The Global I AM Podcast

TaylorMade Ent., NEXUS and Victory & Noble

Global I AM is a  new age podcast by diasporic global culturalists, financiers and manifestors exploring the forces that shape identity, culture, power, and capital in a rapidly evolving world. Positioned "at the nexus of the culture and our capital", the show convenes visionary creators, financiers, thought leaders, and institution builders whose work and spirit has defined what it means to evolve, lead and live in the 21st century. When and why were the culture and our capital separated?  Perhaps, they were demingled as a means of control and power over limitless talent as much as resources? Maya Angelou. Amiri Baraka. Tupac Amaru Shakur.  Michael Jackson?  Toni Morrison?  Revolutionaries, renaissance artist or political leaders?  Economic super athletes?   The Matrix. V is for Vendetta. Toni Morrison's Beloved? Langston Hughes' "The Ways of White Folks". Prince's ‘Sign of the Times’? NWA's ‘F%$k the Police’. Artwork, manifestos or political treatises? Through thoughtful dialogue and expert inquiry with academy award winners, New York Times bestsellers or emerging global leaders, Global I AM examines how story has become strategy, how culture informs markets, and how global communities transform ideas into enduring institutions and spirits into "energy currency". Each episode invites listeners into conversations that are both intellectually rigorous and deeply human -  connecting heritage to ambition, creativity to enterprise, and personal conviction to collective progress. The philosophical foundation of the program draws from Patrick A. Howell’s literary anthology work, Dispatches from the Vanguard (The Global International African Arts Movement v. Donald J. Trump, Penguin/Random House, 2020), which reflects on leadership, cultural stewardship, and the responsibility of shaping the future. The show also builds upon the legacy of Getting Deals Done from Victory & Noble - extending a long-standing commitment to bridging relationships, opportunity, and global influence. So much more than a podcast, Global IAM is a megaphone and it is the voice of builders.  Global I AM podcast is a mastermind for those building what comes next.  NOW.

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  1. GLOBAL I AM ARCHIVE - Ruth E. Carter: The Origin of Vision and the Architecture of Afrofuturistic Costume Design

    vor 2 Tagen

    GLOBAL I AM ARCHIVE - Ruth E. Carter: The Origin of Vision and the Architecture of Afrofuturistic Costume Design

    Send us Fan Mail In this archive conversation, we examine the creative origins and cultural vision of Ruth E. Carter, whose work has helped redefine the visual language of Black cinema and global storytelling. Long before “Afrofuturism” entered the mainstream lexicon, Carter was constructing worlds — drawing from history, diaspora, imagination, and memory — to articulate identities too often left unseen. Together with our Global I Am hosts, they explore the discipline behind her craft, the intentionality required to design for cultural specificity, and the responsibility inherent in rendering Black life with depth, dignity, and possibility. What emerges is a meditation on vision — how it is formed, how it is protected, and how it ultimately helps a people see themselves anew. "i am deep/blk/soil they have tried to pollute me with a poison called America. they have tried to scorch my roots with dope they have tried to drown my dreams with alcohol with too many men who spit their foam on top of my fruit till it drops rotten in America's parks. but i am deeeeeEEEp blue/blk/soil and you can hear the sound of my walken as i bring forth green songs from a seasoned breast as i burn on our evening bed of revolution. i, being blk woooOOOMAN know only the way of the womb for i am deep/red/soil for our emergen Blk Nation." - Sonia Sanchez,  A Blk/Woman/Speaks

