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P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Izzy Baker
348 episodes
2 days ago
Are you a young millennial man standing at the crossroads of life, feeling like the outlier in your circle when making smart, healthy choices? Look no further because P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast has got you covered!

Hosted by Izzy Baker, Prodigy Sportive Attestations is an interview-based podcast that delivers a raw, masculine take on mental health specifically tailored to young men like you—those who defy the grain yet find themselves isolated in their pursuit of well-being.

This podcast is a journey into the heart of decision-making for young men striving to thrive in the complexities of modern society. We dissect topics that resonate with your life: building authentic relationships, navigating societal pressures with wisdom, achieving financial stability, career development, emotional intelligence, physical health, lifestyle management, cultural competency, and fostering personal growth through faith.

Whether you want to enhance your leadership skills, improve your fitness regime, or foster better connections, we've got you covered. Alongside, we'll explore the emotional landscape of manhood—tackling topics like stress management, the impact of social media, and the importance of creative expression.

Each episode blends unfiltered discussions, sound research, and engaging storytelling, spiced with the comedy style of satire. We're here to equip you with the tools to break through decision fatigue and chart a course through life's challenges with resilience and foresight. This podcast captures intellectual and humorous conversations that challenge your thoughts, beliefs, and actions.

So, join us on this journey of self-discovery and personal growth. But remember, this podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only and is not a replacement for seeking professional help.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.
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Mental Health
Comedy,
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Self-Improvement,
Health & Fitness
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All content for P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast is the property of Izzy Baker and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Are you a young millennial man standing at the crossroads of life, feeling like the outlier in your circle when making smart, healthy choices? Look no further because P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast has got you covered!

Hosted by Izzy Baker, Prodigy Sportive Attestations is an interview-based podcast that delivers a raw, masculine take on mental health specifically tailored to young men like you—those who defy the grain yet find themselves isolated in their pursuit of well-being.

This podcast is a journey into the heart of decision-making for young men striving to thrive in the complexities of modern society. We dissect topics that resonate with your life: building authentic relationships, navigating societal pressures with wisdom, achieving financial stability, career development, emotional intelligence, physical health, lifestyle management, cultural competency, and fostering personal growth through faith.

Whether you want to enhance your leadership skills, improve your fitness regime, or foster better connections, we've got you covered. Alongside, we'll explore the emotional landscape of manhood—tackling topics like stress management, the impact of social media, and the importance of creative expression.

Each episode blends unfiltered discussions, sound research, and engaging storytelling, spiced with the comedy style of satire. We're here to equip you with the tools to break through decision fatigue and chart a course through life's challenges with resilience and foresight. This podcast captures intellectual and humorous conversations that challenge your thoughts, beliefs, and actions.

So, join us on this journey of self-discovery and personal growth. But remember, this podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only and is not a replacement for seeking professional help.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.
Show more...
Mental Health
Comedy,
Education,
Comedy Interviews,
Self-Improvement,
Health & Fitness
Episodes (20/348)
P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Social Media & Therapy, 21 Savage Claims He was "Groomed", & John Cena's Last Match
This week’s Mental Man Monday livestream is a raw, culture-driven conversation about burnout, growth, and knowing when it’s time to leave a season behind. Izzy Baker opens the episode by recapping the latest PSA: The Mental Health Podcast release, Social Media & You Reloaded Pt. 2, featuring licensed therapist Payton Hogan, and reflects on why conversations around therapy, emotional expression, and suicidal ideation still make many men uncomfortable — especially Black men.

From there, the conversation shifts into how early exposure to adult environments can shape long-term dissatisfaction. Using 21 Savage’s viral comments about being “clubbed out” as a case study, Izzy breaks down how many men are introduced to nightlife, validation, and external stimulation at a young age — only to feel bored, empty, or restless later in life. The discussion connects club culture, social conditioning, and mental health, questioning whether burnout is less about age and more about repetition without purpose.

The livestream then pivots to John Cena’s retirement and the psychology of endings. Izzy explores what it means to exit a season with intention — whether it’s a career, a relationship, a lifestyle, or an identity you’ve outgrown. The episode challenges men to recognize when it’s time to make a clean break instead of waiting to be forced out, emphasizing the mental toll of staying too long in spaces that no longer serve you.

Throughout the conversation, Izzy weaves together faith, personal experience, and cultural commentary — touching on entrepreneurship, financial pressure, family responsibility, and the silent expectations placed on men to “just keep going.” This episode isn’t about shaming the past; it’s about recognizing patterns, honoring growth, and giving yourself permission to move forward.

If you’ve ever felt tired of the same routines, disconnected from environments you once loved, or unsure how to transition into your next chapter, this Mental Man Monday is for you.

Listen. Reflect. And ask yourself what season you’re being called to leave behind.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

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2 days ago
19 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
“I Talk to God, Not a Therapist" Feat. Payton Hogan
Part two of Social Media and You dives into one of the most misunderstood topics in mental health: therapy. This week, Izzy Baker sits down with Omaha-based licensed professional counselor Payton Hogan, founder of Bear Company Counseling, for an unfiltered conversation about the intersection of faith, healing, and the internet. What starts as a discussion on how social media glorifies “self-care” quickly becomes a deeper exploration of why so many men avoid therapy altogether.

Izzy and Payton break down the myths that keep men silent—like the idea that therapy is just “talking to a stranger” or that prayer alone is enough to fix what discipline and dialogue are meant to address. They discuss how the rise of “therapy culture” online has made mental health both a movement and a marketing trend, and how that confuses people who genuinely need help. Payton shares how he went from private struggle to running a full counseling practice, why community care matters more than image, and how faith can guide—but not replace—the therapeutic process.

