerful episode, Ali breaks down energy democracy, off-grid engineering, and building a sustainable Detroit from D-Town Farms to Highland Park’s streetlights. “We’re not just placing panels—we’re placing power back in the hands of the people,” he says. With stories tracing back to his grandfather’s Ford Model T factory job, African-centered schooling at Aisha Shule, and a capstone project at Oakland University, Ali ties Black legacy to Black futures. This is innovation rooted in community, fueled by melanin, and structured with purpose. It’s a conversation that honors how Detroit built the world—and now might just rewire it.