The trailer for ALLBLK’s new original series G.R.I.T.S. dropped and, within hours, Memphis was trending nationwide. Not the postcard version of Beale Street and barbecue, but the real one—where grief and hustle share the same block, where the roller rink is church on Friday nights, and where three young women are fighting like hell to turn trauma into triumph.
Created by Deji LaRay and backed by executive producers Thomas Q. Jones, Martha Sanchez, and the ALLBLK scripted team, the eight-episode season follows Keisha, Ty, and Francis—three childhood friends who refuse to let the city that raised them also bury them. When a skating competition offers the kind of prize money that can rewrite futures, the rink becomes battlefield, therapy couch, and runway all at once.
A few days before the world meets them, the women behind the characters sat down with AMFM and spoke with the easy rhythm of sisters who’ve already cried, cussed, and celebrated together on set.
They describe the show the way people describe life when they’re finally brave enough to tell the truth: messy, hilarious, heartbreaking, shocking, and still worth waking up for. One minute you’re laughing at something that would get you canceled on social media; the next minute you’re staring at your own reflection in a scene you didn’t realize you needed to see.
What makes G.R.I.T.S. different, they insist, is that nobody is just a hero or just a villain. Every choice—legal or otherwise—comes with a flashback you can feel in your chest. The streets didn’t turn these women hard; the streets just never gave them the luxury of staying soft. And still, every night they lace up skates like armor and roll anyway.
On set, the energy was apparently contagious. Grown women were shouting “I get paid for this?” while spinning backward in sequins. Nights blurred into early mornings in Memphis hotels, music leaking from somebody’s room into the hallway, everybody too excited to sleep. The week they filmed at the actual rink felt less like work and more like a reunion nobody wanted to end. When the director finally yelled “that’s a wrap,” the tears weren’t scripted.
Ask what they hope lands hardest with viewers, and the answer circles back to understanding. Too many people only see the result—braids, slang, side-eyes, survival—and never the why. This series hands you the why in 4K. It asks you to sit with the fact that even the character you want to hate has a grave they visit when nobody’s watching. Everybody, they say, has their villain moment. The difference is whether anyone ever bothered to ask what broke them first.
For the dreamers reading this, the message is simple and brutal: go all in or go home. Talent gets you in the room; humility and relationships keep you there. Confidence isn’t optional; neither is kindness. And when doubt creeps in—and it will—find your rink. Find the thing that lets you breathe long enough to fight another day.
Come October 30, a lot of living rooms are going to feel a little more Southern, a little more seen, and a lot more understood. Because long after the credits roll, one truth lingers: when the world tries to knock you down, sometimes the only move left is to lace up, grab your sisters, and skate until the wheels fall off.
G.R.I.T.S. premieres Thursday, October 30, exclusively on ALLBLK. New episodes drop weekly.
Clear your schedule. Memphis is about to speak—and she’s not whispering anymore.