The Idea of...
Bassey Ikpi and Mike Andrews
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Bassey Ikpi and Dr. Michael Andrews explore the intersections of Black culture, family, art, and mental health. As children of immigrant parents, xennial creatives, and parents raising sons in competitive soccer, they bring the full complexity of their lives to every conversation. The podcast is a space for nuanced discussions that don't fit neatly elsewhere, blending intellect, joy, and righteousness.
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The Idea Of... Compassion Before Commentary 08.07.2026 1sa 8dkThis week starts with soccer......and somehow ends with parenting, grief, race, and what happens when tragedy collides with the internet.Mike and Bassey unpack everything from World Cup coaching decisions and why infrastructure matters more than raw talent, to the emotional culture of international soccer and why some countries seem to know how to win before the game even begins.Then the conversation shifts.Following the death of 18-year-old Nolan Wells, they wrestle with something bigger than headlines: why every tragedy immediately becomes someone's cautionary tale. Instead of asking better questions, social media often rushes to assign blame—even to grieving families.Throughout the episode, they also reflect on creator burnout, authenticity, and why conversations from creators like Deante Kyle continue to resonate so deeply.This isn't an episode about having all the answers.It's about resisting the urge to simplify complicated human stories.Sometimes the hardest thing we can do is let grief stay grief.
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The Idea Of... Lauryn Hill's Flowers 02.07.2026 1sa 35dkThe World Cup may have brought us into the conversation, but this episode quickly becomes something much bigger.Mike and Bassey unpack why soccer finally feels different in America, how Black athletes have transformed the global game, and why creativity—not just discipline—changes sports forever. Along the way they explore racism in international fandom, North African identity, and what it means to truly belong.Then the conversation pivots to one of the greatest BET tributes ever: Lauryn Hill. They discuss why The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill remains nearly impossible to replicate, why Lauryn's artistry has always defied categories, and how her influence stretches from Kendrick Lamar to generations of writers, musicians, and creatives.Finally, they examine something even larger: how history gets rewritten. From Michael Jackson's evolving public image to changing cultural language and collective memory, they ask an uncomfortable question:Who gets to tell our stories once we're gone?This is a conversation about legacy, ownership, Black creativity, and why preserving our cultural memory may be one of the most important things we do.
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The Idea Of... The Blackest World Cup Ever 24.06.2026 1sa 22dkThis week, Mike and Bassey wander through a conversation that begins with Michael Jackson and ends somewhere between the World Cup, social media outrage, Black leadership, and the challenge of remaining human in a culture that rewards performance.As Bassey revisits a decades-old biography of Michael Jackson, the conversation explores our tendency to turn celebrities into myths instead of people. From Michael Jackson's eccentricities to Jay-Z combing Blue Ivy's hair, they discuss why audiences struggle to accept complexity, vulnerability, and ordinary humanity from extraordinary people.The conversation then shifts to the internet's addiction to outrage, the rise of podcasts and reaction culture, and how constant commentary may be changing the way we consume music, books, and ideas. Along the way, they examine what happens when everyone has an opinion but fewer people are developing the skills to think critically.Later, Mike reflects on an unexpected moment of affirmation while hosting an Alpha Phi Alpha scholarship gala, leading to a broader discussion about purpose, self-doubt, and the importance of hearing encouragement when you need it most.The episode closes with a passionate conversation about the World Cup, Black athletes around the globe, representation, belonging, and why finding the right environment can change the trajectory of a life.Sometimes the story isn't about celebrity, politics, or sports. Sometimes it's about remembering that every headline, every public figure, and every one of us is still a human being.
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The Idea Of… The Age of Uncertainty 17.06.2026 1sa 10dkThis week, the conversation takes a turn inward. If you've ever felt stuck, disconnected, uncertain, or simply tired, this conversation may feel familiar.Mike and Bassey begin with a listener comment about music, parenting, and vulnerability, but quickly find themselves exploring something much deeper: what happens when confidence fades, motivation disappears, and the version of yourself you've always counted on feels just out of reach.They talk openly about depression, loneliness, aging, creativity, therapy, self-doubt, friendship, identity, and the strange reality of reaching midlife with accomplishments behind you and unanswered questions still ahead.From analysis paralysis and fear of being perceived to wondering whether there's enough time left to become who you thought you'd be, this episode sits in the uncomfortable space between certainty and uncertainty.No easy answers. No inspirational shortcuts.Just two friends trying to make sense of what it means to keep showing up when you don't always feel like yourself.
