Isabella Akinseye is the founder of Yellow Tamarind Production, a
television production outfit. Prior to establishing her company, the young lady
had a job a lot of people are yearning for. She was under the employment of
Nestle, but she quit the job to follow her passion.
In a chat with Saturday Beats, she explained why she quit a
well-paying job to establish a television production outfit.
“I left Nestlé Nigeria Plc in November 2015. It was hard. I still visit
and the love, hugs and smiles are so comforting and touching. I have so many
fond memories of my time at Nestlé. I left to follow my dreams. As a creative
person, I needed time and space to incubate my ideas and projects. Also, I now
have the opportunity to pitch ideas to Nestlé without any issues of conflict of
interest. I have always done several things at the same time while in school,
so naturally, in my adult life, I have my hands in several pies and I’m loving
it. A lot of people told me they admired my courage. They tell me that I did
the right thing to follow my dreams, especially while I am still young with not
as many responsibilities. A few were not so pleased with my move and thought I
was making a mistake, citing that I still had a lot to do in the corporate
world. Others felt the timing was not right and that I should not be giving up
a job when people are looking for jobs. Not everyone understood it. I have
learnt that you can’t please everyone no matter how hard you try,” she said.
Already, she has a show, Africana Literati, which is aimed at reviving
the reading culture among Nigerians.
She said, “First of all, we have very few art shows out there. Abroad,
arts and culture are a big deal, but here in Nigeria, it is politics, music,
sports, reality and fashion. So there is a gap and Africana Literati is only
too happy to fill it. We are making reading and learning cool with a touch of
Mama Africa. As a teacher, it was natural that I would want to teach my
audience a thing or two and I do that on the ‘Back to School’ segment which focuses
on spelling, pronunciation and African slang.”


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