• Black Women's Wall Street: Building Generational Wealth
    Jul 16 2026

    Wall Street has historically shut its doors to Black women, so right here in Dallas, two founders built their own.


    This week on Making Black History Today, hosts Liz & Porter sit down with LaToya Gooden and JaCoi Pugh, the creators of Black Women's Wall Street. Together, they break down what it actually takes to invest while Black, push past the barriers still built into corporate finance, and turn community into generational wealth.


    This isn't a corporate success story. It's an unfiltered look at what it takes to build something that brings Black women entrepreneurs, business owners, and community leaders together to create ownership and lasting impact.


    In this episode, you'll hear:

    - How Black Women's Wall Street grew from a local idea into a movement

    - The barriers Black women entrepreneurs still face—and how they're overcoming them

    - Why building wealth together creates more impact than doing it alone

    - The role of strategic relationships and mentorship in growing a business

    - Why ownership is essential to closing the racial wealth gap

    - What legacy means when you're building something designed to outlive you


    Whether you're an entrepreneur, a professional, a community leader, or

    someone building toward a stronger financial future—this one's for you.


    If this episode inspired you, hit the [+] FOLLOW button and save this episode to your library so you never miss a moment of history being made. Share this with someone building a business, a legacy, or

    their own future today.


    Making Black History Today is Dallas's premier podcast documenting the leaders, entrepreneurs, creatives, and change-makers shaping Black history in real time. New episodes every other Thursday.


    Hosted by Liz & Porter | Recorded in Dallas, Texas

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 4 mins
  • Can Music Heal a City? | Pastor Richie Butler & Maestro Leon Lacey on Unity, Faith, Project Unity & Dallas
    Jul 2 2026

    Can music heal a city? Can faith create common ground? And what happens when people choose unity over division?

    In this episode of Making Black History Today, Pastor Richie Butler, founder and CEO of Project Unity, joins internationally acclaimed conductor Maestro Leon Lacey for a conversation about leadership, community, and the power of music to bring people together.

    Pastor Richie Butler shares the story behind Project Unity, the Dallas-based organization dedicated to building trust, strengthening relationships, and creating meaningful dialogue across communities. Maestro Leon Lacey reflects on a career that has taken him around the world, including conducting for Beyoncé in Dubai, while explaining why some of his most meaningful work continues to happen right here in Dallas through Together We Sing.

    Together, they discuss how faith, collaboration, and servant leadership can help heal divided communities, why honest conversations matter, and how music often communicates what words cannot.

    In this episode, you'll discover:

    • Why Pastor Richie Butler founded Project Unity
    • How Together We Sing became one of Dallas' most powerful movements for unity
    • Maestro Leon Lacey's journey from the international stage to leading music that transforms communities
    • How faith and servant leadership build trust across differences
    • Why collaboration is essential for creating lasting change
    • What it means to make Black history today in Dallas

    Whether you're passionate about leadership, community development, faith, music, or the future of Dallas, this conversation offers practical wisdom and hope for anyone who believes stronger communities begin with understanding.

    Making Black History Today is Dallas' premier podcast and the digital archive of Dallas's current Black history makers. Hosted by Liz and Porter, each episode features conversations with the leaders, educators, entrepreneurs, artists, faith leaders, and change-makers shaping the future of Dallas while preserving its history for generations to come.

    Follow Making Black History Today on Spotify for new episodes every other Thursday featuring the people making Black history today across Dallas.

    Show More Show Less
    49 mins
  • Not Restoring a Building. Returning a Soul. | Saving the Forest Theater
    Jun 18 2026

    For years, the Forest Theater stood empty.

    A historic landmark. A cultural icon. A reminder of what once was.

    Many people accepted that story.

    Elizabeth Wattley did not.

    In this Season II premiere of Making Black History Today, the President and CEO of Forest Forward joins us to discuss the effort to bring one of South Dallas' most important landmarks back to life and why the work is about much more than a building.

    It's about history.

    It's about community.

    It's about who gets remembered and who gets left behind.

    From the future of the Forest Theater to the future of South Dallas, Elizabeth shares the vision, challenges, and leadership lessons behind one of the city's most significant revitalization efforts.

    If you've ever wondered what it takes to preserve history while creating opportunity for the next generation, this conversation is for you.

    Topics include community development, historic preservation, leadership, economic opportunity, South Dallas, the Forest Theater, and the power of investing in people.

    Follow Making Black History Today for conversations with everyday people making an extraordinary impact.

    Show More Show Less
    52 mins
  • Naomi Green: Discrimination Inside a Doctor’s Office—What No One Talks About
    Jun 4 2026

    Naomi Green shares a firsthand experience of discrimination inside a doctor’s office and what it revealed about how bias can show up in everyday healthcare interactions.

    What happens when the place designed to care for you becomes the place where you feel dismissed?

    In this conversation on Making Black History Today, Naomi opens up about her experience and the broader questions it raises about visibility, treatment, and how different communities are heard and believed in medical spaces and beyond.