The episode also challenges the common phrase, “I talk to God, not a therapist,” and examines how spiritual pride can sometimes block emotional growth. Through their conversation, Izzy and Payton connect faith and practicality—showing that therapy isn’t the absence of God, it’s often how He meets you. Together, they discuss the emotional labor of entrepreneurship, the exhaustion that comes from constantly performing strength, and the freedom that comes with being honest about your limits.

As the episode closes, Izzy reminds listeners that vulnerability is not weakness—it’s alignment. Healing doesn’t always look holy on social media, but it’s still sacred work.

 Listen. Reflect. And remember, real men heal out loud.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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1 week ago
1 hour 10 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Social Media and You: How Online Habits Are Rewiring Our Mental Health Feat. William Sharpe
Season 9 continues with a brand-new six-part series, Social Media and You, and Izzy Baker kicks it off on Thanksgiving Day with a conversation that hits home for anyone navigating digital life in 2025. From therapy misconceptions to doomscrolling addiction, Izzy opens the series with licensed professional counselor William Sharp, known online as With the Therapist, to explore the real link between social media and mental health. This one isn’t just about apps — it’s about attention, identity, and the hidden ways the online world is shaping how we think, feel, and believe. Izzy begins with humor and honesty, setting the tone for a Thanksgiving special that’s as relatable as it is revealing.

The meme of the week reads: “After being on social media… how’s your mental health?” That question drives the episode as Izzy and Will unpack why therapy isn’t just “paid advice,” why so many people — especially Black men — still resist counseling, and how misunderstanding therapy keeps communities stuck in cycles of burnout and emotional isolation. Drawing from Angel Reese and Monaleo’s viral conversation about therapy, Izzy challenges the myth that “therapists tell you what you want to hear,” and instead highlights how real therapy forces us to confront the truths we’ve been avoiding.

The discussion quickly widens into the bigger picture — how the digital world has become both a tool and a trap. Izzy and Will take a hard look at the rise of AI therapy tools like ChatGPT, the increasing dependence on digital validation, and how men are using online spaces to process pain in unhealthy ways. Will offers professional insight into why comparison culture hits men differently, explaining how purpose, work, and emotional restraint collide under the pressure of social media. Together, they explore what it means to live authentically when your highlight reel becomes your identity — and why so many “high-functioning” men are thriving online while quietly unraveling offline. In the Happy Hour segment, Izzy addresses one of the most controversial trends of the year — using chatbots as substitutes for therapy — and asks the hard question:

At what point are we replacing God with technology? Drawing from Matthew 6:22 and Psalm 101:3, he warns listeners about guarding their eye gates and ear gates, breaking down how overstimulation, gossip algorithms, and endless “self-help” content can distort spiritual and emotional clarity. Will adds balance with practical strategies, from setting social media cut-off times to fasting from digital noise to refocus on purpose. The conversation turns deeply personal as the two men share how they’ve had to guard their peace as both content creators and counselors. Izzy opens up about his own struggles with distraction, comparison, and the temptation to overwork in the name of “purpose.”

Will responds with a message on fasting, boundaries, and the freedom that comes from stepping away — even temporarily — to reclaim your mind. They both challenge listeners to examine how much control their phones really have, and to ask: Do you own your feed, or does it own you? By the time the Weekly Sabbatical arrives, the tone turns spiritual. Izzy reads from a reflection on Proverbs 4:20–22, reminding listeners that “what you watch, hear, and meditate on becomes either life or poison to your body.”

He connects the scripture to modern habits — the endless scrolling, the comparison traps, and the way entertainment can quietly erode discipline and joy. The challenge of the week is simple but piercing: Do you need a social media fast — and if so, when’s the last time you took one? As Thanksgiving unfolds, Izzy leaves the audience with a reminder that gratitude and presence matter more than performance. You don’t have to post your plate to prove you’re enjoying your blessings. You just have to live them.

Listen. Reflect. And don’t be afraid to join the conversation.Show more...
2 weeks ago
51 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Nicki Minaj, the Epstein Files, and Why Men Stay Silent
This week’s Mental Man Monday livestream lands right on Thanksgiving week — and Izzy Baker’s back solo with the launch of a brand-new six-part mini-series: Social Media and You. In this first installment, he wastes no time stirring the pot, opening up bold conversations about truth, accountability, and why silence is becoming one of the most dangerous habits among modern men. With just two solo episodes left before the series finale of Season 9, Izzy sets the tone for what’s about to be a stretch of some of the most honest dialogue yet.

 He starts by recapping last week’s PSA episode, “Did God Tell You To Do That, or Does It Just Make Sense?”, breaking down how obedience often clashes with comfort. Pulling from his own growth and real-life reflections, Izzy challenges listeners to consider how faith gets limited when we try to make everything logical. He calls out how men often get stuck in cycles of “doing what makes sense” rather than trusting divine redirection — highlighting that partial obedience still counts as disobedience, no matter how rational it looks.

From there, Izzy shifts into the week’s major headlines: the release of the Epstein files and Nicki Minaj’s viral United Nations speech about the persecution of Christians in Nigeria. In true Mental Man Monday fashion, he approaches both stories with balance — part faith, part logic, and all transparency. He questions the timing of the Epstein file release, challenging the government’s motives and asking whether edited “truths” protect the innocent or simply hide the guilty. It’s not conspiracy for clicks — it’s a deeper reflection on truth, accountability, and discernment in a digital age that rewards distraction.

