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The Black Effect Podcast Network VIBE Digital Cover Story (Nov 2025)
Music

The Black Effect Podcast Network VIBE Digital Cover Story (Nov 2025)

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

If there’s one thing Charlamagne Tha God has never been accused of, it’s silence.  

For years, the man has made a living — a good living — off the simple act of running his mouth. He’s debated Hip-Hop icons before breakfast, grilled politicians before lunch, and can even be found on Comedy Central sparking national conversation just before your evening nightcap. To the man born Lenard McKelvey, a microphone isn’t just a tool — it’s an instrument, a weapon, and a confessional booth rolled into one.  

It was only a matter of time before he decided to build an empire out of it. In 2020, he launched The Black Effect Podcast Network, a platform dedicated to amplifying Black voices, perspectives, and experiences in all of their complexity. What started as a big idea (and a few bold calls to iHeartMedia) has become a powerhouse — a cultural echo chamber where storytellers, truth-tellers, and comedians all come to do what Charlamagne does best: talk that talk.  

And then there’s Dollie S. Bishop, the Brooklyn-born, South Carolina-raised television maven-turned podcasting pro who makes sure he walks the walk. As President of Production and Creative Development at The Black Effect Podcast Network, Bishop is the steady hand behind the mics who turn all that talk into traction. While Charlamagne might light the spark, Bishop keeps the fire burning — overseeing strategy, partnerships, and the delicate art of keeping a creative network profitable and purposeful. Charlamagne is the mouth, Dollie is the muscle — the one who makes sure ideas turn into institutions. 

Together, they form a rare kind of creative balance — the dreamer and the doer, the provocateur and the planner. But at their core, they’re both storytellers who’ve been hooked on narrative since childhood. Charlamagne credits his mother, who put everything from The Bible to Beverly Cleary novels in his hands as a young man in Moncks Corner, SC, while Bishop conceptualized her own stories, reimagining her life as something greater than her reality. Their shared passion blossomed into communications careers, with Charlamagne’s radio history and time with “OG” Wendy Williams well documented. However, the strategic chatterbox has the late Reggie Ossé to thank for sparking his interest in podcasts with the highly regarded and influential Combat Jack Show. 

“My man Chris Morrow told me 12, 13 years ago I needed to start a podcast, and I’m like, ‘what is a podcast?’” Charlamange tells VIBE from the comfort of The Breakfast Club studio in New York City. “He worked with Reggie Ossé and The Loud Speakers Network, and told me to start listening to Combat Jack. Combat Jack was literally my introduction to podcasts.” 

Even while a fan and admirer of Jack, Charla was hesitant to follow through on Morrow’s advice. “Chris told me, ‘There’s two things you’re gonna have to do. You’re gonna have to write a book, and you’re gonna have to start a podcast.’ I always wanted to write a book. I love reading and storytelling. But I remember being arrogant, saying, ‘Oh, I don’t need a podcast, I do morning radio! The people who do podcasts are the people who can’t get on radio.’ And then I started thinking to myself, ‘I’ve been fired from radio four times, so this would be a good backup plan if I ever get fired from The Breakfast Club.’”  

Morrow, the man who planted the seed, tells VIBE that his insistence stemmed from Charla’s interests and success in other areas, knowing that a podcast could not only amplify those moves, but create new opportunities. While Charla was slow to see the vision, he eventually came around.

“When he saw the value in that, I think it was a significant moment for podcasting,” Morrow tells VIBE. “Prior to that, especially in the Hip-Hop space, there was a feeling that if you were already on the radio, then you didn’t need to do a podcast. Charlamagne changed that perception.” 

And so he went for it, quickly learning that his previous arrogance was not only naïve, but a blessing blocker. He realized with his show Brilliant Idiots that the industry could bring in the bread and stir conversation like the radio of yore. 

