Her Take by Laila Jean Yu Says

Laila Jean Yu

Her Take by Laila Jean Yu Says is where pop culture meets consciousness and feminine evolution. Join Laila Jean Yu for real conversations on manifestation, spirituality, and the Black experience — from beauty and mindset to racial injustice and current events. This is your space for growth, truth-telling, and leveling up while staying soft, aware, and aligned.

  1. 3d ago

    Black Artists Created the Blueprint… So Why Were They Pushed Out?

    In this episode of Her Take by Laila Jean Yu Says, Laila breaks down the patterns behind the rise and shift of 80s and 90s boy bands, inspired by the documentary Boy Band Confidential.   From New Edition and Boyz II Men to NSYNC, Backstreet Boys, and 98 Degrees, this conversation explores how Black R&B groups helped shape the modern boy band blueprint — and how the industry shifted its focus as pop music became more commercially global.   Laila also unpacks documentary-reported industry moments involving Motown, songwriting decisions like “Invisible Man,” and the structural differences in how Black artists and white pop groups were marketed, supported, and sustained.   This episode examines:   How Black artists influenced the foundation of modern pop and boy band culture Why visibility and industry support shifted in the late 1990s How labels, radio, and marketing shaped who became “mainstream” The difference between cultural creation and cultural recognition The emotional toll on artists navigating industry transitions   This is not about erasing anyone’s talent or success — it’s about questioning the systems that decide who gets centered, who gets pushed forward, and who gets quietly moved out of the spotlight.   Because Black artists didn’t just participate in the culture — they helped build the blueprint.   And the question remains: why are they not always the ones who get to stay at the center of it?

    16 min

About

Her Take by Laila Jean Yu Says is where pop culture meets consciousness and feminine evolution. Join Laila Jean Yu for real conversations on manifestation, spirituality, and the Black experience — from beauty and mindset to racial injustice and current events. This is your space for growth, truth-telling, and leveling up while staying soft, aware, and aligned.