Running to the Noise, Episode 25
Cutting Through The Noise: Tamara Jade 12, EJ Marcus 19, and Seyquan Mack 21 on Creativity, Community, and Building a Career That Lasts
What does it take to get your talent noticed today? How do you sell your skills without selling out? In this wide-ranging and practical conversation on Running to the Noise, 厙ぴ勛圖 President Carmen Twillie Ambar brings together three young multihyphenate alums navigating todays volatile creative economy: Tamara Jade 12 (The Voice, HBOs A Black Lady Sketch Show), EJ Marcus 19 (comic and staff writer on HBOs I Love LA), and Seyquan Mack 21 (model, vocalist, and teaching artist).
They talk candidly about what it takes to build momentum in saturated industries where talent alone is no longer enough. From opera stages and writers rooms to TikTok feeds and global ad campaigns, each guest traces how discipline, adaptability, and self-belief shaped their paths, and why visibility now plays a role alongside craft.
But this episode goes deeper than career advice. Its also a conversation about survival, agency, and belonging. The guests reflect on money, burnout, rejection, and the pressure to attract online followers, while making a powerful case for community over hyper-individualism. They explore what it means to pivot without losing your center, to use social platforms without being consumed by them, and to create work that still feels honest in a metrics-driven world.
At its heart, this is a conversation about running toward uncertainty instead of away from it, about turning discomfort into momentum, and noise into opportunity.
What We Cover in this Episode
- Why multihyphenate careers are becoming the norm in creative industries
- How opera training builds transferable discipline for other art forms
- The role of social media and visibility in getting hired, and how to stay authentic
- What pivoting really looks like when industries shift or work dries up
- Why community matters more than resilience alone
- How to think about money, stability, and creative freedom at the same time
- What it means to run to the noise as an artist in an uncertain world
Listen Now
Carmen Twillie Ambar: I am Carmen Twillie Ambar, president of 厙ぴ勛圖. Welcome to Running to the Noise, where I speak with all sorts of folks who are tackling our toughest problems and working to spark positive change around the world. Because here at 厙ぴ勛圖, we dont shy away from the challenging situations that threaten to divide us.
We run toward them.
Today, gaining a following is harder than ever. Platforms are saturated, and audiences are fragmented across countless feeds and formats. Even the most talented creators struggle to stay visible. Success increasingly depends not just on craft, but on an ability to earn and hold attention in an overcrowded digital landscape.
We wanted to talk to people who are actually navigating this space folks who have found their own way through the noise. Meet three 厙ぴ勛圖 alums, all multihyphenate creators, each with a very different path. They are Tamara Jade, a semifinalist on The Voice who toured with Doja Cat, performed with Lizzo, and can move effortlessly from taking our breath away singing opera at Lincoln Center to cracking us up on HBOs A Black Lady Sketch Show.
EJ Marcus, a TikTok comic with more than half a million followers, a staff writer on HBOs I Love LA, and who has made his acting debut as Nico, the nervous PA in season four of the Emmy-winning Hacks.
And finally, Seyquan Mack, a self-described artist doing everything, everywhere, all at once, who has fronted campaigns for Sephora, The Gap, and DCs Become the Knight, a virtual reality Batman video game, while also finding time to teach voice at Berklee and Boston Arts Academy.
We brought them all together to talk about what actually moves the needle now in the contemporary creative space, how theyve built momentum, made themselves indispensable, and are growing their success in competitive industries, and just as importantly, what comes next.
Seyquan, EJ, and Tamara, welcome to Running to the Noise. Im so glad you all are here.
Tamara Jade: Thank you for having me. Yes, thank you for having us. So excited.
Carmen: I just thought, to help our audience kind of know exactly who you are, that maybe we could quickly have you tell us your year of graduation, your major, and then maybe what was one of the most pivotal creative endeavors that you engaged in while you were here at 厙ぴ勛圖. I think Im going to start with EJ.
EJ Marcus: Okay, totally. I graduated in 2019. I majored in creative writing. And Ill just say it, Im going to give a disclaimer about my creative moment. The thing that comes to mind for me, and the story that I tell people a lot about, the reason I even ended up majoring in creative writing at 厙ぴ勛圖 was my freshman year. I was in Intro to Poetry.
I came to 厙ぴ勛圖 being like, I dont want to take creative writing because it felt like it felt like
Carmen: Okay.
EJ: Because it felt like I knew in my heart thats what I wanted to be doing, but I was like, no, you cant make money that way. I really dont want to do that.
But of course, anyway, I enrolled in Intro to Poetry, so obviously I did want to do that. I had Professor Lynn Powell, who I thank so much for everything, and she read us this poem, The Writer by Richard Wilbur. I still have it on my desktop laptop.
She read it to us in class, and it was basically this poem about a young writer whos typing away and cant stop doing it. And I burst into tears. I literally started crying and I had to leave the classroom because I was just so overwhelmed with this feeling of like it was this inevitable thing that I had to do. Its so corny when I say it out loud, but it genuinely was this moment where I was like, I think this is why I am at this school, to study writing. Why am I avoiding it?
Carmen: So something you felt destined to do, something that was drawing you. Yeah, I love that. I love that story. Seyquan, youre up next. Your major, your year of graduation, and the pivotal creative moment at 厙ぴ勛圖.