    29 Min.
  2. Global I Am Episode 6:  Chester Higgins and the Spirit of Our Worlds

    12. Juni

    Global I Am Episode 6: Chester Higgins and the Spirit of Our Worlds

    Send us Fan Mail Chester Higgins Jr. is not simply a photographer. He is one of the great visual historians of the Black world — a man whose lens transformed memory into sacred text. A longtime staff photographer for The New York Times for nearly four decades, Higgins captured the spiritual architecture of Black life with extraordinary dignity and force. His photographs of Muhammad Ali, Maya Angelou, and Amiri Baraka at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture remain among the most powerful visual records of Black intellect, movement, artistry and spirit. His work lives in museums, archives, history — and in the consciousness of a people still learning to see themselves whole. () The Chester Higgins episode of Global I Am is now produced. It still needs a touch more work on the production end — but already it breathes. Soulful. Profound. Brilliant. What began as one conversation became two episodes — a rare gift unfolding at the intersection of storytelling, photography, revolt, memory, and the apex of a master’s eye. In this conversation, the lineage becomes clear. Gordon Parks became more than photographer; he became witness. Oracle. The Eye of Horus. The ancient Kemetic symbol of protection, healing, restoration — the eye wounded, then restored. Sun and moon. Spirit and return. Through that tradition, Chester Higgins does not merely photograph people. He illuminates them. His lens is not mechanical. It is spiritual architecture. Spirit. Soul. Excellence. He has become that rare artist who transforms as he reveals — reminding us not only how we looked, but how we loved, endured, struggled, prayed, created, resisted, and remembered. His presence itself becomes an archive of grace. Through Chester Higgins, we remember how to see one another again. Sacred. In the Spirit. Renewed. Global I Am. Wisdom & Grace.

    32 Min.
  3. Global I Am Episode 3:  I Am Somebody: Jesse Jackson, Jamaica Kincaid, and the Architecture of Identity

    1. Mai

    Global I Am Episode 3: I Am Somebody: Jesse Jackson, Jamaica Kincaid, and the Architecture of Identity

    Send us Fan Mail Welcome back to the full season of The Global I AM Podcast at the Nexus of THE Culture and Our Capital.   After our first 2 beta-episodes as well as episodes from our vaults earlier this year,  Global I Am will resume every Friday to share information from around the worlds of culture and finance.  For our first episode back, we lean into the wisdom of the Pacific Ocean at Point Loma University,  a Christian liberal arts university in San Diego, California, founded in 1902 and rooted in the Wesleyan tradition - Point Loma Nazarene University (PLNU) is named after its location on the Point Loma peninsula in San Diego, California, where it moved in 1973 In a rare and layered gathering of minds — Dr. Dean Nelson of Point Loma University, our Max Rodriguez of the Harlem Book Fair, Kenyan leader Wavinya Makai of Cambridge University, global financier Bill Huston and visionary Patrick A. Howell - explore the intersection of literature, leadership, and lived identity.   At the center stands Jesse Jackson as a living force through the people whom he inspired.  When he declared, “I Am Somebody,”  in 1984 and 1989 as a presidential aspirant, he did more than inspire -  he changed the nation, he changed the world.  Dean and Max talk about Jamaica Kincaid - a literary force whose voice, rooted in Antigua and expanded across the world, has shaped how we understand place, power and self-definition, from St. John’s to Harvard, from the Caribbean to the global stage. Dean E. Nelson, Ph.D., is a beloved award-winning journalist, author, and 21st Century thought leader who founded and directs the journalism program at Point Loma Nazarene University (PLNU). He is also the founder and host of the distinguished annual Writer's Symposium by the Sea.  This episode moves across continents and disciplines:  From the civil rights movement to the global diaspora From economic systems to cultural production From personal testimony to institutional consequenceIt positions Jesse Jackson as what he truly is: The bridge - between Martin Luther King Jr. and Barack Obama, between protest and policy, between voice and power.

    25 Min.
  4. Ruth E. Carter — Designing Culture, Identity & the Historic Sinners Nomination — GLOBAL I AM ARCHIVES

    25. Feb.

    Ruth E. Carter — Designing Culture, Identity & the Historic Sinners Nomination — GLOBAL I AM ARCHIVES

