Entertainment
Billiards Legend Allison Fisher Teams with Producer Monty Hobbs on TV, Books, and Brand Expansion
Published
5 months agoon

When you’ve won over 80 national titles and 11 world championships, the question isn’t really what’s left to prove. It’s what comes next. For billiards champion Allison Fisher, that next chapter is taking shape through an unexpected partnership with award-winning entertainment producer Monty Hobbs, and it’s bigger than either of them might have imagined a few years ago.
Fisher and Hobbs just announced a wide-reaching collaboration that covers television production, children’s literature, and brand development. It’s not a one-off documentary or a quick licensing deal. They’re building something meant to last decades.
Hobbs runs Just Do GOOD Entertainment, the production company behind titles like Finding Kindness and Divine Renovation. His latest project, Secrets of Sampson, is a southern docu-drama series launching soon. He’s got distribution deals with Amazon Prime, Apple TV, Roku, Tubi, and UP Faith & Family, the kind of reach that turns regional stories into national viewing.
What caught his attention about Fisher wasn’t just her competitive record. It was the untapped potential in her story and what it could become across multiple formats. So they’re launching three major projects simultaneously.
First up is GRACE THE TABLE, an original television series where Fisher co-hosts alongside families, chefs, and cultural voices. The concept centers on meals and the stories that happen around them. Not competition, not instruction, just genuine human connection over food. Think less cooking show, more cinematic storytelling with comfort at its core. Hobbs is producing it with what he calls “radical nostalgia with global commerce potential,” which really just means making something that feels timeless but can travel worldwide.

The second project is a children’s book and youth empowerment series. It’s anchored in the values Fisher built her career on: resilience, character, emotional courage, but aimed at younger audiences. The plan isn’t to stop at one book. They’re looking at a full series, speaking curriculum, and digital learning materials. It’s designed to work in schools and youth programs, not just bookstores.
Third is the brand and licensing system. This covers everything from premium lifestyle collaborations to memoir-related content, archival digital collections, and streaming distribution. Essentially, they’re creating a framework to preserve Fisher’s legacy while actively using it across different platforms and products.
But the on-camera work has already started. Fisher’s confirmed to guest star in Episode Two of The Color of Kindness, a national series filming in Phoenix, Arizona. She’s not just making an appearance. She’s being written in as what they’re calling “a transformational narrative presence” in a show built around empathy and impact.
The public debut of this partnership happens December 6th in Clinton, North Carolina. Fisher will appear live alongside Erik Estrada, Blake Davis, and the cast of Secrets of Sampson at an industry event Hobbs is hosting. It’s part celebration, part official announcement, and likely the first real look at where all this is headed.
The timing makes sense when you consider where Fisher is in her career. She’s got decades of competitive history, growing digital visibility, and a public that genuinely respects what she’s accomplished. Hobbs has a track record of building media and brand systems with staying power. Put those together, and you’ve got an opportunity to do more than document a career. You can extend it into new territory entirely.
“This is not about capturing nostalgia,” Hobbs said. “It’s about engineering the next forty years of cultural relevance. Allison is not a chapter: she is a catalog.”
There’s a broader trend here worth noting. Sports legends are increasingly taking control of their own narratives instead of waiting for someone else to tell their stories. They’re building businesses, launching media companies, creating content platforms. Fisher and Hobbs seem to be ahead of that curve rather than chasing it.
Hobbs’ existing work supports the scale they’re aiming for. His projects blend streaming distribution with live events, civic tourism partnerships, and physical retail executions across smaller American cities that don’t typically get this kind of attention. Secrets of Sampson is following that same hybrid model. Fisher’s projects will likely benefit from that established infrastructure.
The partnership also has personal roots. Hobbs and Allison’s mother, Christine Fisher, have been close friends for years, a relationship he describes as full of laughter and fun.