“When we started doing it, we were doing it for the love, me and my guy Andrew Schultz,” Charlamagne says of his Brilliant Idiots co-host. “It took off immediately. I remember getting that first check with the advertising dollars, and being like, ‘Oh! You can make real money doing this.’ And then we started doing live shows and selling merchandise and treating this like a legitimate business. Twelve years later, and that’s been very lucrative for me.” 

Bishop, on the other hand, found herself smitten with Oprah Winfrey’s Super Soul Sunday, an interview podcast hosted by the daytime icon that spoke to her own propensity for self-improvement. 

“I’ve always been into self-help content, so anything that I gravitate toward, whether it’s a book or anything in life, the question is ‘how can I be better?’” Bishop tells VIBE. “It just fed my soul in so many ways.”  

After spending over a decade as a television producer, Bishop, like many of us, found herself twiddling her green thumbs when the 2020 Covid pandemic hit. “Everything had shut down at that point,” she explains. “Everybody was trying to figure out how to adapt. I had just been sitting at home for nine months. I was gardening, and I just let go and let God. I wasn’t concerned about work. I had everything I needed.” 

Within his 2017 tome Black Privilege: Opportunity Comes to Those Who Create It, Charlamagne speaks of failure often leading the way to success. In this case, he deems the “failure of the federal government” as a major catalyst for Black Effect’s creation, “Because everybody was at home because of Covid,” including Bishop. 

“So, I was like, Dollie’s in the garden! ‘Dollie! Yo! You want to come run this network?’,” the radio vet recalls of first reaching out to Bishop. “She decided she wanted to do it, and so did every single person I reached out to to be a part of this network. Everybody said yes. Everybody.” 

A rich relationship has been developed between Charlamagne, Dollie and the network’s hosts, no better demonstrated than during the collective’s 5th anniversary party this October, where journalist and Breakfast Club newswoman Loren LoRosa interviewed fellow podcasters under the brand’s umbrella, including reality show HNIC Carlos King, who brought his Reality With The King podcast to the network in July 2025. 

“When I was approached by Dollie to partner with Black Effect for my podcast, it was a no-brainer for me,” King shared with VIBE amid the celebration. “And I thought for myself, it was an opportunity to show the culture that two successful Black men can join forces with no ego involved and really build a partnership together.”  

It should be noted that King’s podcast was highly successful and a regular conversation starter years before bringing his talents to the network. For the gifted interviewer, partnering has provided the manpower – talent bookers, advertising resources, etc. —  that comes with the iHeart banner without impeding on the creative.  

Carlos King (Photo by Carol Lee Rose/Getty Images)

“They allow me to do me,” King states with confidence. “They’re like, ‘look, it ain’t broke. Don’t fix it, okay? We bought into you. You’ve had three successful years of your podcast already, we’re here to help you build.’ And that’s exactly what they’ve been doing.” 

King partnered with Black Effect in the same vein as many of the network’s biggest shows, with behemoths like The 85 South Show, All The Smoke, Drink Champs and even The Breakfast Club having been established prior to the network’s 2020 founding. Securing partnerships with these entities — in addition to the network’s first original pod, Cut To It Featuring Steve Smith Sr. — established the network as the premiere home of Black storytelling within the podcast space, allowing for the development of shows that speak to deeper issues within our communities, including Just Heal With Dr. Jay, and Family Therapy.  

Both Dollie and Charlamagne brag of these titles with the same – if not more – enthusiasm as they do when discussing the heavy-hitters who consume our timelines. There’s a palpable belief in their people that emanates when they speak of platforming voices that are “intentional” in their mission, whether that be to help you heal or crack you up.  

“I saw all of these different podcasts that didn’t necessarily have a home, but they had an audience,” Charlamagne tells me of securing titles ahead of the network’s launch. “No exaggeration, The Breakfast Club is the most downloaded Black podcast, and has been for the last eight, nine years. But it was just out there as an iHeart podcast. You had Drink Champs, The 85 South Show. My whole mindset was, let’s connect the dots for these people on the audio piece with our sales team, and so that’s what we did.” 