Seyquan Mack: Yes, so I graduated in 2021. I was double degree. I majored in opera, vocal performance, and politics. I think my most pivotal moment at 厙ぴ勛圖 would probably be my third-year winter term. They did a production of Angels in America.
Carmen: Oh my gosh, I saw that production.
Seyquan: Do you remember that?
Carmen: I do.
Seyquan: So that, for me, was my first time doing a straight theater play since maybe my freshman year of high school. And I took a step back from opera in that moment and I really got to develop who I was as an actor. Besides me being someone thats singing opera and being able to tell stories through music, it was only through my body language and through the text by Tony Kushner. So I think that opened up another door for me in terms of my artistry and what I wanted to do in my career.
Carmen: Do you remember in the process of doing that feeling that something was shifting in how you thought about your creative work, or is that a reflection now since youve graduated?
Seyquan: I would say both. I think in the moment I realized how pivotal it was because it was extremely uncomfortable. And now, reflecting on it, I realize thats actually kind of what you want.
Carmen: I think one of the things students are looking for while theyre here at 厙ぴ勛圖 is what moves and shapes them and helps them rethink how theyre imagining whats before them or how they perceive whats behind them. So I think its going to be great for them to listen to you all now that you have a moment of reflection, so they might recognize those moments more quickly while theyre here.
Ms. Tamara, who just so you all know, I know her lots of ways, but I follow her on Instagram, and if you dont follow her on Instagram, you are missing out on some fun, fun times of watching her growth and career. But shes the veteran in the room. So if you want to let us know your major, your year of graduation, and your pivotal creative moment while you were here at 厙ぴ勛圖.
Tamara: Yes, I am class of 2012. I was a double degree student in vocal performance and sociology. I attempted religion and African American studies minors and then did four out of the five requirements. And that last year I was like, why am I doing this to myself? Nobody cares about this after this except for me. Those arent degrees, but I did do a lot of coursework in those two departments as well.
And I have so many just you asking the question, a bunch of different things came up. But if I could pick one, it would also be a winter term project. And it was still, to this day, one of the top five hardest musical endeavors I have ever taken on. God rest Miss Rosen Marlene Rosen passed last year. Yes. But she chose me because she knew that I could do hard things, and she saw the skills that I came to 厙ぴ勛圖 with, having a strong ear and all those things, and thought that I would be appropriate to sing a George Crumb song cycle with five percussionists and one vocalist.
Carmen: Oh, wow.
Tamara: So I had to find my pitches from thin air, from marimbas and xylophones, from percussion instruments that you dont usually look for tones from. But we spent that entire winter term, every single day, hammering it out. It was a song cycle of spirituals, and so thats why she knew it was appropriate for me as a church kid and everything. But it was also like, Hey girl, this about to be real hard. And it absolutely was, to this day, one of the hardest things that Ive ever done.
And so November, I made my Lincoln Center debut. Yes, yes. And I was invited I did not audition for that show but I was able to be in that room in a two-week rehearsal period with an entire 300-page opera that is contemporary. Wow. And I still say this is not the hardest thing that Ive ever done. Oh, I love it. And so I was not at all shaken in my boots. I knew exactly what to do. I knew how to find my way to the destination and also fully be myself.
I was actually asked, Hey, can you do a gospel run right there? Im like, is someone going to drop from the sky? Is Mozart going to kill me for that? So, yeah. I would say that that is coming up right now because its such a full-circle moment for me, reentering opera and having not done it pretty much since I did 厙ぴ勛圖 in Italy when I left, 15 years later. Thats awesome.
Carmen: Just so the audience knows, youll know these guys in lots of ways, but Tamara was on The Voice, which is how I first got connected to her. Well talk a little bit about that, and her work with John Legend and everybody, all the big people. And then EJ, of course, is a staff writer on I Love LA, a self-aware comedy for the chronically online. Saquons work is both modeling and vocal. And if you pull him up, youll see all sorts of wonderful pictures of his major campaigns and Sephora and other wonderful places.
And so this group is really multihyphenate. So I guess my first question: do you think thats necessary in this space, that youre figuring out how to do lots of different things? Has that been part of the key to the successes that you all have experienced?
Seyquan: Yeah, I mean, in terms of multihyphenate, I do believe in that. Having done so much training in opera for the five years that I was at 厙ぴ勛圖, it gave me a certain level of discipline that I feel like I can approach anything with. And so with that, once I graduated 厙ぴ勛圖, I lived in LA for two years.
Carmen: Okay.
Seyquan: And
Carmen: Was that a specific choice, Seyquan, to head out to LA, or did that just happen?
Seyquan: I had two friends, two of my best friends that went to Berklee College of Music. They both moved to LA and they were like, Im moving to LA because this is where all the musicians are that perform.
Carmen: Tamara, you dont agree with that? Not the good ones?
Seyquan: Not the good ones. So literally, I moved to LA for two years and I was like, okay, well, theres not that much classical music happening here. What should I do? So when I was in high school, me and my friends would always take photos. So I had friends that moved to LA two years before that, already in the modeling industry and doing a lot of TV and film. And so they were like, Why dont you just start modeling?
