A Better Chance TV...with Mz Mo!

Monique Robinson

Educational Conversations with Scholars in Mind. "Our mission is to empower and uplift scholars pursuing higher education at HBCUs, ensuring they have the resources, support, and opportunities needed for a successful future. Through mentorship, scholarship programs, and community engagement, we strive to create a pathway to excellence, fostering academic achievement, leadership development, and a strong sense of cultural identity. Together, we are building a brighter future for young scholars, strengthening the legacy of HBCUs, and fueling positive change in our communities."

  1. 11h ago

    Young Voices Rising

    We welcome two powerful student voices for day two of the Takisha A. Davis Scholarship Stipend essay reading and hear how they turn family, faith, and discipline into real college plans. We also share ways to support HBCU-bound scholars through voting, donations, and the upcoming South Texas HBCU Summer Send-Off.  • day two format for the scholarship essay reading and why the competition feels tough  • South Texas HBCU Summer Send-Off details in San Antonio and what support students need  • Common Black College Application overview and why it helps students apply to multiple HBCUs  • Gregorio Armand’s essay on pushing forward through hard work, creativity, and relationships  • cybersecurity motivation rooted in protecting people after seeing a family hack  • choosing St. Philip’s College as an HBCU option close to home and financially practical  • Mariell Curb’s essay on breaking generational cycles through education and mechanical engineering  • Tuskegee preparation through internships and a summer bridge program for engineering students  • leaving a mark on campus through clubs, mentoring, leadership, and showing up  • why each contestant believes they deserve your vote  Please remember to vote, and if you have already voted or have tried to vote, the voting link is actually not active right now, but on Sunday or Monday, it will be back up. If you are interested in being a vendor or interested in supporting our scholars, use that link up to the top of the screen, or just send me a DM and I will gladly tell you how you can support.  Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    30 min
  2. 3d ago

    HBCU Dreams In Their Own Words

    Scholarship season is here, and we’re kicking off the Takeisha A. Davis Annual Competition with three unforgettable voices and three very different reasons for choosing an HBCU. What starts with quick announcements about our HBCU summer send-off celebration and ways to support college-bound students turns into something deeper: a front-row seat to how young scholars think about belonging, purpose, and the future they’re determined to build. First, we meet a Chicago student heading to Tuskegee University who reads an essay about breaking generational cycles through education. She connects her lived experience to mentorship, explains why physical therapy is her path, and makes a clear case for accessible healthcare and support that actually reaches underserved communities. Then we welcome two more round-two contestants Vivian and Alexandria, who share what pulled them toward an HBCU, from family legacy and an HBCU tour to a counselor’s advice about finally getting four years of true belonging. The essays and follow-up questions take us into identity, culture, and resilience. Vivian describes being Nigerian and Black American as a “remix,” refusing to stay stagnant while learning to hold both worlds with pride. Alexandria shares how a family medical crisis pushed her to grow up fast, how scuba diving helped her face fear with knowledge, and why she’s aiming for cardiology at Howard University. Along the way, we also highlight tools like the Common Black College Application and community support options for students and families. If you care about HBCU culture, Black student success, scholarship opportunities, STEM pathways, and real stories from future healthcare leaders, press play. Subscribe, share with someone who needs encouragement, and leave a review then tell us which essay you’re voting for. Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    43 min
  3. May 27

    What Happens When Representation Becomes The Program

    You can feel it when a city decides to stop “talking about” Black excellence and actually programs it. We’re counting down to HBCU weekend in San Antonio, and we’re doing things differently this year with a real run-of-show that centers culture, family, and students not just a room full of tables. If you’ve ever wondered what it takes to make an HBCU celebration feel meaningful, organized, and alive, this conversation gives you the behind-the-scenes. We’re joined by powerhouse performer and creative leader Devon Matthews, who breaks down her work as founder and artistic director of Art Noir Productions, an all-Black performing arts organization built to fix a representation gap across dance, theater, spoken word, and more. She shares why training and stage opportunities matter, how young people grow when the standard is high, and why she’s bringing a tribute that honors Black culture and HBCU pride. We also welcome Anthony Harris Brown back as we talk program upgrades, why youth performers belong on an education-centered weekend, and how quickly people underestimate Black kids until the talent hits the mic. Then the energy shifts to pure community fun with Rod Eckles and the fashion talk, plus a reminder that tickets are moving and the door price jumps if you wait. We also shout out honorees and resources that support college-bound students, including tools like the Common Black College App and HBCU trivia that keeps the history close. Listen, share this with someone coming to the weekend, and then subscribe and leave a review so more people find the show. What part of an HBCU weekend matters most to you: the awards, the performances, the networking, or the student spotlight? Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    41 min
  4. May 26

