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Comedian perfectly nails how little ‘thoughts and prayers’ mean after a mass shooting

It never fails. After a tragic mass shooting, social media is filled with posts offering thoughts and prayers. Politicians give long-winded speeches on the chamber floor or at press conferences asking Americans to do the thing they’ve been repeatedly trained to do after tragedy: offer heartfelt thoughts and prayers. When no real solution or plan of action is put forth to stop these senseless incidents from occurring so frequently in a country that considers itself a world leader, one has to wonder when we will be honest with ourselves about that very intangible automatic phrase.

Comedian Anthony Jeselnik brilliantly summed up what “thoughts and prayers” truly mean. In a 1.5-minute clip, Jeselnik talks about victims’ priorities being that of survival and not wondering if they’re trending at that moment. The crowd laughs as he mimics the actions of well-meaning social media users offering thoughts and prayers after another mass shooting. He goes on to explain how the act of performatively offering thoughts and prayers to victims and their families really pulls the focus onto the author of the social media post and away from the event. In the short clip he expertly expresses how being performative on social media doesn’t typically equate to action that will help victims or enact long-term change.

Of course, this isn’t to say that thoughts and prayers aren’t welcomed or shouldn’t be shared. According to Rabbi Jack Moline “prayer without action is just noise.” In a world where mass shootings are so common that a video clip from 2015 is still relevant, it’s clear that more than thoughts and prayers are needed. It’s important to examine what you’re doing outside of offering thoughts and prayers on social media. In another several years, hopefully this video clip won’t be as relevant, but at this rate it’s hard to see it any differently.

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Here are 4 ways you can effect meaningful change as we process yet another mass shooting

Two mass shootings in less than two weeks. It sounds like some faraway land where citizens fight for their right to freedom. But it’s not some far off land, it’s here in our own backyard. America has a problem—it’s the only developed country in the world that has more mass shootings a year than there are days. We are 144 days into the year and there has already been more than 200 mass shootings, 27 of which were school shootings. Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Texas, is the latest to join that growing list with 19 children and two teachers dying in an elementary school designated for second, third and fourth graders.

Parents and other adults who have lost children at the school are reeling from this unspeakable act of violence. And adults raising children in this country are joining those parents in their grief, but know that collective grief is not enough. People are feeling helpless and want to take action to combat those feelings. It gives our hands and minds something to focus on as our hearts heal.

Here are five things you can do if you’re feeling helpless about gun violence in America.


Connect with advocacy groups

Many gun safety advocacy groups have local chapters or you can connect with them online. Everytown for Gun Safety is the largest gun violence prevention organization in America. Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America has chapters in every state and a bunch of resources on their website. Giffords and Brady are two other nonprofits furnishing statistics, resources and ways to get involved. All of these organizations are there to help people have a voice in creating gun laws that make the most sense for the safety of American citizens. No one wants another mass shooting, and joining the fight with one of these organizations can put your anger and frustration to good use.

Run for office

Running for national office may be a privilege reserved for those who can afford to not work for a lengthy period of time leading up to the elections, but that’s not so much the case with local elections. And a lot of change is enacted at local and state levels. You don’t have to run to become a member of Congress to elicit change. School boards, county commissioners and other local influential positions can be of great benefit to your community. If you’re interested in finding out more about how to run for an office, look for information on your state’s secretary of state website. If you identify as a woman and are unsure of what office to run for, you should check out She Should Run. As well as having a starter kit, trainings and meetings, the organization also has a quiz to help you narrow down the office that would suit you best.

Get involved in other areas of public service

If running for office isn’t your thing, research your local and state candidates and find the ones who support the causes that are important to you and who share your views on preventing gun violence. Your support to their campaign can be in the form of monetary donations, helping with phone banks, texting, canvassing or helping put up signs. Any and every form of support helps for candidates who don’t have deep pockets or big donors.

Active participation in politics may be a bit too much for some people. But you can always write your member of Congress or state senator. If you’re computer savvy, you can even create a form letter and share it with others to make it easier for them to contact their representatives. You can also call your state representatives and leave them messages so they know your voice.

Peacefully protest

Something that will help you move from a place of feeling helpless and stuck is to protest. You can organize protests in your area or you can join protests that are already scheduled. You don’t have to be a member of an organization to show up. Grab a piece of poster board and some markers and go exercise your First Amendment right. You have the power to enact change. Every action has a ripple effect and if enough people are speaking up and stepping up, change is bound to happen.

