Own the Signal, Not Just the Sound cover art

Own the Signal, Not Just the Sound

Own the Signal, Not Just the Sound

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Visibility without power is just decoration — and Melissa Harris-Perry built a career proving exactly that. This episode of the Knowledge Gumbo Podcast opens with one of her most clarifying insights: being seen is not the same as being heard, and being heard is not the same as having power. For Black women navigating media, content creation, and public life, that distinction is everything.

When Melissa Harris-Perry walked off the set of her MSNBC weekend show in 2016, it was not a moment of defeat. It was a demonstration of what power actually looks like when you refuse to perform visibility on someone else's terms. Alicia traces the line from that moment to a longer tradition of Black women who built what they needed rather than waiting to be given access: Ida B. Wells with her own press, Oprah Winfrey building OWN, Issa Rae funding her own work before the networks arrived.

The episode also turns the lens on today's digital landscape, where social media creates the feeling of reach without the reality of ownership. Followers are not infrastructure. Algorithms are not yours. The real power move is building something that outlasts the platforms you use to distribute it.

Key Takeaways

Being seen is not the same as being heard, and being heard is not the same as having power. Melissa Harris-Perry's quote draws a precise distinction that is especially important for Black women in media, where visibility is often offered as a substitute for real authority and control.

Borrowed platforms can be taken away. Harris-Perry's exit from MSNBC illustrates what happens when your platform belongs to someone else. The same principle applies in the digital age: follower lists, algorithm reach, and social media presence are not owned assets.

The most durable Black women media makers throughout history eventually stopped borrowing someone else's infrastructure. From Ida B. Wells owning her own press to Oprah Winfrey building OWN to Issa Rae self-funding before Hollywood called, the pattern of Black women and media ownership is long and intentional.

The real digital power move is building something that outlasts the platforms you use to distribute it. A newsletter, a podcast with an RSS feed, a community that follows you across platforms rather than being anchored to one of them. These are the tools of durable influence.

In This Episode

[00:00] Welcome and introduction

[00:29] Today's quote: Melissa Harris-Perry

[00:43] Who is Melissa Harris-Perry? Context and background

[02:02] Being seen is not the same as being heard

[02:49] Being heard is not the same as having power

[03:43] What power actually means: ownership and control

[04:59] What Harris-Perry did after leaving MSNBC

[06:03] The longer tradition: Ida B. Wells, Oprah, Issa Rae

[07:00] Social media and the illusion of ownership

[07:54] The real digital power move: newsletters, podcasts, RSS

[08:32] Closing question and outro

📱 CONNECT:

YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@aliciatsays

Newsletter: https://tremendous-painter-642.kit.com/305737ceb5

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aliciatsays/

Merch: https://aliciatsays.shop/

No reviews yet