Then comes the curveball: Nicki Minaj. Izzy unpacks how, of all people, Nicki — a female rapper — became the one to publicly speak on Christian persecution before most men of faith did. It’s a sharp, uncomfortable mirror for male audiences. He connects her courage to a broader issue: how fear, groupthink, and cancel culture have made men hesitant to stand on conviction. He doesn’t defend every move she’s made, but he calls her boldness what it is — leadership. Through faith and fire, he questions why men who quote scripture in private remain silent in public, and how social media has turned too many believers into spectators instead of soldiers.

As the episode closes, Izzy flips the usual “what would Jesus do?” question into a challenge: What would you do if the truth cost you popularity? He reminds listeners that Jesus didn’t avoid controversy to stay comfortable — He flipped tables when it mattered. Izzy’s final message is both spiritual and practical: if you can speak up about sports, music, and memes, you can speak up about morals too. Because as he says, “Nicki outmanned half of y’all this week — and that’s saying something.”

It’s sharp. It’s layered. And it’s a reminder that real manhood doesn’t hide behind silence.

 Listen. Reflect. And don’t be afraid to join the conversation.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

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3 weeks ago
21 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Did God Tell You To Do That, or Does It Just Make Sense?
Season 9 is heading into its final stretch, and Izzy Baker is back with one of the most honest and spiritually challenging episodes of the entire season. This week, Izzy dives deep into the tension between obedience and logic, exploring what happens when God tells you to move, shift, release, or trust Him in ways that make absolutely no sense on paper. As the year closes and purpose conversations get louder, this episode confronts the battle between clarity and convenience — and why so many of us confuse one for the other.

 Izzy opens by reflecting on the meme that sparked this entire conversation: “Did God tell you to do that, or does it just make sense?” What starts as a simple question turns into a raw exploration of purpose, timing, career shifts, and the uncomfortable reality that sometimes God will pull you out of familiar environments not to punish you, but to position you. Whether it’s job rejection, unexpected redirection, or losing access to spaces you thought you needed, Izzy unpacks how obedience can feel like irrationality until hindsight proves otherwise.

From there, he moves into Happy Hour, where he tackles one of the most relatable realities for young millennial men today: the art of giving people — especially parents and friends — the bare minimum. Izzy breaks down why some dreams can’t survive unnecessary opinions, why oversharing exposes you to spiritual and emotional interference, and why ambition often gets mislabeled as being “ungrateful.” With humor and honesty, he challenges listeners to protect the visions God gave them privately, even when the people closest to them don’t understand.

In the Case Study, Izzy analyzes 1 Kings 19:11–12, the passage where God’s voice doesn’t appear in the wind, the earthquake, or the fire — but in a still, small whisper. Through personal stories, spiritual insight, and years of hard lessons, Izzy explains why so many of us miss God’s direction looking for something dramatic, when the answer has been sitting quietly in front of us the whole time. He connects this concept to a viral video from sneaker creator Devintage, revealing how delayed obedience can cost you more later — and how idols, comfort, and fear can disguise themselves as logic.

The episode then shifts into the mental health conversation, centered on obedience, pressure, stress, and spiritual clarity. Izzy pulls from psychological research, faith-based studies, and lived experience to show how fear, pressure, and confusion distort decision-making. From habitual stress responses to long-term emotional patterns, he breaks down why people often revert to what “worked last season,” even when God is clearly calling them into something different.

As the Weekly Sabbatical wraps up the episode, Izzy leans into stories of biblical obedience, divine timing, and the uncomfortable process of being stretched. He challenges listeners to evaluate where they’ve been striking the rock out of habit, where they’ve been moving out of pressure instead of peace, and where convenience has been disguised as purpose.

The question he closes with becomes the one you’ll carry all week: Are you moving from clarity… or comfort? This episode is a quiet call to trust, a nudge toward surrender, and a reminder that faith rarely fits neatly into logic. If you’ve been wrestling with a decision, feeling pulled into something that doesn’t add up, or questioning whether you’re hearing God or your own fear — this one will meet you right where you are.

Listen. Reflect. And don’t be afraid to join the conversation.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

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1 month ago
47 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
The Curious Case: Are Men the New Mean Girls?
Season 9 continues with a brand-new mini-series inside the PSA universe — The Curious Case, a slow-rolling investigative run into the emotional habits, social behavior, and internal battles shaping modern men. Think of this like the Diddy case: one episode now, another one in a few weeks, and the rest spread out over time. Today’s question sets the tone: Have men become the new Mean Girls? And if so…why?

In this first installment, Izzy digs into the rise of the hypersensitive sassy man — the guy whose self-esteem swings with every comment, whose feelings erupt at the smallest disagreement, and who weaponizes blocking like it’s spiritual warfare. Pulling from scripture, real-life friendships, pop culture, and even a few TikTok University scholars, the episode explores the difference between being highly sensitive and being hypersensitive — one rooted in compassion and emotional intelligence, the other rooted in offense, insecurity, and unchecked ego.

To ground the conversation, Izzy revisits an older PSA classic, “Wah Wah Wah!” from Season 2, where he first broke down these emotional categories. This time, he expands the lens using passages from Ephesians 4:26 and key reflections from Soriah Lott’s King’s Hill Church blog, which challenges the belief that sensitivity is a spiritual weakness. Lott writes that “feeling strong emotions, empathizing with others, and experiencing stimuli differently is not inherently sinful — it comes down to how we’re wired as image-bearers of God.” The episode uses this framework to show how sanctified sensitivity becomes compassion, while hypersensitivity becomes chaos.

