
Hosted by Thamarrah Jones · EN

Rinku Sen joins Thamarrah to get into what it means to build narrative power and how changing dominant narratives can reshape society.Rinku is the Executive director of Narrative Initiative an organization that engages in the work of deep narrative change by equipping social justice leaders with the knowledge, resources, and skills necessary to harness narrative power and create durable social change.-------------------------------------------------------------------Find more As It Should Be at asitshouldbepod.comSupport the show: Join the Collective for only $3 a month Get full access to By Little at bylittle.substack.com/subscribe This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit asitshouldbe.substack.com

Melvin Graham (he/him) is in conversation with Thamarrah about the unique challenges of Black owned businesses and the role Black entrepreneurship has played in building America.Melvin is a filmmaker and director of the docuseries Black Business LA. In this series he follows entrepreneurs in the Los Angeles area building businesses despite a growing economic crisis. -------------------------------------------------------------------Find more As It Should Be at asitshouldbepod.comSupport the show: Join the Collective for only $3 a month Get full access to By Little at bylittle.substack.com/subscribe This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit asitshouldbe.substack.com

What if we raised an entire generation of young people to live freely and authentically as themselves? This is the question that Elise and Thamarrah explore in today's episode. Elise Schuster is a sexuality educator with 15 years of experience in youth development and sexual health education. They spent years teaching workshops and having thousands of one-on-one educational pleasure-based sexual health conversations before co-founding the nonprofit OkaySo. OkaySo is on a mission to help young people become comfortable with the most personal and vulnerable topics in their lives by connecting them with experienced experts with the aiming to help them live freely and authentically as who they truly are.-------------------------------------------------------------------Find more As It Should Be at asitshouldbepod.comSupport the show: Join the Collective for only $3 a month Get full access to By Little at bylittle.substack.com/subscribe This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit asitshouldbe.substack.com

In today's episode Thamarrah (she/her) is joined by Fury Young & BL Shirelle to discuss how Die Jim Crow Records is dismantling stereotypes of incarceration impacted people through music. Fury is DJC’s founder and Co-Executive Director and Under his leadership, Die Jim Crow Records has recorded over 60 incarcerated artists and over a dozen formerly incarcerated artists and gained access inside 5 different prisons.BL Shirelle is and the Co-Executive Director of DJC and a phenomenal songwriter/rapper and producer on the label and a justice-impacted artist herself, raising up her community and sharing her art and activism with the world.-------------------------------------------------------------------Today's episode is brought to you by the Now We Know podcast.Find more As It Should Be at asitshouldbepod.comSupport the show: Join the Collective for only $3 a month Get full access to By Little at bylittle.substack.com/subscribe This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit asitshouldbe.substack.com

In today's episode Thamarrah (she/her) and Joe (he/him) discuss the role legislators play in protecting us online and how we can stay informed about the policy changes that dictate what tech companies can and cannot do with our data.Resources mentioned: 5 Easy Steps to Keep Your Kids Safe OnlineJoseph Shepherd Miller, Esq. is the Founder of The Washington Center for Technology Policy Inclusion (WashingTech). Through his work at WashingTech, Joe advocates for diversity and inclusion in technology public policymaking and hosts Tech Policy -- a top podcast offering practical and actionable advice to protect yourself and your family from online safety threats.-------------------------------------------------------------------Today's episode is brought to you by the Integrated Schools podcast.Find more As It Should Be at asitshouldbepod.comSupport the show: Join the Collective for only $3 a month Get full access to By Little at bylittle.substack.com/subscribe This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit asitshouldbe.substack.com

In this episode, Co-Founder of Social Cipher, Vanessa Castañeda Gill (she/her) joins the show to discuss how her company is creating space for Neurodivergent youth to thrive through their space pirate-themed social-emotional learning games. Social Cipher is led by a team of Neurodivergent Founders, including Vanessa herself.Vanessa and Thamarrah (she/her) talk the importance of autistic youth failing safely, challenges faced by neurodivergent people caused by inequity in the workplace and in the startup space as founders, and how we can all support the neurodivergent community.----------------------------------Connect with Vanessa Castañeda Gill Social Cipher Website: socialciphergame.com @SocialCipher on Twitter Email: ahoy@socialcipher.com----------------------------------Don't forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share the episode with a friend, colleague, or anyone you think might enjoy it too.Want to connect with Thamarrah? Follow her LinkedIn https://linkedin.com/in/thamarrahjones Get full access to By Little at bylittle.substack.com/subscribe This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit asitshouldbe.substack.com

In part 2 of this 2-part episode, author and activist Kimberly Jones (she/her) joins Thamarrah to discuss taking advantage of the work that’s already being done in your city right now so that we can build thriving communities together. In her book How We Can Win, Kimberly explores the influence America’s history with racial disparity has on our lives today and delivers strategies for how we can effect change while nurturing ourselves in the process. You can buy the audiobook from Libro.fm using code ASITSHOULDBE at checkout and get 2 books for the price of 1. Get full access to By Little at bylittle.substack.com/subscribe This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit asitshouldbe.substack.com

Kimberly Jones (she/her) reminds us that the future we have tomorrow is decided by the actions we take today. In this episode Kimberly joins Thamarrah to discuss self-reflection as a community service and how learning from the pursuits and strategies of our ancestors can help guide our path towards justice today.In 2020, a video of Kimberly speaking on an Atlanta Street went viral after the murder of Ahmaud Aubrey, Breonna Taylor, and George Floyd ignited civil unrest. In just 6 minutes she captivated masses by capturing the economic struggles of Black people in America.In her book How We Can Win, she explores the influence America’s history with racial disparity has on our lives today and delivers strategies for how we can effect change while nurturing ourselves in the process.This is part 1 of a 2 part episode.---------------Kimberly Jones is an activist, screenwriter, and author. She's co-authored books including the bestselling YA novel I’m Not Dying with You Tonight and Why We Fly.--------------Support the show: Buy audiobooks from Libro.fm using code ASITSHOULDBE at checkout to get 2 books for the price of 1. Get full access to By Little at bylittle.substack.com/subscribe This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit asitshouldbe.substack.com

Culture is so deeply personal that when you see it reflected back at you in a way that’s gimmicky or stereotypical or just downright racist it's impossible to not take that personally. Which is why we expect creators of these productions to actually care enough to try to get it right. Sandhya Jain Patel (she/her) joins the show to discuss what it looks like to get cultural inclusion right.Today's episode is brought to you by the Reframeables and TwentyTwice podcastsFind more As It Should Be on asitshouldbepod.com Get full access to By Little at bylittle.substack.com/subscribe This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit asitshouldbe.substack.com

Do you know where the products you own come from? Not where you bought them, but was the person who picked the tomatoes in your tomato paste given fair wages, regular breaks, and adequate water? Was child labor used to create anything you own? It's impossible to answer those questions when companies just won't supply the info. In this episode, Fatimah Walee (she/her), Founder & CEO of Neuterra, joins to help us get some answers.Support Neuterra: Donate as little as $15 to help Neuterra bring supply chain transparency to 5 small and midsize businesses. Trace a product's story from the first kilometer to the last mile.Today's episode is brought to you by the Reframeables podcast. Get full access to By Little at bylittle.substack.com/subscribe This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit asitshouldbe.substack.com