• FITNESS
  • Food
  • Beauty
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Athleisure Studio
  • Athleisure List
  • THIS ISSUE
  • Athleisure TV
  • The Latest
  • ARCHIVE
  • About
  • Press
  • Connect
Menu

Athleisure Mag™ | Athleisure Culture

ATHLEISURE MAG™ | Athleisure Culture
  • FITNESS
  • Food
  • Beauty
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • Athleisure Studio
  • Athleisure List
  • THIS ISSUE
  • Athleisure TV
  • The Latest
  • ARCHIVE
  • About
  • Press
  • Connect
Skip Marley 9PLAYLIST

9PLAYLIST | SKIP MARLEY

July 9, 2022

Read the JUN ISSUE #78 of Athleisure Mag and see 9PLAYLIST | Skip Marley in mag.

Featured
9PL WLM SEP 25.png
9PLAYLIST, AM, Sep 2025, Food, Celebrity
9PLAYLIST | WITH LOVE, MEGHAN
9PLAYLIST, AM, Sep 2025, Food, Celebrity
9PLAYLIST, AM, Sep 2025, Food, Celebrity
9PLM AM AUG 25 RT (1).png
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Music, 9PLAYLIST, 9PLAYLIST MULTI
9PLAYLIST MULTI | ROB THOMAS
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Music, 9PLAYLIST, 9PLAYLIST MULTI
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Music, 9PLAYLIST, 9PLAYLIST MULTI
9PL TM JUL 25 .png
9PLAYLIST, AM, Athletes, Jul 2025, Music, Sports, Pickleball, Tennis
9PLAYLIST | TYSON MCGUFFIN
9PLAYLIST, AM, Athletes, Jul 2025, Music, Sports, Pickleball, Tennis
9PLAYLIST, AM, Athletes, Jul 2025, Music, Sports, Pickleball, Tennis
In 9PLAYLIST, Jun 2022, Music, Editor Picks Tags 9PLAYLIST, Music, Skip Marley
Comment

ATHLEISURE MAG | #78 JUN ISSUE

June 30, 2022

In this month’s issue, our cover story is with Kenji Fujishima, Head of Cultivation at Dr. Greenthumb and Insane OG Brand. We talk about how he befriended B-Real (SEP ISSUE #69 cover) over martial arts training, being on the road with Cypress Hill and growing cannabis together to become legends in cannabis culture. We also talk with Nicky Rodriguez, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu’s star who’s known as the Black Belt Slayer. He talks about upcoming matches and his fight with Team Insane at Subversiv 7 this past month. We catch up with storyteller, actress and producer Alysia Reiner (JUN ISSUE #18 cover) who talks with us about how she approaches her projects, being in Ms. Marvel, upcoming projects and how we can maintain the need for wonder. We also catch up with Chef David Rose who talks with us about his love for grilling, how cookbook EGGIN’ and how we can make sure that we’re always grill ready with Omaha Steaks. We also talk with pop artist Betty Who and Executive Producer and Showrunner of Prime Video’s The One That Got Away, Elan Gale. We talk about this social experiment series which allows for those to find if someone in their past may be the one for them. We talk about the show, the importance of relationships and what this show aims to represent.

This month’s 9PLAYLIST comes from EDM DJ/Producers Aname as well as Skip Marley. Our 9DRIP comes from our cover, Kenji Fujishima. Our 63MIX ROUTIN3S comes EDM DJ/Producer Plastic Funk. Our 9LIST STORI3S comes from Alysia Reiner.

Our monthly feature, The Art of the Snack shares Indian restaurant, Jaz in NYC’s Hell’s Kitchen. This month’s Athleisure List comes from Atzaro Beach in Ibiza and Bagel + Slice in LA. As always, we have our monthly roundups of some of our favorite finds.

Read the JUN ISSUE #78 here.

Featured
AM NOV FRONT COVER 3.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #119 | JJ JULIUS SON
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
AM SEP FRONT COVER.png
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
ATHLEISURE MAG #117 | JAY "JEEZY" JENKINS
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
In Jun 2022, AM, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues Tags Kenji Fujishima, Insane Brand, Alysia Reiner, Ms. Marvel, Chef David Rose, The One That Got Away, Elan Gale, Betty Who
Comment

STORING SEEDS | JB SMOOVE

June 26, 2022

We're all about big energy while keeping it real and J.B. Smoove is both of these! You know when you see him on the stage or on your screen that he's going to make you laugh, think and give you his philosphy on life and how to approach it - all while rocking great style. We've enjoyed seeing him in a number of films from Pootie Tang, Barbershop: The Next Cut, the Spider-Man franchise and more. He's also been in numerous TV series from The Last O.G., Woke and of course Curb Your Enthusiasm. He's someone that you see everywhere and yet he aligns perfectly with the projects that we see him in.

We had to check in with him to find out about his journey from being a standup comedian, SNL writer and performer, actor and more. He talked about how he honed his skills, how he navigates his career and what he has coming up.

ATHLEISURE MAG: What was the moment that you realized that you wanted to be an entertainer?

J.B. SMOOVE: You know, I’ve always been the one – some people have a high threshold for pain, I think that that’s what it is. In simple terms, I think that I have this thing and feel for people when I know that people need laughter and they need communication. They need all these fun things that make life easier.

I remember one time that I missed my flight because somebody stopped me and I could tell that this dude needed somebody to talk to about his dreams and I missed my damn flight! I felt like, damn I’ll get the next one. In that moment, it just felt like something was - like sometimes you just have to talk people off the ledge in some sense you know? It’s their life, it’s their everything, but sometimes what you provide for people is something that you can’t buy. I think that shows that you’re a real person and it shows you that you can reach out and touch that person. What I promote is real!

You know how fans get, sometimes they don’t believe that you are who you are or who they think you are, or who they perceive you to be by what you do on camera. You know how it is. Nowadays, the world is faster, people promote certain things, but that’s not who they are. They do things to be accepted, to be liked, to be all these things and it’s not real and it doesn’t come from a real place. I think for me and my upbringing from where I started from is something that I can appreciate more. I’m talking about the days from pulling over and having to make a phone call at the phone booth! Those days, it was more hands on – you know what I mean? There’s automatic transmission and then there’s manual – I’m a manual dude! I got to switch gears for myself. I need to know when to slow down and when to hit the brake! Sometimes I don’t brake at all! Most of the time, I’m just changing gears because brake means that I’m going to stop. When you’re changing gears, I’m just navigating through it! You know what I mean? It’s different!

AM: And it is different!

I think that you have such an authenticity about you and that’s why people love being able to see you. It’s great to see you popping on screen in your shows or starting up my Mon with your podcast. I know that when I hear you, I’m going to get you as an authentic full experience!

JBS: Yes indeed! And that, you know to answer the question – that is something that I do from the heart and for the love of what I do! For the love of being in the moment, for the love of something to hold onto that knowledge and to hold onto that laughter! Holding onto things that makes me happy – it’s the ability to benefit the world or the people who also want to do what I do or just want to be inspired. I do think that it applies to every walk of life no matter what your occupation is or what your dreams are, the same process applies. Come early, stay late, be courteous to people, respect their dreams and what they're trying to do – don’t waste their time, don’t waste your time. There are certain things that will apply always. I think that is the core of growth and the core of achieving your dreams. What I want to do is to be consistent. I want to give this laughter away whether you’re paying me or if you’re not paying for it. I don’t get paid if I stop and talk to someone for half an hour and miss my flight. I can’t say, “oh I got paid for that so it’s ok I missed the flight.” No, I’m doing that because I felt something for this person in that moment that they needed this quick little talk and it’s free.

AM: How did you hone your craft?

JBS: You know, being in real situations. Real situations are a comedian's food. That’s our food. Real situations, you can elaborate on real situations and make them funny. You can take pain and make it funny. You can take funny and make it funnier. So you know, it’s all in the construction of the joke, the construction of the situation, the construction of the scene – you know? That is where it comes from. I always say that anyone can tell a joke if I have to use what I do for a living. Anybody can tell a joke, but not everyone can sell a joke. Everybody can’t sell it – you can tell it – but everybody can’t sell it!

AM: I am the worst joke teller because I forget the parts, I have to stop and reset it – so I definitely can’t sell it.

JBS: Oh yeah, that’s true!

AM: I remember when I first saw you for Def Comedy Jam as a standup comedian and then you went onto SNL as a writer and a performer! What was that experience like?

JBS: To me it was great. But again, you gotta make decisions on your movement because when I started on Def Comedy Jam and I was on BET and did all of these TV shows, guest-starring, touring in colleges, those road gigs, tours and all of the things that I have done, making the decision to move to LA, doing all of that stuff and making the decision to go on Cedric the Entertainer Presents, getting on Lyricists Lounge Show – doing guest spots on TV shows, doing my first CBS deal – all those things I’ve done.

Then to sit there and say, “ok I have this audition for SNL.” My second time auditioning for SNL actually. I did it twice. I was going for cast member. For me, you sit there and you say, I’m going in for cast member and I didn’t make the show as a performer but I ended up making the show as a writer. Even when I got the offer for a writer, I was in the middle of a deal for a host of stuff of my own so I had to say do I put myself on hold to work on Saturday Night Live? So I sat and thought about it and decided that it would look great on my resume so I said, as more of a business move. I know that the percentage of shows that actually air are so small and back then it was REALLY hard! Back then we didn’t have streaming services. We didn’t have Netflix and Hulu and Amazon. We didn’t have any of this stuff. It was just regular TV, HBO and Showtime. We had the premium channels but those opportunities, we didn’t have as big of a chance to get someone to air. I had to sit there and say, “ok. If I put this to the side and do this, how can I make this work for me?” I said, I will do this and then figure it out later. But this is going to look great on my resume – SNL.

So I came to SNL and when I got here, I ended up doing sketches, I ended up being a writer on the show, I ended up doing monologues on the show and ended up doing all these amazing things for the show and doing warmups for my 3 seasons. So I ended up doing a lot of stuff and that was 4 different checks – that’s a NY hustle right there! But that’s also being someone who has different skills – who can be a utility person – 4 things at the same time. That helps me and shows how I can be versatile. I can do 4 jobs at once.

For me, it worked out perfect. I had the chance to be JB, I had a chance to be someone who's able to do all of these amazing things and at the same time, it allowed me to work and build my resume and network with these amazing guest stars of the show. So it was definitely a process. I can’t say that it was easy – it was hard work because you’re talking about someone going from being a standup comedian to being a writer. I wasn’t a traditional writer. I improvise a lot in my standup so for me it made more sense to take it, do all of my skills under one roof. I did 3 seasons over there and it looks great on my resume, so it served its purpose doing it that way.

None of those other opportunities went away, the opportunities for TV shows were still there, the opportunities for movies were still there and I was still able to leave there and do a bunch of movies – The Sitter, Hall Pass, Date Night all in a row. I got a chance to do all of that stuff and when I was working over at SNL, I did Conan O’Brien. Conan O’Brien’s show, he was still at NBC at that time and I did his show as a sketch artist 10 times. So I had a chance to get from behind the desk typing jokes, go downstairs on the elevator and do a sketch with Conan and then get back in the elevator upstairs to finish working. I got a chance to do so many things while I was over there. Again, it wasn’t easy and it was humbling in some sense. You’re in control on stage but you’re not in control on this show which is live TV. Everything is just fast. You have to sit there and write all night long for these sketches and it’s humbling because it’s like your trying out for the cheerleading team or the football team and you go in the hallway and they put the list up of who made the team. There was a piece of paper in the hallway that said whose sketch made it and you had to read that list on the wall and you’d say, "damn, I didn’t get it."

AM: Oh wow that happened every week!

JBS: It was an amazing experience and I wouldn't change that for anything in the world. I would have rather taken this process that I have already completed rather than this fast and quick process that these young people are doing now. I had more time to smell the roses.

AM: I’m a huge fan of Curb Your Enthusiasm, you joined it in the 6th season and I know that the 12th season is coming back, how did you get attached to the show and how involved are you in creating and evolving the character of Leon Black?

JBS: Oh man! My wife told me that I was going to be on the show. We would watch the show, we loved the show and even when I was on SNL, we would talk about the show on our writing days. One day I said, that I would love to be on the show and man I got the opportunity. I always say that one thing has to step out of the way in order for something else to come through. I didn’t get renewed for my 4th season of SNL and I literally went from coming to LA for a friend’s memorial – my friend Oji Pierce who composed and produced This is How We Do It and I was there for his memorial service. I make moves because I trust my process and I trust my talent. I know I always bounce back from things. I had actually fired my agent – I fired every damn body! I knew that once I fired them, I wasn’t going back to SNL.

The agents are the ones that fight for you and keep you hired. They are the ones that call and make it go. I said, well if I fire my agent who I am not happy with, I know for a fact, that I will not get spoken about and they’re not going to push to keep me on the show if they’re not getting paid to do what they do. So I said, “well, I’m going to see what happens.” I fired them and I knew I wasn’t going back and for a fact that with no one there to speak for me, there was no way that I was going to be able to stay at SNL.

So I took that chance, I rolled the dice and I took that chance. Low and behold, I didn’t get renewed. I was out on the road for a month doing standup. Oji passed away, my wife already told me that I was going to be on Curb Your Enthusiasm and I got a phone call of my friend passing and I went to LA for one day. I signed with a new agent before I went to LA, went to meet them when I got to LA and one of the agents said, “man, I have an audition for you – how long are you in town?” I told them that I had come into town for 1 day to pay respects to my buddy and I was going back tomorrow.

He said he had an audition for me and I asked him what it was for and he said, Curb Your Enthusiasm. I said, “get out of here, you have to be kidding me!” I went on the audition and you know, I did what I did well which is improvise which takes these scenes and make them my own. Let me do what I do because I’m going to do what I do! Me and Larry hit it off in the audition. We hit it off to the point where we were in there laughing our butts off and having a good time. We became friends that day. I left there and said to myself, if someone gets that job, God bless them, but me and that man had a great time! That leads to me being on the greatest improvised show to me in TV history.

So, my process is, I’m an improv guy. I have been improvising my entire life and I think that that’s a life choice too. Improvising gives you the ability to change your mind in the moment where no one will ever know that you changed your mind! Improvising will give you the ability to sway someone in a different direction. Improvising gives you a way of reading energy and reading their body language – all of these great things that you can do by knowing the process and being able to improvise. It pays off in life, it pays off in acting, it pays off in real estate sales if you’re a realtor. You can be anyone you want, but if you improvise just a little bit, it allows you to pick up little nuances about people that you can use to your advantage.

I think that that’s what helps me so much having to improvise in my standup career so much. It really allowed me to take that skill and to use that 1 little improv class that I took that summer before I started doing standup. I would tell anyone that they should take improv – I don’t care what you do. That allowed me to really hone in on my acting skills and to get in the moment which makes my standup shows so different. I’m literally listening to what this particular audience is laughing at which is what I apply to Curb Your Enthusiasm.

Whatever is working for my character and sometimes, I don’t know what I will do with my character. Sometimes I don’t know. Sometimes I just go with what the scene is and I take that. Sometimes what I do is, I will decide in the moment if I want to have Larry’s back or if I want to go against Larry. I decide right there, do I want to be on Larry’s side or will I go against him – what is the better argument here? I really decide in the moment and it gives me the upper hand and let’s me drive that. It also lets me give him something new that he doesn’t know about the character every time I work with him. That way, I create these forks in the road – these branches to the character. My character has never been defined. We still don’t know where the hell he came from – so for me to be able to make that up over the 6 seasons that I have been there is great! I can still tell people a little more that they need to know about Leon which makes it fun!

AM: You have been in so many series and films from Spider-Man movies, co-hosting – what do you look for when you’re sent projects and what goes into your decision on whether you’re going to participate in something?

JBS: I go by this, which works for me: I read the script of course. If they specifically call for me, I’m kind of past the audition process at this point because I am established all these years. I get offers for things and I can say yay or nay to the offer. Once in a while, I have to read for something – once in a while. It could be something very specific or something that is outside of my lane and it’s to show that I can do something if it’s a drama or something like that. If I meet a director or a producer and they ask for me specifically and they say that they want me to make my character my own, that is the most precious words that I can hear for an improv guy or a guy that they can trust to do that character. When they say, “make the character your own JB. We love your voice and your sensibilities and we love what you do and we want you to be that character and vice versa.” So I’m like cool, let me make it my own and I take that character and I make them my own. This happens in movies, in TV, in commercials, in animations – it doesn’t matter. They let me do me and if it’s animations, I say let me see the character so I can see who it is and then I can take that character and then I can make that character my own.

AM: You also have Four Courses with JB Smoove, why did you want to do this?

JBS: You know what. I love talk shows and I love talking to friends and I’m good at it. I love to sit there and kick it and have a convo with people and that is what makes interviewing people so fun. I’m curious of the process. I’m curious about your path and I’m really engaged. I love to laugh and I love the stories. I love to tell stories and I love to be interviewed while I’m interviewing – you know what I’m saying? I think that’s fun. I love to be interviewed while I’m interviewing.

AM: Last year when May I Elaborate? first came out, I knew I would be obsessed with it. I love hearing you and Miles Grose talking back and forth about various topics and it was a great way to start my day. Why did you want to create this podcast show?

JBS: You know what? It was one of those things where everybody was doing podcasts. I knew that if everyone was doing podcasts, I had to do something that was funny, insightful and I like to give what I call, broken wisdom sometimes! I feel like there’s more than 1 way for you to be able to get it. For some people, you have to shake it out of their ass and then you have to shake it into them and then shake whatever the issue is out of them at the same time. I think of that tough hard love in a funny way and in a way that makes sense to people. I’m giving it to you in a way that is like a friend. I’m not a doctor, I don’t know it all, I know a lot about everything and a little bit about nothing. You need that balance! You have to tell people sometimes that, “I’m not sure but God damn, I know you got to give it to them like that and here’s what I would do.” I can’t say it’s going to work, but this is what I would do and this is how to get the process started. You sometimes have to get out of your own fucking head. If I can get you out of your own head, I’m halfway there! That’s the block right there. You’re like a controlled schizophrenic – you are battling yourself in your own head. Different versions of you don’t know how to handle certain things. So you’re stuck in a certain place and you just need to find some kind of way to talk to the right person in your head to get it moving in the right direction.