From club culture to section politics, Izzy exposes the “Regina George with dreads” energy he has watched men display in both nightlife and church spaces. The cutting eyes. The whispered comments. The gatekeeping. The sudden blocks. The emotional cliques. And the unspoken jealousy. He questions why so many men have mastered the art of offense but not the discipline of self-awareness — and why emotional fragility disguised as “alpha male confidence” is actually insecurity in disguise. 

The episode also includes a deep dive into viral clips: one warning about the danger of “overly emotional men who lack impulse control,” another challenging outdated ideas about masculine softness in relationships, and a satirical breakdown of performative high-value masculinity. Each clip becomes a case file — a snapshot of the modern male identity crisis.

With raw honesty, Izzy shares personal stories about friendships that disappeared without warning, the “callouses” he’s developed from men cutting him off, and the spiritual lessons that came from losing people he never expected to lose. He dissects loyalty, emotional regulation, conflict, and the growing trend of men who struggle to take accountability without immediately playing the victim.

And as always, the episode ends with Questions That Need Addressing — from “Should a man ever block another man?” to “Are men becoming too comfortable playing the victim?” to “Is clapping back confidence or insecurity?” 

Each one pushes the listener to examine where emotional maturity ends and hypersensitivity begins. If you’ve ever wondered why male friendships dissolve over minor disagreements, why some men crumble at the smallest critique, or why emotional intelligence has become such a battleground among Black men today — this is an episode you don’t want to skip.

 Listen. Learn. Reflect. And prepare yourself — because The Curious Case is just getting started.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

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1 month ago
49 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Big Sean Breaks Silence on Jhené Aiko, David Banner vs Media, & Trump’s $2K Move
🗣️ Mental Man Monday — “You Can’t Trust a Man Who Cheats on His Wife” Season 9’s latest Mental Man Monday livestream is another solo deep dive from Izzy Baker, who steps to the mic alone to tackle three hard-hitting conversations about integrity, headlines, and the hidden state of modern manhood.

The stream opens with Izzy unpacking a viral David Banner clip that’s been making waves online — one that the internet twisted out of context. Banner didn’t say “you can’t trust men to cheat” — he was quoting his mentor, who told him, “You can’t trust a man who’ll cheat on his wife, because if he’ll disrespect his wife in public, what makes you think he won’t snake you?” From there, Izzy calls out how we’ve normalized dishonor among men — quick to protect our homies but silent when they violate their vows. He challenges listeners to rethink loyalty, accountability, and what it really means to stand on values in an era where cheating has become culture.

 Next, Izzy pivots to politics with Donald Trump’s proposed $2,000 “dividend” plan — a headline that sent the internet into chaos. He breaks down what’s real, what’s clickbait, and why emotional regulation matters when reacting to media. Instead of celebrating “free money,” Izzy reframes the moment as a lesson in stewardship: every dollar is a test of discipline. As he puts it, “Any money that comes your way — use it wisely. Sometimes it’s not a blessing; it’s a budget check.”

Finally, Izzy closes with a conversation that blends celebrity gossip and real-life relationships — the Big Sean × Jhené Aiko breakup. Ten years together, a child, no marriage. Izzy flips the narrative on what it means to “play house,” arguing that too many couples want commitment without covenant. “If you’ve been doing everything like a married couple, what’s left to build toward?” he asks. The conversation turns into a spiritual reminder that Jesus never modeled confusion — only clarity and purpose.

As Izzy teases the next big shift — the launch of his new mini-series “The Curious Case of the Hypersensitive Man” — he reminds the audience that this is just the warm-up before the finale stretch of Season 9. This isn’t just commentary — it’s conviction.

From cheating to clickbait to commitment, this episode forces you to ask: where do your values really stand when no one’s watching?

Listen. Reflect. And stop calling dysfunction “normal.”

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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1 month ago
22 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Can Men & Women Really Be Friends? | UPS Layoffs & Jamal Bryant’s Move with Snap Benefits
Season 9’s newest Mental Man Monday livestream might be the most faith-filled and confrontational one yet. After a week off, Izzy Baker returns with DJ No Name, co-host of The HL Podcast, for an unfiltered conversation that blends spiritual awakening with cultural reality.

The night begins with a bold recap of the latest PSA: The Mental Health Podcast episode, “Can Men and Women Truly Be Friends?” DJ No Name gives Izzy his flowers for hosting one of the most transparent, necessary, and uncomfortable conversations men have ever had about friendship, temptation, and maturity. Speaking from the lens of marriage, DJ No Name admits how rare it is to see Black men display this level of honesty and vulnerability on-camera.

From there, the dialogue pivots into current events — specifically UPS’s 48,000 layoffs and what Izzy calls “the season of uncomfortable exits.” He draws a powerful parallel between economic instability and spiritual transition, warning that when God closes doors, it’s not rejection — it’s redirection. “You can’t go back to Egypt,” Izzy declares. “You can’t run back to what He freed you from.”

The conversation heats up even more when they address Pastor Jamal Bryant’s controversial move to suspend church tithes for the entire month of November, instead collecting canned goods for families affected by SNAP cuts. DJ No Name questions whether Bryant’s decision was genuine sacrifice or clever PR, while Izzy argues that this is what real ministry looks like — giving without expecting a return.

As the stream wraps, both men confront what it truly means to keep faith in famine, to trust purpose through layoffs, and to stay generous in a selfish world. This episode isn’t just about religion — it’s about resistance. It’s about not running back to comfort when God is calling you to grow.

Listen. Reflect. Don’t just survive this season — shift through it.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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1 month ago
36 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Can Men and Women Truly Be Friends? Feat. Jessi Holley
Season 9, Episode 25 of PSA: The Mental Health Podcast dives head-first into one of the most polarizing questions in modern relationships: can men and women really be just friends? Izzy Baker sits down with Jessi Holley, host of Everybody Can’t Go Podcast and author of the book that started her brand, for a brutally honest breakdown of friendship, lust, and boundaries in the age of OnlyFans and DM culture.

