This story discusses suicide. If you or someone you know is in crisis, call 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. You can also call the network, previously known as the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, at 800-273-8255, text HOME to 741741 or visit SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources for additional resources.
The unfortunate news confirming Stephen’s passing was released today on all major news outlets. A representative for Boss told NBC News he died by suicide.
Stephen “tWitch” Boss, is known as the popular “So You Think You Can Dance” alum and as the former DJ for “Ellen DeGeneres Show”. The official news was reported by his wife, fellow dancer Allison Holker Boss. She confirmed the news with the following statement to CNN:
“It is with the heaviest of hearts that I have to share my husband Stephen has left us,” Holker Boss said in a statement. “Stephen lit up every room he stepped into. He valued family, friends and community above all else and leading with love and light was everything to him. He was the backbone of our family, the best husband and father, and an inspiration to his fans.”
“To say he left a legacy would be an understatement, and his positive impact will continue to be felt,” she added. “I am certain there won’t be a day that goes by that we won’t honor his memory. We ask for privacy during this difficult time for myself and especially for our three children.”
No further information was provided regarding the cause of his death. Stephen was only 40 years old.
Holker Boss concluded her statement to CNN by saying “Stephen, we love you, we miss you, and I will always save the last dance for you.”
His final instagram post was a ‘shared posted’ released by his wife Allison on Monday showing the two of them dancing in front of the Christmas tree. His wife’s message under the post read “HOLIDAY SUNDAY FUNDAY DANCE!! With my lover @sir_twitch_alot.”
This beautiful pair met when they were all-star dancers on Season 7 of “So You Think You Can Dance” in 2010.
“We shared a dance at the wrap party of that season of ‘So You Think You Can Dance’ and we have been together ever since,” Boss told People in February.
“There was no dialogue, there was no conversation or a first hangout. Literally, we danced and we were together holding hands the very next day,” Holker Boss added. “And we never looked back.”
Most Recent Work
After leaving the Ellen show in 2020 where he had recently been promoted as the co-producer of the show, ‘tWitch’ returned to “So You Think You Can Dance”. In February of 2022, he and his wife announced the launch of the new Athleisure line “Fly” with Dicks Sporting Goods where they served as the new brand ambassadors.
Most recently, ‘tWitch’ and Allison both appeared with major roles in the new Disney film “The Hip Hop Nutcracker” which released on Nov 25th, 2022.
Responses started to flood social media Wednesday morning from celebrities and fans:
“I’m heartbroken,” wrote Ellen DeGeneres on Instagram alongside a photo of the pair hugging. “tWitch was pure love and light. He was my family, and I loved him with all my heart. I will miss him. Please send your love and support to Allison and his beautiful children — Weslie, Maddox, and Zaia.”
Ciara – “I am so crushed to hear the news that you are no longer with us. I’ve always known you as joy, laughter, good times and a big smile! Heaven has gained an angel today! May you rest in paradise. Praying for your family during this difficult time. (see full tweet)
Viola Davis – “I’m at a loss for words right now, praying for his family and loved ones.” (see full tweet)
Valentin – “This is not possible. I am absolutely lost for any words or comprehension. Heartbreaking.” (see full tweet)
Mickey Guyton – “You just never truly know what anyone is going through. Check on your loved ones. Always be good to people. Man this one hurts.” (see full tweet)
Yvette Nicole Brown – “What is going on?! This news has broken my heart. I’ve loved him since #SYTYCD. He was always so joyful & full of life. Always. Oh tWich! If you are feeling despair PLEASE call 988. #PleaseStay” (see full tweet)
Kirk Franklin – “My heartfelt condolences to Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss’s family… beautiful children, beautiful wife. It’s really heartbreaking…” (see his full message here)
The responses continue to flood social media after the release of this news. Please join the ArtSoul Radio family as we continue to keep the family, friends and loved ones of tWitch in prayer during this difficult time.
