Detroit is Different

  • Latest episode: “Tap Into It, Dr. Rose Moten on Healing, Detroit Roots, and Living in Full Bloom”
  • Latest episode: “I Knew That’s What I Wanted to Do, Gerald McBride on Radio, Detroit Love, and Legacy”
  • Latest episode: “Being in Community is Wellness, Dr. Demarra West’s Journey”

  • Latest episode: “Tap Into It, Dr. Rose Moten on Healing, Detroit Roots, and Living in Full Bloom”
  • Latest episode: “I Knew That’s What I Wanted to Do, Gerald McBride on Radio, Detroit Love, and Legacy”
  • Latest episode: “Being in Community is Wellness, Dr. Demarra West’s Journey”

“Before I leave this earth, I want to tell you about all the greater things I’ve done with others. That is the legacy I want to leave.” That’s Dr. Yusef “Bunchy” Shakur laying it plain—legacy isn’t a title, it’s a collective practice. In this in-studio conversation, Bunchy and Khary move through the full arc: from “a self-proclaimed predator” and “street aholic” in Zone 8 to a transformed leader who says, “I’ve broken that myth” that you can’t return home and build. He talks trailblazing—Urban Network to Mama Akua House—while naming the discipline of humility (“I literally do the work”) and the politics of authenticity in spaces that want you to “play the game.” As the first Black and first formerly incarcerated Executive Director in the Michigan Roundtable’s history, he lays out a vision to “build community power, dismantle stigmas” and shift from “like-minded” to “value people.” This episode connects Detroit’s past—elders, Panthers, block wisdom—to our future: a model of Legacy Black Culture that survives by organizing, not performing, and by building together what we couldn’t get alone.