    Send us Fan Mail In this powerful archival episode of Global I Am — At the Nexus of Culture & Our Capital, we sit with Ruth E. Carter, one of the most influential costume designers in cinema history. Originally recorded for our legacy Victory and Noble series Getting Deals Done, this conversation explores Carter’s extraordinary ability to translate cultural memory into visual language — a gift inspired in part by Black Arts Movement icons Sonia Sanchez and Nikki Giovanni. Ruth Carter has long shaped how Black history, imagination, and identity appear on screen — from Black Panther (2018) and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (2022) to Spike Lee classics including Malcolm X (1992) and Do the Right Thing (1989). Here, she reflects on her journey, her craft, and her role as a cultural custodian. This episode lands at a historic moment: Carter has received a new Academy Award nomination for her work on Sinners — a recognition underscoring her enduring impact on American cinema and global cultural storytelling. At its core, Sinners follows twin brothers returning home only to confront a darker reality than the one they left — a powerful meditation on memory, reckoning, and the ghosts we carry. In this archival Global I Am conversation, we explore: • How design becomes narrative and living archive  • The responsibility of cultural representation in global media  • The lineage of Black aesthetics in film and performance  • What it means to stand at the intersection of heritage and innovation Carter’s work reminds us: culture is a language — and those who shape it shape how communities see themselves and the world.

    15 Min.
  5. GLOBAL I AM ARCHIVES: From Lagos To Wakanda: Rethinking Wealth, Work, And Human Potential

    17. Feb. ·  Bonus

    GLOBAL I AM ARCHIVES: From Lagos To Wakanda: Rethinking Wealth, Work, And Human Potential

    Send us Fan Mail In this archival episode of Getting Deals Done, the Mastermind Forum, we look at a larger cosmic picture and identify  opportunities based upon information gleaned from past episodes.  In this case, we note trends by Fortune 500 companies as Viasat Satellite Communications and Newport Beach's Alhambra Technologies with manufacturing in Bahir, Ethiopia.  The Africa insurance market reached a value of US $70 billion in 2020. Revenue in the eCommerce market is projected to reach US $43,885 million in 2022. Agriculture takes up 15 percent ($100 billion annually) of the whole continent's GDP and is also the largest economic sector. African infrastructure saw a raise in compound annual rate at 17%. Banking, Oil and Gas, and Telecommunication also showcase markets with astronomical potential.  The new BRIC are centrally located on the continent where all civilization, technology and visions began. We trace Africa’s rise from informal ingenuity to investable scale, with Nigeria’s momentum, Senegal’s smart-city vision, and a people-first ethos that powers real markets. Along the way, we frame Afrofuturism as practical design for dignity, trust, and growth. • Nigeria’s scale, GDP context, and entrepreneurial tribes • Why informal markets are the infrastructure of daily life • Startup capital growth and Fortune 500 attention • Senegal’s smart sustainable city and crypto-enabled services • Afrofuturism as a blueprint for practical innovation • Integrity, purpose, and human potential as market drivers • Partnerships across media, water stewardship, and hospitality • Invitation to our virtual mastermind forum Be sure to join us for our virtual mastermind forum at the Global I Am Prosperity is a state of being, not a ledger line on your bank account.

    11 Min.
  6. Global I Am -  Episode 2:  The Architecture of Prosperity & the New Transatlantic Power of Love

    11. Feb.

    Global I Am - Episode 2: The Architecture of Prosperity & the New Transatlantic Power of Love

    Send us Fan Mail “It is true that we do not recognize greatness among us. Our measurements of importance are generally faulty and speak mainly to the superficialities of life…”  — Dr. Haki R. Madhubuti, Black Men: Obsolete, Single, Dangerous? In Episode 2 of Global I Am, hosts Sebastien Celestine, Bill Huston, and Patrick A. Howell convene a transatlantic conversation on legacy, sovereignty, capital, and the evolving architecture of African prosperity and wealth. From the enduring political fire of H. Rap Brown - the 1960s Black Power activist, SNCC chairman, and advocate for armed resistance against white oppression - to the cultural revolution ignited by Hip Hop, the dialogue honors movements that insisted upon dignity while reshaping global consciousness and finance. The conversation moves across oceans with Mr. Sebastien Celestine to the GUBA Awards in Barbados and emerging corridors of transatlantic trade, positioning the Caribbean as a modern gateway between Africa and the West. Under the leadership of Mia "Amour" Mottley, Barbados signals a future defined by digital infrastructure, finance enterprise, capital market formation and direct diasporic flight paths linking Nairobi, Accra, and Bridgetown.    Community crowdfunder Bill Huston reflects on the intellectual and economic legacy of the Black Panther era in Cincinnati. Two years after the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., a young Huston entered school with the Black Panther's Head Start programs and helped launch a journey toward national leadership in equity and sovereignty through capital formation.  Mr. Howell reflects that under Barack Obama, the U.S. economy contracted about 2.6% in 2009 during the Great Recession before returning to growth (roughly 2–2.5% in 2010), while the global economy fell around 2.2% and rebounded near 2.7%, supported by the approximately $831B American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, stabilizing financial systems and demand.  His presidency also served as the model for his successor, President Joe Biden's economic recovery from the Pandemic - a $1.9T American Rescue Plan. So, rather than merely the first black president, Obama is the greatest economic steward of American and global financial markets.  Ultimately, Episode 2 is the story of a people engineering their return home - to Peace, Joy, and  our Prosperity.

