2021-08-30
57 分钟My guest Today Jamila Jamil, was a household name in the UK for years, hosting shows on T four and BBC one, before launching into the spotlight in the US, playing Tahani on the acclaimed tv show the Good Place, and then hosting TBS late night game show the Misery index judging voguing reality competition show Legendary.
And along the way, she has been incredibly intentional about leveraging her notoriety for social good, launching the advocacy platform I Weigh and the podcast of the same name.
And she's on a quest to really bring together and amplify the voices of changemakers and promote equity and dignity.
And for her, it's also personal.
Growing up the daughter of indian and pakistani parents, she was often bullied, an experience made tougher after being diagnosed with a condition that affects her body's connective tissue and often causes chronic pain.
And through her teens, she endured even more trauma, became anorexic, and then had a car accident that caused a spinal injury that would profoundly change her relationship with her body and finding her way eventually into the world of tv and radio in the UK.
She headed to the US at first to write, but found herself in front of the camera performing on a set with her childhood heroes on network tv.
But it was her decision to speak truth to power and become an advocate for equality, inclusivity and self determination that has really become the center of who Jamila is and how she shows up in the world, a place she describes as being post shame.
So excited to share this best of conversation with you.
And before we dive into it, I.
Also want to take a moment to.
Share some super exciting news.
So my new book sparked is now.
Available for pre order.
This is really the culmination of more.
Than two decades of work getting to.
The heart of what makes us come alive in work and life.
It'll help you understand, maybe in a way that you never truly have been able to see or embrace those deeper drivers for work that fill you with meaning and joy and excitement and purpose.
And probably equally important, it reveals what.
Work empties your soul, takes the greatest.