What begins as a playful conversation about “the friend zone” quickly turns into a deeper discussion about lust, maturity, and blurred lines. Jesse opens up about having long-term platonic friendships with men — no flings, no past, no “almost.” Izzy challenges the notion that men and women can keep it that clean, pointing to how lust, trauma, and social conditioning make it hard to separate attraction from friendship.

Together, they unpack how sexual trauma and overexposure have rewired how this generation views connection, and why so many people can’t see friendship without filtering it through desire. The conversation gets raw as they debate the OnlyFans effect — how posting provocative content or monetizing sexuality affects how men perceive and approach women, and where accountability versus respect really starts.

Jessi brings fire and wisdom, explaining why confidence, not chaos, should define friendship. Izzy plays devil’s advocate, asking if some women set themselves up for blurred boundaries by ignoring red flags that always looked like Six Flags. The two go back and forth about trust, temptation, and emotional bleed — when friendships get too deep, too fast, and start to feel like mini-relationships.

By the end, they’re not just talking about male-female friendships — they’re dissecting how ego, insecurity, and emotional immaturity keep people from building anything real.

 If you’ve ever been accused of “doing too much” with a friend, or questioned whether your “bro” or “sis” might secretly want more — this one will hit home.

Listen. Reflect. And decide for yourself — can men and women really just be friends?

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
Show more...
1 month ago
1 hour 9 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
The Real Reason Men Have Low Self-Esteem Feat. Paul Sweatpants
Season 9, Episode 24 of PSA: The Mental Health Podcast is as real as it gets. For his first in-person episode of the season, Izzy Baker sits down with Paul Sweatpants, a Las Vegas-based vlogger and Air Force veteran who’s built a name for himself through storytelling, self-awareness, and sharp wit. What starts as a lighthearted chat about self-image and hygiene routines quickly unpacks a much deeper question: How did you raise your self-esteem? I

Izzy opens up about his personal transformation, from being overlooked in his early years to walking into rooms and turning heads. Paul shares how a single YouTube comment about his lack of structure shifted the entire trajectory of his content and his confidence. Together, they discuss how small changes, better hygiene, real accountability, and facing uncomfortable truths can snowball into major life shifts. The episode digs into how men often confuse ego with self-esteem, how hypersexuality sometimes masks deeper emotional wounds, and how military life impacted Paul’s mental health.

The two also tackle how social media pressures men to perform rather than heal, and how real brotherhood, not surface-level friendship, plays a critical role in building healthy self-worth. As the episode closes, Izzy and Paul get candid about the pain of childhood gaslighting, the struggle to express emotion, and the importance of creating a life that reflects who you really are — not who you were told to be. 

This one isn’t just a conversation about confidence it’s a blueprint for rebuilding yourself from the inside out. Tune in if you’ve ever struggled with self-worth, are learning to take feedback without folding, or are just trying to feel like somebody again. 

Listen. Reflect. And don’t be afraid to join the conversation.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

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1 month ago
1 hour 8 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Katt Williams for Jesus, Funky Dineva vs Stephen A, Marvin Winans Dragged
In this special solo edition of Mental Man Monday, Izzy returns to the mic with three hard-hitting, culturally relevant topics that challenge the way men think about faith, accountability, and generosity.

This episode is a bold reminder that silence isn’t always wisdom — and that being outspoken, when rooted in conviction, still has a place in the conversation. The episode opens with a powerful reflection on comedian Katt Williams’ recent appearance on the Sherri Shepherd Show. After making waves on Shannon Sharpe’s Club Shay Shay earlier this year, Katt revealed that he is unashamed to call himself a follower of Jesus Christ — and he accepts the backlash that comes with that declaration. Izzy uses this moment to dig into what it means to truly stand for your beliefs in a world where going viral often means compromising your values. The conversation becomes a wake-up call for creatives, entertainers, and everyday men alike: are you being bold, or are you just being loud?

Next, Izzy addresses Funky Dineva’s strong public rebuke of Stephen A. Smith, following Smith’s controversial comments directed at Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett. While the headlines focused on the drama, Izzy leans into the deeper takeaway — what it looks like to defend Black women publicly, and why accountability and respect must coexist when we speak our minds. It’s a nuanced reflection on what happens when ego, opinion, and purpose collide on public platforms.

The final topic turns toward the church. Bishop Marvin Winans recently sparked backlash after telling a woman that her donation “wasn’t enough.” While social media labeled the moment as greedy and insensitive, Izzy invites listeners to go deeper. Sharing his own spiritual journey, he unpacks the difference between giving out of obligation and giving with understanding. What does it mean to sow into something bigger than yourself?

And how do we distinguish between manipulation and ministry in a world that often confuses the two? This episode blends personal testimony, cultural commentary, and spiritual insight — all wrapped in honesty and humor. Whether you're questioning your own convictions or seeking to strengthen your foundation, this one’s for men navigating life with integrity and faith under pressure.

Listen, reflect, and don’t be afraid to speak up.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

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1 month ago
31 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Trickin', NLE Choppa vs. Jonathan Majors, & Remembering Singer D'Angelo
This week on Mental Man Monday, Izzy is joined by AMROCK, host of the HL Podcast, for a multi-layered conversation that challenges cultural norms, honors legacy, and calls men into deeper accountability. From the first minute, it’s clear this isn’t just another episode — it’s a necessary one. The two begin by continuing last week’s heated topic around trickin’. What’s the line between providing and performing? Is “trickin’” really about power, or is it about unhealed men seeking validation through material gestures?

