Detroit is Different

  • Latest episode: “From Foreclosure to Liberation Zones: Writing Detroit’s Future with Ru Colvin”
  • Latest episode: “Dexter to Delray to DPSCD: Arlyssa Heard on Saving Detroit Schools”
  • Latest episode: “From Redistricting to the Ombudsman: Sherry Gay-Dagnogo on Power, Schools & Service”

  • Latest episode: “From Foreclosure to Liberation Zones: Writing Detroit’s Future with Ru Colvin”
  • Latest episode: “Dexter to Delray to DPSCD: Arlyssa Heard on Saving Detroit Schools”
  • Latest episode: “From Redistricting to the Ombudsman: Sherry Gay-Dagnogo on Power, Schools & Service”

“Most folks that came north from the South weren’t migrants—they were refugees,” Jen Ingram declares, setting the tone for this powerfully layered conversation. In this Detroit is Different episode, we trace coins and culture with Numismatics Noir founder Jen Ingram, whose passion for Black coin collecting merges family legacy, precious metals, and African American storytelling. “I’m building this bridge for them,” she recalls from a poem her great-grandmother recited, honoring the journey of her fourth-generation Detroit family from Mississippi to a duplex on Whitney. Jen shares her Detroit roots, her professional climb through healthcare and philanthropy, and the entrepreneurial leap into calibrating cultural pride through currency. From Harriet Tubman’s golden likeness to the hidden Black faces of U.S. money, Jen reveals how coins hold both historical weight and future economic promise. This episode is a masterclass in legacy, wealth, and Detroit soul.