Conal Byrne, CEO of iHeartMedia Digital Audio Group, spoke of trusting in Charla’s “unwavering passion and vision,” to successfully turn his dream into a “cultural movement.”

“He brings that bold authenticity he’s known for, and it’s translating into real impact—this network has launched dozens of shows, many of which are running up the charts, and is reshaping the podcast landscape, pushing boundaries, and elevating diverse creators and voices,” Byrne tells VIBE. “That kind of drive and purpose is exactly why we built this with him, and it’s why the network is flourishing.”

Even while having established itself as a premiere podcast network – captivating 45% of the entire Black Male podcast audience and hitting over a billion downloads in 2025 – Black Effect has been made to confront barriers that its achievements and influence have yet to circumvent. This becomes evident when the business partners discuss certain advertisers giving them the cold shoulder over “risqué” shows while sponsoring unseasoned titles in the same category.

“The example I use all the time is WHOREible Decisions with Mandii and Weezy,” Charlamagne explains of the much-discussed podcast that was eventually renamed Decisions, Decisions. “Mandii and Weezy’s audio numbers are through the roof.

“They do millions monthly, but they don’t get the same opportunities as a Guys We F****d or a Call Her Daddy. What’s the difference between what Mandii and Weezy do and what all those other ladies do?”  

“They’re Black,” Dollie quickly responds, with Charlamagne confirming, “That’s it. You can’t just pigeonhole them, and say, ‘well, they talk about sex all the time.’ No, they talk about everything, to the point where they decided to change their name. They changed their name because they felt like WHOREible Decisions was holding them back.  

“Advertisers can look at them getting the same type of numbers and would not want to advertise. Like, ‘Oh, that show’s too risqué,’ but a show called Guys We F****d ain’t? And I love Guys We F****d, I’ve been on the show before, but what’s the difference? Nobody’s able to explain that to me, so I can only assume it’s because they’re Black.” 

Black Effect moves to remedy this issue as much as possible with a business model leveraging its biggest property for the security of all.  

“If you want our top show, which is The Breakfast Club podcast, sure! But you also have to take the entire slate that’s on the network,” Dollie details. “You can’t à la carte and pick what you want, and we do that to ensure that all of our partners are bringing in revenue.  

“They need to understand that Black voices have value, that’s it,” Dollie continues of potential sponsors. “There’s value here. I think we all know it. We all probably don’t want to admit it, but act on it and recognize it, it’s just that simple.” 

“Black equals green,” Charlamagne adds. “There’s no such thing as black money. These are human beings who spend like everybody else spends. So, why wouldn’t you tap into that? And it’s not like we don’t have a white audience. We’re not a niche thing that’s just for Black people. We are what’s cool, we control the cool, and people like to listen to what’s cool. Go to any of the live shows, and look at the audience.” 

It’s true. Pull up to a live taping of any given BE podcast and you’ll see a pretty rare sight in 2025: authentic diversity. In fact, authenticity is what reels most listeners in as charisma-drenched hosts bring it on the mic every week. That authenticity also translates to guests like Vernon “Mad Max” Maxwell during his iconic All The Smoke interview and Young Thug’s quotable-heavy appearance on PERSPEKTIVES WITH BANK.  

“Authenticity is the number one thing to me. There’s not a podcast you can name that has success where the individuals on that podcast aren’t authentic to who they are,” Charlamagne insists. “The most important thing for a podcast is to have something to say. Nothing else matters. What is your intention? And when you have that true, authentic intention, you soar.” 

With strong, authentic voices often comes massive egos, and with so many A-list A-mics on the roster, one could wonder how Bishop manages multiple properties and personalities. Turns out, it actually isn’t too taxing for the former Def Jam intern, whose hustle landed her at the side of legendary music exec L.A. Reid before she went on to produce for various Viacom brands. 

