About this episode
This week on Black Art Is Lit, we open Bling by Erika Kennedy and step straight into the early 2000s music industry, a moment when fame, ambition, and access blurred together.Published in 2004, Bling follows Mimi, a young singer suddenly pulled from a group and positioned for solo stardom after a powerful industry decision shifts everything. In this opening chapter, we’re introduced to the gatekeepers, the would-be managers, and the quiet breakaways that often come before success. The story mirrors a familiar era in hip-hop history, where vision, control, and image shaped careers just as much as talent did.In this episode, we read the first chapter and reflect on selection versus agency, loyalty versus leverage, and what it meant to be “chosen” in the early days of hip-hop’s commercial rise. Without gossip, the cultural parallels are impossible to miss.🎧 Black Art Is Lit is a culture podcast where each week we read the first chapter of a book that shaped the culture — and unpack the conversations it opens.