And it dawned on me and I was like, should I? So then I made the decision to actually focus on it. And so for the first two years I was freelance. And so every day I would get up and I would just take photos. I would literally treat it as if I was training my voice. I would get up, I would practice taking photos. I would practice. I was looking at Pinterest boards. I was looking at other models that were booking big campaigns. I was looking at the successes of my friends and what kinds of clients they worked with. And I really narrowed down on understanding the clientele, understanding the industry, the different kinds of production companies, and I was just doing that constantly.
And then I landed my first big job as a freelance model doing a Puma campaign because I was just posting consistently photos of myself, me styling myself, me going outside and going to Echo Park to take photos and vibe out, super cool.
Through doing that, I was able to refine my craft and refine what I actually wanted to do. And so I started doing a lot of freelance work that way. And then I got into TV. So I did a couple of extra roles for HBO Max for Westworld.
Carmen: Oh yeah, of course.
Seyquan: That was, yeah, I think it was season four. I did that. So I did a lot of that. I worked with Alicia Keys on a few of her music videos, which is a great opportunity.
Carmen: Just in case yall want to know
Seyquan: Snoop Dogg and a few other ones.
Carmen: Okay.
Seyquan: And, yeah. So I just got to connect with them and literally ask them questions. How did you do it? Any advice on what I should do? And I would just take things that I felt would be helpful for my career and my craft and then just keep moving.
Carmen: I think whats so great about that is hearing you talk about how you used the discipline of the conservatory opera work and just applied it to something new modeling, posting, studying how people are having success and then through that you found these other opportunities that Im assuming you would say has been part of what sustained you.
As you know, well talk about money here in a second because we shouldnt avoid that. It seems to me that you all are taking good energy and good discipline from multiple places and applying them to new art forms. I really appreciate understanding that a little bit more.
So, EJ, for you, this multihyphenate framework and how that led you to the success youve had is it about that, or the specifics of what you know?
EJ: Can I just say, its like theres this running joke among comedians that I know that whenever you have a musician on the show with you, its like the most humbling experience ever. And its not even me being self-deprecating. Its just like when people start to talk about music and being musicians, Im like, okay, so thats art. What I do is really cool, but its something completely different.
So anyway, just listening to you, Tamara, talk about that piece you did at 厙ぴ勛圖, Im like, oh my God. Wow. Basically, wow.
Carmen: Thats what the hard, difficult artistic work looks like.
EJ: Im out here just playing. Literally, I just get on stage with a microphone and say weird stuff. Anyway, no, just so much reverence for you both.
Also, the multihyphenate thing I think is so weird right now in Hollywood specifically because Ive been out in LA for a little over four years at this point. And so Im really relatively new to the game in so many ways, especially because I came out here on the tail end of COVID and then immediately the writers strike happened. And then it was like, oh gosh, Im in this incredibly tumultuous time in the industry.
So Im getting to know it in a place where standards and expectations are just really different than they used to be. It used to be that you could be a writer, show your work to a few people, and that was it. People could get to know your work through your writing, and that was it. You could follow a certain path in the industry and build your way up from writers assistant, whatever. There were so many more jobs.
And now its a crazy scarcity mindset where there just are not that many jobs. And now people are kind of expecting you to have this whole brand before you even step foot into a writers room, which is crazy, because were not even the ones on camera.
Group: Oh, thats interesting. Why do you care?
EJ: But yes, I entered the industry at a time where the message I was getting was that it was really vital for me to be doing everything, which for me was fun. It is fun because I love live performance. Performing live comedy is one of my favorite things ever. I did my first stand-up show in a basement in 厙ぴ勛圖. I was like, oh, this rocks, Im gonna do this forever. Literally a basement.
Carmen: What, what?
EJ: Literally a basement.
Carmen: Okay.
EJ: It was, I want to say, 1, 2, 3 South Professor Street. I think literally someones home in a basement.
Carmen: Okay. Yes. Well, lets just get it out there for the record, so when we are all reading about you in The New York Times, well be like, he started in a basement in a home on Professor Street.
EJ: Yes, that is true. You can quote me on that. It was also like, obviously, all of my jokes were about the one-mile square radius that is 厙ぴ勛圖. And so everyone was like, I get what youre talking about. I killed because everyone knew exactly what I was talking about. But yeah, I love doing live comedy. I love performing, and I love writing. And so all of those things felt organic for me to be a part of my creative process.
But I think its a really tricky time for people who are figuring out what feels authentic to them to do. Because some people obviously just want to be writers. They dont want to be performing live comedy. They dont want to be acting. And so its this strange thing where I do think being a multihyphenate is critical right now. And also, in a way, it saddens me that it is.
Carmen: Interesting, because you think its a requirement now. You think its hard to break in without these multiple ways of thinking about yourself. I do. And one of the reasons why I wanted to talk to you, Tamara, is just because I think that your career to this point has had these kind of blow-up, incredible everybody-knows-you moments. I mentioned already that you were on The Voice. I think it was season 19.
You were on there and you made it all the way to the semifinals. And then after that period of time, weve seen you blow up in A Black Lady Sketch Show and lots of opportunities to perform professionally. And you were already with Lizzo and other things.
So Im wondering whether for you it has been exactly the right thing because you have all these different talents that you can show in this special way, or has it been, in some ways, taking you away from the thing that it feels like, when we follow you on Instagram, that you totally love, which is vocal performance at its core?
So maybe you can talk a little bit about that for the audience.