Tamara Young-McCoy is the founder of ArtSoul Konnect Entertainment Media, home to ArtSoulRadio.com, and a Radio Host/Journalist whose work has appeared in Ebony, Jet, Blavity, and other publications. With a background in TV, film, and digital media, she is dedicated to bridging faith, culture, and entertainment through storytelling and media innovation. She is passionate about mentoring young creatives, amplifying diverse voices, and advancing the Christian music industry while expanding its mainstream reach. Follow her on social media or learn more at www.tamarayoungmccoy.com.
Robert H. Marshall Jr. does not enter rooms quietly. Not because he is loud, but because the weight of what he carries speaks before he does.
For years, Marshall has emerged as one of the leading voices at the intersection of faith, trauma, masculinity, healing, and identity—doing the difficult work many people preach about but few are willing to confront honestly. As a pastor, author, lecturer, mentor, creative, and advocate, he has dedicated his life to helping boys and men heal from invisible wounds while reclaiming identity, purpose, and hope.
But before the conferences, classrooms, pulpits, documentaries, and books, there was a little boy carrying pain in silence.
Marshall is a survivor of sexual abuse, fatherlessness, abandonment, and childhood trauma—experiences that deeply shaped his understanding of shame, emotional survival, and masculinity. Like many men raised in urban communities, he learned how to perform strength long before he ever learned how to process pain. For years, he hid behind leadership, faith, and achievement while privately wrestling with the emotional aftermath of trauma.
Those experiences became the foundation for his newest book, Shame Is A Liar: Man Enough To Heal, Man Enough To Be Free, a deeply personal and psychologically layered exploration of how shame impacts the minds, relationships, bodies, and spiritual lives of men. The book examines how abuse, violence, rejection, incarceration, addiction, silence, and unhealthy definitions of masculinity distort identity and keep many men emotionally trapped. Marshall challenges readers to confront the lies shame teaches and begin the difficult journey toward healing and freedom.
“Healing is the journey. Wholeness is the destination,” Marshall often says.
His work has resonated far beyond church walls.
Marshall has become a respected voice in faith-based, academic, and social service spaces, lecturing and facilitating conversations on male trauma, restorative justice, mental health, fatherlessness, violence prevention, and emotional wellness through his healing commuities The Survivors Circle & I Am Man, Inc. . As one of the youngest former deans at Moody Bible Institute, he helped mentor and develop emerging leaders while challenging institutions to better understand the emotional and spiritual realities shaping boys, men, and families in urban communities globally.
At the core of Marshall’s work is a sobering belief: that nearly 80–85% of boys and men in urban communities around the world have experienced some form of sexual abuse, trauma, exploitation, or premature exposure to sex. He believes many of society’s deepest crises are rooted in unresolved pain and that more than ever, communities must create intentional frameworks to heal and protect the next generation.
“Broken boys become broken men,” he says. “And broken men often break families, communities, systems, and generations. But if we heal a man, we can heal a family, a community, a nation, and ultimately the world.”
That belief fuels everything he does.
He launched The ARK, one of the first Christian conferences intentionally centered on healing for male survivors of sexual abuse.
“The core of my work is helping people feel safe, seen, and heard,” Marshall says. “I’m committed to becoming what I never had—a safe place.”
Through initiatives, healing circles, conferences, academic spaces, and community partnerships, Marshall works to humanize the lived experiences of survivors, create safe spaces for all people to journey toward wholeness, and empower those who walk alongside survivors to support them well. He strongly believes in diversity and views it as a full reflection of the Kingdom of God—where people from different cultures, backgrounds, stories, and experiences can heal, grow, and belong together.
While much of his work centers on healing boys and men, Marshall also openly identifies as a womanist who believes in empowering women leaders to lead boldly, heal fully, and walk unapologetically in their voice, influence, and calling.
At the heart of his message is faith. Marshall believes healing must move beyond empty religious performance and be rooted in authentic partnership with one another and the Holy Spirit.
Married to his wife Jackie for over a decade, he is the proud father of three children. He sees his life’s work as more than ministry, motivation, or a choice. It’s what God has chosen him to do: to become a conduit of healing in the earth.
Naomi Raine and Chandler Moore have officially announced their exits from Maverick City Music, marking a major shift for one of the most influential worship collectives of the past decade.
