A few clips from the latest two hour episode of Old Black Men Sittin on the Porch Talkin Shit. The full episode features another lively and unfiltered roundtable with Garrett Morris, Harold Sylvester, Terence Rosemore, Earl Billings and Willie C Carpenter.
Sneak peek - The complete conversation releases soon for premium members and supporters.
Full Episode Summary
The porch conversations get deep this episode as the legends dive into Hollywood’s dirty secrets, the hidden history of Black cowboys, and what it really takes to survive as a Black actor in white spaces. From reality TV’s destruction of quality programming to the untold story of Black jockeys dominating horse racing, this sprawling conversation covers the cultural erasure, industry politics, and personal battles that shaped their careers and America’s twisted narratives.
Raw industry insider knowledge, forgotten Black history that’ll blow your mind, and the kind of real talk about race and identity that Hollywood doesn’t want you to hear.
Key Conversations
Hollywood’s Corporate Takeover
* Film industry consolidation crushing independent voices
* Distribution nightmares that kill great projects before audiences see them
* How reality TV’s cheap production costs destroyed quality programming
* Why personal relationships matter more than talent in getting work
“The film industry consolidation isn’t just business—it’s cultural erasure by spreadsheet.”
The Real History of Black Cowboys
* “High Horse” series reveals what textbooks won’t tell you
* Majority of Old West cowboys were Black, Mexican, and Indigenous—not white
* How Hollywood created the white cowboy myth and erased everyone else
* The systematic removal of Black jockeys from horse racing
Acting While Black: The Real Stories
* Surviving predominantly white environments without losing yourself
* Cultural transitions that test your identity daily
* The mentorship networks that keep Black actors sane
* When humor becomes survival strategy in hostile spaces
Cultural Identity & Media Manipulation
* Language as a tool for cultural assimilation (and resistance)
* How media representation shaped decades of racial perceptions
* Colorism’s ongoing impact within Black communities
* Personal heritage stories vs. manufactured narratives
Music, Arts & Activism
* How cultural expression becomes political resistance
* The power of storytelling to reclaim erased histories
* Why community engagement matters for developing young talent
* Connecting historical trauma to contemporary struggles
Industry Survival Wisdom
* Parenting across cultures while maintaining identity
* The aftermath of industry meetings that change everything
* Reading rooms and understanding power dynamics
* Why knowing your history is the ultimate industry armor