Detroit is Different

  • Latest episode: “Walimu Raised Me: Dr. Tierra Bills on Mobility, Black Bottom, and Repair”
  • Latest episode: “From Bates to the Bargaining Table: Kevin Tolbert’s Detroit Story of Faith, Work, and Power”
  • Latest episode: “Stop Playing Small: Lanasia Angelina on Worthiness & Power Within”

  • Latest episode: “Walimu Raised Me: Dr. Tierra Bills on Mobility, Black Bottom, and Repair”
  • Latest episode: “From Bates to the Bargaining Table: Kevin Tolbert’s Detroit Story of Faith, Work, and Power”
  • Latest episode: “Stop Playing Small: Lanasia Angelina on Worthiness & Power Within”

“Wake up people, we stay asleep”—and from that call, this Detroit is Different conversation with Kevin Tolbert, 12th Congressional District Democratic Party Chair, moves like a family reunion and a strategy session. Four generations deep—Kentucky, Tennessee, Black Bottom, then East Side to West Side—Tolbert maps how Legacy Black Detroit culture gets made through migration, work, and neighborhood bonds. He shares a laugh and love of how his parents and older siblings discovered his intellect at an early age, then turns serious about Bates Academy and Dr. Gibson’s lesson: “Excuses are tools of the incompetent.” From there the talk widens to labor power and city politics—how unions built an American & Detroit’ Black middle class, why government contracts “make millionaires,” and why Coleman A. Young mattered because he changed the power dynamics. Tolbert connects the past to today’s fights over media narratives, water, data, and corporate greed, warning that when people stop learning history, they repeat it. It’s a Detroit story about family, discipline, and organizing—why our legacy is a toolkit, and why the future depends on whether we wake up. He honors the skill, talent, and brilliance of Black Detroit and insists, “we’re made of something different”— and at our best when faith and collective action are at our center.

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