Episode 4

full
Published on:

16th Mar 2026

What the Black Family Survived — And Why It Still Stands

The conversation about the Black family always starts in the middle. On this episode of Blacktivities, Shannon, KK, and Mona Lisa go all the way back to the beginning — and what they find rewrites everything.

The Black family's structure wasn't random. It was shaped by centuries of slavery, post-emancipation terror, discriminatory policy, mass incarceration, and a welfare system designed to penalize two-parent households. Shannon delivers the Big Facts, the hosts unpack the history, and then they talk about where we go from here.

📚 BIG FACTS This Episode:

  1. Enslaved marriages had no legal recognition — children could be sold from their parents at any time with no recourse
  2. After emancipation, freed Black people immediately began placing newspaper ads to find children who had been sold away — family always mattered
  3. The 1965 Moynihan Report labeled Black family structure 'pathological,' shifting public narrative away from systemic causes and onto the community itself
  4. War on Drugs mandatory minimums systematically removed Black men from households
  5. Some welfare policies penalized the presence of adult men in the home, deepening economic instability
  6. Extended kin networks, fictive family, multi-generational households, and the Black church all became survival structures — not dysfunction
  7. The nuclear suburban family ideal was post-WWII — and it was never universally accessible or the only valid family structure

💬 The Conversation Goes Deep:

  1. Did forced breeding during slavery leave an epigenetic mark on how Black men show up in families today?
  2. Why does the 'broken family' label stick to us when every culture has family challenges?
  3. Diaspora wars, gender wars, and the strategy of keeping us divided
  4. The village is gone — and what we lose when communal accountability disappears
  5. Vetting partners with intention and building legacy on purpose
  6. Healing your own baggage before building something new


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About the Hosts


Blacktivities is a Black Panache original production - a podcast network with a lineup of black-hosted shows sharing black stories and tackling black issues. For more information on shows like our newest production, Fat Lies Matter, visit blackpanache.com.


Continue the Conversation on Social Media:

Instagram - @blacktivitiespod

Follow Shannon - @justshanofficial

Follow Lisa - @monalisathepoet

Follow Karen - @theekkroberts


Threads - @blacktivitiespod

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Resources:

Slavery & Family Separation

  1. Equal Justice Initiative — Black Families Severed by Slavery https://eji.org/news/history-racial-injustice-black-families-severed-by-slavery/
  2. Smithsonian / NMAAHC — The Historical Legacy of Black Family Reunions https://nmaahc.si.edu/explore/stories/historical-legacy-black-family-reunions
  3. Pew Research Center — For Many Black Americans, Family Extends Beyond Birth and Legal Ties (2026) https://www.pewresearch.org/race-and-ethnicity/2026/02/25/for-many-black-americans-family-extends-beyond-birth-and-legal-ties/

Sharecropping & Economic Exclusion

  1. PBS American Experience — Sharecropping: Slavery Rerouted https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/harvest-sharecropping-slavery-rerouted/

The Great Migration

  1. National Archives — The Great Migration (1910–1970) https://www.archives.gov/research/african-americans/migrations/great-migration
  2. HISTORY.com — The Great Migration https://www.history.com/articles/great-migration

The Moynihan Report (1965)

  1. BlackPast.org — The Moynihan Report: The Negro Family, the Case for National Action https://blackpast.org/african-american-history/moynihan-report-1965/
  2. Open Society Foundations — The Moynihan Report Revisited https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/publications/moynihan-report-revisited
  3. PBS American Masters — Explaining the Moynihan Report https://www.pbs.org/video/explaining-the-moynihan-report-43oqki/

The War on Drugs & Mass Incarceration

  1. Brennan Center for Justice — Race, Mass Incarceration, and the Disastrous War on Drugs https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/analysis-opinion/race-mass-incarceration-and-disastrous-war-drugs
  2. PBS NewsHour — 50-Year War on Drugs Imprisoned Millions of Black Americans https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/50-year-war-on-drugs-imprisoned-millions-of-black-americans
  3. The Sentencing Project — Mass Incarceration Trends https://www.sentencingproject.org/reports/mass-incarceration-trends/



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About the Podcast

Blacktivities
Blacktivities connects the black history we never learned in school to everyday experiences and issues facing black Americans today. A blend of humor and insight, this podcast connects the past and present in an engaging and entertaining way.
Blacktivities is where Black women gather to talk about life, history, and everything in between. It’s a celebration of Black culture, Black perspectives, and the shared experiences that shape how we move through the world.
With the perfect balance of humor and depth, Blacktivities connects Black America’s past to the present through conversations that are thoughtful, relatable, and sometimes nostalgic. We talk about everyday life, current issues, and cultural moments the way they’re actually discussed off-mic.
Hosted by Shannon, Lisa, and Karen, the show centers Black women’s voices while showing that no two experiences are the same. Different viewpoints, real dialogue, and honest reactions all live here.
If you enjoy smart conversations that don’t feel preachy, cultural commentary that still knows how to laugh, and a podcast that feels like home, welcome to Blacktivities.
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About your host

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Shannon Chatmon

Shannon is a veteran educator, wife, mother of two, and host of the U Talk, I’ll Listen Podcast and Blacktivities Podcast. She started podcasting during the quarantine of 2020 at the height of arguments over racial justice, politics, and mask mandates when she decided to create her first podcast centered around listening to others’ stories, perspectives, empathy, and mental health. Check out Shannon’s SAC’s Facts segment on Blacktivities Podcast where she adds her own panache to black history.