We have to do what we can as adults because active shooter drills should not be part of learning to write your name. Calls from school should be because your child has a tummy ache, not because they’re not coming home. Teachers should only need to worry about correcting minor behaviors and teaching math, not how to teach their classroom to barricade a door. America, we have to do better, and the best way to change outcomes is by putting in the work.

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Drake’s Son Adonis Adorably Discusses His Basketball Skills In A Video Drake Shared

There may not be a rapper who loves basketball (or at least is open and enthusiastic about their love of the game) as much as Drake. (Literal professional basketball player J. Cole may be an exception.) Drake is a courtside fixture at NBA games and he’s been an official “global ambassador” of the Toronto Raptors since 2013. Naturally, Drake has started passing that passion onto his son Adonis, who was recently seen adorably mimicking LeBron James’ mannerisms while shooting on Drake’s home court.

Speaking of cute Adonis videos, Drake recently offered up another one on his Instagram Story. In a selfie-style video, Drake asks his son, “Yo, where’d you learn to shoot like that?” Adonis shrugs and playfully replies, “I don’t know.” Drake then noted he just made four out of five shots and added, “You’re cash right now.” Drake again asked how Adonis became such a sharpshooter and the boy replied with an even bigger shrug, “I shoot at school!”

In other recent-Drake-Instagram-post news, he shared a photo of himself with the Haim sisters yesterday, writing, “Just met the Beatles.” The band re-shared and added, “We’re the Beatles.” The trio’s The One More Haim Tour brought them to Toronto last week, so that’s why the four were able to meet up and snap a pic.

Check out the video above.

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Amber Heard Has Testified That She’s Received ‘Hundreds Of Death Threats’ Since The Depp V. Heard Trial Started

Amber Heard testified on Thursday that she’s received “hundreds of death threats” every day during ex-husband Johnny Depp‘s defamation case against her. “I am harassed, humiliated, threatened every single day — even just walking into this courtroom [and] sitting here in front of the world, having the worst parts of my life things I’ve lived through used to humiliate me,” she said. “People want to kill me and they tell me so everyday. People want to put my baby in the microwave. They tell me that. Johnny threatened, promised me if I ever left him, he’d make me think of him every single day that I lived.”

The trial has made Heard “relive the trauma” of Depp’s alleged abuse, she said. “I received hundreds of death threats regularly, if not daily, since this trial started — people mocking my testimony about being assaulted… I hope no one has to go through something like this. I just want Johnny to leave me alone. I’ve said that for years now.”

Heard added that she’s “not a saint” and she’s “not trying to present myself as one, as you all know,” but “I selfishly found relief in being able to use what I’ve lived through to advocate for others. Though I would not wish this situation on my worst enemy, if it gives a voice to someone who doesn’t have it… but as I stand here today can’t have a career or have people associate with me for the threats and the attacks they have to endure.”

Closing arguments in the $50 million defamation trial begin on Friday, May 27.

(Via EW)

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An Anonymous Donor Is Keeping Alex Jones Afloat With Millions In Bitcoin Donations For The Embattled Conspiracy Peddler

If you’re wondering what Ted Cruz’s definition of “American exceptionalism” is, it’s this: Sandy Hook denier Alex Jones just received close to $8 million in a bitcoin payout a week before yet another mass shooting at an elementary school claimed 19 lives.

Let’s back up a bit. Jones has been battling a defamation suit in court brought by the victims of those Sandy Hook students after the InfoWars host built a massive following and a streaming empire on the BSconspiracy theory that the massacre at Sandy Hook was all a hoax. Jones lost that suit after he “called in sick” to a deposition in order to host a new episode of his show. He would have likely been forced to pay the families damages but he decided to declare bankruptcy in order to avoid having to cough up his own money. Since then, Jones has been begging his viewers for donations, referring to his court battles with grieving parents as “a war” and urging his supporters to “attack” them by giving him money.

“To prosecute a war, we need prayer, word of mouth, and money. Money is a symbol that the enemy has used against us, and is bringing us down with. You must use that money to attack,” Jones said on a May 18th taping of his show. “If you don’t go to infowars.com forward-slash crypto and donate…then you have abdicated and signed over your rights. Because God gave you champions that will fight. God gave you people that will not back down, who will never give in, who do not have it in their DNA to submit to Satan. But if we do not have your backing, we cannot take this on, and we will be subjugated, and you will be destroyed.”

