The Bro Talk Podcast
Hosts:
- Rev. Jermine D. Alberty, M.Div., BSB/M — Principal Consultant of SALT Initiative LLC, mental health advocate, author, and purpose coach from Las Vegas.
- Dr. Bryan Williams — Leadership strategist, speaker, and empowerment coach from Houston, Texas.
Two brothers from different cities, united by purpose, share raw and authentic conversations about manhood, faith, healing, relationships, success, and community. The Bro Talk Podcast blends wisdom with wit, humor with honesty, and spirituality with practicality — giving listeners a place where Black men’s voices are centered, celebrated, and uplifted.
The Bro Talk Podcast
Latest Episodes
You'll Be in My Heart
Mother’s Day can feel like a spotlight on what you miss. If you’re celebrating, we celebrate with you. If you’re grieving, we sit with you and tell the truth: love doesn’t disappear when someone is gone, but it does change shape, and some days ...
Pressure & Promise: Managing Stress While Holding Onto Hope
Stress doesn’t wait for a “good time,” and hope doesn’t require you to fake a smile. April carries both National Stress Awareness Month and National Hope Month, and we lean into that tension with a real conversation about what pressure does to ...
A Bro Talk International Women’s Day Conversation with Dr. Barbara Wright
The spark of entrepreneurship isn’t a business plan—it’s the moment you speak ownership over your life. Dr. Barbara Wright joins us to unpack how that declaration becomes a durable enterprise through readiness, strategy, and systems that work e...
From Son To Care Partner: A Journey Through Parkinson’s, Purpose, And Personal Healing
What happens when “showing up” stops being a slogan and becomes your daily life? We sit down with our friend Adrian to trace his path from long-distance helper to full-time care partner for his mother living with Parkinson’s—and the inner overh...
Thank a Mentor: The Power of Showing Up
Who showed up for you when they didn’t have to? We dive into what real mentorship looks like, why it’s essential—not optional—for young people, and how to close the access gap that leaves many boys of color without consistent guidance. Drawing ...