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The Idea Of... The Long Game of Parenting 07.06.2026 1sa 46dkWhat song can make you cry before the first lyric even starts?This week, Mike and Bassey compare their personal "Cry About It" playlists and tumble into a conversation about James Blake, Jeff Buckley, Donny Hathaway, Billie Eilish, Kanye West, and Jay-Z—artists whose music doesn't just entertain, but evokes something deeper.But as often happens on The Idea Of..., the conversation expands beyond music.What starts as a discussion about songs that move us becomes a reflection on artistry, attention, media literacy, and whether we've lost the ability to truly listen. Mike and Bassey unpack the reaction to Jay-Z's recent freestyle, debate what separates timeless artists from viral moments, and explore how technology, algorithms, and modern culture shape the way we experience music.The conversation then turns toward something even more personal: their sons.Through an honest discussion about parenting young men, they reflect on confidence, peer pressure, identity, and the difficult balance between allowing children to find their own way while still passing on the values, culture, and wisdom that shaped them. As their sons move into adulthood, Mike and Bassey wrestle with questions many parents face: How much do we guide? How much do we let go? And when do the lessons we've planted finally take root?It's a conversation about music, fatherhood, culture, growing up, and growing older.Because sometimes the hardest part isn't teaching someone what to think.It's teaching them how to listen.
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The Idea Of... Selling Crack 27.05.2026 1sa 36dkThis week on The Idea Of…, Bassey & Mike start with a conversation about podcasting, originality, and the strange feeling of hearing your ideas echoed back through culture. But what begins as a conversation about creativity and influence quickly turns into something much deeper.The two revisit last week’s heated Drake debate and unpack what was really happening beneath the surface: communication, perception, gender dynamics, emotional safety, and the tension between intent and impact. What follows is one of the most vulnerable conversations the podcast has had to date.Then the episode shifts into an honest and emotionally raw exploration of parenting Black sons in predominantly white spaces. Mike and Bassey reflect on soccer culture, identity, assimilation, disappointment, fear, protection, masculinity, and the impossible balance between preparing Black children for the world without making them afraid of it.This isn’t just an episode about Drake, parenting, or soccer. It’s about the emotional complexity of raising Black boys while watching them slowly become their own people.Funny, painful, nuanced, honest — and deeply human.
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The Idea Of... Iceman 20.05.2026 1sa 54dkThis week, Bassey & Mike take a deeply personal trip back to Brooklyn — not just the borough, but the memories, emotions, and versions of themselves still living there. From Prospect Park scars and Nostrand Avenue apartments to the strange grief of watching places change while realizing you’ve changed too, the conversation becomes less about geography and more about identity. This episode started with Mike reflecting on running the Brooklyn Half Marathon and unexpectedly reconnecting with memories of his mother, Prospect Park, and the neighborhood that shaped him. What followed became a conversation about aging, nostalgia, reinvention, and trying to remember what actually makes you feel alive.Then, in classic The Idea Of… fashion, the conversation pivots hard into a passionate debate about Drake’s Iceman album, lyrical standards, hip-hop tribalism, and whether listeners hear music differently based on who they believe the artist to be. Not the lazy “Drake vs. Kendrick” internet conversation either. A real conversation about artistry, growth, ego, lyricism, perception, and why people hear the same album completely differently.The episode is funny, layered, emotional, petty, thoughtful, and very... us... Tune in!