AM: With the 2nd season dropping last month, what can we expect for the season going forward? Last season was really long as it was everyday which was great. This season, the format is a little different with it being on Mon and you guys have more personalities that are joining you each week like Tiffany Haddish, Kevin Nealon and Randall Park. What can we look forward to?

JBS: In the 1st season, we did almost 190 episodes! Which is crazy! So, we will more than likely maybe transition this amazing podcast into possibly an animated version – we’re not sure yet. We think that the wisdom is funny enough and the visuals that I give Miles and that Miles gives me, you always want to see it and I think that there is a funny way to present this show.

It’s so funny, we got nominated for a podcast award but guess what? We didn’t get nominated in the comedy category. We got nominated in the inspirational and religious category which is crazy! We got nominated with all the gurus and people who are speaking real shit. We’re taking real things and just elaborating on them in a funny way and we get put in that category instead of a comedy one which is nutso! It’s a little bit flattering in some ways to be nominated with all of these amazing people who are really speaking truth to the world. But it’s also like, damn, is what we’re saying not funny or are we ambidextrous - we’re left and right-handed? Can we do both? We have found a way to do both!

Without Miles, Miles is the glue. He is the voice of reason. He is the funniest dude ever. He does the research, I elaborate and he pulls me back. So, we have something that works well and yes, we’re not sure what we’re going to do with the show yet. We have so many ideas on our slate that it’s unlimited amount of ideas that we have that we can do and we haven't locked in what we’re going to do with May I Elaborate?, but we’re not locked out of it either. So, we’ve done a lot of episodes. For this type of show, we’re not just turning it on and talking. You have to do a little research and it takes a lot of time and looking at the perfect quote and affirmation and using it to our advantage.

AM: For last season, it was just the perfect show especially in the midst of the pandemic. To be able to have those lighter moments that would come in and to start the day off with that, it allowed us to have some laughs before we delved into the work here at Athleisure Mag whether it was booking, virtual shoots, meetings etc and it created a part of the day that we looked forward to. That was definitely special but in general. I’m always excited to hear what you will elaborate on?

JBS: Yes and we’re looking forward to doing in some capacity – anything that we can do to help people and to keep things fresh and fun. As little work as possible, but as much of a reward as possible.

AM: You have also had amazing partnerships whether it’s with Crown Royale, Caesars or JUST Egg to name a few. What do you look for when it comes to brand alignment that wants to connect with you? How do you decide what you want to lend your brand to?

JBS: I kind of go with the notion of to talk about what I know about – that way I’m not ever in a weird position. I’m a vegan so I love the JUST Egg relationship that we have. I entertain a lot so I did love my Crown Royale campaign. Every campaign I have ever done, I have always found a way to make it something that I love and that I can put a lot of energy into it and I use it. We were doing this branded entertainment with these companies for years before anybody was really doing it. I did a Mountain Dew campaign years ago – Mountain Dew White Out campaign – you name it. This Caesars one is just another one that I love. I love taking on characters. I like characters. I grew up in the age where commercials were about the characters – the “Where’s the Beef” lady, I love commercials man –

AM: The “Time to Make the Donuts” man.

JBS: Oh yes – time to make the donuts! I love that stuff! I always loved characters and reoccurring cool characters.

AM: We love your Caesars Sportsbook one. Like you said the fact that it’s characters, but also – we love football. We’re in NY, but also – I love football. We’re in NY, but I’m originally from Indiana so when you had the Mannings – that was exciting and then of course, Halle Berry in the commercial! How did this come back with you partnering with them and what will you do with them in terms of ongoing work?

JBS: Well, I actually did a commercial years ago a with a director. The commercial never made it to air, but what happened was, the director remembered me and he loved the commercial even though it never aired and he reached out. He said he was doing a campaign with Caesars and he didn’t see anyone else being Caesar but me! He liked my voice, my delivery and he knew it would be fun. He said he couldn’t imagine anyone else embodying this emperor than me. He said that he thought that it would be amazing and wanted to know if I wanted to do it and I thought it sounded hilarious. He said if we were going to do it, we were going to start the campaign and he had already sold me to Caesars and let them know that they would be blown away by me and that I was his guy. He told them that no one would be able to do this better than JB.

Now that goes back to what we were talking about – coming early, staying late, being courteous, not being a diva – all those things. I’m a seed planter. This is another version of planting seeds for later. I’m the squirrel who has those acorns and buries them for winter. That’s why my phone rings constantly. I’m always planting seeds and I have tons of seeds still planted. My phone rings and it keeps going and that’s why it keeps ringing because I have already planted these seeds and relationships that I have built already. That’s how I keep busy. People say all the time, “man, you’re everywhere – but you don't see everything at one time.” Everything is spread out over time because I have planted seeds and projects and it’s going to come out at this time and then this project over here will come out after this project at this time. My visibility is always up there and that’s the fun part.

AM: You’re an Emmy award winner, author, comedian, actor, producer, podcast host - you do so many things. What else do you want to add to your portfolio that you have yet to do?

JBS: I know at some point, I will get behind the camera and direct something. We started a brand new company called Alternate Side Productions, we’re going to build an amazing brand, an amazing company which will be off the hook. We’re going to do some amazing projects under the JB Smoove banner with brand and style and the things that we love to do. We’re going to build that and I’m going to put a lot of people to work. I think that that’s what needs to be done to build a production company. I want to drop some amazing products in the vegan lane. I’m a vegan. That’s going to be another thing. I have been doing the vegan thing for a long time. A lot of people are just jumping on the bandwagon, but you know, I let them do what they do. I’ve been vegan for awhile and I have been harping on this for awhile now and linking myself with other vegan products. A lot of people are just getting onto it and you know, it’s all good. I’m already established in this lane so it’s another thing and extension of what I do. It’s also another extension of caring about people’s health and my own health.

AM: What led you to want to become a vegan?

JBS: Well my wife has been a vegan for forever. My wife is a musical artist and has been a vegan forever and hasn’t had meat in something like 27 years. So, she was a vegetarian for awhile, then a vegan and now she is a raw vegan which is a whole other level. She’s doing that now, but I’m a straight vegan. I’ve been part-time/full-time for a long time. I was part-time vegan and full-time carnivore for awhile. Now, for the past 4 years, I have been a straight vegan and it’s been great.

AM: As you say, you’re always planting seeds. Do you have upcoming projects that you are able to share that we should keep an eye out for?

JBS: Not right now. The main thing I’m working on right now is of course, you know that Curbed got greenlit for season 12, I have a bunch of animated shows coming out, I have the new season of Woke out right now and I’m recording something right now for a video game. I’m also recording 2 other animated shows at the same time. I’m also building this company. I’m resuming my standup tour and I’m also doing a special and hoping that I can get it done by the top of the year. There’s a bunch of cool things that I am working on and I’m very happy with my process. I like to be the steady tortoise sometimes – I don’t need everything at one time, I still love my private time so that I can RV. I still love to do all the fun things that I love to do. As I said, my wife is also out there doing her thing with her new studio. We’re doing so many cool things and also we’re building some companies outside of entertainment. Yeah we’re just doing cool stuff and things that are off our interest list.

AM: You have great style that's well accessorized. As a stylist in addition to my role as a Co-Founder and Style Director at Athleisure Mag, how do you define your style and would you ever create your own clothing/accessory line?

JBS: I love style! I grew up in an era where you build your outfits from the shoes up. You get a nice pair of reliable comfortable shoes because the first thing people do is look down at your feet and then they work their way up to your eyes.

I do have some amazing things coming out. I’m working on a watch, I’m working on a hat line and some amazing bracelets. I’m working on a few amazing things. Yes, all of these things I plan on dropping before the new year and this is going to be some amazing accessories. Apparel is a little hard, but accessories are something that I love and I love things that I consider conversation pieces. A conversation piece will get you in the door and you can meet your new boss. It just takes the interview and this changes the meeting and the relationship and takes it to something different. It gets you in differently.

I tell young people all the time, create a conversation piece whether it's a rose or a flower in your lapel – something that people look at and think, “wow, I like his style. I like what he represents.” That is the #1 thing – a shiny pair of shoes, a pocket square – something amazing on you to create and allow people to keep their eyes on you. It creates that question of, what kind of rose is that, what kind of pocket square – who made that tie? All these things are things that people look at and allows them to reaffirm who you are!

AM: I couldn’t agree more – statement pieces are so essential!

With everything that you have done, what do you want your legacy to be?

JBS: I just want to be known as a chance taker. I believe in getting as many at bats as possible. Get as many swings at the ball as possible. I have always been one where I have had some stumbles, but I have a bad memory of those stumbles. I tell people all the time that life keeps going – it keeps moving. To be free of mind and to be free to take as many swings as possible and to know that you can change your mind. Take as many swings of the things that you want to do in this life as possible. The more swings you get, the more hits you get. If you’re sitting on your hands, you can’t get the swings! I always say, get those swings in, figure out your progress, figure out what you want to do and keep swinging at it. I want to be known as chance taker, a guy that always walks on a tightrope with no net. I always feel like I got good balance. With good balance, you never worry about falling - you know what I mean? If you worry about falling, you worry about standing up.

IG @ohsnapjbsmoove

PHOTOGRAPHY CREDITS | PG 30 - 31 Harrison O'Brien | PG 33 + 43 Noemad | PG 34, 50 + PG 73 - 75 9DRIP Storm Santo | PG 36 - 40 Curb Your Enthusiasm HBO/John P Johnson | PG 44 - 47 Luis Ruiz | PG 49 The Last O.G. TBS/Cara Howe |

Read the MAY ISSUE #77 of Athleisure Mag and see STORING SEEDS | JB Smoove in mag.

Featured
Screenshot (2303).png
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
AWARDS SEASON | GOLDEN GLOBES NOMINATIONS
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
OS Food Network (1).png
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
FOOD NETWORK NYCWFF 2025
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
OS Megan Eugenio (2).png
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
FOR THE LOVE OF THE GAME | MEGAN EUGENIO
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
In AM, May 2022, Celebrity, TV Show, Editor Picks Tags JB Smoove, Larry David, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Pootie Tang, Barbershop: The Next Cut, Spider-Man, The Last OG, Woke, SNL, Saturday Night Live, May I Elaborate?, BET, Lyricists Lounge Show, Cedric the Entertainer Presents, CBS, Netflix, Hulu, AMazon, Showtime, vegan, HBO, The Sitter, Hall Pass, Date Night, Conan O'Brien, NBC, This is How We Do It, Oji Pierce, Larry, Leon Black, podcast, Four Courses with JB Smoove, Miles Grose, Tiffany Haddish, Kevin Nealon, Randall Park, Caesars, Crown Royale, JUST Egg, Mountain Dew, Mountain Dew White Out Campaign, Caesars Sportsbook, Halle Berry, Emmy
Comment

BACK AT THE PYNK

June 3, 2022

In 2020, the first season of P-Valley, an adaptation of Olivier Award, Pulitzer Prize winning and 2X TONY nominated playwright Katori Hall's (The Mountaintop, Tina: Tina Turner Musical, The Hot Wing King) play Pussy Valley, premiered on STARZ. Katori serves as the Executive Producer and showrunner for this series. This series takes us to the Mississippi Delta where local politics, a strip club and the need to elevate in society come to a head.

The sophomore season of P-Valley begins June 3rd and we caught up with some of our faves of The Pynk in Chucalissa, Mississippi. In our roundtable, we talked with Elarica Johnson (Eastenders, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, A Discovery of Witches) who plays Autumn that we meet in the first season after running from her problems to the town of Chucalissa and becomes a dancer at The Pynk; Parker Sawyers (Succession, Snowden, A Discovery of Witches) who plays Andre Watkins who is an an associate at a commercial investment company trying to secure land for The Promised Land Casino and Resort. We also talk with Shannon Thornton (POWER, Dynasty, Inventing Anna) who plays Keyshawn a dancer at The Pynk who is also making her debut as an artist and J. Alphonse Nicholson (Mr. Robot, Self Made: Inspired by the Life of Madame C.J. Walker, Just Mercy) who plays the up and coming rapper, Lil' Murda.

We find out how they came to this series, why this show is powerful and what can we expect as we head into season 2.

ATHLEISURE MAG: It’s so great to talk to you guys and we've been a fan of your work in this series as well as other projects that you have been attached to. Before we delve into P-Valley and the upcoming season, what led you to want to be an actor?

ELARICA JOHNSON: Ohh I like this question! I was that performing artist kid – the annoying one that has to do performances at the age of 4 or 5. Then I watched Annie in the theater and saw this little girl doing this performance and I was like, oh my God, I want to do that. And then I think that the biggest part is the storytelling. I loved reading stories when I was younger and the fact that I can dress up and be whoever is handed to me and to be who I want to be, that’s the most incredible thing.

PARKER SAWYERS: What’s the expression? Nothing is as queer as folk – nothing is as queer as people? I just love exploring humans man! We’re just a strange animal! So far, my degrees are in philosophy and psychology. I like thinking and reading about people and then I didn’t start acting until I was 27. I’ve always been a keen observer of human behavior and just like – what? Why is that? I’ll give you an example. I was surprised by Katori, I think she had been out of her hometown for awhile like a decade! She had been in NY like Columbia, Harvard and this kind of stuff. And then, her accent is still quite strong! I love thinking about how she loves her hometown and she’s seeing all the stars, her place, the dialect – she loves it so much! That accent isn’t going anywhere! Whereas some other people, they move and they want to assimilate – I live in London and some Americans, they want to feel part of the culture and it’s not on purpose but their accent will start to go British. I love thinking about stuff like that and then putting it on screen whenever I get the chance.

SHANNON THORNTON: I wanted to be an actor since I was a kid. I have always just been a creative person. I don’t know if it’s because I’m a lefty as we’re always creatively and artistically inclined. I don’t know if that has something to do with it as well! I’ve always had a passion for drawing, I was involved in everything band, choir, drama club, African dance, ballet – anything that just involved being on the stage and performing. I was just a part of it and ever since I was a kid from my first play in middle school, I’ve always wanted to create and to express myself artistically. I really couldn’t see myself doing anything but what I am doing right now.

J. ALPHONSE NICHOLSON: For me, it came later in life. I’m a musician first, I’ve been a percussionist my entire life, but I will say that I have had a lot of artistic influences growing up from my mom writing church plays to being on a step team in high school to being in a marching band – so the showmanship was always there. Once I got to college, I was 18 at North Carolina Central University thinking that I was going to be a band teacher, I had a wonderful teacher come up to me and said that I should pursue this theater course and to audition for this play because I had a great personality. I did it and I fell in love with it. Here we are now at 32, 12 years later and I found a lot of success through storytelling and it just grew on me and I knew it was something that I was going to do for the rest of my life outside of any of my other endeavors. Storytelling is important to me and once you realize that you have a gift for it, it doesn’t feel like work – it’s something that you want to keep going after.

AM: I love that. What drew you guys to wanting to be part of P-Valley? I remember hearing about it before the 1st season dropped and I was excited. It sounded like it was going to be really good and when it came on, I was obsessed with this show and the characters! It was everything that I could have imagined and more.

EJ: I mean, I read this script and I fell in love very early on! I was like, this one’s for me – yes! The writing is amazing and Katori does an incredible job with the characters and the space and even the language – I had never seen it before. I knew that it had to be mine. You don’t see scripts like that very often.

PS: The same, the same! Elarica already said it, but as actors, I don’t know how many scripts we get and especially during busy months of the year, it can be 5 or 6 a week. I mean a lot of them look the same and I get confused! I’m like, did you already send me this one? But when I got P-Valley, it was so new and fresh – I got it and I understood it! Oftentimes, I don’t understand some of the humor written down or something in the script. But this one I was like – oh that’s funny, I got this, that’s cool. Reading it I was like, that’s interesting and I know that and I know that world – a little bit. So that’s just something that just leapt out.

ST: The writing is what pulled me in for sure. As soon as you read the script, I remember going into my manager’s office one day to put myself on tape for another project that I was auditioning for and they were like, “listen, this came across our desk and I know you don’t do nudity and that you don’t play this type of character, but it’s definitely worth a read.” I read it on the train ride home as I was living in NY at the time and I cried. It was so beautiful and I hadn’t come across anything like that in my entire career up until that point. The characters are just so beautifully fleshed out and complicated and this world is just so real and familiar to me. I absolutely, despite my reservations, absolutely had to at least throw my hat into the ring and see.

JAN: Same! Katori Hall! The writing! I knew of her genius as a writer prior to coming to P-Valley. We both come from the theater world in NY. So I was very fond of her work and when the opportunity came to work with her and to have an opportunity to audition, we went for it and when you add in the complexity of playing Lil’ Murda right? Him being a closeted rapper so as a heterosexual man, you get a little apprehensive and say, “hey is this a story that I feel comfortable in telling” and then you do it and it's so rewarding! For me, I feel like I have played a part in being an ally in a really dope community and that’s what drew me to it. 1. being an ally through storytelling and then 2. just this incredible writing by Pulitzer prize winning Katori Hall.

AM: That's great. One of the things that we love about this show is that everyone is haunted by something in this series and they are trying to escape to other things in their life. Where did we leave your characters last season and where do we pick up with them again going into the 2nd season which launches next month?

EJ: I mean, when we left my character Autumn, she was at the auction house and I know that there are a lot of questions from fans on where is that situation now and does she really own this space now and what is her relationship like with Uncle Clifford (Nicco Annan – Snowfall, This is Us, Claws)? I can tell you that it’s very bumpy! She does own the majority of The Pynk and is in partnership with Uncle Clifford and she is the boss now. This is a huge difference from her 1st season but the space belonged to Uncle Clifford for so long and has been in her life for so long that this battle has been going on for a very long time.