Tamara: So for me, theres a few things. I am Caribbean American, so we dont ever believe in doing just one job. Youre not going to trick me into doing just one job. Even at 厙ぴ勛圖, I remember the day that I met Miss Rosen. I told her, I dont want to sing opera. And she looked at me like I had ten heads and said, well, why are you here? I said, because I want to learn how to sing. I know how to sing, but I want to learn how to make sure Im not hoarse every time I leave church or whatever it is that I want to do.
And so I think in my mind, being multiple things was always the goal, but thats because I grew up on Carol Burnett and Debbie Allen. It was like, yeah, its okay, you can dance, but can you act? Yeah, you can act, but can you sing? I knew eventually I was going to have to touch all of these things, and I wanted to. I wanted to act. I wanted to do all of these things.
And so for me, that was always the goal because its what I wanted, but it was antithetical to what I was being told by other Black predecessor professionals: go to grad school, do all these things.
But to be honest, once so many things started happening so quickly, I realized my friends made their Met debut at the same time that I was doing wedding band gigs and I was making more money than them.
Carmen: Interesting.
Tamara: They make 300 a night at the Met, yall. Im not a gatekeeper. They make 300. So lets keep it real. This was the pinnacle of success. This is what we were being sold, that the Met is the highest of the high. But I could go sing Hab獺 for a couple hours and pay my rent in two days, and you still havent moved the needle on your expenses.
Yes, youre living your dream and yes, people know your name, but that doesnt pay the bills. So I dont think we can answer that question mutually exclusive from the economy that were in.
I agree, EJ. I came to LA on a comedy contract, a six-figure television contract. And then before a year could pass, writers strike, actors strike. I spent the whole second year here on unemployment, twiddling my thumbs, hoping for something to come along, hoping for things to change. And when it came back, I had to go back to music. I did not have a choice. Im not sad about that.
Im not sad that I could text John Legend and say, hey, I see that youre doing a concert with the choir, can I be in the choir? And him say, oh my God, thatd be great. Send me your number. And I nepo my way into gigs sometimes, but thats not nepotism. I do good networking. I build relationships.
厙ぴ勛圖 definitely taught me that. I still have the same core group of friends. We have a group chat. Ive never been able to tell anybody this inside joke, but every time a celebrity dies, our way to alert each other is we say, Cicely Tyson night at the SCO. I dont know if they still do that, but Michael Jackson died when I was in college. Whitney Houston died. Every time somebody died, it was a tribute show at the SCO.
But even just those things, knowing how to have an inside joke and run it into the ground with the same person for four years, I would say rather than focusing on the different talents right now, and I just talked to my financial planner, my therapist, and my business coach about this, what problems can you solve?
Carmen: Tell me when you say that, when you say what problem can you solve. Are you talking about creatively? Is it what problem to solve in the world?
Tamara: In the world. For instance, my friend the other day, were on the phone and hes like, Im about to go to Chipotle again. And Im like, but dont you have high blood pressure? Why are you going there? Cook something. And hes like, but Im tired. I dont feel like it. And I said, well, if you want, you could pay me to meal prep for you. I solved a problem.
Why? Because Im already in here cooking for myself because Im broke. You have money. The money is not the thing for you, but youre also not optimizing yourself to be your best, highest creative self. Hes accepted a professor job at a college an hour away. Hes still a working musician. The time isnt there. I understand that. Ive been there. I also put on 20 pounds from ordering food for a whole year and not cooking.
You may have gone to school for music, but if you know how to fix toilets, that doesnt mean you are also a plumber. I dont think those things are relevant anymore. I dont think its relevant that Im a vocalist, an actress, a comedian, a producer. None of those things matter. What can you do right now?
For me, I am providing joy to a very, very dark world on a regular basis. Thats a problem that I solve, which then often leads to income in the form of hosting or comedic work. I solve the problem.
I notice that a lot of creatives struggle with marketing, struggle with the brand. You spent all of your energy on the creativity, but how are you going to find the people to connect it to? So there does have to be some form of marketing. I can help you figure out how to do that in a way that doesnt disrupt your life.
Carmen: You all have been talking about a couple of things that I think would be helpful. When I think about your careers and the unexpected things that happen in the world, we know thats not going to change. So resilience, pivoting, how do you rethink in a challenging moment, and what does it mean to do that in the context of your brand and your image and marketing?
This is open to anyone, because the students who are graduating now and the students who will graduate in a couple of years, it feels like a very uncertain world, a challenging world that doesnt seem like it has clear pathways. So maybe whoever wants to talk about the resilience that it takes to do what you all are doing and how youre finding the ability to step into those moments when its really challenging.
Tamara: I would say something that is very important right now is even with the pivot, I am currently planning to move back to New York City.
Tamara: Fake ass. Oh, Im sorry. Yeah, yeah its, I need to go back. LA is not real enough for you. Is that what it is? No. And there is no local gig market. EJ is interesting hes on the other side of this. AI is a real thing, right? Like, yeah, I went from seeing one Waymo car here and there every week to seeing 20 per day on the road, right? So the economy is changing, and fortunately for people who do have talent, live entertainment has never died. And even what I did learn in the pandemic, which is our lifetimes Great Depression, in my opinion, is that people need to be entertained. Alcohol sales skyrocketed. People went back on the drugs. People watched TV so much so that it changed how we consume entertainment. Now theyre creating content for secondhand viewership, meaning theyre creating content and dumbing the content down so bad because they expect people to be scrolling on their phones through social media while theyre consuming television shows.