    What If Your Purpose Has No Deadline

    Graduation season brings a lot of applause, but I want to talk about what happens after the caps come off. I share a message I originally delivered as a school speech, built around one idea that changed how I see education, success, and purpose: graduation is only a concept, and in real life we graduate every single day. If you’ve ever questioned whether you’re enough, worried your dreams are too big for your circumstances, or felt behind because of someone else’s timeline, this conversation is for you. I get personal about not starting at the top, making mistakes, and learning the kind of lessons no classroom can teach. We unpack what it really means to “shrink yourself” and why I keep repeating this line: do not dim your light so others can shine. We talk self-worth, confidence, and how social media comparison can steal joy, especially for students and young professionals trying to figure out who they are. You’ll also hear a clear reminder that titles, awards, and recognition can be nice, but they’re not your value. Then we zoom out to community and opportunity, with a spotlight on Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) and why they matter for culture, connection, mentorship, and lifelong belonging. We share community voices connected to the HBCU Community Icon Awards and the bigger mission of supporting student scholars, connecting alumni with students, and building real networks that pay off later. If you care about education, mentorship, scholarships, and helping the next generation lead without apology, press play and stay with us. Subscribe for more, share this with someone who needs the reminder, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. What’s one way you’re ready to stop shrinking and show up fully? Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    26 min
  5. May 14

    I Celebrate By Giving Back To Future HBCU Students

    A birthday show can be more than candles and dinner plans. I’m celebrating the whole month, but I’m also turning that celebration into support for A Better Chance for Youth Incorporated because it’s crunch time and our students need us. If you’ve ever wanted a practical way to invest in youth mentoring, college access, and real outcomes for college-bound seniors, this conversation lays out exactly how we’re doing it and how you can plug in. I walk through our upcoming HBCU Community Icon Awards and People’s Choice Awards, including why ticket sales and business sponsorships matter and how the event helps fund our South Texas HBCU summer send-off. The goal is simple: celebrate excellence while making sure more young people can step onto the campus of a historically Black college or university with confidence, community support, and a network behind them. I also share a quick tip for saving money on tickets: the newsletter is where the promo code lives. Along the way, we spotlight helpful HBCU resources like the Common Black College Application, which lets students apply to 50+ HBCUs at once for a low cost, plus a fun educational option with an HBCU trivia game. Then we shift into the heart of the celebration with a tribute montage full of love, laughter, and reminders that mentorship is built over years, not moments. If you believe in lifting students and strengthening HBCU pathways, listen, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the mission. What’s one way you’ve seen community support change a young person’s future? Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    16 min
  6. May 12

    What Happens When We Keep HBCU Memories Alive

    You can feel HBCU pride when it’s real and Alfonso Scott brings the real. After a quick run of community updates and award-season reminders, we sit down with Alfonso to trace his path from Dayton, Ohio to Miles College in Birmingham, Alabama, including the culture shock that nearly sent him back home. What changed was the thing HBCUs do better than almost anywhere: community. He talks candidly about finding his people, growing through campus life, and carrying that foundation into adulthood.  Then we dig into his decade-long passion project, “We’ve Got Something to Talk About,” built from hundreds of interviews with HBCU alumni across generations, schools, and cities. It’s not a single-campus story, it’s a living collage of Historically Black Colleges and Universities told by the people who lived it. If you care about HBCU advocacy, college choice, student success, or simply preserving Black education history, these testimonials explain why HBCU alumni stay so loyal and so loud.  We also talk about his HBCU commemorative calendar that pairs images with quotes from the book, plus practical resources for families navigating application season, including the Common Black College Application. Listen for the through-line: when we share our stories, we widen the path for the next student.  Subscribe, share this with an HBCU-bound scholar or proud alum, and leave a quick review telling us what your HBCU story says about you. Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    25 min
  7. Apr 14

    How The Urban League Brings College Access To San Antonio

    You can feel when something is built for the long haul, not for a headline. That’s the energy behind my conversation with Quincy and Mario, two former HBCU athletes who turn a years-long friendship into a community mission: bringing the Urban League’s work to San Antonio and creating the HBCU Live Experience to open doors for students, families, and student-athletes. We get personal about the HBCU foundation that shaped our confidence, our leadership, and our ability to navigate bigger spaces later in life. Then we get specific about what the Urban League movement stands for and how it operates, from education and youth development to workforce development, justice and advocacy, health and wellness, and housing and community development. The goal is simple and serious: raise resources, invest them back into the community, and build relationships that make the work hard to undo. Mario breaks down the HBCU Live Experience model from a student-athlete perspective, with special focus on NAIA HBCUs and the talent that deserves more exposure. We also talk through the college and career fair, why access and exposure change outcomes, and how community support turns an event into a pipeline. Here are the key dates shared: Friday, April 17 at 10 a.m. at the Alamo Communication Center for the HBCU college fair and career fair, then Saturday, April 18 at 3 p.m. at the same venue for the women’s all-star game followed by a performance and the all-star game. Listen, share this with a parent, student, coach, or employer, then subscribe and leave a review. What would you want to see your city build for young people next? Send us Fan Mail Support the show

    40 min

About

Educational Conversations with Scholars in Mind. "Our mission is to empower and uplift scholars pursuing higher education at HBCUs, ensuring they have the resources, support, and opportunities needed for a successful future. Through mentorship, scholarship programs, and community engagement, we strive to create a pathway to excellence, fostering academic achievement, leadership development, and a strong sense of cultural identity. Together, we are building a brighter future for young scholars, strengthening the legacy of HBCUs, and fueling positive change in our communities."