And it seems at least one anonymous donor took that battle cry to heart. According to Hatewatch, Jones received a $6 million bitcoin donation just one day after the May 18th episode of his show aired. The crypto payout came from the same donor who gave him $2 million in bitcoin earlier this year. This windfall comes as Jones continues to sow doubt amongst the public about the mass shooting epidemic the country is facing.

Following the tragedy at Robb Elementary School in Texas, Jones called the event “very opportunistic.” And more, via Newsweek:

“I don’t want to say this was staged, but we have specifically said, with two years of our leading mass shootings, that with all the pre-programming, that mass shootings are coming, terrorists are going to attack and we have got to take the guns. Then I’m like, well I would predict a lot of mass shootings right before elections and like clockwork, it is happening. To me, it is just very opportunistic what is happening.”

The only bit of good news to come from this is that, by Jones asking for donations and receiving such a large one, a judge has ruled that his suit should be removed from bankruptcy protection so that the court can determine how much he’ll need to pay the victims families. Since, you know, he has the money to do so now.

(Via Hatewatch & Newsweek)

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Momma Share The Glistening ‘Lucky’ Ahead Of Their New Album Release

One of this month’s “On The Up” artists to watch, Brooklyn duo Momma have a penchant for crafting nostalgic indie rock tunes that harken back to acts like The Smashing Pumpkins and The Breeders. Led by Etta Friedman and Allegra Weingarten, Momma are set to tour with Snail Mail this summer following the July 1st release of their new album, Household Name. Each single from the impending release has seemingly topped the last and the newly released “Lucky” is a total ripper of a track.

Fuzzed out guitars and Friedman’s choice lyrics about yearning for her partner have a gravitational pull. “How’d I get so lucky?” she asks on the track. “I wrote it after my significant other and I had to spend an unknown amount of time apart from each other on opposite sides of the country,” Friedman said in a statement. “I wanted it to feel anthemic, like a sappy and sentimental love song, but I still wanted to speak on how exciting it feels to know you found true treasure with someone you are in love with.”

Watch the video for “Lucky” above and check out all of Momma’s upcoming tour dates (both headlining and supporting Snail Mail) below.

08/12 — Providence, RI @ Fete Music Hall !
08/13 — Burlington, VT @ Higher Ground !
08/16 — New Haven, CT @ Toad’s Place !
08/17 — Asbury Park, NJ @ The Stone Pony !
08/19 — Richmond, VA @ The National !
08/20 — Norfolk, VA @ The NorVa !
08/21 — Charlotte, NC @ Neighborhood Theatre !
08/23 — Orlando, FL @ The Beacham Theater !
08/24 — Tampa, FL @ The Ritz Ybor !
08/26 — Birmingham, AL @ Saturn !
08/27 — Knoxville, TN @ The Mill & Mine !
08/28 — Louisville, KY @ Headliners Music Hall !
08/30 — Bloomington, IL @ The Castle Theatre !
08/31 — Madison, WI @ Majestic Theatre !
09/02 — Milwaukee, WI @ Turner Hall !
09/03 — St Louis, MO @ The Pageant !
09/04 — Columbus, OH @ The Athenaeum Theatre !
09/06 — Detroit, MI @ Majestic Theatre !
09/07 — Millvale, PA @ Mr. Smalls Theatre !
09/09 — Silver Spring, MD @ The Fillmore !
09/12 — Boston, MA @ Brighton Music Hall #
09/14 — Toronto, ON @ The Drake #
09/16 — Chicago, IL @ Sleeping Village #
09/17 — Minneapolis, MN @ Turf Club #
09/20 — Seattle, WA @ Barboza %
09/21 — Portland, OR @ Mississippi Studios %
09/23 — San Francisco, CA @ Rickshaw Stop %
09/24 — Los Angeles, CA @ The Echo %
09/25 — Santa Ana, CA @ Constellation Room %
09/27 — Phoenix, AZ @ Valley Bar %
09/30 — Austin, TX @ Mohawk — Indoors ^
10/01 — Dallas, TX @ Three Links ^
10/02 — Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall — Upstairs ^
10/04 — Atlanta, GA @ The Earl ^
10/07 — Philadelphia, PA @ Johnny Brenda’s #
10/08 — New York, NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg #

! with Snail Mail
# with Waveform*
% with Pardoner
^ with Teethe

Household Name is out 7/1 via Polyvinyl Record Co. Pre-order it here.