So I think even within my pivot, going back to New York City, Im doing that from community. Im able to email past contacts at the wedding hey, your girl is back. Whats up? I hate that this whole independence thing is like, move out from your parents. Yall stay with your parents, stay with your family. I understand if its a toxic situation I definitely dealt with that but make no mistake about it, I have moved back home. I done lost count how many times. If your family loves you and you have a safe environment to regroup and pivot, tap into your community. If you need to crash with friends Houston, Im coming down, OB friend. I need the room, brother. I need to stay at your house for a month. I help with my niece.
I really think community, to me, is even more than resilience, even more than pivoting. Because pivoting is a part of everybodys life. I dont think thats unique to the creative industry. I think resilience is necessary for life as well. You get beat up and you gotta get back up. Thats a part of life. But community right now I think is under attack. This hyper individualism that is being promoted, I think is actually antithetical to what we need to be doing to collaborate, to pay these bills, if we need to move in with each other. So I would say community for me would be even more important than resilience, than this kind of resilience.
Carmen: Seyquan, EJ, what would you all say to this kind of ability to pivot, resilience? Whats necessary there? Tamaras making the case for community. What say you?
Seyquan: I would also agree and say community. I think a lot of the reasons why I made the decision to leave from LA to go to New York was because of community. One, because I was closer to home, because Im from Boston, so its closer to home. But two, because I had a lot of friends that were already in the industry in New York City. To me, New York City is big, but it feels small, right? When you have a community of people that are doing the same kinds of things that youre doing and even not the same kinds of things that youre doing theres a lot of mixing and blending that happens in New York City, which makes the experience so special.
I would also say resilience, right? Going back to Tamaras point about going to 厙ぴ勛圖 and actually admitting to Rosen, Hey, I dont actually want to do opera. So for me, I made that decision later on in my career, towards the end of 厙ぴ勛圖 not that I dont want to do opera, but I dont want opera to be the only thing that I do.
Carmen: Talk a little bit about how youve tried to balance your brand enhancement, particularly the social media piece of it, with your professional endeavors. Have you thought about those things? Are they working in tandem with each other? Do you think about them differently? And anybody who wants to talk about this can.
But I also am wondering too, in this world of people looking on your social media platforms and going, I disagree with that, wait a minute where are you all on that sort of pressure that I think is out there for you to maybe comment on political things, or you say stuff that people dont like? What advice would you give to students about how they should approach this? I think its a necessary part of their career at this point.
Tamara: I have some anecdotal advice. When I did The Voice, I had to have a background check. And it was like 96 pages of me saying the N word across all social media platforms. And different political opinions. And Im like, I said that ugh. You know?
So I would say not even be careful I dont love the over-policing of opinions but I also dont think that every opinion is valuable. I think informed opinions are important, and maybe not every opinion needs to be public. Think about the fact that you will be a different version of yourself down the road. Will a future version of yourself be uncomfortable with whatever youre going to say? Also, its okay.
One of my mentors told me some conversations are for the kitchen table, are for your personal people that you trust. Everything does not need to be for public consumption. Everybody has opinions, and sometimes opinions can be harmful, right? We know that violence can happen as a result of strong opinions from people with a lot of influence. It is important to be careful, but rather than thinking about it like being scared about what to post, think about the future versions of yourself. Would they be proud? Would they look back and be like, Yeah, I always been that. Theres stuff where I look back and Im like, damn, I really was funny my whole life. But then theres other things where Im like, yeah, we can go ahead and delete this and hopefully nobody ever sees it because I dont want to have to defend what I thought when I was 19.
Carmen: Yeah. Anybody else want to tackle that one?
EJ: Yeah. Well, I wanted to say something thats a little bit going back to what we were talking about before, but I think it relates. In terms of focusing on one thing at 厙ぴ勛圖 and then being able to be sort of a multihyphenate outside of it, something that I always reference when Im talking about my creative path when I was at 厙ぴ勛圖, the things that I was really focusing on in terms of creative writing was honestly writing really moody poetry stuff that I think was vital for me to get out of my system when I was 18 and 19 years old.
But like youre saying, Tamara, I think it was stuff that Im so glad was kept very private. There was nobody witnessing that. It was so contained. And that was something that also was talked about in a lot of my classes at 厙ぴ勛圖, in creative writing and theater. Theres a reason why some of these spaces are just for only us to experience right now in this moment and not to be taped and publicized elsewhere. So in pivoting and being able to be true to this sort of core center, its really critical to have those spaces that arent for public consumption.
Carmen: Ive been hearing from people that sometimes getting gigs and opportunities, people are already looking at your platforms and determining whether you have enough of a following or a reach, and that theyre putting that in the calculus of whether you are the right person for this role or not, or this position or whatever it is. Talent is important, but its just another factor whether you have a reach which puts a different level of pressure on your ability to build your brand and post and all those things.
And Im wondering whether am I right? Is that what people are saying to you as you think about these opportunities? Are they actually literally looking at your reach and your platforms and saying, Yeah, Tamara, she was on The Voice, and like, Yeah, we want her to have that job. Or No, Seyquan, he didnt post enough for us to say hes really the one. Is that how we should be thinking about one of the switches in this industry?