    We explore:

    • A real experience of discrimination in a healthcare setting
    • How bias can shape everyday interactions in medical environments
    • The impact of being unheard in systems designed for care
    • Why these conversations matter for equity, trust, and access

    This episode is part of an ongoing series highlighting lived experiences that often go unspoken but deeply shape how people move through the world.


    New episodes bi-weekly.


    Follow Making Black History Today for conversations with changemakers, leaders, and voices shaping culture, history, and impact.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 3 mins
  • The Truth About Being Ali's Daughter | Maryum Ali
    May 28 2026

    In this special "BONUS" episode of Making Black History Today, we sit down with Maryum “May May” Ali, author, advocate, playwright, and the eldest daughter of Muhammad Ali.

    Maryum shares what it was really like growing up with one of the most iconic athletes in history, the lessons her father taught her about service and humanity, and why her new one-woman play, FLOAT, premiering in Dallas May 27–June 7, is deeply personal.

    This conversation explores legacy, Black history, storytelling, purpose, and creating positive impact beyond a famous last name. If you love powerful interviews, cultural conversations, and inspiring stories, this episode is for you.

    Follow Making Black History Today on Spotify, save this episode, and share it with someone who believes legacy is built through purpose, impact, and storytelling.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 2 mins
  • Only 2% of Educators Are Black Men — The Education Crisis We Ignore
    May 21 2026

    In this episode of Making Black History Today, Dallas ISD Trustee Ed Turner and educator Nakia Douglas discuss what that means for students, schools, mentorship, discipline, leadership, and the future of public education.

    Why are so few Black men entering education?


    What happens when students never see themselves reflected in positions of authority and mentorship?


    And are we paying enough attention to the growing challenges facing students today?

    This conversation explores:
    • Economics impact on education
    • Representation in schools
    • The realities facing today’s students
    • Public education in Dallas
    • Mentorship, accountability, and leadership

    Hosted by Liz & Porter, Making Black History Today highlights the voices shaping culture, community, and legacy in real time.

    Follow, rate, and share the podcast to help amplify these conversations.

    #BlackMenInEducation #EducationCrisis #PublicEducation #DallasISD #MakingBlackHistoryToday#BlackLeadership

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 18 mins
  • Met Gala Energy in Dallas: Black Creatives Building Fashion & Legacy
    May 7 2026

    The Met Gala just declared "Fashion is Art," but in Dallas, three entrepreneurs have been living that truth long before the red carpet rolled out.


    This week on Making Black History Today, hosts Liz & Porter sit down with Cubby the Creator, a custom fashion designer and owner of Untamed Heart and Watch for Smiling Faces and Jasmine & Devon Carter of Balacia, whose custom fine jewelry has graced the Golden Globe Awards and the NAACP Awards.

    These aren't just entrepreneurs. They are artists whose work has already made it to some of the biggest stages in the world and they're just getting started.

    This conversation goes beyond business. It's about identity, culture, creativity, and what it actually takes to build a legacy while you're still writing the story.

    In this episode:

    • How Cubby the Creator built a custom fashion brand rooted in culture and storytelling

    • The story behind Untamed Heart and Watch for Smiling Faces

    • How Balacia's custom fine jewelry made it to the Golden Globes and NAACP Awards red carpets

    • What it takes to build a luxury brand from Dallas to the world stage

    • Navigating business, creative partnership, and personal relationships

    • What legacy looks like when you're still in the middle of building it

    Whether you're a fashion lover, a jewelry enthusiast, an entrepreneur, a creative, or someone who believes the most powerful things being built today aren't on a runway, this episode is for you.


    If this episode moved you, inspired you, or made you think differently, follow Making Black History Today on Spotify so you never miss a moment of history being made.


    Share this episode with someone who needs to hear it. Leave a rating and review, it helps more people find stories like this one.


    Making Black History Today documents history as it happens.

    New episodes every other week.


    Hosted by Liz & Porter | Recorded in Dallas, Texas

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 10 mins
  • Leading the Fight for Texas Education: Dr. Tiffany M. Clark:
    Apr 23 2026

    What does it actually look like when someone uses power to serve their community instead of leaving it behind?

    Dr. Tiffany M. Clark grew up in DeSoto, Texas and instead of moving on, she moved up and came back. Now serving as the Texas State Board of Education Representative for District 13, Dr. Clark is in the rooms where decisions get made about the future of Texas students, and she's making sure those students are seen.

    In this conversation, we talk about what real education leadership looks like from the inside, the policy battles, the responsibility that comes with the seat, and the mindset it takes to create change that actually lasts beyond your tenure.

    We get into:

    *What the State Board of Education actually does and why it matters to everyday families

    *The decisions being made right now that will shape Texas classrooms for years to come

    *What it meant to come back to DeSoto and lead from home

    * How Dr. Clark thinks about legacy, responsibility, and generational impact

    * What it takes for more Black women to step into policy and education leadership

    This is the kind of conversation that reminds you that history isn't just made in the past, it's being made right now, by people who chose to show up.

    Making Black History Today is the podcast that spotlights Black leaders who are actively shaping history through their work, their influence, and their commitment to community.

    New episodes drop bi-weekly.

    Season 2 launches June 18th, follow now so you don't miss it.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 4 mins