Being Almost Successful Is the Most Dangerous Place You Can Be | S2S Ep. 530
Being close isn’t the same as being there — and ET knows exactly what that feels like. In this episode, CJ and ET get raw about the “almost zone”: why […]
Ep 1161 | Jason Whitlock DEFENDS James Harden, RE-EXAMINES Caitlin Clark & CREDITS Jalen Brunson podcast
Corporate Leadership & Faith: Violette Omotosho on Building Influence Without Shrinking podcast
play_arrow
Soft Life or Survival? What the ‘Young Heaux’ Era Is Really Teaching Us podcast
Why You’re Scientifically Addicted to Your Situationship & How to Let Them Go with Amy Chan podcast
play_arrow
play_arrow
Art Shopping Network’s Maxwell Young & Amir Browder of HOMME DC ON ‘Acquired Taste’ podcast
545: Joe & Myra Sitdown podcast
play_arrow
Walk It Out Wednesday: Pentecost: The Feast of Weeks | Pastoral Panel podcast
Jason Whitlock & Virgil Walker Discuss Black Fatigue & the NAACP | Jason Whitlock Harmony podcast
Otis Blackwell helped write the sound of modern America.
He wrote “Don’t Be Cruel.” He wrote “All Shook Up.” He wrote “Fever.”
His songs helped launch Elvis Presley’s rise at the exact moment rock and roll went global — yet his name remains largely unknown.
In this episode of Black Is America, we examine the life, craft, and legacy of Otis Blackwell — the Brooklyn-born songwriter whose structure, hooks, and emotional clarity helped define 1950s youth culture and reshape American popular music.
From the Apollo Theater to international charts… from behind-the-scenes publishing deals to Rock & Roll Hall of Fame recognition… this is the story of the architect behind the anthem.
Otis Blackwell wasn’t just a songwriter.
He was foundational.
Being close isn’t the same as being there — and ET knows exactly what that feels like. In this episode, CJ and ET get raw about the “almost zone”: why […]
Copyright Blackpodcasting 2025