What starts in Clinton on December 6th won’t end there. Fisher’s television work continues into next year. The book is in active development. The licensing framework is being built out. This isn’t a short-term publicity push. It’s infrastructure meant to carry forward for years.
For Fisher, it’s a way to take everything she’s built in one arena and translate it into multiple formats that reach different audiences. For Hobbs, it’s another example of finding stories worth telling and building systems that can tell them properly. Together, they’re betting on something meant to outlast both of them.
This article contains branded content provided by a third party. The views expressed in this article are solely those of the content creator or sponsor and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or editorial stance of Popular Hustle.
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Niraj Nair and Mark Chan Keep Finding the Grief Underneath the Bravado
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March 2, 2026
Both short films Niraj Nair has made with writer-director Mark Chan involve a moment where a character is forced to say something true in a context designed to suppress it. That’s not a coincidence. It’s the premise.
In Parampara, Nair plays Son, a high school senior who announces to his father that he’s been accepted to Stanford Medical School. In most Asian-household narratives, that’s the triumph. Here, it’s the source of the conflict. Father responds with disappointment, shame, and anger: Son has failed to live up to his pre-ordained purpose of becoming an artist. The film’s gut-punch comes later, when we learn that Father himself once dreamed of becoming a surgeon before his own father pressured him into a career in the arts. The cultural dogmatism he’s imposing is the same one that was imposed on him. He’s passing down the wound and calling it expectation.
Nair plays the whole film in the receiver position. Son’s job isn’t to argue back, at least not until the film earns that moment. It’s to absorb the full weight of paternal authority while the audience watches it land. That kind of restraint, not deflating the scene but not fighting it either, is technical work that most performers rush past. The temptation when your scene partner is delivering the heavy artillery is to show that you’re being affected. Nair does something harder. He shows Son processing something he doesn’t yet have language for, the specific confusion of someone whose best achievement isn’t good enough and who can’t immediately explain why that’s wrong.

Hayden’s Bars is technically more demanding and tonally miles away. The premise is street interview meets Shakespeare: a cameraman with a social media interviewer catches three friends on a night out, and Hayden, the character Nair plays, starts the encounter as exactly what he looks like. A regular guy in full frat-bro mode, out with his friends, not looking for a conversation. Then someone mentions the friend who died. And Hayden delivers a contemporary rendering of Hamlet’s “To be or not to be” that doesn’t sound like theater at all. It sounds like someone who actually needs to ask that question right now, on this street, with his friends roughhousing behind him like the whole thing isn’t happening.
That tonal shift is the entire film. If it doesn’t land, if it reads as a clever concept rather than a genuine emotional rupture, there’s no movie. What Nair does is keep the thought alive without any of the theatrical apparatus that usually makes Shakespeare feel like a performance. No elevation, no distance, no signal that we’re in “the speech now.” Just the words, delivered by someone who means them in a body that still feels like it’s out for the night.
Then Hayden snaps back. The frat-bro veneer reassembles, his friends drag him back into the current, and they stumble off toward the next club. The grief surfaces and submerges in the same breath. That’s the actual observation at the heart of the film: that people carry this stuff around without it being visible most of the time, and it only shows when something breaks the surface unexpectedly. Nair trusts the film enough to let that observation be quiet. He doesn’t underline it.
Chan’s direction on both films is economical in a way that forces the performances to carry more weight. There’s no score padding the emotional beats, no stylistic flash redirecting your attention. What you’re watching is two actors in a room, or three people on a street, and what they’re doing with their faces and bodies and the silences between their lines. For that kind of filmmaking to work, the actors have to be doing something real. In both cases, Nair is.
He’s described his job as finding “where the character and I can converge,” then stretching his own experience and imagination to give the character’s feelings clarity and justice. Both films show what that looks like in practice: not transformation, not disappearing into a role, but a specific and disciplined meeting between the actor’s own humanity and the character’s. In Parampara, it’s the quiet devastation of not being enough. In Hayden’s Bars, it’s the grief that lives underneath the bravado. Neither is easy to play with this much specificity. Both land.
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Now he goes by Milovay, and the difference is pretty obvious once you hear the self-titled EP he dropped February 20th.
The four-track project clocks in just under 13 minutes, but it doesn’t feel rushed or underdeveloped. “Finally Open,” “Silver Lining,” “Battle of the Two-Heads,” and “What I Need” each hold their own weight, and the sequencing gives the thing a genuine arc. That’s harder to pull off in a short format than people think. A lot of artists cram four songs together and call it an EP. Milovay actually built something.