PS: With Andre, we’ve seen him where we left off with him failing at a mission again. We open up with him out of a job and sort of lost. And in my mind, a bit of a bum, overgrown and he’s stopped grooming himself and maybe stopped showering and maybe stopped washing his legs – I don’t know! He’s a bit lost, but then there’s something that happens that gets him out of it. Not immediately but it starts him on his path to getting back to himself. But he does it quickly and it’s pretty impressive.

ST: Season 1 as far as Keyshawn, you last see her at The Pynk, she had at this point, pulled a gun on Diamond (Tyler Lepley - 90210, The Haves and the Have Nots, Harlem) to protect her abusive boyfriend Derrick (Jordan Cox - TURN: Washington's Spies, Dynasty, The Outsider). We pick up where we left off, maybe a few months later where we are now in the throws of a pandemic and Keyshawn is dealing with the consequences of her actions. We see in season 2 whether or not she’s forgiven by Diamond or forgiven by her co-workers at The Pynk and where the relationship stands or goes with Derrick.

JAN: We find Lil’ Murda in a similar place at the end where he’s trying to figure him self out and to find himself. We absolutely find him in the same place that we’re at right now, dealing with a pandemic and dealing with how to cope with that. By the time we get to the end of season 2, we see him in a much more clearer space with himself but still complicated and complex none the less. We see him go through this incredible journey as a musician, a lover, a friend as a big brother to Keyshawn and how he moves through that space. So we find them in a multitude of different levels and a lot of different levels and then we find out how they even that playing field for themselves.

AM: The cast is really great and as you're watching the story unfold, there are interesting dynamics between them. In terms of Autumn and Andre, there is a tension between them will we continue to see that as we continue into the next season?

For Keyshawn and Lil' Murda, there is a great vibe into your characters in their relationship as friends and business partners. How will that evolve into the next season?

EJ: They do! They naturally have this thing. They’re like magnets and they’re drawn to each other regardless of what they’re going through as there’s always going to be something. I think that that is definitely a strong factor in their relationship. Yeah, we see that in this season coming.

JAN: For sure, you see it grow immensely. You see them become very fond of each other and what they are able to offer each other. Not only as business partners but as friends too right and as entertainers. I think that Lil’ Murda knows that he has to admit it to himself and his manager on the show that they can’t do that tour without Keyshawn. So we have to make that happen and then at the end of the day, I think that she knows and I don’t want to speak for her, but I feel like Lil’ Murda knows that Keyshawn knows that I am valuable to her. She feels like, “hey, he’s going to help me get out of these trenches – let’s go on tour and make that happen!”

I am valuable to her. She feels like, "hey, he’s going to help me get out of these trenches – let’s go on tour and make that happen!”

AM: Do you think that Keyshawn feels that way?

ST: Absolutely. Yes! We’re helping each other here. I think that being on tour is a kind of escapism and we were able to just escape reality for a little bit. It’s in the middle of the pandemic, but at the same time, we get to take that breather because we’re going on tour. You’ll see little texts and phone calls that bring us back to reality, but yeah absolutely.

AM: Looking past P-Valley, do you have any upcoming projects that you’re able to share that we can keep an eye out for?

PS: Oh man! The Lost Girls, that’s a movie that’s coming out. Look on my IMDB. Next week, I go off to Europe for a few months to do a couple of shows. I’m doing one for HBO Max and it’s set in the 1970s and it’s a spy thriller. Then I am also revisiting a character from a BBC show that I did in 2018 but because of the pandemic, we’re just getting around to being able to do the 2nd season! It’ll be cool, summer in Europe.

EJ: There’s nothing that I can talk about at the moment but I’m so thrilled to hear about what everyone is doing!

JAN: For sure, so I had an opportunity to work on a really cool project with John Boyega (Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens, Star Wars: Episode VIII – The Last Jedi, Star Wars: Episode IX – The Rise of Skywalker), Jamie Foxx (Horrible Bosses 2, Baby Driver, Spider-Man: No Way Home) and Teyonah Parris (If Beale Streets Could Talk, Wandavision, Candyman) called They Cloned Tyrone coming to Netflix this year. I have 2 other projects that are in production right now and they are producer projects as well called Shadowbox with Hill Harper (Homeland, Super Pumped: The Battle for Uber, The Good Doctor) and Joslyn Rose Lyons (Looking Glass, Waging Change, Truth to Power) she’s a writer and director of that project. So it’s in the festival circuit right now. The other 2 projects that I am doing right now haven’t had my characters be announced yet so I can’t wait for the audience and my fan base to get a hold of that!

ST: There are a couple of things that are in play right now, that I don’t want to jinx – they’re under wraps for the moment but I am very very excited and I don’t think that anyone will see me in quite this light before.

IG @pvalleystarz

@elarica

@parkersawyers

@shannonthornt_n

@j_fonz

PHOTOGRAPHY CREDITS | PG 100 - 111 STARZ/P-Valley

Read the MAY ISSUE #77 of Athleisure Mag and see BACK AT THE PYNK in mag.

Featured
Screenshot (2303).png
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
AWARDS SEASON | GOLDEN GLOBES NOMINATIONS
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
OS Food Network (1).png
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
FOOD NETWORK NYCWFF 2025
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
OS Megan Eugenio (2).png
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
FOR THE LOVE OF THE GAME | MEGAN EUGENIO
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
In AM, May 2022, TV Show, Celebrity, Editor Picks Tags Elarica Johnson, Parker Sawyers, Shannon Thornton, J Alphonse Nicholson, STARZ, P-Valley, The Pynk, Katori Hall, Olivier Award, Pulitzer Prize, TONY, The Mountaintop, Tina: Tina Turner Musical, The Hot Wing King, Pussy Valley, Eastenders, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, A Discovery of Witches, Succession, Snowden, POWER, Dynasty, Inventing Anna, Mr Robot, Self Made: Inspired by the Life of Madame C.J. Walker, Just Mercy, Lil' Murda, Uncle Clifford, Nicco Annan, Snowfall, This is Us, Claws, Diamond, Tyler Lepley, 90210, The Haves and the Have Nots, Harlem, Jordan Cox, TURN: Washington's Spies, The Outsider, The Lost Girls, IMDB, HBO Max, BBC, John Boyega, Star Wars, Teyonah Parris, Wandavision, Candyman, Hill Harper, Joslyn Rose Lyons
Comment

ATHLEISURE MAG | #77 MAY 2022

May 31, 2022

In this month’s issue, our cover story is with international superstar EDM DJ/Producer duo Dimitri Vegas and Like Mike. We talk about their love for music, how they got into the industry, their creative process and upcoming projects that span Dimitri appearing in Jurassic World: Dominion and the latest collab with Mike in his BLACK BANANAS X GREEN ROOM. We catch up with Emmy Award winning comedian, actor, animation voice actor and host of his podcast – May I Elaborate? JB Smoove. We talk about how he got into the industry, how he honed his craft via improv, being on SNL for 3 seasons, the upcoming 12th season of Curb Your Enthusiasm and more! Apple TV+’s Physical will drop it’s 2nd season next month. We talk to 2 of its stars, Rose Byrne and Dierdre Friel about what we can expect. STARZ’s P-Valley is also back for its 2 second season and we caught up 4 of the castmembers (Elarica Johnson, Parker Sawyers, Shannon Thornton and J. Alphonse Nicholson) to talk about how they got into the industry, catching us up on season 1, what we can expect for season 2 and additional projects coming up. Mark Indelicato is back for season 2 of HBO’s Hacks and Prime Video’s With Love. We talk about the impact of the success of his character in Ugly Betty, his process to approaching his roles, his shows and more. We also talk with swimsuit model and Netflix’s Grace and Frankie star, Brooklyn Decker. We talk about how she transitioned from modeling to acting, the final season of this iconic comedy and more.

This month’s 9PLAYLIST comes from EDM DJ/Producer Hardwell as well as Lost Frequencies. Our 9DRIP comes from our cover, Dimitri Vegas and Like Mike and Curb Your Enthusiasm’s JB Smoove. Our 63MIX ROUTIN3S comes from WTA tennis star Ajla Tomljanovic and celebrity hair stylist, Andrew Fitzsimons. Our 9LIST STORI3S comes from EDM duo SOFI TUKKER.

Our monthly feature, The Art of the Snack shares Indian restaurant, aRoqa in NYC’s Chelsea. This month’s Athleisure List comes from Pikes Hotel in Ibiza and Pause Studio in LA. As always, we have our monthly roundups of some of our favorite finds.

Read the MAY ISSUE #77 here.

Featured
AM NOV FRONT COVER 3.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #119 | JJ JULIUS SON
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
AM SEP FRONT COVER.png
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
ATHLEISURE MAG #117 | JAY "JEEZY" JENKINS
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
In AM, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, May 2022 Tags Athleisure Mag, SOFI TUKKER, Andrew Fitzsimons, The Art of the Snack, aRoqa, Pikes Hotel, Athleisure List, Pause Studio, 9LIST STORI3S, 9PLAYLIST, Hardwell, Lost Frequencies, 9DRIP, Dimitri Vegas and Like Mike, Curb Your Enthusiasm, JB Smoove, 63MIX ROUTIN3S, Mark Indelicato, Ugly Betty, Parker Sawyers, Elarica Johnson, Shannon Thornton, J. Alphonse Nicholson, May I Elaborate?, SNL, Rose Byrne, Dierdre Friel, P-Valley, Hack's, HBO, Jurassic World: Dominion, Brooklyn Decker, Grace and Frankie, Netflix, With Love, Amazon, Physical, BLACK BANANAS X GREEN ROOM
Comment

IT'S ALL JUST STORY | RODNEY BARNES

May 21, 2022

This year when the NBA unveiled their 75th Anniversary Team of retired and active players, it included 17 members who played for the Lakers which includes the Showtime era of the 70/80s with players Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Magic Johnson. To understand the importance of this era and what it did to how we enjoy the game, and how it moved the game forward in terms of commerce and making players brand, Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty illustrates the dynamics at play.

We talked with Rodney Barnes, who has written for STARZ Heels, STARZ American Gods, Everybody Hates Chris and more. He shares how he got into the industry, the positions he has held, his approach to his work, being the Executive Producer and writer for Winning Time, Zombie Love Studios and his passion for comic books and graphic novels.

ATHLEISURE MAG: You’ve worked in various positions in the entertainment industry as a Production Assistant, showrunner, Executive Producer and an award-winning screenwriter. With all of these roles, what was the moment that you realized that you wanted to work in this industry?

RODNEY BARNES: I was going to Howard University and I was in the School of C (Howard University Cathy Hughs School of Communication) and I was working at Georgetown Law Center as a campus cop at night and I found out that the movie The Pelican Brief was coming to my job to film some scenes. So I was really excited because it’s one thing to go to school for this and it’s another thing to actually be able to see it up close. So I signed up for all of the overtime details and I got them all. I started watching the movie being put together and it was so exciting! So I met a guy and he was the PA, he was a Key Set PA. So I asked him how I could get a job doing what he did. He said that that weekend, they had some big scenes that were taking place at the Washington Monument and that if I wanted to come and do it for a day, they'd be happy to have me.

So I did it and it was the most exciting, fun and best $100 that I ever made in my entire life! It was something about it that felt right. I felt more purpose in doing that and being close to this thing that I wanted to be close to then I did doing anything else that paid a lot better. I quit my job at Georgetown and started working as a PA full time.

AM: What a story, we always tell people that we embrace the multi-hyphenate. As someone who has worked in a number of roles and continues to do so from writing and producing, when did you know that you wanted to take on these areas and what the specific area was that you wanted to start in first? Or was there just a confluence that took place to make all of this come together?

RB: I knew I wanted to be a writer, but I knew what I didn’t know. I knew that I didn’t understand how any of this worked and I had a very fundamental understanding of what writing was and telling stories. Quite frankly, emotionally and psychologically, I wasn’t mature enough or evolved enough to be able to take on the big job. So, working as a PA, I look at it as being an apprentice. I had an opportunity to meet people, to sort of find my tribe, to figure out the psychology of how it would work and to just get my legs under me which was a bit like bootcamp. It was always writing, but I had to build up to the idea of being able to take my shot at it because it just felt too big.

AM: What do you think was the biggest thing that you learned from being a PA that has helped you with your career or was it just being able to see all the parts that were moving and to be able to understand how they connect?

RB: There was that. I think that the thing for me was that I always had this idea that everybody in Hollywood must be a genius and I haven’t met a genius yet. But, what I have met are some folks that have worked really really hard at their craft. It sort of demystified the entire process for me in being able to see it up close and to be able to observe. I wouldn’t say that I was a vital part although I know that some people would disagree. It was sort of the type of thing where getting to know people as friends and mentors even though that’s a problematic word as no one put their arm around me and said, “son this is what you do.” But they allowed me to be in their circle and to be able to see how the sausage is made. I got an opportunity to be able to just see things up close and to decide whether or not I could do it, if I wanted to do it and the closer I got to the thing that I wanted, the better that things got for me, but I wouldn’t have been able to do any of it if I hadn’t been a PA.

AM: From a screenwriting aspect, you have written a number of things. I loved your work in American Gods which I loved that show and obviously Winning Time and then you look at shows like Everybody Hates Chris. How do you get inspiration to write and then where do you start from when you’re trying to put words to paper to create these worlds for us?

RB: I never looked at it from a place of inspiration because if I need the emotional investment to do it, then I’m not going to be inspired some of those days and I’m still going to have to do it. For me, the difference was, approaching every day like I’m at work which was no different then when I was at Walmart or Target or any of those places that I worked at along the way. I had to get up, I had to work, I didn’t feel like it and then somewhere midday or so, it got a little bit better and then a little bit better. I sort of approach writing in the same way. I have a lot of resistance on the days that I don’t feel like doing it, but it needs to be done because I have a deadline. 78% of the time, I’m able to be disciplined and I’m able to get it done and the other times, I might go to the movies, sit and watch a game or do something else when I’m supposed to be writing. But I think it’s more of a discipline of doing the thing than an emotional component to it. There are days where I feel it and if I'm writing something like a horror driven thing like in my graphic novels, I'm enjoying it a great deal so it’s easier to do, but whether I feel it or I don’t feel it or am some place in between, I still do it.

AM: Just to circle back to American Gods, one of my minors in college was Classical Civilization so it covered mythologies of the world in addition to Greece and Rome and included African and Asian nations. So when I watched it, I loved seeing all of these stories that came to life. What was it like writing for that?

RB: It was great! The best thing that came out of it was my relationship with Orlando Jones (Sleepy Hollow, American Gods, The Good Lord Bird) who played Anansi/Mr. Nancy on our show. I had a similar thing as you, I didn’t do it in college but I studied a lot of different types of mythology and some of these characters like Anansi and Bilquis and others, you don’t really get to hear a lot about them. Because of comic books, you get Thor and Zeus, Odin and Hercules and those guys but oftentimes, Gods of color don’t get a lot of love. Even when they do, it’s in secondary roles. Working for American Gods and I’m a huge Neil Gaiman fan. So to be able to play in that sort of world and get some genre credits under my name was great as I have a comic book company and I also tell a lot of genre driven stories so being able to legitimize that beyond wanting to do it was always something that I wanted to do.

AM: It was such a phenomenal series. I remember seeing the episodes and being able to see some of these characters that I had read about being brought to life so fully, it kept me glued and it was truly incredible.

So as a screenwriter, what is that process like in terms of getting attached to a project and how does one pitch themselves to get into this work?

RB: Well my agents do a lot of my pitching. They typically open doors, but I’d say that about 75% of the work that I get, outside of the things that I create, really comes from via word of mouth. Right now it’s a good time because of Winning Time and people seemingly are enjoying it and you get a lot of offers to do things because they like it which I am grateful for and it is a blessing. More often than not, it’s about putting yourself in the right position you know? People know that I write graphic books and comic books so whenever a project like that comes around and it seems like they can use a writer like me, oftentimes, they’ll call or not so much now because I have been doing it for awhile but maybe 7 or 8 years ago, if it was something that I had heard about that was coming down the pike, I would tell my agents to keep an eye out on it and then see if maybe they could get me up there to be considered.

AM: Is it a different flow for you when you’re writing for the BET Awards or the Oscars – is there a different approach because it’s a live audience or a different format then just a show or even the comic books?

RB: Not really, I look at all of it like it’s story whether it’s writing a joke, Chris Rock or one of his specials or whoever I’m working for for the Oscars or an awards show. Even a joke is a story. It has a beginning, a middle and an end. Whether I’m telling a funny story or a horrifying story or a dramatic story, at the end of the day, it’s all a story. So, I approach it all the same way. The biggest thing for me is really understanding who’s going to be interpreting the words. Like, I work a lot with Chris Rock, and I know him really, really well so if I’m going to pitch something to him, I incorporate that knowledge into the pitch. Like, I can sort of filter myself and know that he wouldn’t like this or he would really like that part. In writing the shows, I have built a great relationship with a lot of our cast and so, I try to write to their strengths as well as to the story that I am trying to tell. When I am saying that I’m writing to their strengths, I'm talking dialogue. There is a cadence to how people talk and if you can make it easier for them to interpret the words, I think that they become more comfortable with it so it's really more so about having familiarity with it for the task at hand.

AM: Also in your body of work, you have been a co-producer and a producer in shows like Heels, Winning Time and Wu-Tang: An American Saga. We’ve had a number of WWE wrestlers as our cover and shared their stories so seeing Heels was another show that we enjoyed. When did you realize that you wanted to add these roles into your body of work and how does that change your perspective especially when you're also writing the show as well?

RB: Well it’s funny, those titles of producing can mean a lot of different things. Earlier in my career, say on My Wife and Kids, when I was a producer, it wasn’t really a lot more to do than sitting in a room and writing. It’s sort of like the government, government jobs they have G-1, G-2 as you work up and it’s sort of like that in television in writing as well. If you do it long enough, you start out as a staff writer and then you move up to a story editor and then an executive story editor and then you go up through the WGA (Writers Guild of America) classifications that go with moving up. But then, in certain gigs like in Everybody Hates Chris, I was in the writer’s room and wrote a number of episodes, but I also produced the voiceover that you would hear in every show. So I would write the lines and go with Chris Rock and go record the lines together and then I would place them in the show in editing. So, to me that was actually the beginning of actually producing and so on different shows, that idea of what a producer means is something different.