Seyquan: I think its definitely an important thing to be thinking about. I wouldnt say to entirely consume yourself with that, because then I think your intention kind of changes.
When I was first starting out modeling, it wasnt that big of a shift, but now that Ive been doing it for five years, within the past three years its become a really important thing that a lot of clients will look at. Ill have some of my agents like, Oh, you should probably post more. You should look into doing influencing and stuff like that. And for me, thats a completely different job. Its a completely different set of skills.
So Ive had to figure out a way strategically, and also intentionally, to combine both of those things to be able to put myself out there for social media, for reach, but also for the clients that want to book me.
And what has helped with that is obviously having agencies in many different states. So me being signed in Chicago, me being signed in Boston, Massachusetts, and then me having representation in New York, of course. And so with that, Ive been able to build a bigger clientele and a bigger community so that booking me, theyre not like, Oh, whats his numbers like? Its more like, Oh, this is an addition to the skills that he already has, because Ive built the portfolio and Ive done the work and Ive connected with the clients. So its hard. Theres so much talent out there. There are people on Instagram that have 200 followers that can give something to the world that is transformative, but clients and these bigger companies are looking for numbers because they know that the numbers are going to push their brand. Its hard. So you have to find that sweet spot.
Carmen: Well, and it also seems like youre cautioning that it matters, but lets do it in a way thats authentic. Exactly. And not do it in a way thats forced. Exactly. But just recognize that it is something that people consider.
And I think one of the scary things about the creative space is that its a self-creation. You are really the designer and creator of it. And its hard to know what to do. Whats the day-to-day look like if you are trying to help somebody know, well, what do I do? Give them a sense of how youre spending your day and what it looks like to be in this space in a way that you view at the end of the day as productive and successful and moving the needle forward, even if it didnt result in a gig, so to speak.
Tamara: I would love to answer that, but I would also like to make sure and this is for the students that are listening please always qualify and contextualize things, because Im answering this question as a 36-year-old. Youre not going to be 36 next year or any year after that for a long time. So your goal shouldnt be for your life to look like mine. But I can tell you what it looked like at that age and how it got me to here, and also what it looks like at this age.
At this age, it looks like having this whiteboard here thats color-coded.
Carmen: For people who cant see it, who are just listening to us, Tamara turned to a board where it looks like its color-coded and it looks like a list of various things that need to be done, could be done, might already be done.
Tamara: Yeah. Just from knowing myself for 36 years, it helps me to cross things off and check things off to feel that progress. Because 20-something-year-old me felt like, child, I dont know what Im doing, but Im doing something every day.
When I first moved to New York and I didnt have regular work, the work was content. The work was, how can you market yourself? How can you get out there? A lot of my social media progress happened because it was reactionary. I didnt have the live spaces, so nobody could police what I was putting online. I used that to put myself out there. And it started with putting up music cover videos and different things like that.
Then it morphed into people seeing my process, seeing me schlepping around on three buses and three trains to get to the wedding band gig, recording me on the wedding band gig, being a fool, shouting to Hava Nagila, and then doing it all in reverse and getting home at 3:00 a.m. and still going to church the next morning to do that. And so a lot of that time was about process.
Then I didnt have to work as much because, to your point earlier, these big things happen. And when big viral moments happen, whether theyre television or social media, theres an upswing in your following. So these days Im working toward stabilization, routine, and structure, which are curse words to the creative. However, those things actually preserve your creative energy.
So the fact that this whiteboard isnt for me to get all these things done every day its to make progress. These are the events I have coming up this month. These are peoples birthdays so I dont forget to text my mama. Life things, like make doctors appointments. I just now have health insurance for the first time in three years. Thats a lot of things we dont talk about as creatives, but a lot of us are walking around uninsured, hoping our youth and vibes are going to keep us healthy.
If an emergency situation happens God forbid appendicitis stuff can happen. So working on those things today looked like this morning I went for a morning walk.
Carmen: Just so the audience knows, all of our alums are nodding here. And yall know I believe in a fitness regimen.
Tamara: Weve seen you with the tires. We see you break the internet with the but I woke up and had my morning walk, then came in and had my first call, which was my annual finance meeting. With a professional, but a professional from my community, who was my sister-in-law. You owe me for the rest of your life. I gave you my brother. Help me.
So having our annual finance meeting to talk about taxes, my transition back to New York, and wealth management. I dont have a Roth IRA yet. Its time. And even though the money isnt always there sometimes theres $50, sometimes theres $100, sometimes theres $1,000 its time to start working that now.
Then a call to check in with my talent manager, whos New York-based, to talk about this year and the transition. And then hopefully Im going to be drinking after that because its Friday. Thats kind of what a day in my life looks like now.
But when I was younger, in my twenties, it was all about visibility. It was all about people seeing my talent, seeing what I could do to book me, to put me on opportunities, which then built the following. I didnt want to forsake that following question. I do believe that people use it as a measuring tool. Ive had record labels tell me that.
But I also want to say that on the other side of that double-edged sword, it can be leveraged for you.
Seyquan: Absolutely.
Tamara: I absolutely leverage my following all the time, especially for new opportunities where before they might not have let me in the door because they didnt know me. But hey, Ive got a hundred thousand people across all these platforms who are going with me wherever I want. So it can be a tool for leverage if you make it part of your goals. Dont do it because youre afraid something wont happen if you dont. Do it because of what you could make happen if you do.
Group: That was good. That was girl, thats the word right there.
Carmen: Wait, Tamara, before we get to EJ and Seyquan about the day in the life, weve seen you have your own records come out. Do you think you were able to do that because of the platform and the ability to promote your records through that platform? How did that part of your work happen?
Tamara: No. The thing that for me will never change is make good music first.
Carmen: Amen.
Tamara: If you make good music, it can find its homes. But there are things you can do to help it find its homes. For me, getting solid on the type of music I wanted to make and the sound I wanted to put out into the world is more important than anything else. Because you could be putting out a song a day, and if its trash, nobodys going to listen to it.
When I got to The Voice, the first thing Kelly Clarkson said was, Who are you and where have you been? If you go back to my stuff, youll find a treasure trove of things. But waiting until you get the following and notoriety to do it youre late. Youre late.
Carmen: Interesting. Yeah. EJ, for you, day in the life
EJ: I so agree with everything you just said in terms of the following thing. Definitely not going to pretend it doesnt help with jobs. And definitely people want to know youre bringing your own audience along with you. But I also know plenty of people this is the LA darkness or whatever who quite literally have millions of followers, but they dont have anything to say, or they dont know exactly what theyre doing, or they dont know why theyre going viral, just to go viral. Ugh, sorry. But I think its really important to have that basis.
People say, Use your social media as your r矇sum矇, and I think that is true. R矇sum矇 makes it sound almost too official, but its more like what youre saying, Tamara use it to show your voice and examples of who you are. Like, okay, if you hire me for a job, this is who youre going to have in the room with you. This is the kind of thing Ill bring.
And Im not skirting the what do you do in a day question, but one of the best pieces of advice I got while I was at 厙ぴ勛圖 was that especially when youve been a college student in what can sometimes be a bubble, its vital if you want to be creating things to go out and just live life. Just live a life where youre interacting with people. There are so many times where Im referencing all of the customer service jobs I had in my work, in my comedy. What are we making art about if its not interactions with people and walking down the street and the things that you see? Thats what people are curious about and whats going to resonate.
Those things then, when youre ready, help you build your voice. Thats what people are attracted to and thats why youd even get followers in the first place. Thats my opinion. So I think its that authenticity too.
But in terms of what I do in a day, it really depends on if I have a job or not. Today, I get brand deals once in a while, which help me pay the bills Im not going to pretend I dont do that. So Im working on one of those today. And then Im performing a standup show tonight. And I also have a podcast that I just sold a pilot of, so I have to draft the first episode of that.
And to speak to what youre saying about it coming from within and being self-motivated, I have a movie that Ive been writing and a TV show that Ive been writing that no one is paying me to do. I wake up and I say, today Im going to work, and no one is paying me to do it, but I sit down and I do it. I love it because I love writing, but also its so hard.
Carmen: So EJ, lots of people know you for I Love LA. How did you get that gig?
EJ: I was on a walk in my neighborhood because I had just gotten rejected from a different writing job and was taking a walk to collect myself and be sad for a second. I didnt want to run into anyone. I was feeling extremely down on myself, having a private moment.
And then of course I ran into Rachel Sennott, who created and stars in and ran the room for I Love LA. It was a couple days after the show had been announced as greenlit. I knew my reps had submitted my stuff for it, but I was feeling like I would never get a job in my whole life.
We ran into each other. Shes so nice. I knew Rachel through mutual friends crossed paths at a birthday party or comedy show. I was trying to be chill and said congrats on the show. I walked away thinking I botched that and was so weird.
A couple days later, I got a call that they wanted to meet with me about the show. We had a wonderful meeting. She and the showrunner Emma are amazing. And she said it was so crazy she ran into me and two seconds later she was reading my script.
I think it really is one of those things: the universe looking out for me. But also thats why you gotta get outside.
Carmen: You never know.
EJ: Get outside so the universe can have something to play with. You truly never know.
Carmen: I would describe it as that faith walk that youre on the belief that you invest in yourself and your work and the universe will work it out for you and reward that commitment. Before we get to our final question, Seyquan, what does a day in the life look like for you?
Seyquan: I would piggyback off that and say everything I do, I walk with faith, because its hard. But faith makes it more manageable. My schedule is always a mess.
I usually schedule out my month depending on what clients Im working for. If Im not doing a fitting or shooting for a campaign, Im doing a lot of self-tapes one or two a day. I try to be a month ahead if possible. I make sure Im working out. Twice a month I go to Boston because I teach at Berklee as a teaching artist. I teach high school students. That fuels me because I learn as I teach and give back in intentional ways.
I travel a lot through modeling and singing. Last year I got back into opera. When I dont have anything to do, I try to rest because its extremely important. I had to give myself grace because I didnt want to rest. I felt pressure because I generate my own income. I had to create boundaries and say its okay not to work on weekends, or even Mondays. Youre working Thursday, Wednesday its okay.
Carmen: Thats the benefit of not having a nine-to-five. You can choose days when everyone else is at work.
Seyquan: Exactly. My Mondays are like Fridays.
