2026 Black Effect Festival Held In Atlanta Is A Success

 2026 Black Effect Podcast Festival took place on a rainy Saturday, April 25, 2026 at the Pullman Yards in Atlanta. The event featured live podcast recordings, panel discussions spanning the business of podcasting, a pitch your podcast both, the Black Marketplace and more. 

This year’s Black Effect Podcast Festival was another unforgettable celebration of Black voices, storytelling, and community.

Hosted by Loren LoRosa and DJ Envy of The Breakfast Club, the festival brought an impressive roster of talent through its doors. Cee Lo Green, Sheryl Underwood, Yung Miami, K. Michelle, Tika Sumpter, Claressa Shields, Lil Duval, KevOnStage, Dominique Morgan, Jamilla Bell, Mecca Lou, Stormi Steele and a host of others made appearances throughout the day, each adding their own energy to an event that felt less like a festival and more like a family reunion for the culture.

The presence of Crystal Renee Hayslett, known to millions as Harriet from Tyler Perry‘s Sistas, added a burst of of excitement as she hosted her podcast, Keep It Positive, Sweetie, live on stage — bringing her loyal fan base directly into the Black Effect universe.

Live tapings brought several popular shows to the Pullman Yards stage, including Drink Champs, The Don’t Call Me White Girl Show, Club 520 Podcast, Grits and Eggs Podcast and Reality With The King. Each taping enabled attendees to personally experience their favorite podcast hosts work in real time, creating an intimacy between creator and audience that digital streaming simply cannot replicate.

Beyond the entertainment, the festival leaned into substance with panels covering the evolution of artificial intelligence, audio and media development, and the future of the broader media landscape. The Audio and Media Development panel featured KevOnStage, Tika Sumpter and Carlos King among others, offering a candid look at where Black media is headed and what creators need to get there.

True to its mission of building community while celebrating creativity, the festival offered more than just programming. The popular Pitch Your Podcast Booth gave emerging creators a genuine shot at visibility, while The Black Effect Marketplace — powered by Shopify — showcased merchandise from Black-owned businesses and gave entrepreneurs a platform alongside some of the biggest names in the industry. Local food trucks rounded out the experience, ensuring that the full spirit of Atlanta was woven into every corner of the event.

What struck the attendees and organizers alike is that it rained, and nobody left. Attendees and performers alike kept the energy at full volume through the weather, a testament to the genuine connection that Charlamagne tha God and iHeartMedia have built with their audience over four years of bringing this vision to life. 

What started as an idea to amplify Black voices in podcasting has grown into one of the most anticipated events on the cultural calendar. With each passing year, the festival adds more names, more panels, more moments and more proof that Black media is not just surviving in a crowded landscape — it is setting the standard for what great media looks and feels like.

As Rolling Out reported: "The fourth Annual Black Effect Podcast Festival did not just celebrate where Black podcasting has been. It made a compelling, undeniable case for where it is going."

Comments