On Winning Time, I actually work with the actors whether it’s working on set with their lines, working with the director to see whether or not a shot is sort of lining up with how we saw it when we were writing the show – it can mean a lot of different things. There are some shows where I have been an EP and it didn't mean anything more than just writing a show and putting it together or on some shows I'm actually tangibly doing something different. On American Gods, I wrote and also worked on the set with the actors and the director as well and putting it all together. On Heels, not so much. Marvel's Runaways – not so much. But it’s different with each one, so it’s a classification that comes with being a TV writer and as the responsibilities go, it has more to do with what that show requires.

AM: When I first heard about Winning Time last fall, I knew I was going to love it, I remember as a kid in 1986 loving this team even though I grew up in Indiana and it continues even though I live in NY now. So seeing this story, hearing about this story and getting this inside scoop of what was going on has made it really enjoyable to watch. How did you get attached to this project and what made you want to be involved?

RB: Max Borenstein (Kong: Skull Island, Worth, Godzilla vs Kong) who is our showrunner and the other Executive Producer as well, he and I have been writing together for about 10 years and when Jim Hecht (Fairly OddParents, Ice Age 2: The Meltdown, The Ice Age Adventures of Buck Wild) first optioned the book, he got the book to Adam McKay (Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, Vice, Don’t Look Up), and he got it to HBO and they said they would do a pilot I believe, I don’t know if the project was picked up then. They hired Max, Max called me and I said yes that I would want to be a part of it. That’s how it started.

AM: It’s an incredible cast and I love McKay films and the people that are in it. In terms of writing this where you had Jeff Pearlman’s book Showtime: Magic, Kareem, Riley and the Los Angeles Lakers Dynasty of the 1980s, how much source material did you have as I know players of that time as well as the franchise didn’t reach out to you on this. How did you coalesce these things all together to create this story and to provide that insider feel?

RB: Well we were really fortunate that book. So we studied a lot of books and Rick Fox, former Laker was our technical advisor, we talked to a lot of folks who were around the team at that time who worked for the organization, YouTube – we did a lot of research everywhere – articles anything that we could find. We sort of incorporated into the narrative and some stuff we had to tie in together for dramatization purposes.

AM: Obviously with the people that were involved, John C Reilly (Gangs of New York, The Aviator, Anchorman II: The Legend Continues), Jason Clarke (Brotherhood, Chappaquiddick, Silk Road), Rob Morgan (Stranger Things, The United States vs. Billie Holiday, Don’t Look Up), Jason Segel (How I Met Your Mother, Dispatches from Elsewhere, Hotel Artemis) and Adrien Brody (The Grand Budapest Hotel, Peaky Blinders, Succession) etc, there are actors in there where there is a lot of secret sauce. You have actors who were athletic but didn’t play basketball and having to do so for this role, having Quincy Isaiah play such a key and iconic person who was new to this platform, how did all of this come together to get that energy, to make an audience believe that these people who be playing this game even though they didn’t necessarily have this background?

RB: Francine Maisler (Uncut Gems, Being the Ricardos, Dune) is our casting director and she did a great job finding folks. Sometimes you get lucky like in the case of Quincy who is from Michigan and was an athlete – a football player. He had to lose 80lbs or so to come down to being able to have a Magic Johnson-like look. Solomon Hughes who plays, Kareem Adbul-Jabbar is an educator, is 7-feet tall, plays jazz and he played basketball on a professional level before. You just get lucky sometimes. I think that that’s across the board in finding people that not only have the talent but also the emotional stuff.

If you think about our players, they have to learn how to play the game because some had never played the game before, they had to be convincing to learn how to play a particular way that their character played, they had to go through physical training everyday and then they had to learn their lines and then they had to act. So there would be times when they would have to come from training, be on set, leave their work, leave set and go and play basketball everyday for however long – for a year or so. Then there is the training that went into it before hand and always having a good attitude about it as they were going. We got really really fortunate to find the folks that we found.

AM: When did you realize that you were going to be Maurice?

RB: I’ll tell you when I was working, Max was working on a movie called Worth in NY that’s on Netflix now. I was working on the first season of Wu-Tang: An American Saga. I was in Staten Island, he was in Manhattan. We would meet on the weekends and we would go over it with Jim Hecht and Rebecca Bertuch (Worth) and we would work on putting the show together. Every now and then, this name would pop up, Maurice, Maurice, Maurice – like who the hell is Maurice? Oh, you’re going to see and it was like an inside joke. They knew that I didn’t know. When we were officially on board and we started in the writer’s room in LA, we had all the pictures up of the actors on the wall and then there was a picture of me. I was like, “why is my picture on the wall?” They said, you’re going to play Maurice and I was like, “oh, ok – haha Maurice.” So Max actually wrote Maurice’s lines and the only scene that I had at one time was the scene with Pat Reily where I don’t let him in The Forum. I thought, “ok, I can do that, I’ve been a security guard my whole damn life!” I know how to say you can’t come in. You don’t even need to even write out the lines just let me stand there and I know how to not let you in some place. Then, all of a sudden, I started seeing Maurice pop up in other scripts! He's like a leprechaun where he sort of shows up in different places and I'm like, "why am I popping up?” and then I had a walk and talk which is very difficult as an actor because you have to walk, you have to think and you have to move which was in episode 5 where I had that scene. I was nervous about that scene. Actually, I messed up the scene that is on. I messed up a line but Gabby Hoffman (High Maintenance, Girls, Transparent) who plays Claire Rothman is so great, you would never know because she kept going and I kept going and so that was it and they cut and we went on with the day – but I messed up.

It's cool, the network likes it, everyone likes him and I think that Maurice is going to come back and probably say more words.

AM: We always like when he pops up!

RB: Well, thank you! As long as I stay big and relatively menacing and intimidating, Maurice will probably be around.

AM: What has been your biggest takeaway of being part of this particular project, seeing it come together and the reception of people loving this?

RB: Anytime you work hard at a thing for a long time that is intended to entertain people, you always want that to land the way it is intended so that people are entertained. I think that we’ve got a great reception and that people really seem to like it and it’s sort of gratifying because I and a lot of people give a lot when you do these sort of things and it’s not easily assembled. For me certainly being able to talk about African American culture as it pertains to sports in a way that is sort of elevated is always an honor. It’s a good thing.

AM: Well, you guys have been greenlit for a second season. What does that look like, what do you want to tackle – will it continue with these same players or will it be another part of Laker history or even another time in NBA history for a Winning Time situation?

RB: As of the moment, the plan is to continue on in the same narrative and to just keep telling the story as we have been. Even now, when we first started the process before, we were going in the third or fourth iteration of what you see on screen now – we were going to go a lot faster. Then, the decision was made during COVID to slow down the process of storytelling and we had to go back to the drawing board a couple of times to slow it down. I say all of that to say that you never know. We could speed up a couple of seasons, we can keep going the way that it is, but I think that the plan for now is to continue going in the direction that it is.

AM: One of the things that I enjoy especially with a lot of the HBO shows is that there is a companion podcast and literally, I can’t wait until Mon to listen to the show which drops right after the episode airs on Sun. I listen to JB Smoove and then I listen to your podcast. It’s great to get your insights, what’s going on – the Rob Morgan episode was really great to hear. Every episode is great as there are so many tidbits that can be enjoyed. How did you get attached to hosting this podcast and how much input do you have over who ends up being on the episode with you?

RB: Very similar to how I became Maurice. Somebody thought that it would be a good idea to have me do it and my first reaction was, I have never done a podcast before and they were like, “oh you can do it.” I think that I tried to back out a couple of times and they were like no just give it a shot. I think that I got better as time went on which is sort of the course of life, the more you do it, the better you get at the thing that you do. But, it also helps that I know everybody. Everybody that I have had on so far whether it was Snoop Dogg, Rob Morgan or Quincy, or Max or whoever, I know them. It’s like having a conversation with someone who is a friend and not so much like talking to someone who is a stranger.

They always ask me who I would like to have on and I try to spread it around between the cast members, but also the people behind the scenes. I had Todd Banhazl (Janelle Monae: Dirty Computer, They Call Me Magic, Hustlers), I had Max, I had Jim Hecht, Rebecca, I had Sarah Scott (Pam & Tommy, The Offer, The Flight Attendant) our intimacy coordinator. I had Idan Ravin whose the basketball coordinator. I had our director Salli Richardson (The Chi, Altered Carbon, The Wheel of Time) and Tanya Hamilton (Big Sky, The Deuce, Snowfall). I try to mix it up where you have one of the cast members and then someone who is a technical part of the team so that for people who are interested in being part of the business as one time I was, you can actually hear some of what they do and realize that there are a number of jobs besides the big 4 or 5 at producer, director, writer. There are a lot of other things to be done and some things may spark to someone and hopefully that podcast can help a little bit.

AM: We love seeing the birth of the NBA as we know it today as this entertainment platform with next level dancers, club lounges and had this came together with Dr. Buss. This has become the standard for what it means to go to a NBA game. Being able to hear more about Jack McKinney and his time with the Lakers. I knew he was a coach for the Pacers, but I didn’t know about his backstory. What is it that you want audiences to walk away with after watching this season or subsequent seasons?

RB: Always with our show, we have what you know and the thing that you can Google and find out. Who won the game, who lost the game and those types of things. But there’s also those things that you didn’t know. Like in the case of Jack McKinney, a lot of people had forgotten not just him, but the accident that he was in – the basketball accident and how that changed the course of the Lakers coaching dynamic. So, being able to tell some of those stories and show the Shakespearean dynamic of the coaching system with Paul West head and Pat Riley, most people know Pat Riley being the Lakers coach and they sort of identify with just him, but there were other guys too.

I think that the other side of that coin is Spencer Haywood who was a big part of NBA free agency and a lot of how we look at basketball today in the fact that we can look at James Harden and see him go from team to team to team or LeBron just being able to go to the Heat and all of that – a lot of that has to do with Spencer Haywood and going to court to battle for free agency rights for players. When I was growing up watching the NBA, I’m from Maryland so we had the Bullets, now the Wizards. Usually if a player got drafted, he played with one team for his entire career. It was big news when a player would move from one team to another.

Now, when you look at the change and the evolution both in the style of play when you look at the Showtime offense of Jack McKinney that evolved and to Spencer Haywood’s contribution, that you see in these 2 gentleman, it has a lot to do with the way that the game is played and it’s rarely recognized over the course of history. Anytime we can incorporate things that folks don’t know, it’s always a treat!

AM: Usually, when an episode concludes, we’re usually Googling about 4 things! It becomes a great way to understand how far the game has come in really such a short period of time and how things are so different and the shoulders that people stood on to get to where we are now.

RB: Exactly.

AM: Where did your love for comic books come from. You have Killadelphia that you’re writing, Marvel, Star Wars universes and Lucas Film Studios – where did this come from?

RB: The only inciting influence that I can find in my mind and my heart was that my mother was a school teacher. Before computers and all of that stuff, she would go to the public library to do her lesson plans and she would bring me. There was always this area where you would have kids like in a pen, your Cat in the Hat, Curious George books etc. I had no interest in any of those books because under those books was a box and in that box was comic books. I knew exactly where it was and I don’t think that they ever changed them in all the years that I went. I would just sit in the corner and read them for hours. It sort of became a thing where it was infectious you know? The moral throughline and some of the stories were more evolved than what my 5 or 6 year old mind could handle but I was intrigued by that idea. Then later, people would give them to me and my grandfather would call them funny books back then. They would give me a stack of them and it was a way to keep me quiet. Later on, when I would have odd jobs, I would buy them. This was during a period of time where you could get comic books anywhere – the convenience store, liquor store, virtually any place that had a spinner rack full of comics. Now, you have to go to a comic shop on Wed to get them. But back then, they were readily available and they were only 20 cents or a quarter. Now they’re $4 if not more.

It was just a love that just evolved along with my life. In the beginning, it was mostly about the art and the story. Then in my teen and later years, there were guys like Alan Moore (Watchmen, V for Vendetta, Swamp Thing) and Grant Morrison (Doom Patrol, New X-Men, Fantastic Four 1234) and Frank Miller (Daredevil, The Dark Knight Returns, Sin City), they sort of made it like literature and evolved into something that was more serious and that kept me involved and then later television and film like most people. So there has always been this relationship.

When I was younger, I tried to write comics professionally, but couldn’t find a way in. Like a lot of things that I’m sure people feel with television and film, it’s a tough nut to crack. But even more so back then, there weren’t a whole lot of African American characters and there wasn’t a big indie space when I was coming up. It was just Marvel and DC and every once in a while there’d be a new company that would pop in. They didn’t have the same distribution chain as DC so you were relegated to those 10 characters maybe if there were 10. I think that a lot of times, companies back then felt like unless you were writing for a character of color, what’s the point of hiring this person? So for me, I wanted to take a shot at writing a comic so when I was on the show Runaways which was a Marvel show, they liked my work and I sort of leveraged the appreciation of my work to say, “hey if you guys have any relationship with Marvel Publishing, I’d love to write a comic book.” They gave me Falcon. I quickly realized that I had no idea what the hell I was doing or how to write a comic book. I just took my shot. It was received ok-ish. Then again like the podcast, I kept doing it again and again and again and I got better and better and better at it and then I had the idea for Killadelphia and started a whole new thing. Now I write 10 books a month and I have my own company and it’s taken on a life all of it’s own.

AM: Which is amazing and I know in looking at your IG, you were talking about The Mandalorian which I’m a fan of. You have a project coming out in June – can you tell us more?

RB: Yes, it’s June the 22nd, The Mandalorian adaptation of the TV show and it’s the first adaptation that Marvel and Lucas Film have done with a project. It’s basically straight adaptation of that story. They don’t let you deviate too far from the story because it’s Star Wars cannon and you can’t really interfere or add new things because it’s connected to the television show. So I basically do my version of the television show would be.

AM: It’s still very cool though!

RB: Yes, it’s an honor to play in that space.

I just finished IG-88 Star Wars: War of the Bounty Hunters and I did Lando Double or Nothing earlier. I love to play in the space. I have a Luke Cage short that’s coming up and maybe a Luke Cage miniseries coming up for Marvel. So anytime you get to play in that space, it’s always fun because it’s such a big fan base that you get to connect with that many people is always an honor.

AM: You created Zombie Love Studio which deals with creating original graphic novels and things of that nature, what are some things coming out of there that you want to highlight?

RB: The first book is Blacula, a reboot of the Blacula character from Blaxploitation era in Oct/Nov which should be dropping then. I also have another book, Florence and Normandie and alien attack story that takes place on the corner of Florence and Normandie famous because of the Rodney King riots that started from there. I’m writing that with Xzibit. I have Tales from the Crip with Snoop Dogg which is the Crip Keeper. I have a book called Crownsville which is set in one of the first black mental asylums in America that’s a ghost story.

There's a bunch of other things that we’re developing that are moving along. There aren’t enough hours in the day, but I’m really excited about it all and it’s coming together slowly but surely.

AM: The depth of what you’ve done is truly phenomenal. What are things on your bucket list that you have yet to do or areas that you want to put into that body of work that you haven’t but that you’re still interested in tackling.

RB: Well certainly, developing the Zombie Love books and Killadelphia and things like that into my Substack page where I do 4 of the books. 3 that are connected to the Killadelphia world which is the book that I do at Image. There are 3 books that I do at Image, Killadelphia, Nita Hawes’ Nightmare Blog and Monarch an alien attack miniseries that I am doing. My Substack page has 3 other series, Johnny Gatlin who is a gun slinger in hell and hell is like the Wild West. 20 Degrees Past Rigor which is a zombie story set in Flint, Michigan where zombies are connected to the polluted waters of Flint. The Butcher of Black Bottom which is a serial killer story set in 1920’s Black Bottom section of Detroit. Then there’s Elysium Gardens which is in the back of Killadelphia which has an ongoing story on a Substack page. So, there are those books as well. There’s a lot of stuff and next, I hope to adopt a lot of those things into other forms of media whether it’s animated, live action or television or those kinds of things.

AM: Because you have so many projects that are just in constant rotation, how do you deal with the overlap? Do you have to be at a certain point before you take other things on – do you slice it up like a pizza and mix it the best that you can?

RB: Ha! That’s basically it. I try to tackle each thing as the day comes at me. I usually get up at 4 in the morning and then I start writing and I get the comic book stuff done in the morning. Then I tackle my day jobs like Winning Time or anything else that I have in front of me and I take it as the day comes. Whoever is yelling the most that is owed the thing to them – so yeah! Whoever’s voice is the loudest at the moment!

AM: I think that the time that we’re living in right now, although there is still a need for a lot more representation, to think of myself now versus the younger me who wouldn’t have thought to know that there would be an Ava Du Vernay (A Wrinkle in Time, Queen Sugar, Girls Trip), yourself, Shonda Rhimes (Bridgerton, Inventing Anna, Grey’s Anatomy) all these people that are moving storytelling forward. How important is it for you to reflect that in your work and to have POC be able to see themselves as well as for others to understand why they need to be an ally and to make these spaces more open?

RB: Well I think it’s important because the world doesn’t connect in the same way anymore like physically. We don’t talk to each other the way that we used to and it wasn’t perfect back then either. It’s more important than ever to be able to tell stories that have a ring of truth or some semblance of honesty. That way you get to see people as they are good, bad and indifferent more so than as a caricature or something that feels contrived in some way. I think that a lot of the biases that we hold with each other comes from those depictions. I know since 1619, a concerted effort was made speaking directly to African American culture to make us less than human. There’s one idea of being less than human, but you have to reinforce that on a regular basis. So you either make them caricatures or villains – one extreme or the other. If that idea has the ability to sort of ferment for 400 years or more then you’re at a place where it almost becomes truth because you’re so used to seeing that be the case.

So when you have this culture that is fighting for a slice of the pie or some semblance for respect and dignity, living in a culture and you’re sort of burdened by living with that depiction. It's really a hard thing to overcome because then even the culture itself starts to believe it – is this who I am and some people do. That can be problematic in its own way because you start to devalue yourself and people who look like you.

