Yore On Smith Street

Smith Street

Yore on Smith Street is a weekly pop culture and current events show hosted by media creator and storyteller Jaron Smith. Each episode blends cultural commentary, television, and music breakdowns, and authentic storytelling to unpack the moments shaping today’s conversations. From reality TV reactions and viral internet moments to music industry insights and trending news, Jaron delivers thoughtful analysis with humor, personality, and a sharp eye for what’s culturally relevant. The show combines structured commentary with candid reactions, making it both informative and entertaining. Yore on Smith Street is designed for listeners who enjoy pop culture podcasts, current events discussions, TV recaps, music commentary, and modern storytelling. Whether breaking down a trending show, reflecting on cultural shifts, or sharing personal insights tied to the moment, the podcast offers perspective-driven conversations that feel current, engaging, and real. New episodes explore: ·       Pop culture commentary ·       Reality TV and television recaps ·       Music discussions and industry insights ·       Viral trends and internet culture ·       Cultural analysis and storytelling If you’re looking for a weekly podcast that connects entertainment, media, and culture through an authentic voice and thoughtful commentary, Yore on Smith Street offers a fresh take on the stories everyone is talking about.

Episodes

  1. Apr 8

    It's The Climb

    Send us Fan Mail The biggest lie we tell ourselves as creators is that we need more inspiration, when what we really need is a system. For our season finale, we get honest about what seven weeks of building a podcast taught us about the social media algorithm, engagement, and the small choices that quietly decide whether people stop scrolling or never notice you at all. We talk through the shift from using social media “for fun” to using it with intention, and why posting whenever you feel like it is not a strategy. We break down what actually moved the needle for us: consistency that survives low motivation, cleaner presentation, and fixing the tiny formatting details that can wreck reach (including text sitting out of frame). We also share why talking head video often beats voiceovers when you’re still earning attention, plus what we noticed when a collaboration post brought in people we didn’t know while an informative post lit up our existing circle. Then we zoom out into the real storyline behind the tactics: the creator learning curve. We tell a personal story about buying the tools before knowing the craft, that humbling moment of realizing you’re not ready yet, and why starting over is not failure, it’s part of the work. Audio-only growth is tough, getting on camera can be uncomfortable, and the paint is still wet, but we keep climbing the next mountain anyway. If you’re building a podcast, growing on Instagram, or trying to stay consistent with content creation, hit play and take what you need. Subscribe for the next season, share this with a friend who’s building, and leave a review with the one system you’re using to stay consistent. It's The Climb Playlisthttps://open.spotify.com/playlist/521MZuM0WwX8rQly3BOizb?si=739a3344fcc245d8  Yore on Smith Street is a weekly culture and commentary podcast hosted by Smith Street. Blending current events, pop culture, and storytelling, each episode connects today’s headlines to the deeper narratives behind them — because every moment has a backstory. https://www.smithstreetsounds.com/

    15 min
  2. Apr 1

    Episode 6: Adjust

    Send us Fan Mail You ever publish something you know is good, then watch it land with a thud? That moment can mess with your head fast, especially when you’re trying to grow, stay consistent, and build something real. We get honest about that frustration and the doubts that follow, then pull it apart piece by piece so it turns into fuel instead of a dead end.  We dig into what consistency actually means for content creation and social media strategy. It’s not always “post more.” Sometimes it’s posting less, but on a rhythm you can sustain, so your audience (and the Instagram algorithm) learns to expect you. We also talk about the unsexy stuff that quietly kills reach: content optimization, safe zones, and how a simple template mistake can push your headline out of frame so people never stop to read. Small fixes can create a big shift.  Then we go deeper than tactics. We talk perfectionism, especially the kind that looks like “preference” and keeps you from doing more talking-on-camera content. We compare polished production to raw energy, and why real connection can beat perfect lighting when it’s just you without a crew. And we pull a lesson from business history with Pepsi vs Coca-Cola: sometimes you don’t win by going head-to-head, you win by pivoting, owning a smarter lane, and adapting your approach.  If you’re building a brand, a community, an email list, or just trying to keep going without losing yourself, press play. Subscribe, share this with a creator friend, and leave a review with the one adjustment you’re making next. Yore on Smith Street is a weekly culture and commentary podcast hosted by Smith Street. Blending current events, pop culture, and storytelling, each episode connects today’s headlines to the deeper narratives behind them — because every moment has a backstory. https://www.smithstreetsounds.com/

