The grid just shifted. Tronix Network has officially rebooted, and it’s already making noise with a premiere that sets timelines on fire: The Final Convo, starring Hazel-E and Masika Kalysha.
If you’ve been anywhere near the culture over the last decade, you already know these two have carried one of reality TV’s most unforgettable feuds. Headlines, shade, subtweets, live rants. Hazel and Masika didn’t just live in the drama, they practically defined it. And now, instead of passing comments through the grapevine or firing shots online, they’re finally face-to-face, sitting down for one last conversation.
A Network That Knows the Assignment
Ray J is steering Tronix Network’s reboot with a clear vision: platforms shouldn’t just broadcast content, they should curate cultural moments. Tronix is positioning itself at the intersection of entertainment, conversation, and raw storytelling. And there’s no better way to prove that than putting two women who shaped the Love & Hip Hop era of pop culture across from each other to air it all out.
What We See in The Final Convo
The energy? Tense. The body language? Loud. The dialogue? Exactly the kind of messy clarity fans crave. Hazel-E and Masika hold nothing back: old accusations resurface, tempers flare, and moments of icy silence hit just as hard as the shouting. The teaser already gave us iconic one-liners—“I’m not a TV bitch. I’m a bitch that’s on TV”, but the full sit-down proves this is more than a reunion clip.
It’s conflict laid bare, with no producers feeding lines and no reunion-style audience egging them on. Just two women, their truth, and the weight of years in the public eye.
More Than Just Drama
Of course, The Final Convo is entertaining, explosive even, but there’s also a bigger story under it. For Black women in reality television, reclaiming the narrative matters. Too often, messy edits and soundbites are the only legacy left behind. Here, both Hazel and Masika get to tell their story in their own words, with no filters besides the cameras rolling.
It’s also a commentary on the culture we’ve built online: conflict sells, but closure lingers. Viewers don’t just want to see the argument, they want to know what comes after… whether it’s peace, distance, or another spark.

Why This Hits Different
The relaunch of Tronix Network isn’t about nostalgia, it’s about evolution. By choosing The Final Convo as its statement piece, the network is saying: this is where culture and conversation meet, no shortcuts. It’s glossy, it’s gritty, and it’s undeniably of the moment.
Hazel-E and Masika’s sit-down is the kind of reality moment that reminds us why we stay tuned in: because fairytales might end with closure, but pop culture always leaves room for the remix.

The culture moves quick, but my Pynnderella is quicker.
Pynnderella, The Fairytale Connoisseur



