When Angie Rose sits down with Brian Sebastian on “Movie Reviews & More,” she isn’t simply making another media stop — she’s carrying a whole world to the microphone. The Bronx-born, Puerto Rican Latina who has built a career on turning her hardest chapters into anthems of survival now steps onto one of entertainment’s most far-reaching platforms, and the story she brings with her is one that has already moved millions.
Hers is a sound that refuses to sit in a single lane. Angie Rose came up in a Bronx swirl of thumping hip-hop and the irresistible sway of salsa drifting from corner stores, and that collision of block-party grit and Puerto Rican soul became the foundation of an artist who fuses pop, R&B, and hip-hop into something distinctly her own. A little BX, a little PR, a lotta heaven — the description she gives herself doubles as a map of everything she carries into a conversation.

But the heart of what Angie Rose brings to Sebastian’s audience runs deeper than genre. She is an artist who has been open about battling depression, addiction, and the brink of suicide, and who emerged from those years determined to turn her scars into something that heals others. That testimony reaches well beyond the music. Her Unstoppable Foundation, recognized by FEMA for its relief work in Puerto Rico, has extended her mission of hope into the lives of the broken, the underserved, and the overlooked — proof that her message of being “unstoppable” is something she lives as much as she sings.
That mission has not gone unnoticed. With Latin Grammy and Dove Award nominations, more than twenty million global streams, and a sophomore album, The Letters I Never Sent, that traces the emotional arc from pain to triumph, Angie Rose arrives at Sebastian’s mic as an artist whose substance has already earned its place in the room. “Movie Reviews & More,” with its global reach across more than a hundred outlets and a host known for chasing the heart and soul of a story rather than the usual fluff, gives that full narrative the stage it deserves.

For audiences meeting her for the first time and longtime supporters alike, the conversation is an invitation into the whole of who Angie Rose is — Bronx fighter, Boricua daughter, woman of faith, and relentless voice of hope. She came up through music, prayer, and laughter, and she carries every bit of it with her. When she speaks, the worldwide audience of “Movie Reviews and More” will hear an artist who has turned her life into a message, and a message into a movement that shows no sign of slowing down.
Watch Angie Rose on Movies Reviews & More here:
