About Us
Connecting You to Culture, Media & Entertainment That Matters
Who we are
A Platform Built to Inform, Entertain, and Connect Communities
In today’s day and age where the majority of social media platforms are controlled by either Zionists, neo-Nazis or apartheid supporters it has become increasingly important for the Black diaspora to be intentional about where we invest our attention, our money, and our support. It is to this end that The Blackcentric was formed. Though we may not be able to control all of the narratives, we can definitely control where we spend our money and who we support. Founded and fully funded by three Black men, with no backing, influence, or involvement from entities hostile to Black interests, this platform exists to challenge narrative control and create space where Black voices are centered without compromise.
We sit at the intersection of culture, business, politics, entertainment, and women’s voices, delivering sharp news coverage, provocative opinion pieces, and exclusive video content that captures what people are actually talking about online. From viral chaos and internet controversies to serious political shifts, cultural movements, and Black excellence across industries, The Black Centric tells the full story—raw when necessary, thoughtful when required, and always unapologetically relevant.
We don’t just report what happened; we examine why it matters, who it impacts, and what it says about the moment we’re living in. Our contributors challenge dominant narratives, question power, spotlight overlooked voices, and speak directly to a community that refuses to be reduced to a single perspective.
The Black Centric was built for readers who want more than headlines—for those who want context, debate, humor, critique, and cultural truth all in one place. Whether it’s breaking political news, viral internet madness, business moves, entertainment controversies, or conversations centered on Black women globally, our mission is simple: center Black voices, amplify real conversations, and document the culture in real time.
This is not just a media site.
It’s a lens.
It’s a record.
It’s a conversation Black people are already having—finally given a home.