“I’m going to tell the truth girl, it’s really not tough,” Bishop concedes. “My career has been kind of like walking up a staircase, and everything has prepared me for what was next. Interacting with people and dealing with talent has always been easy for me. I think I see people for who they are, and it gives me a good idea of how to deal with them. 

“Now, because I never ran a podcast network before, there was definitely a learning curve just to understand things, but I pay attention. I pay attention to the people who know what they’re doing. I’ve had great teachers throughout my career and I’m a great student, so it hasn’t been difficult at all. It’s just been a powerful course. I’m led by something higher.” 

Tapping into “something higher” has always been the goal for Black Effect, which not only measures its success by the numbers, but by its real-world impact, best demonstrated via their annual Black Effect Podcast Festival and The Thrill of Possibilities HBCU Summit, where students receive mentorship and assistance with everything from headshots to post-collegiate career placement. 

“These initiatives go beyond the bottom line, they showcase Black Effect as a media company that’s not just talking the talk, but walking it, and not just for fun,” says Bishop, who embraces the challenge with enthusiasm and expertise, something that, for Charlamagne, solidifies the businesswoman as the leader of this movement. 

“My definition of a boss is Dollie Bishop, I work for her,” he says with confidence in his presidential pick. “You can’t just say you’re a boss, people have to want to follow your direction because they know you’re leading them somewhere they need or want to be, and that’s Dollie.”  

Another powerful woman with whom BE left a lasting impression is none other than former Vice President Kamala Harris, whose appearance on All The Smoke found its way into her 2025 book 107 Days, a moment of pride for Charla, who was somewhat taken aback by the entry. 

“That’s history, you know what I mean?” he asks, almost in disbelief. “She has a whole chapter in her book about running for office on her experience on one of our podcasts. That’s gonna be set in stone forever.” 

As will Black Effects influence, with Charla and Dollie already noting other podcasts and networks following their blueprint. When asked for names, Charla boldly declares “every single one of them, and I mean that respectfully.” 

“Anyone you see come with a Black-driven podcast network, it was influenced by the success of The Black Effect Podcast Network. And by the way, not just Black. After we came in going Black specific, you started seeing the same thing, but for Latinos, for the Queer community. Now, there’s no Brown Effects or Gay Effects or anything, but other networks are now being created specifically for their communities because people saw the success of Black Effect.” 

Indeed, these inspired collectives are all proof that Black Effect didn’t just change the game, it expanded it. Still, being first carries its own kind of permanence. The Black Effect remains the standard-bearer for culture-led storytelling. And as the audio space evolves into whatever comes next — the network’s foundation ensures its relevance. Because long after algorithms shift and platforms fade, the thing that never goes out of style is a good story, told well, by people who own their narrative. And if there’s one thing The Black Effect has taught the industry, it’s that when Black voices tell their own stories, the whole world listens.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Official Trailer for 'The White House Effect' Doc About Climate Change
Hollywood

Official Trailer for ‘The White House Effect’ Doc About Climate Change

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Official Trailer for ‘The White House Effect’ Doc About Climate Change

by Alex Billington
October 29, 2025
Source: YouTube

“We need a new attitude about the environment.” Cinetic debuted the trailer for a compelling documentary film called The White House Effect, made by a trio of some of the best doc filmmakers around – Bonni Cohen, Pedro Kos, Jon Shenk. It will be streaming on Netflix to watch starting this week – after premiering at film festivals in 2024. The title comes from an actual quote used by President George H.W. Bush who said he would use “the White House effect” to tackle climate change problems in the 80s. However, things didn’t really go well. Three decades ago, the world was poised to stop global warming. Using exclusively archival materials, The White House Effect tells the dramatic origin story of the climate crisis and how a political battle in the George H. W. Bush administration interrupted that moment, changing the course of history. So sad and infuriating. “How it happened is a question that we can still learn from – and one that [this film] answers with shocking & eye-opening timeliness with a virtuoso use of archive footage. Clips from TV news, presidential speeches, documents reveal how the US was on the brink of historic climate change [action], but instead laid the groundwork for decades of polarization.” Still as important than ever to show the truth.