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Capella Grey Announces His Upcoming Single ‘OT’ Featuring Ty Dolla Sign

Capella Grey seems to only know how to elevate. The Bronx artist burst onto the scene in 2021 with the track “Gyalis,” forcing his way into the conversation for song of the summer, if not the year; It bubbled outwardly from just being a New York bop to a worldwide smash. As a result, he found himself in the studio with many greats on the artist and production side. While fans have been patiently, or impatiently, awaiting his next move, he announced today on Instagram that he has a record coming called “OT” featuring Ty Dolla Sign.

A moving graphic of the two artists and a quick trailer accompanies the announcement, as Grey sits with his lady to watch a movie before Ty calls him to ask where he is. The two are on opposite coasts, but it sounds like the “Psycho” artist is trying to convince the 26-year-old to come out west. The trailer closes with Capella singing ,”Why would I take a shorty OT,” meaning “out of town,” which makes it very clear what his intentions would be on that trip.

Capella is no stranger to big collaborations, as “OT” will follow the March record “Confujawn” featuring Grammy-winning songwriter and artist Nija. In 2021, “Gyalis” was remixed by Chris Brown, Popcaan, and a slew of other artists. Most recently, Chloe Bailey tried her hand at a “Gyalis” cover.

Check out the “OT” announcement above.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Doja Cat Explains Why She Doesn’t Like Her Early Hit ‘Go To Town’

Doja Cat has come a long way since dropping her debut album, Amala, in 2018. While that album mostly flew under music fans’ radars, after breaking through with her jokey track “Mooo!” and follow-up singles “Tia Tamera” and “Juicy,” many revisited the album and its lead single “Go To Town” — although, according to Doja herself, she’d rather they didn’t.

In a YouTube segment accompanying her recent Elle magazine cover story called “Thirst Trap,” Doja got challenged to answer some potentially controversial questions or take a shot for each one she abstained from answering. One of those questions was, “What song or verse do you regret putting out and why?” In the video, Doja waffles a bit about whether or not to answer because “then I’m just giving more attention to it,” but ultimately decides to tell viewers, “Don’t go and listen to ‘Go To Town’… I don’t like that one.” Sorry, Doja, but…

Her explanation reflects her musical perfectionism. “It’s not a bad song. I don’t think that I was very lyrically or vocally evolved in that era… That song is really difficult to listen to for me. Don’t waste your time.” This lines up with previous statements Doja has made about Amala as a whole; she’s called it unfinished and rushed in the past, attributing both to her overindulgence in weed and partying while recording it. However, she’s certainly made up for it since with Hot Pink and Planet Her, and she has vowed to really lean into her rap proclivities on her fourth album, for which she says she wants 9th Wonder to make beats.

Watch Doja Cat’s “Thirst Trap” segment above.

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‘Top Gun: Maverick’ Is Film About How Fast Jets Are Cool And Tom Cruise Will Never Die

In the middle ages, European armies kept investing in heavy cavalry charges long after it had already proven ineffective as a battle strategy, presumably for one simple reason: it looked cool. Knights were society’s most glorious gloryboys, and watching them clatter around on their gigantic horses wearing hundreds of pounds of shiny plate armor was an impressive spectacle that no one wanted to give up, no matter how many times they got aerated by commoners with longbows or drowned themselves falling into waist-deep rivers or whatever.

A similar kind of impending obsolescence and stubborn chivalry suffuses Top Gun: Maverick, which in the very first scene sees its title character (played by Tom Cruise) trying to justify an experimental fighter program to a disapproving admiral. The admiral, played by steely Ed Harris, who has looked the same age for even longer than Tom Cruise, is nicknamed “The Drone Ranger,” and he’s determined to shut down this wasteful program, using the fact that they’re behind schedule on hitting their benchmarks for speed as his excuse. Bad move, pal. Tom Cruise eats afterburners and shits sonic booms.

Instead Maverick hijacks the experimental plane (apparently designed specifically for the movie but based on the SR-71) and takes it up to Mach 10, even though they’re barely cleared for Mach 9 (that’s so many Machs!). In effect, Maverick puts himself at great personal risk to save a jobs program. Guaranteed another paycheck, the ground crew cheer like the brake pad factory workers at the end of Tommy Boy. Tom Cruise isn’t being badass for him, he’s being badass for us.