So I think that the more folks that can get in for various gender, sexual orientation, race or whatever it may be – to be able to speak to your truth in an honest way cannot only help you and the group that you’re in but also people outside of that group so that they have a better understanding of who you are and the struggle that you navigate just to be a human being and to have a human experience.

AM: Who are 3 people that you feel were profound, instrumental or helpful to be in your career?

RB: Damon Wayans (My Wife and Kids, Lethal Weapon, Major Payne) is always first! He was the first person that gave me an opportunity to work on a television show. Were it not for him, I wouldn’t be here. Don Reo (Everybody Hates Chris, Two and a Half Men, The Ranch) who was the showrunner and creator with Damon on My Wife and Kids. He helped take whatever raw ability I had and allowed me into a space in a way that pushed me to a space where I was able to see for myself what I had to do. I’m eternally grateful to him as well. I have to say that there is a tie for number 3 Allen Hughes (Dead Presidents, Menace II Society, The Book of Eli) of the Hughes Brothers, a director. He helped me to bridge art and commerce. He gave me an opportunity to write in a different type of way and helped me find my way of doing art. He was very supportive in that. Then, Max Borenstein who is our showrunner on Winning Time who sort of did the same thing but in a different way. There’s a push sometimes that you need to get out of where you have been to where you want to be and Max was very helpful in being able to push me. Beyond him pushing me, was me pushing me as well. There are a lot of other people and if you had given me 10 or 20, I could have continued on with other people who have helped me even if it was just survival – that’s important as well. So when it comes to writing and being a professional writer, those people come to mind.

IG @therodneybarnes

PHOTOGRAPHY CREDITS | PG 78 Warrick Page/HBO MAX | PG 81 - 85 STARZ/American Gods | PG 87 + 88 STARZ/Heels | PG 91 -102 HBO MAX/Winning Time |

Read the APR ISSUE #77 of Athleisure Mag and see IT’S ALL JUST STORY | Rodney Barnes in mag.

Featured
Screenshot (2303).png
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
AWARDS SEASON | GOLDEN GLOBES NOMINATIONS
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
OS Food Network (1).png
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
FOOD NETWORK NYCWFF 2025
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
OS Megan Eugenio (2).png
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
FOR THE LOVE OF THE GAME | MEGAN EUGENIO
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
In AM, Apr 2022, TV Show, Editor Picks Tags Rodney Barnes, NBA, 75th Anniversary Team, Lakers, Magic Johnson, Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty, STARZ, Heels, American Gods, Everybody Hates Chris, Zombie Love Studios, Production Assistant, Showrunner, Executive Producer, HBO, HBO Max, Howard University, School of C, Cathy Hughes School of Communications, Georgetown Law Center, The Pelican Brief, Orlando Jones, Sleepy Hollow, The Good Lord Bird, Neil Gaiman, Anansi, Mr Nancy, Bilquis, Zeus, Odin, Thor, BET Awards, Oscars, Chris Rock, Wu-Tang: An American Saga, WWE, My Wife and Kids, WGA, Writers Guild of America, Marvel, DC, Runaways, Max Borenstein, Kong: Skull Island, Worth, Godzilla vs Kong, Jim Hecht, Fairly OddParents, Ice Age 2: The Meltdown, The Ice Age Adventures of Buck Wild, Adam McKay, Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby, Vice, Don't Look Up, Showtime: Magic Kareem Riley and the Los Angeles Lakers Dynasty, Rick Fox, John C Reilly, Gangs of New York, The Aviator, Anchorman II: The Legend Continues, Jason Clarke, Brotherhood, Chappaquiddick, Silk Road, Rob Morgan, Stranger Things, The United States vs Billie Holiday, Jason Segel, How I Met Your Mother, Dispatches from Elsewehre, Hotel Artemis, Adrien Brody, The Grand Budapest Hotel, Peaky Blinders, Succession, Francine Maiser, Uncut Gems, Being the Ricardos, Dune, Solomon Hughes, Netflix, Rebecca Bertuch, Gabby Hoffman, High Maintenance, Girls, Transparent, Claire Rothman, Dr Buss, Jeanie Buss, JB Smoove, podcast, Rob MorganTodd Banhazi, Janelle Monae: Dirty Computer, They Call Me Magic, Hustlers, Sarah Scott, Pam & Tommy, THe Offer, The Flight Attendant, Idan Ravin, Salli Richardson, The Chi, Altered Carbon, The Wheel of Time, Tanya Hamilton, Big Sky, The Deuce, Snowfall, Jack McKinney, Pacers, James Harden, Heat, LeBron, Spencer Haywood, Wizards, BUllets, Killadelphia, Star Wars, Lucas Film Studios, Cat in the Hat, Curious George, Alan Moore, Watchmen, V for Vendetta, Swamp Thing, Grant Morrison, Doom Patrol, New X-Men, Fantastic Four 1234, Frank Miller, Daredevil, The Dark Knight Returns, Sin City, Marvel Publishing, The Mandalorian, IG-88 Star Wars: War of the Bountry Hunters, Lando Double or Nothing, Luke Cage, Blacula, Florence and Normandie, Xzibit, Crownville, Substack, Nita Hawes' Nightmare Blog, Monarch, Johnny Gatin, 20 Degrees Past Rigor, The Butcher of Black Bottom, ELysium Gardens, Shonda Rhimes, Girls Trip, Queen Sugar, A Wrinkle in Time, Ava Du Vernay, Bridgerton, Inventing Anna, Grey's Anatomy, Damon Wayans, Lethal Weapon, Major Payne, Don Reo, Two and a Half Men, The Ranch, Allen Huges, Hughes Brothers, Dead Presidents, Menace II Society, The Book of Eli
Comment

9DRIP | YVES V

May 11, 2022

Read the APR ISSUE #76 of Athleisure Mag and see 9DRIP | Yves V in mag.

Featured
9D  JJ J S AM NOV 25 X copy (2).png
AM, 9DRIP, Nov 2025, Music
9DRIP STORI3S | JJ JULIUS SON
AM, 9DRIP, Nov 2025, Music
AM, 9DRIP, Nov 2025, Music
9D RT AUG 25 ZC.png
9DRIP, AM, Aug 2025, Music
9DRIP | ROB THOMAS
9DRIP, AM, Aug 2025, Music
9DRIP, AM, Aug 2025, Music
9D S AM NOV 24.png
9DRIP, AM, Athletes, Nov 2024, Sports
9DRIP | SARAYA
9DRIP, AM, Athletes, Nov 2024, Sports
9DRIP, AM, Athletes, Nov 2024, Sports
In 9DRIP, AM, Apr 2022, Music, Editor Picks Tags 9DRIP, Music, Yves V, Collective Successes, Celine, Once in a Lifetime, Wine for My Father, Firm Favorite, TML X Yuma Labs, Again Sneakers, Saint Laurent, Jewellery, Shoes, Adidas, Yeezy, Wine Collection, A Holiday to the Maldives
Comment

ATHLEISURE MAG | #76 APR 2022

April 29, 2022

In this month’s issue, our cover story is with 3X MTV VMA nominated Creative Director, Choreographer, Performance Coach and dancer Tanisha Scott. We talk about her love for dancing, her career, her work in Sean Paul's Give Me the Light, Drake's Hotline Bling and a number of major moments, we talk about her work as a Creative Director for H.E.R., Lizzo and Cardi B as well as how she goes about her work. You can see her up the upcoming season of HBO MAX's Legendary as well as Prime Video's Watch Out for the Big Girrrls with Lizzo. 

We also talk with Titus Welliver who has helmed the title character of Harry Bosch in Prime Video's Bosch. On May 6th he will continue the journey on Amazon's FreeVee with Bosch: Legacy. We talk with Titus about how he fell in love with acting, how he approaches his projects and what's in store for this series.

We also talk with award winning Executive Producer and screenwriter of HBO's Winning Time! He has been a screenwriter for a number of programs from Everybody Hates Chris, STARZ Heels, American Gods and so much more. He's also a writer for graphic novels and comic books. We talk about how he got into the industry, the various positions that he has held on set, how Winning Time came to be and his upcoming projects that are coming out with Marvel, DC Comics, Star Wars and more!

This month's 9PLAYLIST comes from EDM DJ/producer Ferry Corsten. Our 63MIX ROUTIN3S comes from FOX's 9-1-1: Lonestar Brian Michael Smith as he shares with us what he does Morning, Afternoon and Night. Our 9LIST STORI3S comes from Gorjana Reidel Co-founder of jewelry brand, gorjana and from our cover star, Tanisha Scott whow share their must-haves in beauty, style and fitness (3-page spread). Our 9LOOKS comes from DEMOBAZA.

Our monthly feature, The Art of the Snack focuses on Sushi AMANE in NY. This month's Athleisure List comes from Ramen Misoya here in NY as well as [solidcore]'s LA studio. As always, we have our monthly roundups of some of our favorite finds. 

Please note that you may have a number of brands within the issue so make sure to check out all the pages! If you have an issue accessing the links - do let me know!

Read the APR ISSUE #76 of Athleisure Mag.

Featured
AM NOV FRONT COVER 3.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #119 | JJ JULIUS SON
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
AM SEP FRONT COVER.png
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
ATHLEISURE MAG #117 | JAY "JEEZY" JENKINS
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
In Apr 2022, AM, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues Tags Tanisha Scott, Titus Welliver, Rodney Barnes, Yves V, Ferry Corsten, Brian Michael Smith, Gorjana Reidel
Comment

NEVER GIVE UP | BEAR GRYLLS

April 22, 2022

When it comes to being an adventurer and navigating an array of terrains and working with what's around you, Bear Grylls is a man that you think of that you'd want to have on your team!

Known for his National Geographics' Running Wild with Bear Grylls where he takes A-list celebs on his expeditions, he has spent his life perfecting his craft and sharing his knowledge with many of us! His survival school comes from years of work that included serving in the Territorial Army of the 21 SAS, he has been awarded the honorary of Lt Commander in the Royal Naval Reserve and was awarded Honorary Colonel in the Royal Marines Reserve. He was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire as well as the youngest ever Chief Scout of the United Kingdom and Overseas Territories.

We talk with him about how he became an adventurer, shared these skills with us through his TV shows and how he stays fit to continue to do what he loves on and off the camera.

ATHLEISURE MAG: We’ve been a fan of yours for a number of years watching you go all around the world in these amazing environments and taking on nature. How did you decide that this was something that you wanted to do and then doing it as a career and being able to have these TV shows that showcase this profound series of skills and activities that you’re doing?

BEAR GRYLLS: That is so sweet of you to say. I’m not sure that it’s something that is so very profound. But you know, it’s been the only thing that I have been good at in my life! As a kid growing up, I loved adventure and it was a huge part of my upbringing with my dad doing this sort of stuff. Then I joined the military and my job there involved combat survival, the climbing and the sky diving. After the military, to be able to do a show like Man vs. Wild which then became Running Wild – it’s been a true privilege. I’ve been able to take incredible Hollywood and sports stars from all over the world to take them on great adventures and to introduce them to the power of the outdoors and how adventure can inspire us. Like I said, I’m very privileged.

I think it’s been a stumbling journey with many failures as well. People often like to talk about the good stuff, but I think it’s also important to be honest and say that behind the scenes there have been many failures! There have been many failed expeditions, failed TV shows and failed projects you know? It’s through that door that you get to go through to the good stuff! Never give up! I think that that’s the message isn’t it, for all of us for life!

AM: From our standpoint, we find it to be impressive and profound simply because you’re introducing things to us and people at large that we have never seen before or thought to do! It’s amazing to see you taking all of these celebrities and even President Obama to these places. You can kind of imagine what it would be like to do it, although we would not be able to do that! But we can appreciate that you do it!

BG: I’ll take the compliment. You’re so kind! When I talk with my family, they say, “Papa, you’re head is just filled with so much useless information.” And I go, “you might say that until it all goes wrong and your life is on the line.” I love this stuff and It’s a huge privilege to be able to do it and I hope to continue to be able to do it well into the rest of my life long after TV cameras – it’s been the beating heart of things that I have always loved! It’s a pleasure to share it with people – thank you!

AM: Do you have a favorite location that you like to go to or what do you look for from a TV perspective in terms of an area you want to go to? Is there a checklist or a criteria?

BG: Yeah, we try to keep every season of our Running Wild's as diverse as we can. We’ll hit a bunch of jungles and deserts and mountains – but at the same time, we have to be mindful that we’re taking rookies and they may be iconic people but in this world, they are rookies. You have to moderate as well as it can’t be too inaccessible and you have to have safety back up with us as well. You need to have rescue guys in case things go wrong. We try to avoid the real extremes of temperatures now because it really limits what you can do with people and it makes it super hard work for the crew in minus degree weather or in 125 degree weather. So, on the whole, we try to pick iconic places that are going to deliver adventures. So, it’s always fresh, it’s always new and it always puts a smile on my face that’s for sure!

AM: You just released your latest book, Never Give Up: My Life in the Wild, why did you want to write this book and how long did you spend putting it together?

BG: Well, I think that these are the stories that I get asked about all the time by people – including my own family, you know as my kids are growing up. I’ve never written about these things before – about the closest I’ve ever come to dying, behind the scenes filming with President Obama, filming Running Wild or Man vs Wild narrow escapes! Getting chased by snakes and this and that! All of those stories are things that I get asked about a lot and I spent 10 years writing about this. I wanted to write every word myself and I wanted to do it from the heart. I wanted to include the struggles and failures you know? That’s why, for me, the book was ever going to be called Never Give Up because that is the journey of life, you know? You hit some storms, you have to get back up and you have to be resilient and it’s the key to so much. I think that in this current climate with people as we re-emerge from this COVID time, I think it’s especially tough for young people. We need a spirit of resilience, determination and to know that the power of a never give up spirit – how much it counts for in life.

AM: Tell us about Cardio Miracle and why you wanted to partner with them?

BG: Well, Cardio Miracle is something that I have believed in for a long while. I think that the world of supplementation is really a minefield for people and I'm super conscious of my health and fitness. I need to be fit and strong for my job. You know, when I’m not out at adventures, I do everything that I can to stay fit and finding a supplement like Cardio Miracle which is all in one and does it all, has been amazing for me. Just reading the stories from all around the world from people that have been taking the supplements and how it’s enhanced and strengthened their lives is amazing to see. They pour in every day. I love that! I try to do things that really empower people’s lives and I think that all of us as we get older, we have to be conscious of our heart health. You know, I lost my dad far too young to a heart attack and it’s made me super conscious about getting really good proper supplements that’s really good and all natural – great antioxidants, great anti-inflammatory and good amino acids that are good for our hearts as we get older and we want to stay fit for these adventures.

AM: Absolutely. How long have you been taking it and in terms of your partnership with them, what are the things that you are going to do to spread the word?

BG: Well, I’ve been taking Cardio Miracle for a few years now. I had been on the lookout for something like Cardio Miracle for about 10 years. A lot of people have not been able to find something that has everything that I believe is really great and is natural for your health.

It’s been a journey. There is also an alignment of values there and the fact that they are really trying to do something positive for heart health for people’s metabolic health. As we come out of this COVID time, I think that one of the messages that is resounding for all of us is that we just can’t rely on vaccines.

It's important to also be metabolically strong and to have a strong immune system – I think this is part of that, physical training is part of that - but definitely in the modern world getting supplementation that really helps you metabolically to help you stay ahead of the curve to stay strong and fit. It’s so key and they do an amazing job. For me, it’s just seeing the stories like I said, that are pouring in and how it has helped people. I’m proud to do that.

When we’re not filming, I love championing that message for people. We want people to have good heart health long into their life.

AM: Are there any upcoming projects that we should keep an eye out for that you can share with us?

BG: Well we’re back on filming Running Wild right now. Never Give Up was just pushed in America. I’m also sharing that message of Cardio Miracle for people that want to stay in good health as they get older. So those are my 3 focuses of the moment! Stay fit and healthy, enjoy these stories and I’m back on the road filming Running Wild.

IG @beargrylls

PHOTO COURTESY | PG 96 Bear Grylls | PG 98 - 109 Ben Simms/National Geographic |

Read the APR ISSUE #76 of Athleisure Mag and see NEVER GIVE UP | Bear Grylls in mag.

Featured
Screenshot (2303).png
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
AWARDS SEASON | GOLDEN GLOBES NOMINATIONS
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
OS Food Network (1).png
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
FOOD NETWORK NYCWFF 2025
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
OS Megan Eugenio (2).png
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
FOR THE LOVE OF THE GAME | MEGAN EUGENIO
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
In AM, Athletes, Celebrity, Mar 2022, TV Show, Travel, Editor Picks Tags Never Give Up, Bear Grylls, National Geographic, Running Wild with Bear Grylls, Territorial Army of the 21 SAS, Royal Naval Reserve, Royal Marines Reserve, Chief Scout, Honorary Colonel, President Obama, Supplementation, Never GIve Up: My Life in the Wild, Cardio Miracle, Running Wild
Comment

9PLAYLIST | ALOK

April 15, 2022

Read the MAR ISSUE #75 of Athleisure Mag and see 9PLAYLIST | ALOK in mag.