Here’s the official trailer for Cohen, Kos, Shenk’s doc film The White House Effect, direct from YouTube:

The White House Effect Doc Trailer

The White House Effect Doc Trailer

A riveting look at a key moment in the history of the climate crisis, The White House Effect travels back in time to show how a crucial opportunity to take real action on global warming was not just squandered but deliberately undermined. Woven entirely of archival material, the film focuses on the pivotal years of the George H.W. Bush administration — 1988 to 1992 — when the entire country was waking up to the reality of global warming and Bush had pledged to use “the White House effect” to tackle it. Infuriating and irrefutable, the film tracks cause & effect with devastating precision to reveal just how hollow that promise became as Bush finds himself increasingly caught between his chief of staff John Sununu and industry power brokers on one side and his EPA chief Bill Reilly and climatologists on the other. As the world prepares for the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, Bush faces mounting pressure to make a decision that will change the course of history—culminating with the U.S. undermining a global agreement to set hard limits on emissions, setting the stage for the increasingly hot, dangerous, polarized future we all now face.

The White House Effect is co-directed by three award-winning doc filmmakers: Bonni Cohen (director of The Rape of Europa, Audrie & Daisy, Athlete A, Make a Splash) & Pedro Kos (director of Bending the Arc, Rebel Hearts, In Our Blood) & Jon Shenk (director of Lost Boys of Sudan, The Island President, Audrie & Daisy, An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power, Athlete A). Produced by Noah Stahl, Josh Penn, Justine Nagan. This initially premiered at the 2024 Telluride Film Festival a few years ago. Cinetic / Netflix debuts The White House Effect doc streaming on Netflix starting on October 31st, 2025 this fall. Look any good?

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Find more posts in: Documentaries, To Watch, Trailer

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | California bans loud ads on streaming platforms, to go into effect next July
Celebrity News

bitchy | California bans loud ads on streaming platforms, to go into effect next July

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84


My mother will never give up cable and switch to streaming-only, because of her deep and abiding love of fast-forwarding through commercials on shows she’s recorded on her DVR. It’s her remote-wielding right and she will not relinquish it! I, on the other hand, have been streaming-only for years, and for most platforms I subscribe to the (microscopically) cheaper ad-included plans. This is how I know far too many pharmaceutical and insurance jingles than any one human should be subjected to. I know many of you know this pain as well. Have you also noticed that a lot of the time, the ads are glaringly LOUDER than whatever program you’re actually trying to watch? Well Californians sure noticed it, which led to Golden State legislators recently passing a law that bans commercials from being louder than the movie/TV show being streamed:

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the bill, SB 576, that had been shepherded by Sen. Thomas Umberg (D-Santa Ana) through the legislative process. It had passed unanimously on the Senate and Assembly floor earlier this month in Sacramento.

The passage means that, starting on July 1 of next year, major streaming services won’t be able to “transmit the audio of commercial advertisements louder than the video content the advertisements accompany,” the bill’s text reads.

The law asks streaming services to follow the Federal Communications Commission’s Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation (CALM) Act, which went in to effect in 2012 for linear TV and radio but does not currently apply to streamers. That effort was spurred by the FCC receiving more than 130,000 complaints in 2010, “the vast majority of which concerned the excessively loud sound of commercials,” the state’s Assembly analysis recounted.

“Many platforms have introduced tiered subscription models that require consumers to pay a premium to avoid commercials, bringing ad-supported viewing, and the loudness of those ads, back into focus for millions of users,” the Assembly briefing noted. Indeed, price hikes across the board from streaming services have by default pushed consumers to the cheaper options, which now include regular commercial breaks just like old school TV.

A bill analysis by Senate Legislature committee staff noted that the Motion Picture Association, which lobbies on behalf of Disney, Netflix, Paramount, Amazon MGM Studios, Sony, Universal and Warner Bros. Discovery, had voiced opposition to the effort.