It’s a triumphant moment, even if the part left unsaid is what actual battlefield utility there is in having a fighter plane that goes 7,000-some odd miles per hour. For which war would we need such a plane? Doesn’t matter, looks cool! This turns out to be an oddly refreshing take on the military-industrial complex.

It’s notable, in fact, that in Top Gun: Maverick, an adversary is never named. Most of the movie consists of “Maverick,” in his proverbial “one last shot” at keeping his job as a pilot, training a team of young hotshots for a big mission. Nestled deep in an unnamed mountain range, there’s a uranium enrichment facility which, we learn, will soon be capable of producing nuclear weapons. It’s surrounded by SAMs (surface-to-air missiles) and heavily patrolled by “fifth-generation fighter jets.” Which entity actually owns this facility is left unsaid. The adversary in Top Gun: Maverick is only ever referred to as “The Enemy,” and those “fifth-generation fighter jets” are unmarked, flown by pilots with blacked out helmets conveniently concealing any facial features and hints as to nationality. (Which is maybe an ironic choice in a movie that’s otherwise a sentimental ode to the value of actual humans in battle).

This ambiguity gives it all the feel that what these pilots are training for is more like a really dangerous video game or an important air show than a war. The enemy is, essentially, logic itself. Maverick and his team don’t need to prove that pilots are the most effective weapons, just that they’re the coolest. Would drones or cruise missiles or satellite guided bombs work better for destroying that uranium-enrichment facility than supersonic jets and cocksure flyboys? Sure, but it wouldn’t be nearly as inspiring. It would deny us the thrill of seeing a pilot try to survive nine Gs, expanding the limits of human skill, endurance, and ingenuity, and becoming, essentially, the Ubermensch, justifying the existence of the human race by defying its limitations.

On that note, it’s hilarious the degree to which Top Gun: Maverick positions Tom Cruise as the personification of this übermensch. While all his contemporaries from the original movie seem to be either dead (Goose), MIA (Kelly McGillis’s Charlie), or stricken with cancer (Ice Man), Pete “Maverick” Mitchell has barely aged. He’s still flying experimental planes at hypersonic speeds, chasing tail (in the form of San Diego bartender Penny Benjamin, played by Jennifer Connolly), and playing football shirtless on the beach despite being 59 years old and five foot seven. Sorry, it’s actually “dogfight football,” which involves playing offense and defense at the same time or something (feels very much like a sport invented by someone who didn’t grow up playing sports).

The first Top Gun hinged on Maverick learning enough humility and self-possession to be a good teammate. With that in mind, you might think that the big conflict in Top Gun: Maverick would be “Can aging, decorated ace Maverick learn to let go and pass the torch to his younger, more capable successors as he nears retirement?”

But again, that’s logic, and logic is the enemy. Maverick is a human fighter jet and he will not be mothballed. This is a movie that (at least as it relates to Tom Cruise) stubbornly refuses to acknowledge the realities of aging in any way. Humility is merely an obstacle to greatness. Day in, day out, Maverick shows these whippersnappers what’s what during their simulated dogfights, from too-cocky “Hangman” (Glen Powell, whose over-the-top clean-cut masculinism sort of makes him look like a gay porn star), angsty, conservative “Rooster” (who is also Goose’s son, played by Miles Teller), girl-pilot “Phoenix” (Monica Barbaro), and all the others. The big conflict is whether Maverick can get anyone to be as good as he is. In the end he can’t, so he bets on himself.

Maverick is still the best pilot, best lover, best football player, best teammate, and best trainer the Navy has to offer. Maneuvers that make younger pilots, notably “Payback,” played by Jay Ellis from Insecure, pass out from excess G force, Maverick powers through on sheer force of will. He’s constantly putting himself at personal risk to save the project or the mission, and his plane even seems to have, and there’s no other way to say this, a big black cock on the bottom. It’s like a supersonic strap-on.

Top Gun: Maverick is, in the end, a glorious justification of excess. Tom Cruise gets the girl, old guys win, humans beat the machines. It makes no attempts to be timely or realistic (there were a few ideas for it to be about drone pilots kicking around in the 20 or however many years it’s been in development, ultimately rejected, thank God). Timeliness, realism, and logic would cut against Top Gun‘s basic reason for being: screeching around the sky in a multi-million dollar jet is cool. The fact that it’s so wasteful and unnecessary and romantic is part of why it’s cool. We don’t need a Top Gun movie to be clever any more than we need a Tom Cruise who acts his age.

