
Nationwide — What started as an unlikely introduction through ex-wife Beulah McLoyd has grown into a culture-shifting media force. Money Sex Gen X, the raw and unapologetic podcast hosted by two African American men, Eric McLoyd and Scott Steward, who’ve lived—and healed through—the highs and lows of life, is rewriting the script on Black masculinity, emotional vulnerability, and legacy-building.
At its core, the show is a space for unfiltered conversations about the things we’re taught not to talk about: guilt, power, fatherhood, backstabbing in the boardroom, and the quiet trauma of trying to survive in white-collar spaces.
But this isn’t trauma porn. It’s transformation.
Redefining Black Corporate Life, One Episode at a Time
In the latest series, Characters From Corporate, the hosts unpack listener-submitted stories from Black professionals reckoning with who they became in the climb to success. One standout episode features a 51-year-old retired executive who admits to years of corporate sabotage—including passing over other Black colleagues for promotions. He writes in asking how to atone for his “corporate sins.”
The conversation that follows is honest, uncomfortable, and healing. And that’s exactly the point.
“We don’t need another platform that just vents. We need spaces where we can process—and move different,” says co-host Eric McLoyd.
“This is the therapy session you didn’t know you needed,” adds co-host Big Stew. “But it’s also a mirror. Because a lot of us have been that ‘character from corporate’—or survived one.”
A Movement Masquerading as a Podcast
More than just a show, Money Sex Gen X has become a platform for global connection. With listeners in 80+ countries and 700+ cities, the series resonates with Gen X and Millennial Black professionals navigating identity, relationships, and wealth with a cultural lens. Their format blends humor, heart, and hip-hop with sharp analysis and spiritual depth.
Episodes are as likely to reference legacy planning and reparations as they are to unpack ego, parenting, or the pressures of performing at work.
A Call to Corporate Heroes—and Those Who Love Them
This is not a rebrand of respectability. This is a return to wholeness.
“We’re not trying to ‘fix’ people,” says McLoyd. “We’re giving them a place to be seen—flaws and all—and challenging them to take accountability for their impact. Even if that means sending $20,000 to atone for your sins.”
The series invites listeners to reflect, confess, and connect—and maybe even cut a check to help someone else heal.
Money Sex Gen X is available on all major platforms, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube. The Characters From Corporate series is listed under “bonus episodes”.
Learn more at https://moneysexgenx.buzzsprout.com
For press or business inquiries, contact moneysexgenx@gmail.com