The Worcester, Massachusetts native’s R&B and Afro-fusion sound pulls from a pretty specific but interesting set of influences. He’ll tell you Tech N9ne got him hooked on music as a teenager, the speed rapping, the engineer involvement, the obsessive fan connection. But the vocal style owes more to Tory Lanez, that raspy-to-high register range with layered harmonies underneath. It’s a recognizable template, but Milovay doesn’t just ape it. The execution feels considered, not borrowed. And “Silver Lining” is where that execution gets a visual to match it. The song itself is about that specific kind of overthinking that comes with trying to impress someone, not knowing if you’re giving too much or not enough, stuck somewhere between grand gestures and playing it cool.
The video, shot and edited by @trill_is_bliss and featuring co-star @tesqhila, plays that tension straight. There’s no melodramatic breakup, no fantasy sequence. It’s the uncomfortable middle ground the song is actually about, wanting to go all in but second-guessing every move. That’s a harder thing to visualize than heartbreak, and it works.
This is his second EP in just a few months. He dropped “The Lost Scripts of Phenoxism” back in December 2025, and the new one clearly goes in its own direction. That kind of output discipline is notable. Short-form projects released consistently are the current play for independent artists trying to stay relevant without burning through a full album rollout budget, and Milovay seems to genuinely understand the logic of it rather than just following a trend.
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“There is no deadline to make it in this industry,” he said. “I could be 41 and still make moves as if I’ve been doing this for X amount of years.” He means it. Part of what changed is practical too. He talks about finally understanding how to navigate blogs, push his releases correctly, and use social media as an actual tool rather than an afterthought. For independent artists in 2026, that gap between talent and platform literacy is where careers stall. Milovay figured out which side of that gap he needed to close.
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You can follow Milovay on YouTube, Instagram, and stream his music on Spotify, Apple Music, and SoundCloud.
Entertainment
Andre Correa’s New Single “Histórias” Explores How Stories Change in the Telling
Published
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The best instrumental music makes you feel something you can’t quite name. Brazilian guitarist Andre Correa’s new single “Histórias” works like that, building a narrative without a single word by exploring how stories transform as they pass between people.
The track, which translates to “Stories” in English, draws from baião and fusion to create something that unfolds like a conversation you’re overhearing. Correa structured the composition around the concept of a game of telephone, where a single idea gets reinterpreted through different emotional filters until it returns to something clearer than where it started. The piece swells and contracts, moving through restlessness and conflict before landing somewhere more settled and direct.

“The work invites the listener to create their own interpretation,” Correa explains. “Each person hears a different story within the same music.”
It’s a fitting approach for a guitarist who treats composition as personal archaeology. Correa, a Berklee College of Music graduate now based in Orlando, doesn’t start with theory or structure when he writes. He starts with whatever he’s actually living through, picking up his guitar and trying to translate feeling into sound. One idea leads to another until the piece reveals its own direction. “I only feel comfortable when I can see the full picture and everything feels cohesive, like the music is telling one clear story,” he says.

That process shaped his debut album “Seasons,” released November 29, 2025, which documents his years in Boston through seven original tracks. But “Histórias,” releasing in 2026, pushes further into abstraction, examining not just personal experience but the nature of how experience gets communicated and distorted over time. Multiple musical “voices” emerge from a single theme, creating layers that explore the relationship between noise, interpretation, and truth.

Correa was born in Valinhos, São Paulo, and raised in Campinas, learning keyboard from his father at eight before picking up guitar at twelve. Playing in church communities taught him early that music works best as service rather than spectacle, a belief that stuck through his formal training at Berklee, where he studied with faculty including Danilo Pérez, John Patitucci, and Randy Roos. His time at the Berklee Global Jazz Institute took him into hospitals and rehabilitation centers, reinforcing his sense that music exists to create space for something meaningful to happen.
The immigrant experience of rebuilding life in the United States has informed his writing as much as any classroom. Moving countries, learning to navigate unfamiliar systems, processing the particular loneliness of starting over in a new place: all of it feeds into work that prioritizes emotional honesty over technical display.
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Correa isn’t chasing anything grand with his music. If someone walks away feeling a little more present, a little more honest with themselves, or simply more connected to their own emotions, he figures the work has done what it was supposed to do.
“Histórias” rewards that kind of attention. The track doesn’t demand you understand it on first listen. It just asks you to sit with it long enough to find whatever story you needed to hear.
Stream Andre Correa’s music on Spotify and Apple Music, and follow his work on Instagram, YouTube, Facebook, TikTok, and LinkedIn. Visit his website for more.
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