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The Idea Of… Roasts, Race, and Public Consumption 13.05.2026 1sa 41dkThis week, Bassey and Mike go deep into the cultural event that is the new Michael film—and what it unlocked emotionally for a generation that grew up watching Michael Jackson in real time.They unpack the brilliance of Jafar Jackson’s performance, the impossible weight of portraying Michael, the trauma and complexity of the Jackson family dynamic, and the reality that Michael wasn’t just a superstar—he was the internet before the internet existed.The conversation expands into parenting, Black family survival strategies, Joe Jackson, fragility versus discipline, and what happens when old-world survival tactics meet modern ideas about emotional care.Then the conversation pivots into the complicated world of comedy roasts, race, public consumption, and whether some forms of humor were ever meant for mass audiences in the social media era.This episode lives in memory, discomfort, nostalgia, grief, brilliance, and the blurry line between truth and performance.
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The Idea Of... Homie-Sexuals 06.05.2026 1sa 27dkThis week, Bassey & Mike return with a conversation that starts in music—but doesn’t stay there.From revisiting Mos Def and Black Star to questioning what happens when artists are ahead of their time, the conversation quickly turns inward. Because somewhere along the way, the culture feels off.And that’s where “Homie-Sexuals” enters the chat.Not as a joke—but as a lens.What does it say about us when men show more loyalty, empathy, and emotional investment in each other than in the women in their lives?Why does pain experienced by women get debated, dismissed, or even celebrated—while men rally instantly around each other?And what happens when accountability gets replaced with distance—“that’s not me” instead of “what am I connected to?”This episode wrestles with some uncomfortable truths:The gap between performance and maturity in hip-hopWhy “not all men” misses the pointHow restraint—not dominance—might be the clearest marker of manhoodThe role of online culture in amplifying the worst of usAnd why we have to stop using celebrities as avatars for our own livesAt its core, this is a conversation about alignment—between what we say we value, and how we actually show up. Because if the loudest energy we give is to defending each other, but not protecting or respecting women…then maybe “Homie-Sexuals” isn’t just a phrase. It’s a mirror.
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The Idea Of... Joe Jackson 29.04.2026 40dkIn this solo episode, Mike steps in while Bassey is out and takes listeners through a layered reflection on culture, media, and fatherhood.He explores the surge of emotionally charged stories involving Black men and Black women, questioning whether timing, amplification, and media cycles are shaping how we interpret reality. Introducing the idea of “racialized noise governance,” he breaks down how outrage, fear, and spectacle can be manufactured or magnified.From there, the conversation turns inward. Mike reflects on his identity as a runner, the discipline it requires, and what it means to claim something that doesn’t always feel culturally “assigned.”Then the core question lands:What is the role of a father in pushing a child toward greatness?Using Joe Jackson, LeVar Ball, and his own parenting as entry points, Mike wrestles with the uncomfortable space between love, pressure, discipline, and legacy. He challenges listeners to reconsider how fathers are framed—and what might be lost when their role is misunderstood or minimized.This episode doesn’t offer clean answers. It offers perspective, tension, and an invitation to think deeper.
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The Idea Of... Men All Pause 15.04.2026 1sa 13dkThis the one! Aging isn’t just physical—it’s emotional, relational, and deeply social.In this episode, Bassey and Mike unpack what it really means to grow older in real time. From perimenopause and shifting identities to regret, nostalgia, and the quiet ways men and women are (and aren’t) allowed to change, this conversation moves between humor and honesty with no filter.They explore the uneven expectations placed on men and women, how midlife shows up differently depending on who you are, and why so many of us feel like we’re running out of time—even when we’re still figuring things out.Somewhere between therapy talk, cultural critique, and lived experience, they land on a truth most people feel but rarely say out loud: we’re all just trying to make sense of who we’re becoming… without a map.