Featured
9PL WLM SEP 25.png
9PLAYLIST, AM, Sep 2025, Food, Celebrity
9PLAYLIST | WITH LOVE, MEGHAN
9PLAYLIST, AM, Sep 2025, Food, Celebrity
9PLAYLIST, AM, Sep 2025, Food, Celebrity
9PLM AM AUG 25 RT (1).png
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Music, 9PLAYLIST, 9PLAYLIST MULTI
9PLAYLIST MULTI | ROB THOMAS
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Music, 9PLAYLIST, 9PLAYLIST MULTI
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Music, 9PLAYLIST, 9PLAYLIST MULTI
9PL TM JUL 25 .png
9PLAYLIST, AM, Athletes, Jul 2025, Music, Sports, Pickleball, Tennis
9PLAYLIST | TYSON MCGUFFIN
9PLAYLIST, AM, Athletes, Jul 2025, Music, Sports, Pickleball, Tennis
9PLAYLIST, AM, Athletes, Jul 2025, Music, Sports, Pickleball, Tennis
In 9PLAYLIST, Mar 2022, Music, AM, Editor Picks Tags 9PLAYLIST, ALOK
Comment

PHOTO CREDIT | Jeff Bottari/Getty Images

ATHLEISURE MAG | #75 MAR 2022

March 31, 2022

In this month’s issue, our cover story is with 5 XUFC Welterweight Champion, stuntsman, actor and rapper, Tyron Woodley. We talk about he went from being a 2 X All American wrestler, to MMA, being in the UFC and taking on various interests as a free agent in the MMA. We catch up with BRAVO's Real Housewives of Potamac and entrepreneur Candiace Dillard-Bassett as she talks about her work in public service under the Obama administration, her focus on uplifting women and those in the pageant world and joining the cast to use the platform allowed her to share her music and work in TV/film to the world. We catch up with 9-1-1: Lone Star's Brian Michael Smith who talks about his career, how he approaches his craft, learning about the industry in front of and behind the camera, the show and how he uses his platform to speak out on trans rights. We catch up with Bear Grylls as he talks with us about how he got into being an adventurer, Running with Bear on National Geographic, the importance of supplementation and more. We also talk with Gorjana Reidel, co-founder of gorjana. She talks about how they built the brand, key items that we should have in our assortment and the importance of empowering women! 

This month’s 9PLAYLIST is from EDM ALOK as well as Curb Your Enthusiasm, comedian, spokesperson and co-host of May I Elaborate? JB Smoove. Basketball influencer and trainer Chris Brickley and adventurer Bear Grylls shares their 63MIX ROUTIN3S of what they do Morning, Afternoon and Night with us. Our 9DRIP comes from our cover Tyron Woodley. Our 9LIST STORI3S comes from Brian Michael Smith and Candiace Dillard-Bassett as they share their must-haves in grooming/beauty, style and fitness. This month’s 9LOOKS shares some of our favorite ensembles from Herve Leger. 

Our monthly feature, The Art of the Snack focuses on Baazi in NY. This month’s Athleisure List comes from JAPAN HOUSE | Los Angeles and Loreley Beer Garden. As always, we have our monthly roundups of some of our favorite finds.

Read the MAR ISSUE #75 of Athleisure Mag.

Featured
AM NOV FRONT COVER 3.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #119 | JJ JULIUS SON
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
AM SEP FRONT COVER.png
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
ATHLEISURE MAG #117 | JAY "JEEZY" JENKINS
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
In Mar 2022, AM, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Martial Arts, MMA Tags Tyron Woodley, Candiace Dillard-Bassett, BRAVO, Real Housewives of Potomac, 9-1-1: Lone Star, Brian Michael Smith, Running with Bear, Bear Grylls, National Geographic, gorjana, Chris Brickley, ALOK, JB Smoove
Comment

CREATIVITY RULES | MARIA BRITO

March 18, 2022

A few years ago, we had the pleasure of meeting Maria Brito who is an award winning NY based contemporary art advisor, author and curator. She is known as a Power Players in the Art World and in 2020 she was named by ARTNEWS as one of the visionaries who gets to shape the art world. With her finger on the pulse of noted and rising artists, we wanted to catch up with her to talk about how she came to this industry, what it's like to build a personal collection versus when she is working with her clientele who includes A-list celebrities, demistifying art, the impact of NFTs on art, what her Art Basel experiences are and finding out about her book which is available next month!

ATHLEISURE MAG: You are a noted and well-respected power player in the art world. Prior to working in this industry, you graduated from Harvard Law School and practiced corporate law for a period of time. How did you come to the world of art and realize that this was an industry that you wanted to work in?

MARIA BRITO: I grew up in a family that prioritized art as a cultivation tool, like a hobby, but not a career. I went to every art exhibition, museum, gallery and artist studio my parents took me to, and it was really a very hands-on training for me. I continued furthering my passion when I moved to New York City in 2000 as a newly-minted attorney and started going to galleries and buying for myself.

AM: When you began building your personal collection of art work, what were you drawn to initially?

MB: I have always been drawn toward figuration, the human form, saturated colors, narratives that move me. I started collecting the work of Black artists way before all the galleries went crazy for them in the past 5 years. I am very proud of that.

AM: Can you tell us the difference between being a curator and an art advisor and why you love working in these areas?

MB: An art advisor is someone who makes suggestions as to what to acquire and why. It brings access and an eye to a client and it’s the eyes and ears of the art collectors who can’t possibly navigate the art market which is a global $300 billion market. A curator is someone who makes sense of how a collection looks together or envisions an art exhibition that has a theme that is coherent. The curator is an editor, the advisor is a strategist.

AM: Why is the concept of buying art and ultimately curating a collection intimidating to those that are outside of the art world?

MB: I think for too long people have had the wrong idea because what gets written in the big newspapers or reported on mainstream TV are the insanely high numbers that happen when a piece of art sells at auction for $200 million - that is intimidating. Or when people go to a gallery and the environment feels sterile and impersonal - that is intimidating. But that’s just the surface, there are thousands of galleries around the world as well as websites and art fairs that sell art priced under $5000 - people have no problem saving up money to buy a handbag for that amount of money or more. But a piece of art bought with a little bit of an understanding of the market can not only multiply its value 100x but also stay with you forever.

AM: How do you demystify the experience so that it’s more approachable to those that want to obtain art for their pieces?

MB: As I mentioned above, there are all sorts of levels in the art market. People take bets in emerging artists because they see the potential. There has never been a better time to collect or to be an artist. Besides, it’s all a cultural dialogue that is formed between the art and the collectors.

AM: I know that you have been an art advisor to Sean Combs, Gwyneth Paltrow and Tracy Anderson – what is the client relationship like in terms of making them aware of pieces, educating them about collections and ensuring that that it meets the requirements that they are looking for?

MB: I have hundreds of clients and they are all important to me. Every client gets a tailored approach with offerings that resonate to who they are and what moves them. That happens because I spend a really good amount of time getting to know my clients’ tastes and their objectives.

AM: Art Basel took place a few weeks back, what’s that time of year like for you and can you give us insight into how you navigate this show personally as well as when you’re doing it with/for your clients?

MB: That’s the busiest and most intense time of the year. It’s an insane amount of work because physically you have to go not only to Art Basel which can easily take 4 or 5 hours to see but to all the satellite fairs like NADA and Untitled which is where all the new talent gets to be shown. Clients come and walk around the aisles with me but the thing is that for the most part almost all of these galleries have circulated PDFs with all the images and the previews of what they will be showing so much of the good stuff has already been sold. That’s why an art advisor is so important for people who want to collect if they can’t dedicate themselves to building all these relationships with galleries.

AM: You curate art shows such as Greek Gotham in Mykonos a few years back with NY based artists such KAWS, Nir Hod, and Erik Parker, what do you look for when you are putting shows together like this?

MB: First I have an idea and then I let the idea marinate inside my head. Then I discuss it with the person who hired me to do the exhibition and then I go for the most talented artists I can approach who actually fit the idea or theme I had.

AM: How do you keep your pulse to the ground in terms of finding new artists and phenomenal pieces?

MB: By pounding the pavement! It’s easy to get complacent and more so now in a world that has gotten so digital but I still go to as many art galleries as I can every week, every art fair I can attend and artists studios when I can.

AM: Your firm Maria Brito LLC, includes your work as an advisor, but it also includes being an interior designer which seems like a natural progression with lifestyling as well as your fashion accessory design collaborations. Tell me about your firm and what your day-to-day is like.

MB: I actually don’t do interior design anymore because as a creative entrepreneur I know when to pivot - that business is good for the money but my mission in this life isn’t to place rugs in people’s homes. With accessories that was a very fun time but I did it for several years as an extension of my relationships with the artists and because there was nothing like it in the market. However, when my advisory practice grew and grew, and the headaches with factories and retailers also grew, I knew it was time to end that too. I still get called to consult with companies on product collaborations and I do that from time-to-time. Last year I launched two fine-porcelain collections with Showfields in collaboration with artists Cydne Coleby and Allison Zuckerman.

AM: Last year, NFTs became the conversation across all sectors of business. What does it mean to the art world and how are you navigating NFTs with artists you work with and clients that you curate/advise for?

MB: NFTs are a very important development in terms of digital ownership and because society is moving more and more toward a digital world, this movement found the perfect timing to flourish. Like everything that's new, right now it’s a lot of confusion, gray areas, speculation, like the wild west. My clients mostly collect art that is tangible, to live with in their homes or their offices, so while NFTs are a lot of fun, they will never replace physical art.

AM: Who are 3 artists that are currently on your radar that you’re looking at that we should be aware of?

MB: Cydne Coleby, Ryan Wilde and Cristina BanBan.

AM: Next month, your book, How Creativity Rules the World: The Art and Business of Turning Your Ideas into Gold drops. What was your motivation behind writing this book and what is it about?

There has never been a more crucial time than now to develop your creativity and your ability to innovate. Coming up with original ideas of value is today’s most precious skill.

MB: I wanted to debunk the myth that creativity is only for the few chosen ones or that it is genetic. Creativity is not about arts and crafts and cutouts or technical wizardry. Creativity is about fostering specific habits, making associations, and standing behind the ideas that come out of them. Whether you are an entrepreneur, an artist, or an employee, your creativity will help you turn the mundane into the extraordinary.

This is a book that helps leaders access their creative potential and profit from their ideas. It took me 13 years to be able to gather all the information that is here, and it’s a comprehensive, practical and actionable blueprint that will get you there even if you don’t think you can be creative and innovative.

I used every technique and everything that’s in this book to transition from a miserable corporate attorney to building an industry-leader seven-figure art advisory business and I have taught the same methods to people in companies as well as to hundreds of entrepreneurs, freelancers, managers, and artists through my online program Jumpstart.

I know these methods work and the time was right to bring them to a greater group of people through a book that is timely and timeless.

AM: Are there any projects that you’re working on that we should keep an eye out for that you’re working on?

MB: Writing a book, selling it at auction to a major publishing house and launching it is like having a full-time job on top of your full-time job. The book is the biggest project that I have worked on in a long time.

IG @mariabrito_ny

PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY | Maria Brito

Read the FEB ISSUE #75 of Athleisure Mag and see CREATIVITY RULES | Maria Brito in mag.

Featured
9PLM KS AM NOV 25 RTX (2).png
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Fashion, Nov 2025
9LIST STORI3S | KAY SIDES
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Fashion, Nov 2025
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Fashion, Nov 2025
ROCK THIS WHEN SWINGING BY YOUR VINEYARD IN THE FALL.png
AM, Rock This When, Fashion, Nov 2025
ROCK THIS WHEN HEADING OUT FOR HOLIDAY SHOPPING
AM, Rock This When, Fashion, Nov 2025
AM, Rock This When, Fashion, Nov 2025
Chloe x Drybar Holiday Bow Bar Experience.jpg
AM, Food, Beauty, Style, Fashion
GETTING HOLIDAY READY WITH CHLOE X DRY BAR AT THE HOLIDAY BOW BAR
AM, Food, Beauty, Style, Fashion
AM, Food, Beauty, Style, Fashion
In Feb 2022, Fashion, AM, Finance, Editor Picks, Ath Style Interview Tags Maria Brito, art advisor, art, author, Art Basel, How Creativity Rules the World The Art and Business of Turning Your Ideas Into Gold, Cydne Coleby, Ryan Wilde, Cristina BanBan, NFT, artist, Allison Zuckerman, Showfields, Greek Gotham, KAWS, Nir Hod, Erik Parker, Mykonos, NADA, Untitled, Sean Combs, Gwyneth Paltrow, Tracy Anderson, curator, art work, personal collection, Harvard Law School, ARTNEWS, art world, power players, celebrities, collection, clientele
Comment

KUMINGA MODE ON JONATHAN KUMINGA

March 14, 2022

It's been a great season for the NBA and this month, we're looking forward to All-Star Weekend as well as anticipating the back half of the season! We caught up with Golden State Warriors’ Jonathan Kuminga who is in his rookie year (just a year ago he was drafted into the G League) and was drafted 7th in 2021. We talked with him ahead of being added to the Rising Stars Challenge during All-Star Weekend. He talked with us about coming to the Warriors, how he values playing with his teammates, where he sees himself and being able to play against his mentor, Kyrie Irving.

ATHLEISURE MAG: When did you fall in love with basketball and what was the moment that you knew you wanted to be able to play it professionally?

JONATHAN KUMINGA: I think I fell in love with basketball at the age of 10. That’s when I was trying to go to the gym every single day. My parents weren’t interested in me doing that because the area that I grew up in, it wasn’t like here where there were gyms everywhere and so it was a long walk for me to be able to get there. So at that age, my parents weren’t really letting me do it.

AM: You went 7th in the NBA Draft in 2021. What was that experience like and how excited were you to come to the Warriors?

JK: I mean, it was a good experience. People don’t get drafted twice! When I heard my name and that I was going to the Warriors, it was a blessing. It was a good thing for me and I felt that it was a perfect fit. And as you can see now, I’m getting comfortable with the team. I was super happy when that happened.

AM: What workouts do you do that help to optimize you when you’re on the court?

JK: I mean, it’s not just about the workout, but it’s about listening and watching films over and over. You have to see how you play and how they play and on top of that, it’s about the work ethic that you put in every single day. I think that's really important.

AM: What does your week look like when you’re leading up to a game. What would you say your flow is?

JK: Honestly, I’m super laid back and chill guy. I don’t do too much, I just stay home. I have my 2 dogs so I have my guys with me and I like to kick back and play 2K and just chill with my dogs. That’s all that I do. I don’t really do too much. I don’t go to the mall – I don’t go nowhere.

AM: Ok, you’re a homebody!

JK: Yeah!

AM: Do you have any routines that you have to do the night before a game or moments before a game?

JK: No. So I don’t have a routine. I just go out there and play. When I get in the gym or I get on the court, my mind changes. My mind switches right away. I don’t think about anything else but basketball when I’m out there. So I don’t have a routine although I am trying to think about having it.

AM: You play with some incredible people on your team from Steph, Klay, Wiggins and Draymond! What’s it like to be around that energy and to learn from them as well as play with them?

JK: That’s the fam right there – that’s the legends! I’m learning every single day and it’s super exciting especially being the rookie and playing along with those guys. They never complain about anything that you do on the court if it’s bad or good they just encourage you to be good. To have those legends like that giving you advice – a lot of people don’t get it. There are a lot of rookies that got drafted to different teams and they don’t have that given to them. I’m just super blessed to be on that team.

AM: You played at the same high school as Kyrie Irving did and I know that he has been a mentor to you over the years and he recently gave you his jersey. What’s that like to have that relationship with him and finally being able to play against him now that you’re in the NBA?

JK: It’s actually crazy because even growing up, I used to watch Kyrie. We went from meeting each other to him being a mentor to me and then finally being able to play against him! It’s just crazy because I never thought that that would happen! But it happened and him giving me his jersey – a lot of people don’t get something like that from him. It was a good moment and a special one.

AM: What are your goals for this year, what are you looking forward to as you play through the season – do you have anything that you’re aiming for?

JK: I’ve got the biggest goals of anybody else. People would say, “man you’re a rookie and you’re already thinking ahead of you.” My big goal this year is that I want to play for the Championship. I feel like we have a chance to do it with the way that we play, the way that we get better every day and the way that we get to know each other every day. I feel like we have a big chance to do it and that pretty much is my biggest goal. As long as I’m on this team and helping them win and getting better every day, I think that’s my biggest goal.

IG @jonathan_kuminga

PHOTOGRAPHY COURTESY | Noah Graham/NBAE/Getty Images

Read the FEB ISSUE #74 of Athleisure Mag and see KUMINGA MODE ON | Jonathan Kuminga in mag.

Featured
Social Graphic_rseo-breckenridge-16X9-WHITE-v2.jpg
AM, Athletes, Sports
ROCKSTAR ENERGY OPEN 2025
AM, Athletes, Sports
AM, Athletes, Sports
OS Leigh Steinberg (1).png
AM, Athletes, Oct 2025, Sports, TV Show
THE SUPER AGENT | LEIGH STEINBERG
AM, Athletes, Oct 2025, Sports, TV Show
AM, Athletes, Oct 2025, Sports, TV Show
OS Daniele Foti (2).png
AM, Food, Oct 2025, Sports, Tennis, TV Show, Athletes
ESPRESSO TIME | LAVAZZA DANIELE FOTI
AM, Food, Oct 2025, Sports, Tennis, TV Show, Athletes
AM, Food, Oct 2025, Sports, Tennis, TV Show, Athletes
In AM, Athletes, Feb 2022, Sports, Editor Picks Tags Jonathan Kuminga, Golden State Warriors, Andrew Wiggins, Klay Thompson, Steph Curry, Steph, Draymond Green, NBA, Draymond, Wiggins, Klay, All-Star Weekend, Kyrie Irving, Jersey, Rising Star Challenge, Basketball, NBA Draft, g League, G League
Comment

ATHLEISURE MAG | #74 FEB 2022

February 28, 2022

In this month’s issue, our cover story is with actress, author and educator, Christina Ochoa. We talk with her about her love for the arts and sciences. You can watch her currently in ABC's Promised Land as well as the upcoming final season of TNT's Animal Kingdom. You can also see her share her answers in this month's 9LIST STORI3S where she shares her must haves in beauty, fitness and style. EDM duo, Adventure Club shares how they stay inspired musically, the release of their sophomore album LOVE//CHAOS which dropped this month as well as who they collaborated with. We chatted with Rebecca Henderson about her current roles in Freeform's Single Drunk Female as well as Netflix's Inventing Anna. We talked with art advisor and curator, Maria Brito about her career in the art industry, what it's like to be at Art Basel as well as her latest books, How Creativity Rules the World. We caught up with Golden State Warriors, Jonathan Kuminga on being in his rookie year, what his goals are for the season and the mentorship he receives from Steph, Klay, Draymond and more. We also talked with CIROC's Love Squad ambassadors, content creator and actress Jasmine Luv and Chef Richard Ingraham who is the celebrity private chef for the Wade's. They talk about how they have navigated their careers, obtain inspiration and upcoming projects that they are focused on.

