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This season on The Afrocentric Podcast, host Morgan Gray steps to the mic with a word, a warning, and a reclamation: somebody almost walked away with all of our stuff. Not the playlist or the podcast—but the real stuff. The kind passed down through bloodlines, rhythms, recipes, and revolutionary memory.
Season 4 is a journey into what it means to lose and reclaim the sacred—our culture, our language, our spiritual and physical selves. Morgan blends spoken word, archival storytelling, and social commentary to ask bold questions about ownership, identity, and survival in an age that profits off our genius while pretending it discovered us.
This season is louder, deeper, and more defiant. It’s for every person who’s ever felt their story stolen or their joy recycled as someone else’s product. Morgan and her guests call names, name systems, and summon ancestors—turning critique into testimony and testimony into sound.
Someone Almost Walked Away with All of My Stuff isn’t a metaphor. It’s a reminder.
We are still here, still whole, and still calling back what was ours from the beginning.
By Morgan GrayThis season on The Afrocentric Podcast, host Morgan Gray steps to the mic with a word, a warning, and a reclamation: somebody almost walked away with all of our stuff. Not the playlist or the podcast—but the real stuff. The kind passed down through bloodlines, rhythms, recipes, and revolutionary memory.
Season 4 is a journey into what it means to lose and reclaim the sacred—our culture, our language, our spiritual and physical selves. Morgan blends spoken word, archival storytelling, and social commentary to ask bold questions about ownership, identity, and survival in an age that profits off our genius while pretending it discovered us.
This season is louder, deeper, and more defiant. It’s for every person who’s ever felt their story stolen or their joy recycled as someone else’s product. Morgan and her guests call names, name systems, and summon ancestors—turning critique into testimony and testimony into sound.
Someone Almost Walked Away with All of My Stuff isn’t a metaphor. It’s a reminder.
We are still here, still whole, and still calling back what was ours from the beginning.