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The Idea Of… Midlife Flyness ft. Kendra Lendsey 08.04.2026 1sa 43dkIn this episode of The Idea Of…, we’re joined by Kendra Lendsey, creator of Midlife Flyness and a leading voice in reframing what it means to age with intention, style, and self-trust. Grounded in a 100% Gen X perspective, Kendra’s work pushes back on the idea that midlife is something to fear, and instead invites us to see it as a return to who we’ve always been.Together, we explore the tension between who we were, who we became, and who we’re now choosing to be. From style and self-expression to parenting, cultural memory, and generational shifts, this conversation moves with honesty and depth. We reflect on how our understanding of aging is shaped by what we saw growing up, and how different this moment feels as we live it in real time.We also dig into the cultural conversations shaping today’s discourse, including reflections on artists like Brandy, Wanyá Morris, Beyoncé, and Jay-Z, and what happens when we apply today’s lens to yesterday’s context. What do we gain, and what do we risk losing, when nuance gets replaced by reaction?At its core, this episode sits with a deeper question: what if much of the chaos we’re experiencing right now is actually unprocessed grief, especially in the wake of COVID and the cultural reset it forced on all of us?A conversation about aging without apology. Mike, Bassey, and Kendra unpack midlife identity, cultural memory, generational tension, and what it means to return to yourself in a world that rewards reinvention but forgets context.Follow us on everything @wearetheideapodFollow Kendra on everything @kendra_lendsey
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The Idea of... Arrested Development 01.04.2026 1sa 12dkThis week, Bassey & Mike sit with the whirlwind of J. Cole’s recent interviews—and what they reveal beyond the headlines.What happens when an artist processes in real time, in public, without a filter? Where is the line between vulnerability and oversharing? And what does it look like when a grown man is still figuring out who he is… out loud?From “at first I was… then I was…” to the difference between being nice and being clear, this episode moves past hip hop commentary into something deeper: identity, maturity, and the cost of not standing firmly in your own voice. Are these artists is phasses of Arrested Development?Because at some point, it’s not about what you say.It’s about whether you believe it when you say it.
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The Idea Of... Young Grown Men 25.03.2026 1sa 17dkIn this episode, Mike and Bassey begin with a check-in on mental clutter, ADHD, illness, and shadow work before moving into a deeply honest conversation about parenting older children. Mike shares the story of discovering that his son secretly booked a trip to Italy, which leads to a broader reflection on what it means to parent someone who is no longer a child, but not fully settled into adulthood either. They talk about fear, pride, judgment, college culture, impulsive decisions, and the emotional transition parents go through when their children begin making serious choices on their own. The back half of the episode turns to hip-hop, specifically the long tail of the Drake, Kendrick, and J. Cole battle. Mike and Bassey unpack why they are still interested in the aftermath, not just as rap discourse, but as a lens into ego, insecurity, male emotional development, public performance, and authenticity. Bassey offers a blistering read of J. Cole as the “conscious dude on the quad” who uses awareness language without true self-knowledge, while Mike complicates that reading by framing Cole as impulsive, emotionally exposed, and unfinished in public. Together, they explore what it means for a grown man to half-stand on decisions, why Drake still feels mad, and why rap beef still tells us something real about men.
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The Idea Of... Michael B. Jordan 18.03.2026 1sa 25dkIn this episode, Mike and Bassey unpack what happens when Blackness becomes performance online instead of practice in real life. Starting with a conversation about therapy, depression, and SXSW EDU, they move into a deeper critique of social media culture, online polarization, and the ways people turn niche opinions into identity.They talk about Jack Harlow’s new album, the constant urge to manufacture outrage, and why so much online energy feels disconnected from actual Black life. They also dig into Sinners, the Oscars, Ryan Coogler, Michael B. Jordan, and the emotional reality of Black excellence in spaces where disappointment is often expected before recognition arrives.At the center of the episode is a clear idea: Blackness is not so fragile that every outside interaction threatens it. Loving Black people, investing in Black communities, and showing up unapologetically may be a more powerful response than living in constant opposition.
