Speakertalks: Kelly Kanayama on “Look Back At Me,” by Trina & Killer Mike

This is Speakertalks, Volume 1.

One song. One guest. One conversation.

Let’s get it:

Kelly Kanayama discusses the finer pleasures of Trina, especially on the song “Look Back At Me” with Killer Mike. Which foods make the best sex metaphors? Can any man ever measure up to Trina’s expectations?

You can find Kelly at:
Frank Discussions, a Punisher podcast
@KellyKanayama
https://www.patreon.com/UntilTheEndOfTheWorld

Speakertalks, Vol. 1 album art by Jonathan Chan

Speakertalks: Julian Lytle on “Get It Together” by Drake, Jorja Smith, & Black Coffee

This is Speakertalks, Volume 1.

One song. One guest. One conversation.

Let’s get it:

Julian Lytle explains the gospel of Heartbreak Drake through the lens of Drake, Jorja Smith, & Black Coffee’s “Get It Together,” from the album More Life. What’s up with house and rap music? What kind of storytelling wave is Aubrey on?

You can find Julian at:
ants.thejulianlytle.com
@JulianLytle
instagram.com/julianlytle
https://www.facebook.com/ants.webcomic/

Speakertalks, Vol. 1 album art by Jonathan Chan

The Way We Move: Evan Narcisse//New York, New York

The Way We Move is a free project that is intended to share some of the wisdom I’ve gleaned from simply talking to people about the world they live in. I’m blessed to know a lot of people who are doing things that inspire me, impress me, or give me hope. I chose six people to speak to face-to-face for this project. They’re writers and accountants, musicians and martial artists…

Rather than holding court on some subject or another or trying to solve some major issue, I spoke to these people about themselves and let the conversation be what it was gonna be. In the end, we discussed protesting, activism, punk music, defining our identities, cultural sabotage, video games, martial arts, and more.

The distance between what we expected back then and how we live now is where The Way We Move lives. Listen to one episode a day, like a vitamin.

♦♦♦

I spoke to Evan Narcisse of New York, New York about being a New Yorker, becoming a father, religion, and the complicated status quo of being a black man in 2017 America
https://twitter.com/EvNarc

♠♠♠

The Way We Move was recorded between September and December 2016 in Oakland, Portland, and New York City.

The intro and outro music is Insane Analog’s Somewhere Out There. Check out http://insaneanalog.com and https://soundcloud.com/insaneanalog, and look for new music from them in 2017.

The cover art features two brothers four thousand miles from home.

The Way We Move: Thomas Jackson//Fontana, CA

The Way We Move is a free project that is intended to share some of the wisdom I’ve gleaned from simply talking to people about the world they live in. I’m blessed to know a lot of people who are doing things that inspire me, impress me, or give me hope. I chose six people to speak to face-to-face for this project. They’re writers and accountants, musicians and martial artists…

Rather than holding court on some subject or another or trying to solve some major issue, I spoke to these people about themselves and let the conversation be what it was gonna be. In the end, we discussed protesting, activism, punk music, defining our identities, cultural sabotage, video games, martial arts, and more.

The distance between what we expected back then and how we live now is where The Way We Move lives. Listen to one episode a day, like a vitamin.

♦♦♦

I spoke to Thomas Jackson of Fontana, CA about moving around as a kid, keeping a best friend, making music, touring with a band, and staying creative
https://baus.bandcamp.com/

♠♠♠

The Way We Move was recorded between September and December 2016 in Oakland, Portland, and New York City.

The intro and outro music is Insane Analog’s Somewhere Out There. Check out http://insaneanalog.com and https://soundcloud.com/insaneanalog, and look for new music from them in 2017.

The cover art features two brothers four thousand miles from home.

The Way We Move: Professor Malandro//Detroit, MI

The Way We Move is a free project that is intended to share some of the wisdom I’ve gleaned from simply talking to people about the world they live in. I’m blessed to know a lot of people who are doing things that inspire me, impress me, or give me hope. I chose six people to speak to face-to-face for this project. They’re writers and accountants, musicians and martial artists…

Rather than holding court on some subject or another or trying to solve some major issue, I spoke to these people about themselves and let the conversation be what it was gonna be. In the end, we discussed protesting, activism, punk music, defining our identities, cultural sabotage, video games, martial arts, and more.

The distance between what we expected back then and how we live now is where The Way We Move lives. Listen to one episode a day, like a vitamin.

♦♦♦

I spoke to Professor Malandro of Detroit, MI about becoming yourself, dance contests, studying martial arts, discovering capoeira, and living your ideals
http://capoeirabayarea.com/

♠♠♠

The Way We Move was recorded between September and December 2016 in Oakland, Portland, and New York City.

The intro and outro music is Insane Analog’s Somewhere Out There. Check out http://insaneanalog.com and https://soundcloud.com/insaneanalog, and look for new music from them in 2017.

The cover art features two brothers four thousand miles from home.