Izzy and AMROCK don’t just ask these questions — they unpack them through personal experience and cultural critique. Midway through the conversation, the episode takes a more somber turn. The sudden and tragic death of R&B icon D’Angelo is discussed, not from a gossip angle, but through the lens of grief, masculinity, and preventative health. D’Angelo, who passed from pancreatic cancer, leaves behind a son who now joins the many men navigating life without both parents. This segment becomes a moment of real-life therapy, a call for Black men to take their health seriously, to grieve openly, and to talk about the pain we often suppress.

In the final portion of the episode, the conversation pivots again — this time toward faith, controversy, and cultural tension. Izzy and AMROCK react to a now-viral moment from Kirk Franklin’s podcast where rapper NLE Choppa shares a controversial opinion, calling Jesus “our brother, not our savior.” Actor Jonathan Majors, who was also present, immediately pushes back. While neither Kirk nor Majors appear in this episode, their interaction sparks a discussion that’s deeply relevant. The episode raises an honest question: what happens when our version of spirituality is built more on vibes than on truth? The name Charlie Kirk also comes up, not as a guest, but as a symbol of the ideological chaos and division that has even infiltrated the faith conversation.

 Together, AMROCK and Izzy reflect on how masculinity, media, mental health, and misguided theology all intersect. Whether you agree or disagree with everything said, one thing’s for sure: this episode forces men to confront their beliefs, their grief, and their need for authentic healing. It’s part podcast, part barbershop talk, and part altar call. Listen closely because these are the kinds of conversations that shift the culture.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

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🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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2 months ago
1 hour 2 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Is Tricking Just Generosity? The Truth About Power, Provision, & Playing Yourself Feat. The Pod Peeps
Izzy is back with the PodPeeps — Jesse, Tevin, and JR — for one of the most honest and entertaining conversations of the season. Recorded live in Atlanta, this in-person episode dives deep into the world of “tricking”: what it is, what it isn’t, and why so many people pretend not to be doing it… while doing it. From sugar daddies to spontaneous gifts, this one unpacks the cultural, psychological, and spiritual sides of spending money to feel powerful, feel loved, or feel something at all.

The group explores why some men equate money with masculinity, using dollars to compensate for past bullying, insecurities, or rejection, and how the act of tricking becomes less about generosity and more about buying temporary validation. As JR explains, the amygdala, the part of the brain responsible for fear, gets activated when people feel unattractive or unwanted, and tricking becomes a way to override that emotional pain. But is it worth it? 

The conversation doesn’t stop at men. The PodPeeps also explore the reality of women who trick, the blurred lines between providing and flexing, and how “generosity” can often be misread depending on your tax bracket. Jesse raises a powerful point about how true respect, the kind that’s rooted in character and consistency, can’t be bought. Tricking might get you tolerance, but it won’t get you love. 

Izzy adds a spiritual layer to the mix, asking: Would God be okay with you tricking? Pulling from Proverbs and Genesis, the episode challenges listeners to rethink how they use their resources not just in relationships, but in their purpose. Provision, as the Bible outlines, is about stewardship, love, and responsibility, not manipulation, performance, or flashy validation. Whether you’ve been a trick, been tricked on, or just like nice things, this episode forces you to ask the question: What are you really trying to buy?

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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2 months ago
1 hour 1 minute

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Sleeping on Potential: Diddy, Kyren Lacy’s Case Reopened & Tyler Lepley Being the Only Black
This week’s Mental Man Monday features a timely and powerful conversation between Izzy and Jaleel Wavey, creator and host of the Unconventional AF Podcast. The livestream opens by revisiting last week’s impactful episode with Jonathan Otto, where the conversation focused on men sleeping on their potential. This follow-up episode brings that discussion into real life, as Jaleel shares his personal experience living with a chronic illness and how Jonathan’s message gave him a deeper sense of peace.

Together, Izzy and Jaleel explore how men often carry silent battles while still being expected to perform and show up in the world. Although it wasn’t part of the plan, the topic of Diddy naturally came up during the stream. With Diddy now sentenced to 50 months in prison, Jaleel offers insight into the case, the role of power and accountability in public narratives, and how perception can shape justice. The conversation then shifts to the heartbreaking story of Kyren Lacy, the LSU football player who died by suicide after being falsely blamed for an accident.

New developments reveal that Kyren was innocent, and Izzy and Jaleel reflect on how quick judgment, isolation, and the absence of support systems can have devastating consequences. Toward the end of the episode, the discussion turns to actor Tyler Lepley, known for his roles in P-Valley, Harlem, and Ruth & Boaz. Tyler recently appeared on the Baby, This Is Keke Palmer podcast, where he shared a childhood experience of being called the N-word by a white friend in second grade. That moment sparks a deeper conversation on racism, identity, and what it means to grow up Black in predominantly white spaces.

This Mental Man Monday episode is a raw and unfiltered examination of perseverance, pain, and potential. It blends cultural critique with emotional truth, reminding listeners that healing isn’t about having everything figured out — it’s about showing up for yourself anyway. Tune in to hear a conversation that invites reflection, accountability, and hope.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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2 months ago
56 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Charlie Kirk, Overcoming Lyme Disease & the War on Men’s Potential Feat. Jonathan Otto
This week on PSA: The Mental Health Podcast, we’re diving deep into potential, purpose, and the fight to stay awake in a world full of numbing. In this raw and revealing conversation, Izzy is joined by investigative journalist, wellness advocate, and documentary filmmaker Jonathan Otto, whose work has reached millions globally. The two discuss everything from healing parasites and trauma to escaping the trap of performance-driven identity — especially for men. Jonathan opens up about being shaped by childhood wounds, the risk of chasing fame over faith, and why true healing can’t be outsourced.

