SHE100: From the Runway to the Newsroom, The Ojy Okpe Story
There is a version of Ojy Okpe's story that would sound almost cinematic to your hearing or would even feel scripted.
A young girl from Lagos, spotted by a South African talent scout, walks into the MNet Face of Africa competition and walks out a finalist.
Within years, she is strutting runways across continents, her face filling the glossy pages of Elle, Vogue, Cosmopolitan, and Essence. Her hands have touched the fabric of Oscar de la Renta and Versace.
Her presence has graced prominent productions connected to Hollywood, including The Devil Wears Prada and the 2009 romantic comedy Confessions of a Shopaholic.
But that version, impressive as it is, is only what I would call the tip of the iceberg.
Because Ojy Okpe did something that very few people at the peak of one career have the courage or clarity to do.
She walked away from the runway and walked into a newsroom, not as a celebrity guest, a brand ambassador but as a journalist.
Today, she is one of the most recognisable faces on Arise News, anchoring The Morning Show alongside a panel of Nigeria's sharpest media minds, and hosting her own dedicated daily segment, What's Trending with Ojy Okpe.
But to understand why she matters—truly matters—you have to start at the beginning, before the cameras, before the catwalks, before the Emmy.
The Girl Behind the Glamour
Born Ojinika Anne Okpe on April 23, 1981, in Lagos State, Ojy grew up carrying two things at once — beauty and purpose. She hails from Umukwata, Ukwani in Delta State, from the Ukwuani/Ndokwa (Delta Igbo) tribe.
Her late father, Matthew Egwuenu, is a retired Commissioner of Police, while her mother, the late Chief Mrs Philomena Ngozi Egwuenu, was a politician and two-time aspirant for the Federal House of Representatives, a Senior Special Adviser to the then Delta State Governor on Conflict Resolution, who fought her own battles in rooms that rarely welcomed women.
It is impossible to look at Ojy Okpe, the broadcaster who asks governments the hard questions, the woman who reports on sexual violence and grassroots struggles with unwavering steadiness and not see the fingerprints of the woman who raised her.
A mother who ran for office twice. A mother who advised on conflict resolution. A mother who refused to stay decorative in a society that often prefers its women quiet and ornamental.
Ojy completed her primary and secondary education in Lagos before leaving Nigeria to study Communication with a minor in Film Production at St John's University in New York. She also trained at the New York Film Academy.
Her modelling years were real and remarkable, she worked with Jean Paul Gaultier, Dolce & Gabbana, Moschino, and Ralph Lauren, and built a career that many young Nigerian women dreamed of.
But whilst all this was unfolding, it seems to be that Ojy was always watching something deeper than the lights and aesthetically pleasing runway.
She was studying how stories were told, how images shaped perception, and how the media could make the invisible visible.
So it would actually be safe to say that the runway was, in retrospect, her first classroom in the power of presentation.
Building a Voice That Outlasts a Photograph
Ojy joined Arise News in 2013 and she did not just arrive as a star seeking another spotlight.
She came in through the documentary unit, as a producer, doing the unglamorous, essential work of research, sourcing, scripting, and shaping stories that would outlast a single broadcast.
It looked like a deliberate choice, and it said everything about the kind of media professional she intended to become.
She rose steadily, from producer to anchor, from anchor to Assistant Director of Features and Special Programming.
Along the way, she co-anchored The Morning Show, one of Nigeria's most-watched news programmes, alongside veterans like Reuben Abati and Rufai Oseni.
To hold your own in that company, in that format, in a country where morning television is as much a national institution as the morning prayer, is no small thing.
But it was What's Trending with Ojy Okpe that gave her the fullest expression of who she is as a journalist.
The segment is not just a round-up of viral content, in her hands, it became a daily audit of Nigerian life, the crimes being committed and ignored, the young people building quietly in the margins, the women and children caught in systems that chew them up without headlines.
She has described it as a show about both accountability and upliftment, and that dual commitment, to expose and to celebrate is the signature of her work.
Then came the Emmy. As part of Arise News's documentary unit, Ojy contributed to Game Changers: How the Harlem Globetrotters Battled Racism—a film that went on to win Best Documentary at the 58th New York Emmy Awards.
For a Nigerian television station that was still finding its footing on the international stage, it was a statement win.
For Ojy, it was confirmation that the pivot from fashion to journalism had not just been brave, it had been a right thing to do.
Beyond anchoring, she runs Africa Shape, her own production company, through which she has produced bio-documentaries on artists including Ciara and Janelle Monae, work that keeps her tied to the creative world while firmly rooted in storytelling.
She has interviewed Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Omotola Jalade Ekeinde, Susan Sarandon, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Idina Menzel, and served as Master of Ceremony at the 82nd Golden Globes Awards coverage for Arise News.
A Mind That The Camera Cannot Contain
What makes Ojy Okpe's story worth telling, especially in a season of celebrating women, is not the glamour of it, though the glamour is real.
It is the sequence of choices she made, each one quiet and more demanding than the last. To leave modelling at a moment of visibility and enter journalism through the back door of production rather than the front door of fame.
To spend years doing the work before the work rewarded her publicly.
She once said of her storytelling: "I like the fact that I'm able to impact change in certain stories that I tell. I enjoy that I'm able to connect with people in that type of manner where people are even reaching out to me to discuss this or that because it's so important to them. It's like a system where we are just trying to create change."
There is nothing actually accidental in that statement. It is the philosophy of a woman who has always known that attention is only valuable if it is pointed at something that matters.
Her late mother spent her life trying to get into rooms where decisions were made on behalf of the people.
Ojy found a different door—a camera, a microphone, a daily broadcast reaching millions and walked through it with the same intention. To serve. To speak. To make the country's noise into something that sounds, on the best days, like a conversation worth having.
From the pages of Vogue to the set of one of Nigeria's most-watched morning shows, Ojy Okpe has never chased relevance.
She has simply, consistently, shown up for the story, for the viewer, for the truth. And in a media landscape that often rewards noise over substance, that is its own kind of revolution.
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