‘Top Gun: Maverick’ opens in theaters nationwide May 27th. Vince Mancini is on Twitter. More reviews here.

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Jasmin Leigh Reveals Her Favorite ‘People’s Party’ Interview And Speaks On What’s Next For The Show

Comedian Jasmin Leigh is well known to hip-hop fans as one-half of People’s Party with Talib Kweli — the podcast produced by Uproxx and shared on Luminary and YouTube each week. Her enthusiasm and warmth offer a nice balance to Kweli’s encyclopedic understanding of music and culture. She consistently adds levity, while never shying away from deeply incisive questions.

This week, to mark People’s Party‘s 150th episode, Leigh and poet Jessica Care Moore turned the tables on Kweli — putting him in the guest’s chair. In the run-up to that episode launch, we tapped Leigh to talk about what reaching 150 episodes means to her and asked about the ascendancy of women in rap plus some of her favorite moments from this marathon run.

As an insider — who maybe has a different view than the fans do — what is your favorite episode of the show?

I feel like… Okay, so I have so many favorites, but if I have to wind it down, we’ll say the Jadakiss episode, because the verse he wrote for Puffy is one of my favorite verses — so me being able to rap that was great and I always fuck up the words. I can know a song forward and backwards, and I’m still going to fuck up the words, but I didn’t quite fuck up the words. Sorry, if I’m not supposed to be cursing [laughs].

But yeah, so I got to rap it. It was on the spot, rap it and I was just like, “Oh God,” and I did it, so that would have to be my favorite episode. If I could do another favorite, it would have to be the one that I fangirl the most out of, which was Lil’ Kim.

That’s understandable!

I love Lil’ Kim. I absolutely love Lil’ Kim. I was a part of Junior M.A.F.I.A. You couldn’t tell me that I wasn’t! [laughs]

Money, Power & Respect! Do you remember when that dropped?!

Listen! And I shouldn’t even be singing her songs and most of her songs. Like I couldn’t sing, but she was commercial so a lot of her stuff was on the radio. So yeah, Lil’ Kim, and then we did Lady Marmalade — me and a couple of my girlfriends — and I did Lil’ Kim’s part and I showed her the video, and she started following me on Instagram and I was just like… [gasps]

Does it get cooler? I don’t know if it gets cooler than that!

It doesn’t. It really doesn’t, and she’s still following me right now!

That is dope. Now… what has doing 150 episodes taught you about yourself, and what has it taught you about just what it means to function at this level of hip-hop? I mean — you’re one of the realest black women on the realest show, in the realest time. So tell us about that.

It’s definitely forced me to challenge myself in numerous ways, challenge myself in how to deal with public opinions, challenge myself in how to deal with constructive criticism within my team, challenge myself just being able to be able to speak up, and have a voice in more times than not male-dominated interviews just because we typically interview men.

Right. It’s just a lopsided situation — the way that hip-hop is — just because so many dudes rap!

Right, it’s just how hip-hop is. So there are a lot of women in hip-hop, but we have interviewed a lot of men so that has definitely been a challenge. And then just being able to film multiple episodes, because we don’t typically do one episode at a time, and so some interviews I will be high energy, because the person is maybe lower energy, and then the other ones will be low energy because the guest has plenty of energy to give — so just knowing when to give and when to pull back.

There’ve just been so many things that I’ve learned. I didn’t even realize that we were at 150 episodes and then it’s like, “Wow, we’ve been doing this for three years now.” It’s crazy.

That said, accomplishing and experiencing everything that you have, what would you like to see? Where would you like to see the show go from here? Have you visualized any new ways, aspects, angles, ideas that you can share?

Well, I actually love how the show is now. I love that Talib is really not for the fluff, and I’m a fluff person so it comes for me anyway. But the fact that we don’t focus on it and we focus on real issues and real conversations, and things that are not necessarily the popular topic or in the blogs and stuff like that, so I really love that aspect of the show and I’m looking forward to more people catching on.

I’m also looking forward to us going and doing more live episodes. I had so much fun in Austin to South-by-Southwest [SXSW] traveling and getting to do interviews in a different place with artists that may not have been readily available in LA, and doing in their home state so that was really fun. And I loved the energy of an audience, so I’m looking forward to that for sure.

For more on Jasmin Leigh check out the 150th episode of Peoples Party with Talib Kweli.