 Izzy brings the convo full circle by reflecting on why this episode had to happen — especially now. Drawing inspiration from past critiques by names like Charlie Kirk, this episode doesn’t just call men to do better. It calls them to feel, to reflect, and to stop sleeping on their assignment. “You were never lazy,” Izzy says. “You were in survival mode.” And that survival is costing us potential, purpose, and even our peace.

Jonathan highlights the importance of red light therapy and how it helps combat disease, boost energy, and promote overall body health. This is especially for men of faith who’ve been taught to just “pray it away.” He talks about the power of holding space with people who can validate your pain while still holding you accountable. The conversation wrestles with the emotional consequences of never confronting your own story and the spiritual danger of not knowing your why. 

Together, they dig into self-sabotage, spiritual warfare, dietary healing, and why so many men use comfort as a cover-up. From letting go of bitterness to breaking cycles of delay and numbness, this episode is a necessary interruption for anyone who feels stuck, silenced, or sick of themselves.

You’ll hear conviction. You’ll feel the tension. But more than anything, you’ll be reminded that your potential isn’t gone — it’s just buried under habits, hurts, and the pressure to be perfect.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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2 months ago
1 hour 1 minute

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Did Young Thug Just Say You Gotta Be WHITE to Win?! | Trump, Med Beds & Suicide Unpacked
Izzy returns for a solo edition of Mental Man Monday, and this one pulls no punches. The episode begins by reflecting on last week’s powerful conversation, “Is Ending Your Life Selfish?”, a follow-up to the original 2021 episode that many were too uncomfortable to face. But as Izzy explains, that silence is part of the problem. Men’s mental health is often the most neglected when it’s most needed — and this series refuses to let it stay in the shadows.

From there, Izzy dives deep into cultural controversy, starting with Young Thug’s bold new album released while behind bars and dressed in whiteface. The project sparked backlash for including the hard ER in the first track, followed by Young Thug claiming that “to go big, you have to be white.” Izzy breaks down the deeper meaning behind the outrage, what it says about the entertainment industry, and dares to ask the rawest question of all: What would Jesus do in this situation? 

Then the episode takes a sharp turn into conspiracy culture with Donald Trump reposting — then deleting a video about so-called “med beds” that supposedly heal disease and regrow limbs. What started as a fringe theory suddenly garnered presidential attention, and Izzy unpacks what it reveals about trust, belief, and the blurring of the line between politics, pseudoscience, and desperation in today’s culture.

This livestream blends cultural commentary with emotional honesty, serving up a raw and thought-provoking experience for young Black men, men of faith, and anyone navigating the blurred lines between identity, masculinity, mental health, and social pressure.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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2 months ago
24 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Is Unaliving Yourself Selfish? Or Are We Just Not Paying Attention?
This episode is not for clicks it’s for clarity, conviction, and compassion. In honor of Suicide Prevention Awareness Month, Izzy revisits one of the most intense and necessary conversations from Season 5 this time with a sharper lens, deeper vulnerability, and real-world commentary on what’s changed (and what hasn’t) since that original question was first posed: Is suicide selfish?

Izzy opens up about his own past thoughts of unaliving, the pain of losing a close friend in 2021, and the quiet desperation that lives inside so many young men today. We explore Kevin Hines' powerful survival story after jumping from the Golden Gate Bridge and why so many people are silently begging to be seen, not saved by a sermon or a hot take, but seen in their struggle.

Throughout the episode, Izzy also unpacks how rejection, isolation, and financial pressure weigh heavily on Black men, even when there’s no diagnosed mental illness. When therapy feels inaccessible or "not for us," some brothers turn to AI like ChatGPT for answers, or worse, they retreat in silence. There is also an intense conversation about suicide pods and the financial stress that leads men to "hitting licks".  This episode challenges that.

With moments of honesty, comedy (because we need to breathe), and gut-punching truth, Izzy poses questions that demand soul-searching: Do we truly check in on the "strong" friends? Are we calling out for help without knowing it? Is our silence costing someone else their life? If you’ve ever wrestled with the thought, “Do I belong here?” — this episode is your reminder that you do. You’re not alone. And someone is still here, ready to answer the call.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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2 months ago
44 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Help, I'm Addicted to My Phone Feat. Dr. Patrick Porter
We live in a world where prayer, silence, and stillness feel unbearable — not because we’re lazy, but because we’re addicted. In this eye-opening episode of PSA: The Mental Health Podcast, Izzy is joined by Dr. Patrick Porter, founder of BrainTap and a global authority in neuroscience and cognitive health, to unpack how phone addiction has become the hidden pandemic for men.

They explore why most of us reach for our phones during moments of boredom, stress, or even spiritual practices — and how dopamine dependency, overstimulation, and silence anxiety are quietly robbing us of peace, clarity, and purpose. Dr. Porter breaks down the neuroscience behind addiction to short-form content, explaining how the brain’s reward system has been hijacked by platforms designed to keep us scrolling.

Meanwhile, Izzy shares raw personal reflections on his struggle with constant stimulation and the fear of sitting with his thoughts. Together, they challenge men to choose discipline over dopamine and question who they’re becoming in a world that values reaction over reflection.

From brainwave training to breathwork to the power of presence, this episode offers tools and truths for the man who feels like his mind is always racing — and just wants peace. Dr. Porter also shares insight from his latest book You’re to Die For Life, offering men a roadmap to regain control of their mental and spiritual health before burnout becomes their baseline.

