There are interviews that skim the surface, and there are conversations that reach for the heart and soul of an artist. When Angie Rose joins Brian Sebastian on “Movie Reviews and More,” it is firmly the latter — a meeting between a host renowned for asking the questions others skip and a Latina artist whose life holds far more than any quick soundbite could capture.

Sebastian has built one of entertainment’s most enduring platforms on exactly this premise. Across nearly three decades and tens of thousands of interviews, he has earned a reputation for capturing not just the story but the heart and soul of it, pressing past the usual promotional fluff to find what actually drives an artist. It is a rare kind of attention, and few guests reward it the way Angie Rose does.
Because the truth is, Angie Rose has never been an artist who fits in a single sentence. Born and raised in the Bronx with deep Puerto Rican roots, she came up in a swirl of hip-hop beats and salsa rhythms, faith and family, that shaped a sound refusing to stay in one lane — pop, R&B, and hip-hop fused into something unmistakably hers. Behind the music is a story of survival: she has spoken openly about battling depression, addiction, and the edge of suicide, and about emerging determined to turn those scars into something that heals others. That is the kind of testimony that surface-level questions can never reach, and precisely the kind Sebastian’s approach is built to draw out.
The depth extends well beyond her own journey. Through her Unstoppable Foundation — recognized by FEMA for its relief work in Puerto Rico — Angie Rose has carried her message of hope to the broken, the underserved, and the overlooked. Add Latin Grammy and Dove Award nominations and more than twenty million global streams, and what emerges is an artist whose substance demands a conversation with room to breathe rather than a rushed exchange of talking points.

That is what makes this pairing worth watching. “Movie Reviews and More” reaches audiences across more than a hundred outlets worldwide, and Sebastian’s gift for the unhurried, genuine question gives Angie Rose’s full story — fighter, Boricua daughter, woman of faith, humanitarian — the space it has always deserved. When the two sit down, viewers won’t get the polished veneer. They’ll get the person underneath, and with an artist like Angie Rose, that is exactly where the real story lives.
Watch Angie Rose on Movies Reviews & More here:
