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The Brit-Nigerian Host Providing A Platform For Black Women

Jo Maxwell

Black Women in the News

The Brit-Nigerian Host Providing A Platform For Black Women

BRITISH-NIGERIAN media personality, Jo (Ibijoke) Maxwell is not your typical talk show host. After studying Accounting and Finance, Jo changed careers to become an IT Specialist within the Financial Industry and developed a passion for the media when she struggled to find images of black women consistently on British screens.

She rarely saw black women and men on TV who reflected the positive success stories that she was surrounded by within her network. Jo is particularly passionate about seeing individuals within the Black community succeed in all of their endeavours; in their personal lives, careers, businesses. She decided to launch her very own talk show to give women an opportunity to showcase these successes and counteract the lack of visibility for Black women in the UK within Mainstream media. Her show also features inspirational black men who enrich their communities.

The Jo Maxwell Show was launched on YouTube in 2017 with the first season PEPTALK, covering a range of topics that pushed the boundaries of the usual conversations within the Black Community in the UK. Using a new media platform like YouTube has given Jo the opportunity to take control of a positive narrative and reach a far wider audience without relying on traditional media.

“I decided to undertake this journey to allow me to showcase some of the inspiring and amazing black people who have done so well for themselves in the UK,” said Maxwell. “I also wanted to tackle real life issues and topics that the Black British Community is not always confident in talking about i.e. Child Sexual Abuse, Why African men do not like to marry older women, Should a Woman downplay her success to keep a man, domestic violence and more.”

In 2018 Jo will be releasing the seconnd series of PEPTALK aimed at black women from all over the world and The UK including African and Caribbean diaspora and African-American community and a new show called One to One, aimed at Black men and women across the world.

The show is currently based in the UK but the power of YouTube means that it has a global audience and Jo will be filming the show internationally in the future. Maxwell believes that everyone exists to add value to people around them and the world they …

 

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I am a future butterfly at the stage of growth when I am turning into an adult. I am enclosed in a hard case shell formed by love, family, and friends. It is the hardest stage of becoming a black butterfly. You will encounter many hardships only to come out stronger and better than what you went in. At this stage, you are finding out who you truly are and how to love yourself.

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