The news arrives without scandal or spectacle, but it still carries weight. Maverick City Music didn’t just produce songs — it helped reframe what worship could sound like, look like, and feel like for a generation raised on genre-blending playlists, vulnerability, and authenticity. Naomi and Chandler were central to that identity.
In many ways, the transition had already begun.
Just weeks before the announcement, Naomi Raine released her solo project, Jesus Over Everything, on September 14. The album feels stripped-back and intentional, less focused on communal anthems and more on personal conviction. Songs like “Lost in Hallelujah” lean into restraint rather than climax — worship that doesn’t rush resolution or try to sound bigger than it is.
Addressing the shift directly, Naomi framed the moment as growth rather than departure.
“This isn’t really an ending. It’s a new beginning. A new chapter,” she wrote. “I learned so much about God, about people, and about myself. Every song was written from a pure place — just wanting to please God.”
Her statement reflects a throughline that’s been present throughout her work: faith as something lived and evolving, not fixed or performative.
Chandler Moore followed with his own message, emphasizing clarity and forward momentum rather than nostalgia.
“These last few years have been locked in on what really matters in my life and my career,” he shared. “It’s been scary at times, but full of fresh vision and real excitement about the future.”
That recalibration has increasingly shaped Chandler’s solo direction, which he says is focused less on production and more on connection.
“I’m stepping into the next phase, ready to make music that helps people feel a little more human, a little more understood, and a little less alone.”
That approach mirrors what drew so many listeners to Maverick City Music in the first place. The collective disrupted traditional worship norms by embracing cultural nuance, emotional honesty, and musical hybridity — pulling from gospel, CCM, soul, and contemporary Black music without forcing clean lines between them.
Naomi and Chandler weren’t just contributors to that sound — they helped define it.
Their exits don’t signal an abandonment of that vision so much as an expansion of it. Naomi’s Jesus Over Everything and Chandler’s forthcoming solo work suggest both artists are exploring what faith-centered music looks like when it’s untethered from a single collective framework.
For fans, the moment may feel like the closing of a chapter — but Maverick City Music was always designed as a community, not a container. Its influence was never meant to stop at the group itself.
As Chandler put it plainly:
“The dream hasn’t changed. The sound continues.”
What changes now is scale and direction, not intent.
Naomi Raine and Chandler Moore aren’t leaving behind what they helped build. They’re carrying it forward — on their own terms, in their own voices, and into whatever comes next.
About ArtSoul Radio
ArtSoul Radio is a faith-forward media and culture platform spotlighting the intersection of Christian R&B, Gospel, CHH, and creative expression. Through storytelling, sound, and community, we amplify the voices shaping the next era of faith-driven culture.
Chicago was the backdrop for a moment you couldn’t script any better: GRAMMY®, Dove, and Stellar Award-winning powerhouse Jonathan McReynolds linking arms with American Idol Season 23 winner Jamal Roberts to deliver a live ballad that hits straight to the soul. Their new single, “Still,” isn’t just another worship record—it’s a reminder that God’s love is the one thing that doesn’t shift when life does.
Recorded live in McReynolds’ hometown, the song is lifted from his forthcoming project Closer—an album already carrying heavy anticipation. What unfolds in “Still” is classic Jonathan: heartfelt storytelling, layered with rich theology, now elevated by Roberts’ fresh, unshaken voice.
Jonathan McReynolds has carved out a lane few can touch—an artist who makes Gospel feel as real as your group chat confessions. His catalog has always balanced honesty and worship, bringing Sunday morning depth into everyday playlists.
Enter Jamal Roberts: the new voice America fell in love with on American Idol. His win wasn’t just about vocal ability—it was about heart, authenticity, and the kind of presence that feels rare. Pairing him with McReynolds doesn’t just make sense; it feels prophetic. It’s the kind of intergenerational link-up that keeps Gospel fresh while honoring its roots.
The Vibe
With “Still,” Jonathan McReynolds and Jamal Roberts don’t just give us another Gospel single—they give us a soundtrack for resilience. It’s raw, it’s soulful, and it’s proof that the future of faith-based music is in good hands. Expect this one to be on repeat long after the Stellars.