From Hollywood to Home: Black Voices in Entertainment
- Jalyn Hall expands into comedy, mastering timing, camera looks, and playful energy while preserving emotional authenticity.
- Jalyn Hall builds characters from lived experience, balancing construction and confession so honesty lets the comedy land.
- Jalyn Hall prioritizes cast chemistry and chosen family, and is moving into producing to create opportunities in a diverse creative era.
Inside The Rise and Fall of Reggie Dinkins, and the mindset of a young actor stepping fully into his own voice
Instinct as Compass
For Jalyn Hall, instinct isn’t a luxury—it’s the compass.
Before the booking, before the set, before the cameras start rolling, there’s a moment where something either clicks or it doesn’t. When The Rise and Fall of Reggie Dinkins came across his radar, the response was immediate.
“First off, I love the mockumentary style of filming,” he says. “When I read that in the breakdown, I was like, okay—this could be really funny just off that style.”
Then he read the script.
“And you’re like, okay, this is hilarious.”
That instinct—to trust what excites him—is something Hall is learning to follow without hesitation. Even in the audition phase, he was already thinking beyond the page, building the world in real time.
“I actually did my audition in the mockumentary style,” he explains. “We had the camera moving, zoom-ins, all that. I had such a great time doing it.”
So much so that the outcome almost felt secondary.
“I was like, even if I don’t book this, I’m going to watch this show. It’s that good.”
He booked it. But what he stepped into wasn’t just another role—it was a shift in rhythm, tone, and creative muscle.
Learning the Language of Comedy
Hall has built his career on emotional authenticity. Comedy—especially the precise, self-aware language of mockumentary—asked something different.
“It’s really the looks to camera that are my favorite part,” he says. “It brings the audience in, like they’re in the scene with you.”
He studied the mechanics—the rhythm popularized by shows like The Office and Abbott Elementary—where comedy lives in timing, silence, and the glance that says everything. But on set, the work became less about imitation and more about energy.
“There’d be moments before action where we’re just uncontrollably laughing, goofing off,” he says. “And then we start filming, and that energy just rolls into the scene.”
It’s a looser muscle. A different kind of control.
“One thing I pride myself on is diversity,” he says. “So stepping into comedy—it was a welcome challenge. And I’m continuously enjoying it.”
Playing It Close to Truth
At the center of Reggie Dinkins is Carmelo, a teenager navigating identity, family, and the quiet pressure of becoming. It’s a role that doesn’t demand distance—it demands honesty.
“When you strip everything away, he’s just a teenager figuring out who he is,” Hall says—a truth that lands differently in a generation hyper-aware of identity, performance, and perception.
That clarity simplifies the work, but it doesn’t make it easy.
“It’s not really about embodying a character,” he explains. “It’s about implementing my real-life experience—just putting it in his shoes.”
Still, there’s craft in the balance. Hall approaches performance as both construction and confession.
“I’d say it’s 50/50,” he says. “You build who this person is—his situation, what he’s going through. But then you apply your real experience to it.”
The grounding is what makes the comedy land.
“Then you just add the comedy to it,” he says. “That’s where it comes alive.”

The Chemistry You Can’t Script
What lingers most from the experience isn’t just the work—it’s the people.
“One of my favorite moments was Tracy’s birthday,” Hall says, smiling at the memory. “We surprised him with a mariachi band, a cake—we just partied right there on set.”
It wasn’t written. It wasn’t planned for the camera. It was real.
From the beginning, the cast moved like a unit—breaking bread, building trust, finding rhythm in each other. What started as a production evolved into something closer to a chosen family.
“We still have a group chat. We check in on each other,” he says. “That support system—it’s amazing.”
Even the unexpected moments—celebrity drop-ins, shifting energy, the unpredictability of each day—became part of the experience.
“Every day was something new,” he says. “It was always an adventure—a hilarious adventure.”
When the Work Meets the World
For Hall, the work doesn’t fully land until it reaches people.
He thinks back to a screening from an earlier project—hundreds of students in a room, watching, reacting in real time.
“When I walked on stage, it was like earth-rumbling applause,” he says—and for a moment, the work, the risk, the waiting—it all made sense.
That feeling—of being seen, of being received—stays with him.
“It was validating,” he says. “It lets me know that what I want to give to the world is being received.”
But he doesn’t mistake validation for arrival.
“The journey’s not done. The train is still rolling,” he says. “It just shows how far I’ve come—and how far I have left to go.”

Outgrowing the Frame
Growth, for Hall, isn’t something he announces—it’s something audiences are still catching up to.
“There are still people like, ‘You’re the little brother—when did you grow up?’” he says, laughing. “I’ve had people ask me where my mom is. I’m like, I’m 19.”
He doesn’t resist it. If anything, he understands what it means.
“It lets me know it stuck with people.”
Still, evolution is inevitable.
“As I grow, the roles will grow too.”
Choosing With Intention
That evolution comes with a sharper sense of choice.
“The first thing I look at is the story,” he says. “Would I watch it if I didn’t book it?”
It’s a simple filter—but a revealing one.
“I want to be captivated. Then it’s about what my character adds—what’s their why.”
Only after that does he turn the question inward.
“Am I prepared to give what that requires?”
It’s a measure of readiness as much as desire—and one he doesn’t take lightly.

Building Beyond the Screen
Looking ahead, Hall’s vision stretches beyond performance.
“I’m definitely looking into producing,” he says. “I love collaborating, bringing ideas to life.”
He’s clear about where he thrives.
“I’m more of an idea guy when it comes to writing,” he admits. “But I love working with writers, building things together.”
What drives him is the opportunity to create space—not just for himself, but for others.
“If I can help give someone a chance to shine, I feel obligated to do that.”
The Era He’s Stepping Into
If there’s a way to define this moment, Hall already has the language for it.
“This is the era of creativity and diversity,” he says.
Not just in roles—but in identity, ambition, and possibility.
“I started out wanting to entertain,” he reflects. “But being creative isn’t just acting. It’s so many different things.”
He’s not rushing the process. He’s letting it unfold—intentionally, curiously, on his own terms.
“I’m taking my time to figure out what that looks like for me,” he says. “While staying dedicated to my craft.”
He’s not chasing what’s next.
He’s building it in real time.
And for the first time, he’s fully aware of the voice leading the way.
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