If you’ve ever felt like your phone has more control over your day than your own thoughts — this one’s for you.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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3 months ago
1 hour 11 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Young Thug’s Leaked Calls, Charlie Sheen’s Confession, and the Truth About Men Who Overshare
On this week’s Mental Man Monday, Izzy is joined by a familiar voice and face: Paul Sweatpants. Broadcasting straight outta Minnesota by way of Vegas, Paul taps in to give his raw, real-time reaction to Izzy’s most recent episode featuring Karen Salmansohn. The two revisit the core message of that episode — why we need to outgrow the phrase “this is just how I am.” As Paul says, that excuse keeps too many people stagnant, unwilling to grow, and hiding behind comfort instead of confronting character. Izzy and Paul explore what it means to mature emotionally and take accountability, especially as men, when change is uncomfortable but necessary.

Then, the episode takes a sharp cultural turn, diving into the buzz around Charlie Sheen’s Netflix documentary. Charlie made headlines by admitting that during his addiction to crack, he had sexual experiences with men — a bold confession that he shared before anyone else could use it against him. Izzy and Paul dissect the power of taking control of your own story before the world can distort it. They challenge listeners to consider how many of us are still hiding behind secrets and shame — and how healing often begins with honesty, even when it's ugly.

Finally, the conversation pivots to Young Thug’s leaked jail phone calls to his girlfriend, Mariah the Scientist, where he was heard dissing Future, Gunna, and others — and got clowned online for “gossiping.” But Paul quickly defends him, breaking down a universal truth: if you’ve ever had a girlfriend, you already know — we all vent to the person we’re dating. It’s not gossip. It’s intimacy. It’s how real relationships work.

Izzy and Paul use this moment to expose how the internet loves to twist vulnerability into weakness, especially for Black men. This stream wasn’t about a performance. It was two men being real about growth, grief, love, trauma, and taking your power back.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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3 months ago
40 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Drake’s BBL, Jim Jones Privilege, & the Rejection Letter That Broke the Internet
Labor Day might’ve pushed us to Tuesday, but the energy didn’t miss a beat. In this week's episode of PSA: The Mental Health Podcast, Izzy Baker teams up with JR, host of Real Sht Let’s Talk, to go deep on rejection, masculinity, and the invisible rules that Black men are forced to play by — even when we do everything “right.” From viral barbershop clips to viral job rejection letters, this episode exposes the emotional cost of showing up with credentials and still being seen as not enough.

 The convo opens with Drake’s viral BBL joke — and what might’ve seemed like a funny one-liner turns into a raw dialogue on male body image, deflection, and the way men, especially Black men, are trained to laugh off what hurts. Izzy and JR challenge the idea that men don’t struggle with appearance and ask what it means when jokes start masking deep insecurities.

Then it gets even deeper — we unpack the clip of Jim Jones, Fabolous, Maino, and Dave East sitting around debating Black privilege, struggle, and the unspoken hierarchy of pain. JR delivers a fiery perspective: when you're Black in America, even your “privilege” is questioned, and the pressure to prove your authenticity becomes a mental weight too many brothers silently carry.

Whether it's job applications, fake motivational quotes from parents, or “just wear a suit” advice, this episode pulls back the curtain on the gaslighting Black men face while trying to level up. This episode is for the man who’s tired of chasing validation from jobs, platforms, or people who don’t see his worth. For the one who’s constantly told he’s not “struggling enough” to be relatable. For the brother who’s been hiding pain under a personality.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.

TrustBuilder Package
🎯 Level up your professional development influence with the TrustBuilder Package — a social media strategy designed to position you as a thought leader in your space. From authority-building content to engagement that actually converts, we make sure your message doesn’t just get seen… it gets respected. Perfect for personal brands looking to grow their presence and impact. Legacy Launchpad


🚀 Build your podcast — and your influence — from the ground up with the Legacy Launchpad. We handle everything: strategy, branding, production, and promotion, so you can focus on delivering value. Designed for personal and professional development influencers who want their voice amplified, their brand elevated, and their legacy secured in the digital space.
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3 months ago
47 minutes

P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast
Are you a young millennial man standing at the crossroads of life, feeling like the outlier in your circle when making smart, healthy choices? Look no further because P.S.A the Mental Health Podcast has got you covered!

Hosted by Izzy Baker, Prodigy Sportive Attestations is an interview-based podcast that delivers a raw, masculine take on mental health specifically tailored to young men like you—those who defy the grain yet find themselves isolated in their pursuit of well-being.

This podcast is a journey into the heart of decision-making for young men striving to thrive in the complexities of modern society. We dissect topics that resonate with your life: building authentic relationships, navigating societal pressures with wisdom, achieving financial stability, career development, emotional intelligence, physical health, lifestyle management, cultural competency, and fostering personal growth through faith.

Whether you want to enhance your leadership skills, improve your fitness regime, or foster better connections, we've got you covered. Alongside, we'll explore the emotional landscape of manhood—tackling topics like stress management, the impact of social media, and the importance of creative expression.

Each episode blends unfiltered discussions, sound research, and engaging storytelling, spiced with the comedy style of satire. We're here to equip you with the tools to break through decision fatigue and chart a course through life's challenges with resilience and foresight. This podcast captures intellectual and humorous conversations that challenge your thoughts, beliefs, and actions.

So, join us on this journey of self-discovery and personal growth. But remember, this podcast is for educational and entertainment purposes only and is not a replacement for seeking professional help.

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/p-s-a-the-mental-health-podcast--5520511/support.