“The Motion Picture Association says that since streaming services are working voluntarily to address the issue of loud advertisements, SB 576 is unnecessary,” the analysis read. “They note that many streaming services have undertaken reasonable efforts to adjust the loudness of advertisements that come from server-side ad insertion that may be inconsistent with the loudness of the programs.”

Newsom, on signing the bill on Oct. 6, touted its volume-lowering impact, saying, “We heard Californians loud and clear, and what’s clear is that they don’t want commercials at a volume any louder than the level at which they were previously enjoying a program.”

[From The Hollywood Reporter]

I’d like to take this opportunity to commend the lawmakers who make the time and effort to name their policies in such a way that there’s a clever resulting acronym. Case in point: the Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation Act, or CALM. It’s all in the details! And speaking of, those few at the top making fortunes off streaming are such sneaky f–ks, ignoring the CALM Act because it didn’t explicitly refer to streaming (even though it was a logical extension). It’s the same playbook for how these Scrooges have been cheating actors out of streaming residuals. Anyway, good on California, and I hope the movement spreads east! What I find annoying is not just how loud commercials are overall, but how a lot of the time now it’s contrasted with TV/movies that are increasingly hard to hear! (Or do I need to make an appointment with my ENT?) There’s a whole slew of entertainment that is mumbling verging on inarticulate in audible dialogue levels, to the point where a lot of the time I wear my air pods when watching TV so that the sound goes directly into my head! I know it makes me sound (noise pun!) like an old fogey, I can live with that.

Photos credit: Janet Mayer/INSTARimages.com, Netflix, Disney press

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Daniel Dae Kim Calls Out 'Chilling Effect' On Speech, DEI In Hollywood
TV & Streaming

Daniel Dae Kim Calls Out ‘Chilling Effect’ On Speech, DEI In Hollywood

by jummy84 August 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Daniel Dae Kim called out the “chilling effect” on free speech and diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in Hollywood.

In an Associated Press interview conducted in Seoul, South Korea, the Tony nominee was asked if he’s worried about backlash against DEI efforts in the entertainment industry.

“We’re already seeing it,” the Butterfly actor and executive producer said. “If you look at what happened with Paramount and CBS News, we’re seeing a chilling effect on free speech and journalism and DEI. ‘DEI’ is a bad word these days, but to me, DEI’s not a fad. The idea of inclusion is not something that’s a political trend. It’s my life. It’s what I’ve lived every decade I’ve been in this business.”

Kim is referring to the $16 million settlement reached between Paramount and president Donald Trump over a contested 60 Minutes interview with former vice president Kamala Harris, which the GOP leader had claimed was fraudulently edited. At the time of the $20 billion lawsuit filing, the media conglomerate deemed the move “meritless.”

Following the settlement’s announcement, late-night host Stephen Colbert, whose show is televised on Paramount’s CBS, called the decision a “big fat bribe” amid the looming and long-gestating Paramount-Skydance merger. Just days later, he announced to audiences that his show — and The Late Show franchise as a whole, which began with David Letterman — would be cancelled next year. Amid speculation from viewers, Congress members and fellow industry peers, Paramount defended the decision as purely financially motivated.

Elsewhere in the Q&A with the AP, the Lost alum noted, “I have a lot of sympathy for actors who take stereotypical roles when they’re starting out because you need some way to break into the business. It’s much easier once you’re more successful and more established because you have more financial stability. It’s something that, if you’re not a person of color, or someone who’s a minority in the United States, you don’t have to think about. You don’t think about what this role means for the rest of a nation or an ethnicity. You just do what you’re drawn to, and that’s very liberating. I am lucky enough now where I can also make those same choices. But I don’t ever escape the fact that whatever I do will be watched and seen by so many people and judged through their own lens and filters.”

August 24, 2025 0 comments
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