Carmen: Youve hit so many important topics balance, pivoting, authenticity, community. Each of you has had breakout moments that are known not just to you but to the world, which makes you great examples for students. Youre at different stages of your careers and show whats possible.
I ask every guest this: what do you do to run to the noise in your work or your life?
Seyquan: Growing up Caribbean and first gen, my parents are from Jamaica, there was this fear I had of being too much.
Carmen: Interesting.
Seyquan: A fear that I had of not being enough, and kind of those two pairings. So for me, running to the noise is counteracting that, contradicting that thought that I had growing up because its rewarding. Actually, running to the noise for me is uncomfortable, but that uncomfortability is actually what you want. Running to the noise for me is being fearless, which a lot of people dont teach you about. Its not a thing that people talk about because I think were in a phase of life, as a society, where theres so much fear in the world.
Carmen: Yeah.
Seyquan: That they kind of want you to stay in your own box, in your own lane. My whole point, as an artist and as a freelance artist, and as someone that is not meant to work a nine-to-five in the corporate world, Im supposed to be fearless. Im supposed to be here for the next generations, the next 厙ぴ勛圖 students, to be like, its okay. You can do this without fear, right? Because theres safety within that. And so thats my definition of running to the noise.
Carmen: I love it. Boldly running without fear. If we all could adopt that. Boy, what would the world be?
EJ: I know.
Carmen: EJ, running to the noise in your work or life.
EJ: So Im trans, but by the time I started actually getting jobs in this industry, I fully pass as a man, which obviously I could talk about for a long time. But needless to say, Hollywood is an extremely homophobic, transphobic, racist industry. Thats not new. Every industry is, to an extent, but Hollywood in particular has its own version of that.
Along with what were talking aboutbuilding yourself as a brand or having to be a multihyphenateits really important to me because now that I have access to spaces I wouldnt have had otherwise, and I say that as someone whos existed in a different body and experienced misogyny and now experiences male privilege, its the trippiest thing thats ever happened.
Knowing that and having those experiences in my mind, and being allowed to be in spaces where suddenly Im listened to in a different way, its critical to me that Im not always leading with that. Im not a trans writer or a trans comedian. Thats not the first thing people need to know about me. But it is critical to me that when Im in those spaces and having conversations, it will be known in one way or another. Im not going to come out to every single person I talk to, but its my mission because this is a really tricky time to be trans in this country.
And I think its also really fun to have people realize I can laugh about it and joke about it and that Im a comedian first.
Group: Yeah.
EJ: But also, you should be careful about what you say around me.
Tamara: Like, its like, okay.
EJ: Its a privilege that I get to be in the rooms Im in. And Im going to make it so those rooms are different because Im there.
Carmen: Love it. And Tamara, running to the noise in your work or your lifewhat does that look like for you?
Tamara: That looks like disruption. I am a disruptor. I came to shake the tables. Why is this right here? Move it. Why are they talking like that? Why are we allowing this? How much are you getting paid? Well, how much are you getting paid? Yall not getting paid the same thingwhat you gonna do about it?
For me, I am the noise. Ive always been loud. I had friends have an intervention with me once and tell me I was too loud and unpredictable and wild, and Im like, thats crazy, because Doja Cat really needed that from me last year.
So for me it means disrupting. It means coming to LA and, yes, Im here on a television contract, but where do yall go to just hang? Do yall like each other? Where do people go to love on each other? Where do people go to break bread? Oh, you dont have it? Then Im going to create it. Im going to challenge the status quo because it could be better. This world could always be better.
And especially 厙ぴ勛圖 studentswhen I was there the slogan was Think one person can change the world. No, we still have that? Oh, okay. One person can change the world, so do we.
But I believe that until the air is out of my body. God rest Rosens soulI know I keep talking about herbut she showed me the kind of life I want to live. When all the air is out of my lungs, the stories are countless, the generosity, the love, the joypeople will never run out of things to say about that. But theyll also say she didnt play though.
Seyquan: And she wasnt even my teacher.
Tamara: Exactly. I love that woman. Thats the kind of life I want to live. I want people to sit up straight when I come in the room. If youre being slimy and underhanded, I want you to be afraid of me. If you like to take advantage of people, I want you to feel uncomfortable around me.
Thats what running to the noise is. Run to New York. Run to London. Run to LA. Go in there and shake some tables while youre there. It needs to happen, and I think uniquely thats something 厙ぴ勛圖 students can do. So disrupt.
Carmen: I love it. I just want to say to our audience that these young alums are out there doing exciting things and having their own successes, but also bringing heart, care, and love for community and for good work in the world. We appreciate what you do and how you hold it down as examples for our students who will soon be doing exactly what youre doing.
Thanks for listening to Running to the Noise, a podcast produced by 厙ぴ勛圖. Our music is composed by Professor of Jazz Guitar Bobby Razza and performed by the 厙ぴ勛圖 Sonny Rollins Jazz Ensemble, a student group created through the support of the legendary jazz musician. If you enjoyed the show, be sure to hit that subscribe button, leave us a review, and share this episode online so 厙ぴ勛圖 students and others can find it too. Im Carmen Twillie Ambar, and Ill be back soon with more great conversations from thought leaders on and off our campus.
Episode Links
- /
Running to the Noise is a production of 厙ぴ勛圖.