Detroit is Different

  • Latest episode: “No Compromise: Dwan Dandridge on Building Wealth for Black Detroit”
  • Latest episode: “Not Just Diversity: Darlene King-Turner on Equity, Detroit, and Black Men in Leadership”
  • Latest episode: “Detroiters Are Our Assignment Editors: Orlando Bailey on Truth, Power & Black Leadership”

  • Latest episode: “No Compromise: Dwan Dandridge on Building Wealth for Black Detroit”
  • Latest episode: “Not Just Diversity: Darlene King-Turner on Equity, Detroit, and Black Men in Leadership”
  • Latest episode: “Detroiters Are Our Assignment Editors: Orlando Bailey on Truth, Power & Black Leadership”

“Write it down, make it plain.” That’s how Cornetta Lane Smith steps into the Detroit is Different studio—rooted, ready, and carrying her grandmother’s legacy with her. Across this powerful conversation, Cornetta drops stories that pull you straight into the heart of Black Detroit lineage: her grandmother migrating from “two blocks of Grand Junction, Tennessee” to Greenlawn; discovering their sharecropper past through census records; and standing on the road where the plantation her ancestors survived once sat—“We realized the street changed from Plantation Road to Elliot Road. I said, this has to be it.” She shares how grief, curiosity, and faith led her to create Recipes of Resistance, a docu-series blending food, memory, and truth-telling, because “the role of the storyteller is to humanize people—especially now, when trust is disappearing.” Cornetta opens up about love, loss, religion, politics, Arab–Black Detroit relationships, and why understanding where we come from is essential to shaping where we go as Black Detroiters. This is an episode that stitches together the past and future of Legacy Black Detroit with the tenderness of a family recipe and the urgency of a people reclaiming their story.

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