    18 min
  3. Mar 25

    Episode 5: Spring Breakthrough

    Send us Fan Mail If your entire online presence vanished tomorrow, would your work still have a way to reach the people who support you? That question is the heartbeat of this Smith Street conversation, sparked by the noise around LaRussell stepping back from social media after backlash. What catches my attention isn’t the hot takes; it’s the leverage: selling 30,000 copies independently means you can log off and still communicate with your audience, because you built direct access.  We dig into what that really takes in the creator economy: an owned audience through email marketing, text updates, and a contact list you control. We talk about why “more followers” is often the wrong goal, how the social media algorithm can quietly cut your reach, and how information silos make us think everyone sees what we see. Platform mergers and curated feeds raise the stakes, so the most valuable metric becomes simple: can you reach your people on demand?  From there, I get practical and personal: sending your work to real people, building a site, staying consistent while you experiment, and permitting yourself to start now, not on somebody else’s schedule. We even detour into small life updates and shoutouts, because progress is rarely just business, it’s a mindset too. If this hit home, subscribe, share it with one creator who needs a backup plan, and leave a review with your answer: what’s your best way to stay reachable off-platform? Ending Song - Pick it Up - Smith Street  Spring Breakthrough Playlist - https://open.spotify.com/playlist/53VwxVXTxfLYuuCKybZ9Mg?si=81f94cc5e34746b5 Yore on Smith Street is a weekly culture and commentary podcast hosted by Smith Street. Blending current events, pop culture, and storytelling, each episode connects today’s headlines to the deeper narratives behind them — because every moment has a backstory. https://www.smithstreetsounds.com/

    12 min
  4. Mar 18

    Episode 4: The Paint Is Still Wet

    Send us Fan Mail We lean into “The Paint Is Still Wet” as a metaphor for being kids under construction, where progress is real even when the process is messy. We also talk music takes, creative expression, and the DIY work we do to keep our space and our sound moving forward.  • being under construction and choosing progress over perfection  • why building anything gets messy before it gets better  • thoughts on Jack Harlow, viral comments, and culture lines  • appreciation vs appropriation and how listeners hear intent  • why Tone Stith’s “Fly” resonates across generations  • vocal taste, spacing, and storytelling beyond riffs  • painting the room for better feng shui and creative flow  • building removable studio panels, magnets, and learning as we go  • taking feedback, growing thick skin, and serving the right audience  Comment, tag the brother or something, you share it if you will. That’s you can find me on Instagram at Smith Street Sound. SmithStreetSounds.com would be the website where you would check out all the episodes, the music, the blog, and anything else going on over here on Smith Street. Be sure to check out the playlist.  The Paint is still wet Playlist -  https://open.spotify.com/playlist/37i9dQZF1FwUawMyY3VCM5?si=1ff794585a25486a Yore on Smith Street is a weekly culture and commentary podcast hosted by Smith Street. Blending current events, pop culture, and storytelling, each episode connects today’s headlines to the deeper narratives behind them — because every moment has a backstory. https://www.smithstreetsounds.com/

    16 min
  5. Feb 26

    Episode 1: The First Episode, No Middleman

    Send us Fan Mail [00:00 – 02:00] Welcome & Intention 1.    Launching the first professional episode ·       Why independence matters ·       Releasing during Black History Month ·       Building without a middleman [02:00 – 06:00] Gatekeeping & Power Dynamics ·       Revisiting America's Next Top Model as an adult ·       Mentorship vs. control ·       Power imbalance in entertainment ·       The shift from traditional gatekeepers to social media access Key question:  Are gatekeepers necessary, or are they becoming obsolete?  [06:00 – 10:00] First Jobs & Foundations ·       Hearing about Wendy’s closing locations ·       First W-2 job at 18 ·       Moving neighborhoods and adapting ·       Lessons in discipline and structure ·       How early work shaped creative independence [10:00 – 13:00] Building the Studio ·       DIY renovation updates ·       Measurement mistakes ·       Buying the wrong magnets ·       Fixing errors instead of quitting Metaphor:  Creative ownership means solving your own problems.  [13:00 – 15:00] Closing Thoughts ·       Independence vs. permission ·       Doing things your way ·       Commitment to consistency What’s coming next 🔥 Key Themes ·       Independence over permission ·       Mentorship vs. manipulation ·       Gatekeepers in the digital age ·       Early work shaping the discipline ·       Mistakes as part of the build 💬 Join the Conversation Has social media actually freed creatives — or just made everyone louder? Share your thoughts and tag the show.   Yore on Smith Street is a weekly culture and commentary podcast hosted by Smith Street. Blending current events, pop culture, and storytelling, each episode connects today’s headlines to the deeper narratives behind them — because every moment has a backstory. https://www.smithstreetsounds.com/

    17 min

About

Yore on Smith Street is a weekly pop culture and current events show hosted by media creator and storyteller Jaron Smith. Each episode blends cultural commentary, television, and music breakdowns, and authentic storytelling to unpack the moments shaping today’s conversations. From reality TV reactions and viral internet moments to music industry insights and trending news, Jaron delivers thoughtful analysis with humor, personality, and a sharp eye for what’s culturally relevant. The show combines structured commentary with candid reactions, making it both informative and entertaining. Yore on Smith Street is designed for listeners who enjoy pop culture podcasts, current events discussions, TV recaps, music commentary, and modern storytelling. Whether breaking down a trending show, reflecting on cultural shifts, or sharing personal insights tied to the moment, the podcast offers perspective-driven conversations that feel current, engaging, and real. New episodes explore: ·       Pop culture commentary ·       Reality TV and television recaps ·       Music discussions and industry insights ·       Viral trends and internet culture ·       Cultural analysis and storytelling If you’re looking for a weekly podcast that connects entertainment, media, and culture through an authentic voice and thoughtful commentary, Yore on Smith Street offers a fresh take on the stories everyone is talking about.