This month’s 9PLAYLIST is from Ultra Record's President David Waxman. Red Bull Downhill Mountain Bike Athlete, Jill Kintner shares her 63MIX ROUTIN3S of what she does Morning, Afternoon and Night. Our 9DRIP comes from content creator, actress and comedian Jasmin Luv as well as art advisor and curator, Maria Brito. Our 9LIST STORI3S comes from our cover, Christina Ochoa as she shares her must haves in beauty, style and fitness. This month’s 9LOOKS shares some of our favorite ensembles from Alice + Olivia. 

Our monthly feature, The Art of the Snack focuses on Vineapple Cafe in Brooklyn. This month’s Athleisure List comes from Mr. C Miami Coconut Grove and Hot Tub Boats. As always, we have our monthly roundups of some of our favorite finds.

Read the FEB ISSUE #74 here.

Featured
AM NOV FRONT COVER 3.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #119 | JJ JULIUS SON
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
AM SEP FRONT COVER.png
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
ATHLEISURE MAG #117 | JAY "JEEZY" JENKINS
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
ATHLEISURE MAG #116 | ROB THOMAS
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #116 | ROB THOMAS
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM JUL FC.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Jul 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #115 | TYSON MCGUFFIN
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Jul 2025, Editor Picks
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Jul 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #114 | DARUDE
AM, Jun 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #114 | DARUDE
AM, Jun 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, Jun 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM MAY COVER CHEF EC I a.png
AM, May 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #113 | CHEF ESTHER CHOI
AM, May 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, May 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #112 | CHEF MASAHARU MORIMOTO
AM, Apr 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #112 | CHEF MASAHARU MORIMOTO
AM, Apr 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, Apr 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM MAR COVER I p.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Mar 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #111 | RASHEE RICE
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Mar 2025
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Mar 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #110 | FLOYD MAYWEATHER JR.
AM, Athletes, Sports, Olympics, Olympian, Celebrity, Fitness, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Feb 2025, Martial Arts, Boxing
ATHLEISURE MAG #110 | FLOYD MAYWEATHER JR.
AM, Athletes, Sports, Olympics, Olympian, Celebrity, Fitness, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Feb 2025, Martial Arts, Boxing
AM, Athletes, Sports, Olympics, Olympian, Celebrity, Fitness, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Feb 2025, Martial Arts, Boxing
In AM, Editor Picks, Feb 2022, Ath Mag Issues
Comment

OFF THE MAT | NIA DENNIS

February 16, 2022

We have been a fan of National Championship Nia Dennis' gymnastic routines for a while, but then it was her iconic routine set to Beyoncé that went viral and this UCLA athlete alum popped up on everyone's radar! We've seen her at the Met Gala in 2021 and on the Gold Over America Tour alongside Olympians Simone Biles, Jordan Chiles, Laurie Hernandez to name a few.

We chatted with Nia to talk about her sport, how she got into it, recovering from her injury, giving us that Black Girl Magic moment and her partnership with Pressed. In this issue, you'll also hear about her 63MIX ROUTIN3S and NEW YEAR, N3W YOU.

ATHLEISURE MAG: What drew you to gymnastics?

NIA DENNIS: When I was younger, I honestly tried a couple of other things, such as ballet, and piano lessons but I cried at every lesson! My parents told me that I used to flip around on the playground as a young child kind of unsafely lol so they decided to put me in gymnastics lessons & I didn’t cry for once!! Haha. And ever since I could remember, I’ve absolutely loved gymnastics, the feeling of flying and being free had me hooked.

AM: You tore your Achilles 3 months before the 2016 Olympics. What did you learn and how have you approached the sport since?

ND: During that time I was feeling really depressed about my injury & honestly wanted to quit the sport. I no longer found gymnastics enjoyable. Through digging deep and understanding there were other goals in the sport that I wanted to accomplish, such as, competing for team UCLA and getting an education, I discovered how resilient I was. Once entering UCLA I was able redefine my identity as a gymnast, and also rediscover the joy I used to feel for the sport. I began to approach gymnastics as I used to when I was a child, when it was fun and freeing.

AM: I remember seeing your Beyoncé themed floor routine and being blown away by the energy, skill, and confidence that you exuded. How did you come up with this routine and I know when I watched it, I loved seeing this Black Girl Magic moment and it made me proud and excited – how has it impacted you?

ND: Thank you so much!! This routine was inspired by my annual Thanksgiving trips to New Orleans. Every year we would go to battle of the bands because a lot of my family down there went to the big school that battles in the event, Grambling. I loved the majorette dancers and loved the energy they brought to performing. Ironically enough, while I was beginning to come up with my theme for my routine, Beyoncé dropped her Homecoming album that was just perfect for what I wanted to do. I wanted to bring some of Black culture to the sport of gymnastics and it was so personal to me because a lot of my family went there. The response my routine has received truly has blown me away. I feel overwhelmed with love and light. Ya know I used to be that young girl who looked up to Gabby and Dominique Dawes & representation is so important, so I feel honored to be in this position for the next generation of young girls.

AM: As an athlete, you’re always focused on optimizing your body and mind and you recently partnered with Pressed – why did you want to work with them and what are you doing together?

ND: This year it’s not about making big resolutions but taking small steps to make big changes and my first step is getting more fruits and veggies into my day. To do that, I’m so excited to announce my new partnership with Pressed and share my new Limited-Edition Nia Dennis Routine featuring my three favorite Pressed juices and three Pressed well-being shots which is available in store and on pressed.com.

IG @niaadennis

PHOTOS COURTESY | Pressed

Read the JAN ISSUE #74 of Athleisure Mag and see Off the Mat | Nia Dennis in mag.

Featured
Social Graphic_rseo-breckenridge-16X9-WHITE-v2.jpg
AM, Athletes, Sports
ROCKSTAR ENERGY OPEN 2025
AM, Athletes, Sports
AM, Athletes, Sports
OS Leigh Steinberg (1).png
AM, Athletes, Oct 2025, Sports, TV Show
THE SUPER AGENT | LEIGH STEINBERG
AM, Athletes, Oct 2025, Sports, TV Show
AM, Athletes, Oct 2025, Sports, TV Show
OS Daniele Foti (2).png
AM, Food, Oct 2025, Sports, Tennis, TV Show, Athletes
ESPRESSO TIME | LAVAZZA DANIELE FOTI
AM, Food, Oct 2025, Sports, Tennis, TV Show, Athletes
AM, Food, Oct 2025, Sports, Tennis, TV Show, Athletes
zwvuxueaw61mhjkomzfs.jpg
AM, Athletes, Sports
WORLD SERIES 2025
AM, Athletes, Sports
AM, Athletes, Sports
AM SEP ISSUE #117 S 1.png
AM, Athletes, Sports, Sep 2025, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks
PAIN RECOVERY FOR ATHLETES & FANS
AM, Athletes, Sports, Sep 2025, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks
AM, Athletes, Sports, Sep 2025, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks
AM SEP ISSUE #117 G 1.png
AM, Athletes, Sep 2025, Sports, Pickleball, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks
GUMMIES & ZZZ | TYSON APOSTOL
AM, Athletes, Sep 2025, Sports, Pickleball, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks
AM, Athletes, Sep 2025, Sports, Pickleball, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks
AM SEP ISSUE #117 Surfing 1.png
AM, Sep 2025, Athletes, Surfing, Surfer
HITTING THE WAVES | NATE FLUELLEN
AM, Sep 2025, Athletes, Surfing, Surfer
AM, Sep 2025, Athletes, Surfing, Surfer
OS AM AUG ISSUE #116 OS US Open.png
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Athletes, Food, Sports, Tennis, Editor Picks
WELCOME TO US OPEN 2025
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Athletes, Food, Sports, Tennis, Editor Picks
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Athletes, Food, Sports, Tennis, Editor Picks
OS AM AUG ISSUE #116 OS MAJOR LEAGUE PICKLEBALL_.png
AM, Aug 2025, Athletes, Pickleball, Sports
MAJOR LEAGUE PICKLEBALL FINALS 2025, CITYPICKLE CENTRAL PARK NYC
AM, Aug 2025, Athletes, Pickleball, Sports
AM, Aug 2025, Athletes, Pickleball, Sports
9LS TMG AUG 25  ZA.png
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Athletes, Pickleball, Sports
9LIST STORI3S | TYSON MCGUFFIN
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Athletes, Pickleball, Sports
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Athletes, Pickleball, Sports
In AM, Athletes, Sports, Editor Picks Tags Nia Dennis, Beyonce, Homecoming, Athlete, Sports, UCLA, gymnastics, Pressed, Limited Edition Nia Dennis Routine, Gabby, Dominique Dawes, Grambling, Battle of the Bands, Olympics, Simone Biles, Jordan Chiles, Laurie Hernandez, 63MIX ROUTIN3S, NEW YEAR N3W YOU, Gold Over America Tour, Met Gala, National Championship
Comment

HIS TIME IS NOW | JOSEPH SIKORA

February 7, 2022

Throughout the past few months we have loved interviewing those who have been in POWER, POWER BOOK II: GHOST, POWER BOOK III: RAISING KANAN and with the release of POWER BOOK IV: FORCE on Feb 6th, we were excited to chat with Joseph Sikora (POWER, Ozark, Jack Reacher) who is back playing fan favorite, Tommy Egan. We talked about how he got into acting, being on POWER, where we find Tommy in the latest series and what projects he has coming up that we should keep an eye out for!

ATHLEISURE MAG: When did you realize that you wanted to be an actor?

JOSEPH SIKORA: I was 10 years old. There was a show that used to be on called KIDS Incorporated. Fergie used to be on it and I think even Jennifer Love Hewitt. They were just the kids that were being rockstars and actors. I went to my mom and I said, I’d love to be an actor. She said that if I still wanted to be an actor in a month, come back. So I’m waiting and counting down the days. I said, “ma I want to be an actor.” She says ok and pulls out the Yellow Pages and we look up acting and there isn’t much in there. We look up theater and my mother, to her credit starts cold calling theaters and says, “my son wants to be an actor, how do we do this?” Eventually, I auditioned for a role in A Christmas Carol at The Goodman Theater in Chicago, but I didn’t get it. The casting director said that I was really talented and that I should audition for The Little Prince which was up in a far suburb in Lake Forest in Chicago. I ended up booking the role so my mother had to trek me out all the way to Lake Forest for rehearsals and performances. I did it and it was really a bug. Then my mother again cold-called agencies and said, “my son is in a play will you come watch it and would you want to represent him afterward?” Some of them came and then I got representation, I did some commercials which really helped pay for college and saved all of my money and even when I was just getting into mischief in high school, I kept paying my SAG dues and I have been a member of SAG since 1988. That’s how I started acting, it was through the theater and doing little bits of pieces here and as you know, I have done a ton of stuff! But none of it was any real success until really the POWER show. It’s my biggest thing for sure!

I was a series regular one of the series leads of an Adult Swim show called The Heart, She Holler that I am very proud of. It was directed and written by Vernon Chatman and John Lee starring Patton Oswalt which was so much fun. I did stuff here and stuff there, but acting is a tough thing and it’s truly a calling in some ways that I just never gave up.

So in a lot of ways, Tommy Egan, he’s that same guy. Tommy Egan never gives up and he says as much in episode 1 of POWER when he takes Holly out for their first date to the bar. He just keeps fighting and so I really just kept fighting and I did it not for reasons of fame. I didn’t want people to recognize or know me, I did it because I wanted to be able to explore the human condition and to see what it would be like to be other people and from what other people experienced. To see what it’s like to love, lose and win in other bodies.

AM: What made you want to be part of POWER?

JS: I mean, I was starving! I had no money, I was auditioning, I had a couple of little things around that time that I was really happy to do. I had just done Jack Reacher and I had done True Detective, the series Banshee – I was dating a girl who is now my wife and I had found something that I loved more than acting. For whatever reason in the irony that is life, when you don’t want something so bad, things start coming to you. This is one of those things.

There were 5 auditions for POWER for Tommy Egan, which was originally called Eddie O’Neal by the way!

AM: Where did we leave Tommy in POWER and where do we pick him up again in FORCE?

JS: Well, where we leave Tommy in the POWER show, is with Tommy and NY in his rearview mirror. But then, in POWER BOOK II: GHOST, we realize that he made a U-turn to take care of some unfinished business with Tasha played by Naturi Naughton and obviously the lead of the series Michael Rainey Jr who plays Tariq. After he leaves Tariq in Monet’s capable hands, but makes an enemy of the Tejada group, it’s even more of a reason for Tommy to get out of town. He’s not welcome back in the town of the city that raised him, so now he’s on his way to Los Angeles to take care of the ports and to work at the ports of Long Beach and Port of Los Angeles. But he makes a pit stop in Chicago for what people will find out in the first episode. But then he ends up saying, “you know what? Chicago may be talking to me right now. This may be my land of opportunity.” It’s a harkening back to the 1890’s where the NY papers said, “go West young man, go West!” Tommy did it and he ended up in Chicago and he sees a possibility of a future in the gem of the prairie in Chicago, Il.

AM: How does it feel to have this whole spinoff wrapped around your character?

JS: It’s great! I love working and I get to work more, it’s a win-win! I’m so happy and grateful for the audience demanding it and that Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson made it happen!

AM: Is there anything that you can tell us about it as I know it’s out very soon but any insights would be appreciated!

JS: Absolutely, I think that it’s super exciting and that it’s really truly different city, different rules, same Tommy. I’m so excited about the pilot directed by Larysa Kondracki (Legion, Gotham, THEM) and then we have Kieron Hawkes (POWER, POWER BOOK II GHOST, POWER BOOK III: RAISING KANAN) a POWER alum who directed in Raising Kanan and on the POWER BOOK II: GHOST, he’s an amazing director – so it’s great to have Kieron Hawkes! Another director that I am so excited about is Deon Taylor (Kicks, Meet the Blacks, Black and Blue) who directs our incredible finale. Everyone knows him from The Intruder and Black and Blue, Supremacy, and I am doing another film with Deon that’s going to be coming out in March called Fear, also starring Andrew “King Bach” Bachelor, T.I., Annie Ilonzeh, Iddo Goldberg and Terrence J – so a bit of an all star wonderful cast that is a thriller and a horror film that revolves around our current state of pandemic so you have to check that out!

AM: I just finished watching Ozark Season 4 part 1. It was nice seeing you in that!

JS: Nice! Frank Jr! Frank Jr is the antithesis to Tommy! Tommy is everything that Frank Jr is not. But they share the same struggle. They want to be able to make their way, they want to get outside of somebodies shadow, but Frank Jr is as unsuccessful as Tommy is successful.

IG @JosephSikora4

PHOTOS COURTESY | STARZ's POWER BOOK IV: FORCE

Hear STARZ's POWER BOOK IV: FORCE's Joseph Sikora on our show, #TRIBEGOALS - which is a part of Athleisure Studio, our multimedia companion podcast network! Subscribe to be notified when the episode drops. Listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, Google Podcasts or wherever you enjoy your podcasts.

Read the JAN ISSUE #73 of Athleisure Mag and see HIS TIME IS NOW | Joseph Sikora in mag.

Featured
Screenshot (2303).png
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
AWARDS SEASON | GOLDEN GLOBES NOMINATIONS
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
AM, Awards Season 2025-2026, Awards Season, TV Show
OS Food Network (1).png
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
FOOD NETWORK NYCWFF 2025
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
AM, Celebrity, Food, Oct 2025, TV Show, Travel
OS Megan Eugenio (2).png
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
FOR THE LOVE OF THE GAME | MEGAN EUGENIO
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
AM, Oct 2025, Fashion, Fashion Editorial, Travel, TV Show, Sports
OS Leigh Steinberg (1).png
AM, Athletes, Oct 2025, Sports, TV Show
THE SUPER AGENT | LEIGH STEINBERG
AM, Athletes, Oct 2025, Sports, TV Show
AM, Athletes, Oct 2025, Sports, TV Show
OS Daniele Foti (2).png
AM, Food, Oct 2025, Sports, Tennis, TV Show, Athletes
ESPRESSO TIME | LAVAZZA DANIELE FOTI
AM, Food, Oct 2025, Sports, Tennis, TV Show, Athletes
AM, Food, Oct 2025, Sports, Tennis, TV Show, Athletes
AM OCT ISSUE #118 NYCC.png
AM, Celebrity, Oct 2025, TV Show
NEW YORK COMIC CON '25
AM, Celebrity, Oct 2025, TV Show
AM, Celebrity, Oct 2025, TV Show
THE GOLDEN BACHELOR S2. E9. | AND NOW THE FINALE
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
THE GOLDEN BACHELOR S2. E9. | AND NOW THE FINALE
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
THE GOLDEN BACHELOR S2. E8. | THE FINAL TWO + FANTASY SUITES
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
THE GOLDEN BACHELOR S2. E8. | THE FINAL TWO + FANTASY SUITES
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
THE GOLDEN BACHELOR S2. E7. | THE WOMEN TELL ALL
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
THE GOLDEN BACHELOR S2. E7. | THE WOMEN TELL ALL
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
THE GOLDEN BACHELOR S2. E6. | WELCOME TO HOMETOWNS!
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
THE GOLDEN BACHELOR S2. E6. | WELCOME TO HOMETOWNS!
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
TV Show, Celebrity, AM
In AM, Jan 2022, TV Show, Celebrity, Editor Picks Tags Joseph Sikora, Chicago, POWER, Power Book II: GHOST, POWER BOOK III: RAISING KANAN, POWER BOOK IV: FORCE, Tariq, 50 Cent, Curtis Jackson, Ozark, Jack Reacher, Goodman Theater, A Christmas Carol, The Little Prince, Tommy Egan, SAG, Adult Swim, The Heart, The Heart She Holler, Vernon Chatman, John Lee, Patton Oswalt, actor, True Detective, Banshee, Naturi Naughton, Michael Rainey Jr, Monet, Tasha, Larysa Kondracki, Legion, Gotham, THEM, Kieron Hawkes, Deon Taylor, Kicks, Meet the Blacks, Black and Blue, The Intruder, Supremacy, Fear, Andrew Bachelor, King Bach, T.I., Annie Ilonzeh, Iddo Goldberg, Terrence J, Frank Jr
Comment

ATHLEISURE MAG | #73 JAN 2022

January 31, 2022

this month’s issue, our cover story is with 3 X Pro Bowl Indianapolis Colts' Darius Leonard. We talk with him ahead of the Pro Bowl game taking place on Feb 6th. He talks about how he came to the sport, being with the Colts, how he prepares for game day and the importance of giving back via The Maniac Foundation.We talk with TV Host and Bachelor/Bachelorette favorite Ali Fedotowsky-Manno about what it's like being on this franchise and what one can expect when signing up and we also talk about the importance of self-care and mental health. She talks about her partnership with PEBBLES and upcoming projects. We talk with TRU TV's Fast Foodie hosts Chef Kristen Kish, Chef Justin Sutherland and Chef Jeremy Ford to find out about their second season which is out now, their favorite go-to's when they're having their own Fast Foodie late night meal and their upcoming projects. Our NEW YEAR, N3W YOU comes from Team USA Surfing Olympian and National Champion Caroline Marks, 3 x NY Times Best Selling Author and Kimberly Snyder, National Gymnastic Champion Nia Dennis and PGA TOUR VP of Community and Inclusion Marsha Oliver. Ahead of STARZ's POWER BOOK IV: FORCE premier, we talk with Joseph Sikora about how he came to being an actor, playing Tommy Egan and upcoming projects. We talk with Sosie Bacon and Joe Mantegna about their series As We See It which follows 3 roommates who are on the spectrum and how they navigate life. They talk about how they connected to this series, the importance of representation and how they hope the series will be embraced. National Gymnastic Champion Nia Dennis talks about how she got into the sport, giving her Black Girl Magic moment and upcoming projects.