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The Idea Of... Cultureless Celebrity 04.03.2026 1sa 22dkThis episode captures exactly what The Idea Of... Is all about... In this episode, Mike and Bassey bounce between real life and rap life—starting with Mike’s SXSW EDU crunch (presentation prep, expo logistics, and being displaced from home during renovations), then sliding into what the culture has been doing while everyone’s been busy.They break down the 50 Cent vs T.I. moment—how T.I. responded with skill, restraint, and strategy, and how 50 looked more like a grown man addicted to trolling than a serious competitor. Then Domani enters the chat with “Sorry, Miss Jackson,” and the conversation turns into a masterclass on composure as power: bars without yelling, disrespect without chaos, and the quiet confidence of someone who knows he belongs in the room.From there, the episode zooms out: what “show and prove” still means in hip hop, why J. Cole’s apology still feels like a self-inflicted wound, and how certain artists lose their anchor as they become their own orbit. They also tap into nostalgia (New Edition / Boyz II Men / Tony Braxton), the shift from buying albums to streaming, and why cultural moments used to feel rarer—and heavier.
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The Idea Of... Tribalism in the Timeline 25.02.2026 1sa 26dkBassey and MIke star by asking why Black stories are rarely allowed to be simple. From there, they unpack awards culture and whose “normal” gets celebrated. White stories often get to be ordinary and still win. Black art frequently has to be exceptional, political, or spectacular just to compete.The conversation widens into today’s digital climate: hyper-tribal fandoms, collapsing media literacy, and a culture where observation gets labeled hate. They examine how online identity and algorithm-driven validation blur the line between opinion and expertise, with real consequences beyond entertainment.A central segment explores the BAFTAs moment involving Delroy Lindo, Michael B. Jordan, and an audience member with Tourette’s who yelled a racial slur. Mike and Bassey sit in the tension: the condition may be real, but the impact is real too. They discuss the impossible split-second calculus Black public figures make between reacting authentically and protecting their careers.The episode closes with a reflection on cultural leadership. As movement-era icons pass, where does that collective energy go? Has it shifted into hip-hop and celebrity? That question frames a thoughtful debate about J. Cole’s “final” album, Kendrick’s symbolism, and why Baby Keem’s grief-centered storytelling resonated in a different way.
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The Idea Of... Black History Month & The Fall Off 18.02.2026 1sa 21dkBlack History Month sparks a bigger conversation: who gets centered in the story of Black America?Bassey and Mike unpack diaspora tensions, the FBA debate, AAVE, colonization, and why Black American identity is both distinct and deeply connected to the global Black experience. Then they turn to J. Cole’s The Fall Off — breaking down elite lyricism, uneven production, underdog narratives, and whether “What If” was artful or out of pocket.It's a conversation that only Bassey & Mike can have while providing the space to be right, wrong, and everything in between.
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The Idea of... Bad Bunny & the Culture Bowl 11.02.2026 48dkBassey & Mike dig into what it means to write—and create—with integrity in an era where AI can imitate style but not spirit. They talk about how tools like ChatGPT are reshaping how writing is read, why voice and cadence now get misread as automation, and how both of them are actively resisting the pressure to sand down their natural rhythm.The conversation moves into Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime performance as a case study in cultural storytelling. They unpack why the performance mattered, how language barriers were used as cover for discomfort, and what it means to see Puerto Rican history, identity, and resistance presented without translation or apology.Along the way, Mike shares a personal story about learning Puerto Rico’s African, Taíno, and Spanish roots firsthand, and both hosts reflect on why Black audiences often recognize cultural intention even when others miss it.The episode closes with a larger question: after Kendrick and Bad Bunny, has the halftime show permanently shifted from entertainment to cultural statement—and if so, what comes next?
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The Idea Of... Grammy Darlings 04.02.2026 1sa 20dkAward Season is upon us! Bassey and Mike start the episode exactly how real life starts: with chargers, chaos, and a lot going on. From there, they slide into a layered “life update” convo—Mike talks about setting intentions for the year and learning how to be more direct without losing his humanity, while Bassey opens up about health, surgery, motivation, and the pressure of big birthdays. The episode moves through aging and body changes (and the very real emotional side of watching icons like Bobby Brown navigate time), fitness journeys, and what it means to take care of yourself so you can keep living with range.Then it’s Grammy time: Trevor Noah’s hosting energy, Kendrick’s wins and the “Grammy darling” conversation, name recognition vs. merit, campaigning, and whether the system has a regional bias. They also celebrate the moments that felt black as hell—especially the tribute that had them overwhelmed in the best way.
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