    33 Min.
  7. After the Bridge: George Floyd, Congressman John Lewis, and the Rise of the Digital Nomad — GLOBAL I AM ARCHIVES

    3. Feb.

    After the Bridge: George Floyd, Congressman John Lewis, and the Rise of the Digital Nomad — GLOBAL I AM ARCHIVES

    Send us Fan Mail After the BridgeGeorge Floyd, Congressman John Lewis, and the Rise of the Digital Nomad GLOBAL I AM ARCHIVES Recorded in 2020, this archival conversation returns us to one of the most consequential years of the twenty-first century—a moment when pandemic, protest, technology, and cultural transformation converged to reshape the global imagination. Hosted by Tori L. Reid, this early Global I Am conversation (then known as the Global International African Arts Movement) explores the social, political, and spiritual currents that emerged following the murder of George Floyd and the passing of Congressman John Lewis. Together, these events challenged societies around the world to confront questions of justice, citizenship, identity, and what Lewis famously called "good trouble." But this conversation reaches beyond the headlines. It asks a larger question: What kind of world was being born? As work, creativity, and community increasingly transcended geography, the figure of the digital nomad emerged as a symbol of a new era—globally connected, technologically fluent, and culturally agile. For the African diaspora, however, this way of living was not entirely new. Black identity has long been shaped by movement across continents, carrying stories, traditions, and innovation beyond national borders. Joining the discussion is Patrick A. Howell, author of Dispatches from the Vanguard (Repeater Books, London), whose reflections consider whether 2020 represented more than a public health crisis or political inflection point. Was it, instead, the beginning of another cultural renaissance? If the Harlem Renaissance transformed literature and the arts, and the Black Arts Movement helped redefine cultural consciousness, what creative and intellectual movement was quietly taking shape during one of history's most turbulent years? The conversation moves from history to philosophy, exploring cultural stewardship, entrepreneurship, ancestral memory, healing, and the enduring influence of Patrick Howell's father, Dr. Bing P. Howell. It also traces the earliest ideas that would eventually evolve into Global I Am itself—a vision grounded in the belief that culture, creativity, entrepreneurship, capital, and spirit are not separate pursuits, but interconnected forces capable of shaping more humane societies. More than a historical document, this episode captures a movement before it fully understood its own name. It reminds us that every renaissance begins first as a conversation.