This month’s 9PLAYLIST is from TRU TV's Fast Foodie hosts Chef Kristen Kish, Chef Justin Sutherland and Chef Jeremy Ford who talk about what they listen to when cooking and why! Team USA Marathon Olympic Medalist Molly Seidel and National Gymnastic Champion Nia Dennis shares their 63MIX ROUTIN3S of what they do Morning, Afternoon and Night with us in a 3 page spread. Our 9LIST STORI3S comes from Team USA Surfing Olympian and National Champion Caroline Marks, who shares her must haves with us. This month’s 9LOOKS shares some of our favorite ensembles from Michael Costello collections. 

Our monthly feature, The Art of the Snack focuses on Sarashina Horii in NY. This month’s Athleisure List comes from The Pilates Class and ICHIRAN Ramen NY Times Square. As always, we have our monthly roundups of some of our favorite finds.

Read the JAN ISSUE #73.

Featured
AM NOV FRONT COVER 3.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #119 | JJ JULIUS SON
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
AM SEP FRONT COVER.png
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
ATHLEISURE MAG #117 | JAY "JEEZY" JENKINS
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
ATHLEISURE MAG #116 | ROB THOMAS
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #116 | ROB THOMAS
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM JUL FC.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Jul 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #115 | TYSON MCGUFFIN
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Jul 2025, Editor Picks
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Jul 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #114 | DARUDE
AM, Jun 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #114 | DARUDE
AM, Jun 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, Jun 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM MAY COVER CHEF EC I a.png
AM, May 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #113 | CHEF ESTHER CHOI
AM, May 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, May 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #112 | CHEF MASAHARU MORIMOTO
AM, Apr 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #112 | CHEF MASAHARU MORIMOTO
AM, Apr 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, Apr 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM MAR COVER I p.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Mar 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #111 | RASHEE RICE
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Mar 2025
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Mar 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #110 | FLOYD MAYWEATHER JR.
AM, Athletes, Sports, Olympics, Olympian, Celebrity, Fitness, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Feb 2025, Martial Arts, Boxing
ATHLEISURE MAG #110 | FLOYD MAYWEATHER JR.
AM, Athletes, Sports, Olympics, Olympian, Celebrity, Fitness, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Feb 2025, Martial Arts, Boxing
AM, Athletes, Sports, Olympics, Olympian, Celebrity, Fitness, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Feb 2025, Martial Arts, Boxing
In Ath Mag Issues, Jan 2022, AM, Editor Picks Tags Darius Leonard, Nia Dennis, Ali Fedotowsky-Manno, Sosie Bacon, Joe Mantegna, Kristen Kish, Justin Sutherland, Jeremy Ford, Caroline Marks, Molly Seidel
Comment

9LIST ROUTIN3S | KYLE BUSCH

January 14, 2022

Read the DEC ISSUE #72 of Athleisure Mag and see 9LIST ROUTIN3S | Kyle Busch in mag.

Featured
63MR BMS AM APR 22.png
63MIX ROUTIN3S, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Apr 2022
63MIX ROUTIN3S | BRIAN MICHAEL SMITH
63MIX ROUTIN3S, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Apr 2022
63MIX ROUTIN3S, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Apr 2022
AM MAR ISSUE #75 63MIX ROUTIN3S BEAR GRYLLS II.png
63MIX ROUTIN3S, AM, Mar 2022, Sports, TV Show, 9LIST ROUTIN3S
63MIX ROUTIN3S | BEAR GRYLLS
63MIX ROUTIN3S, AM, Mar 2022, Sports, TV Show, 9LIST ROUTIN3S
63MIX ROUTIN3S, AM, Mar 2022, Sports, TV Show, 9LIST ROUTIN3S
63MR CB AM MAR 22.png
63MIX ROUTIN3S, Mar 2022, AM, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Sports
63MIX ROUTIN3S | CHRIS BRICKLEY
63MIX ROUTIN3S, Mar 2022, AM, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Sports
63MIX ROUTIN3S, Mar 2022, AM, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Sports
63MR MS AM JAN 22.png
63MIX ROUTIN3S, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Jan 2022
63MIX ROUTIN3S | MOLLY SEIDEL
63MIX ROUTIN3S, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Jan 2022
63MIX ROUTIN3S, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Jan 2022
63MR ND AM JAN 22.png
AM, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Sports, 63MIX ROUTIN3S, Jan 2022
63MIX ROUTIN3S | NIA DENNIS
AM, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Sports, 63MIX ROUTIN3S, Jan 2022
AM, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Sports, 63MIX ROUTIN3S, Jan 2022
9R RB AM DEC 21 X.png
9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Athletes, Celebrity, Editor Picks
9LIST ROUTIN3S | KYLE BUSCH
9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Athletes, Celebrity, Editor Picks
9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Athletes, Celebrity, Editor Picks
9R LT AM NOV 21.png
9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Golf, Nov 2021, Sports, Beauty
9LIST ROUTIN3S | LEXI THOMPSON
9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Golf, Nov 2021, Sports, Beauty
9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Golf, Nov 2021, Sports, Beauty
9R TA AM NOV 21.png
9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Nov 2021, Sports
9LIST ROUTIN3S | TROY AIKMAN
9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Nov 2021, Sports
9LIST ROUTIN3S, Athletes, Nov 2021, Sports
9R DG AM NOV 21.png
9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Nov 2021, Food
9LIST ROUTIN3S | DUFF GOLDMAN
9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Nov 2021, Food
9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Nov 2021, Food
AM+9R+NN+AM+OCT+21+X.png
AM, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, Oct 2021
9LIST ROUTIN3S | NOAH NEIMAN
AM, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, Oct 2021
AM, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, Oct 2021
In 9LIST ROUTIN3S, AM, Athletes, Celebrity, Editor Picks Tags 9LIST ROUTIN3S, Kyle Busch, Sport, Athlete
Comment

9LIST STORI3S | MATTHEW JUDON

January 13, 2022

Read the DEC ISSUE #72 of Athleisure Mag and see 9LIST STORI3S | Matthew Judon in mag.

Featured
9PLM KS AM NOV 25 RTX (2).png
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Fashion, Nov 2025
9LIST STORI3S | KAY SIDES
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Fashion, Nov 2025
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Fashion, Nov 2025
9L ME AM OCT 25  (2).jpg
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Oct 2025
9LIST STORI3S | MEGAN EUGENIO
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Oct 2025
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Oct 2025
9LS JD SEP 25  Y.png
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Sep 2025, Fashion
9LIST STORI3S | JESSY DOVER
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Sep 2025, Fashion
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Sep 2025, Fashion
9LS TMG AUG 25  ZA.png
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Athletes, Pickleball, Sports
9LIST STORI3S | TYSON MCGUFFIN
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Athletes, Pickleball, Sports
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Athletes, Pickleball, Sports
9LS SR AUG 25  copy.png
AM, 9LIST STORI3S, Aug 2025, Music
9LIST STORI3S | SOMMER RAY
AM, 9LIST STORI3S, Aug 2025, Music
AM, 9LIST STORI3S, Aug 2025, Music
9LS LS MAY 25.png
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Fashion, May 2025
9LIST STORI3S | LELE SADOUGHI
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Fashion, May 2025
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Fashion, May 2025
9L EC MAY25 Y.png
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Celebrity, Food, May 2025, TV Show
9LIST STORI3S | CHEF ESTHER CHOI
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Celebrity, Food, May 2025, TV Show
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Celebrity, Food, May 2025, TV Show
9L JJ APR25 .png
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Apr 2025, The Bachelor, The Bachelorette, TV Show
9LIST STORI3S | JOJO FLETCHER
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Apr 2025, The Bachelor, The Bachelorette, TV Show
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Apr 2025, The Bachelor, The Bachelorette, TV Show
9L TT APR25  X.png
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Athletes, Sports, Tennis, Apr 2025
9LIST STORI3S | TAYLOR TOWNSEND
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Athletes, Sports, Tennis, Apr 2025
9LIST STORI3S, AM, Athletes, Sports, Tennis, Apr 2025
9LMCG AM DEC 24_.png
AM, 9LIST STORI3S, Dec 2024, TV Show
9LIST STORI3S | MARIA CAMILA GIRALDO
AM, 9LIST STORI3S, Dec 2024, TV Show
AM, 9LIST STORI3S, Dec 2024, TV Show
In 9LIST STORI3S, AM, Dec 2021, Athletes, Sports, Editor Picks Tags Matthew Judon, 9LIST STORI3S, Faith Family Football, Nike, Core Hydration, Selfish Spa Pedicure, Nest Bedding, Bainultra, Chef Anthony, Beats by Dre, Scotch & Soda
Comment

ATHLEISURE MAG | #72 DEC 2021

December 31, 2021

In this month’s issue, our cover story is with film, TV and stage actor, Curtiss Cook who plays Abe in the film adaptation of West Side Story, Otis “Douda” Perry in The Chi and has appeared in countless other shows. He talks with us about how he got into acting, how he plays dynamic characters and brings them to life as well as upcoming projects that we can expect to see him in. We also have the first of 2 NEW YEAR, N3W YOU features with Curtiss Cook, STARZ’s POWER BOOK II: GHOST’s Alix Lapri and NBA Minnesota Timberwolves’ Taurean Prince. They share The Good, The Add and The Buzz as they look at 2021 and 2022.

This month’s 9PLAYLIST is from Ryan Seacrest as he shares songs for our playlist as we countdown to the New Year. NFL New England Patriot and 3 X Pro Bowler, Matthew Judon, shares his 9LIST STORI3S with us. Our 9LIST ROUTIN3S comes from NASCAR’s 2 X Cup Series Champion and 220+ trophy winner Kyle Busch, who shares his Morning, Afternoon and Night with us. This month’s 9LOOKS shares some of our favorite ensembles from Zimmermann’s Resort 22 collections.

Our monthly feature, The Art of the Snack focuses on Sapphire Cuisines of India in NY. This month’s Athleisure List comes from Mad Morton and ONE19 Wine Bar + Food. As always, we have our monthly roundups of some of our favorite finds.

Featured
AM NOV FRONT COVER 3.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #119 | JJ JULIUS SON
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
AM SEP FRONT COVER.png
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
ATHLEISURE MAG #117 | JAY "JEEZY" JENKINS
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
ATHLEISURE MAG #116 | ROB THOMAS
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #116 | ROB THOMAS
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM JUL FC.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Jul 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #115 | TYSON MCGUFFIN
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Jul 2025, Editor Picks
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Jul 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #114 | DARUDE
AM, Jun 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #114 | DARUDE
AM, Jun 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, Jun 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM MAY COVER CHEF EC I a.png
AM, May 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #113 | CHEF ESTHER CHOI
AM, May 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, May 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #112 | CHEF MASAHARU MORIMOTO
AM, Apr 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #112 | CHEF MASAHARU MORIMOTO
AM, Apr 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, Apr 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM MAR COVER I p.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Mar 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #111 | RASHEE RICE
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Mar 2025
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Mar 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #110 | FLOYD MAYWEATHER JR.
AM, Athletes, Sports, Olympics, Olympian, Celebrity, Fitness, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Feb 2025, Martial Arts, Boxing
ATHLEISURE MAG #110 | FLOYD MAYWEATHER JR.
AM, Athletes, Sports, Olympics, Olympian, Celebrity, Fitness, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Feb 2025, Martial Arts, Boxing
AM, Athletes, Sports, Olympics, Olympian, Celebrity, Fitness, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, Feb 2025, Martial Arts, Boxing
In Dec 2021, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks, AM Tags Curtiss Cook, Kyle Busch, Matthew Judon, Ryan Seacrest, NASCAR, NFL, NBA, Minnesota Timberwolves, New England Patriots, Taurean Prince, Cup Series, Pro Bowler, Alix Lapri, POWER, Power Book II: GHOST, NEW YEAR N3W YOU, 9LIST STORI3S, 9LIST ROUTIN3S, 9LIST, 9LOOKS
Comment
← Newer Posts Older Posts →

GET ATH MAG

Read the NOV ISSUE #119.

GET YOUR COPY OF NOV ISSUE #119

Personal trainers
Personal Trainer Jobs

Sign up for our newsletter!

Sign up for our newsletter!


PODCAST NETWORK

ATHLEISURE STUDIO SLATE.jpg
LISTEN TO ALL OF #TRIBEGOALS’ EPISODES ON SPOTIFY, APPLE PODCAST, GOOGLE PODCAST AND MORE

LISTEN TO ALL OF #TRIBEGOALS’ EPISODES ON SPOTIFY, APPLE PODCAST, GOOGLE PODCAST AND MORE

LISTEN TO ALL OF ATHLEISURE KITCHEN’S EPISODES ON iHEARTRADIO, SPOTIFY, APPLE PODCAST, GOOGLE PODCAST AND MORE

LISTEN TO ALL OF ATHLEISURE KITCHEN’S EPISODES ON iHEARTRADIO, SPOTIFY, APPLE PODCAST, GOOGLE PODCAST AND MORE

LISTEN TO ALL OF BUNGALOW SK’S EPISODES ON iHEARTRADIO, SPOTIFY, APPLE PODCAST, GOOGLE PODCAST AND MORE

LISTEN TO ALL OF BUNGALOW SK’S EPISODES ON iHEARTRADIO, SPOTIFY, APPLE PODCAST, GOOGLE PODCAST AND MORE

LISTEN TO ALL OF THE 9LIST’S EPISODES ON iHEARTRADIO, SPOTIFY, APPLE PODCAST, GOOGLE PODCAST AND MORE

LISTEN TO ALL OF THE VOT3D IO’S EPISODES ON iHEARTRADIO, SPOTIFY, APPLE PODCAST, GOOGLE PODCAST AND MORE


TRENDING

Featured
AM NOV FRONT COVER 3.png
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #119 | JJ JULIUS SON
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
AM, Ath Mag Issues, Nov 2025, Editor Picks
FITNESS ANGELS WITH KIRK MYERS
AM, Fitness, Oct 2025, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks, Editor Picks
FITNESS ANGELS WITH KIRK MYERS
AM, Fitness, Oct 2025, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks, Editor Picks
AM, Fitness, Oct 2025, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks, Editor Picks
THE ART OF THE SNACK | JACK & CHARLIE'S 118
AM, Food, Oct 2025, The Art of the Snack, Editor Picks
THE ART OF THE SNACK | JACK & CHARLIE'S 118
AM, Food, Oct 2025, The Art of the Snack, Editor Picks
AM, Food, Oct 2025, The Art of the Snack, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
ATHLEISURE MAG #118 | CHEF JEAN-GEORGES VONGERICHTEN
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues, Oct 2025
AM SEP ISSUE #117 CND 1.png
AM, Sep 2025, TV Show, Celebrity, Editor Picks
BACK TO THE CUL-DE-SAC
AM, Sep 2025, TV Show, Celebrity, Editor Picks
AM, Sep 2025, TV Show, Celebrity, Editor Picks
NYFW SS26 EDIT
AM, NYFW SS26, Fashion, Fashion Week, Editor Picks
NYFW SS26 EDIT
AM, NYFW SS26, Fashion, Fashion Week, Editor Picks
AM, NYFW SS26, Fashion, Fashion Week, Editor Picks
AM SEP FRONT COVER.png
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
ATHLEISURE MAG #117 | JAY "JEEZY" JENKINS
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
Sep 2025, Editor Picks, Ath Mag Issues
OS AM AUG ISSUE #116 OS US Open.png
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Athletes, Food, Sports, Tennis, Editor Picks
WELCOME TO US OPEN 2025
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Athletes, Food, Sports, Tennis, Editor Picks
AM, Aug 2025, Celebrity, Athletes, Food, Sports, Tennis, Editor Picks
OS AM AUG ISSUE #116 OS Chef Christina Tosi.png
AM, Aug 2025, Food, Editor Picks, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks
BAKE CLUB RULES (NO RULES!) | CHRISTINA TOSI
AM, Aug 2025, Food, Editor Picks, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks
AM, Aug 2025, Food, Editor Picks, Wellness, Wellness Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #116 | ROB THOMAS
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
ATHLEISURE MAG #116 | ROB THOMAS
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks
AM, Aug 2025, Ath Mag Issues, Editor Picks