    37 Min.
  8. At the Nexus of the Culture and Our Capital - Welcome to Global I Am — Episode 1

    27. Jan.

    At the Nexus of the Culture and Our Capital - Welcome to Global I Am — Episode 1

    Send us Fan Mail In this inaugural episode of Global I Am, Patrick A. Howell, Bill Huston, Kate Washington, and Max Rodriguez come together for a conversation about identity, culture, creativity, and capital—and how these forces shape the future of our communities and our shared humanity. Together, they explore the stories that define us, the institutions that sustain us, and the opportunities before us as artists, entrepreneurs, investors, educators, and cultural stewards. Executive Produced by Nicole Hernandez-Colin. The Culture. Our Capital. Global I Am—the Global Independent African Arts Movement—is a global cultural and economic movement dedicated to advancing the creative, intellectual, and financial alignment of the African world within the broader human family. Inspired by the enduring legacy of the Harlem Renaissance and the Harlem Book Fair, Global I Am is a next-generation platform connecting artists, entrepreneurs, investors, educators, and storytellers across Africa, the Caribbean, Europe, North and South America. We believe that culture is not merely something we inherit—it is something we invest in. Through literature, music, film, visual arts, journalism, finance, innovation, technology, and community leadership, we seek to cultivate relationships that generate both cultural wealth and economic opportunity. Our mission is simple: To transform cultural capital into community capital. Our Invitation Global I Am is more than a podcast. It is a growing international community. We invite artists, investors, institutions, philanthropists, business leaders, and visionaries to help shape this movement. Whether your contribution is creative, strategic, financial, or simply your willingness to participate, you have a place here. Together we can build stronger institutions, richer cultural exchange, and more prosperous communities across the globe. Together, we are building the next renaissance. Perhaps more importantly— Together, we are the next renaissance. For partnerships, collaborations, or ideas: globalmarketiq@gmail.com A Kingdom Re-remembers Itself This is indeed a dark brightening hour, when Black souls take flight, As empires of white magic crumble beneath hulking sins. This is the hour when melanin marks the excellence of our skin, & we reverse the voyage home by digital, Transatlantic lights Here ~ new harmonies rise: a Cave Canem choir, Drummed in iambs, in hexameter fires of griots, Conducted deftly by our Black Cornelius, bronzed Derricotte, From mothers’ midnight dreams ~ breath | love |    power Our blue's ancestors foretold it: brand-new days, new themes, Eras of trillionaire kingdoms  ~ Benin… Mali rise supreme,  Canem built castles of Black word, Black philosophy,  Inlaid with golden crowns - Baldwin, Amiri, Giovanni & Langston’s dreams.  From this Time of the Fool, a brand new era awakened, “Cave Canem,” we sing - now the call is: come home. But, beware the big dawg - Brooklyn prowler, roamed alone, Sniffing, barking, growling through our age of Gangster Poets. You see? Pulitzers bloomed from grandmothers’ funeral prayers. At Cave Canem, laureates remember sovereignty. Elders paid, endured, and now invoke total Liberty. Book Award finalists kneel & now rise as the Kingdom’s heirs.

    32 Min.

Info

Global I AM is a  new age podcast by diasporic global culturalists, financiers and manifestors exploring the forces that shape identity, culture, power, and capital in a rapidly evolving world. Positioned "at the nexus of the culture and our capital", the show convenes visionary creators, financiers, thought leaders, and institution builders whose work and spirit has defined what it means to evolve, lead and live in the 21st century. When and why were the culture and our capital separated?  Perhaps, they were demingled as a means of control and power over limitless talent as much as resources? Maya Angelou. Amiri Baraka. Tupac Amaru Shakur.  Michael Jackson?  Toni Morrison?  Revolutionaries, renaissance artist or political leaders?  Economic super athletes?   The Matrix. V is for Vendetta. Toni Morrison's Beloved? Langston Hughes' "The Ways of White Folks". Prince's ‘Sign of the Times’? NWA's ‘F%$k the Police’. Artwork, manifestos or political treatises? Through thoughtful dialogue and expert inquiry with academy award winners, New York Times bestsellers or emerging global leaders, Global I AM examines how story has become strategy, how culture informs markets, and how global communities transform ideas into enduring institutions and spirits into "energy currency". Each episode invites listeners into conversations that are both intellectually rigorous and deeply human -  connecting heritage to ambition, creativity to enterprise, and personal conviction to collective progress. The philosophical foundation of the program draws from Patrick A. Howell’s literary anthology work, Dispatches from the Vanguard (The Global International African Arts Movement v. Donald J. Trump, Penguin/Random House, 2020), which reflects on leadership, cultural stewardship, and the responsibility of shaping the future. The show also builds upon the legacy of Getting Deals Done from Victory & Noble - extending a long-standing commitment to bridging relationships, opportunity, and global influence. So much more than a podcast, Global IAM is a megaphone and it is the voice of builders.  Global I AM podcast is a mastermind for those building what comes next.  NOW.