Podcasts about thando hopa

  • 12PODCASTS
  • 13EPISODES
  • 31mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Jun 13, 2024LATEST
thando hopa

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about thando hopa

Latest podcast episodes about thando hopa

Africalink | Deutsche Welle
How society can end stigma associated with albinism

Africalink | Deutsche Welle

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2024 26:43


People born with albinism face challenges like stigma in parts of Africa. On International Albinism Awareness Day, DW speaks to personalities born with Albinism: Tanzania's Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Abdallah Saleh Possi, William Maduhu Kulwa, a Tanzanian activist and lawyer working on albinism rights and Thando Hopa, a prosecutor-turned-model.

Carol Ofori
WCW: Carol Ofori celebrates a woman with a long list of achievements named Thando Hopa.

Carol Ofori

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2023 16:10


Today, Carol Ofori celebrates Thando Hopa as our Woman Crush Wednesday, a fashion model and an advocate of diversity.

The Best of Azania Mosaka Show
Upside of Failure: Thando Hopa

The Best of Azania Mosaka Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2021 24:49


  Relebogile Mabotja is joined by the Model, Cultural Leader at the world forum and Diversity Advocate, Thando Hopa to talk about her failures and how she managed to overcome those failures See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

failure model upside thando hopa relebogile mabotja
True North World Podcast
013 | TNW Podcast (formerly MAKER AMSTERDAM Podcast) - Thando Hopa

True North World Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 45:59


To learn more about Thando, click here:  https://www.instagram.com/thandohopa/?hl=en http://pirellicalendar.pirelli.com/en/article?article=3555 MAKER would like to extend a heartfelt thank you to Melinda Shaw of Shaw Media, South Africa for making this interview possible. Learn more about MAKER MAGAZINE here: https://www.makeramsterdam.nl MAKER MAGAZINE on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/maker_amsterdam/

MAKER AMSTERDAM
010 | MAKER AMSTERDAM Podcast - Thando Hopa

MAKER AMSTERDAM

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 45:59


To learn more about Thando, click here: https://www.instagram.com/thandohopa/?hl=enhttp://pirellicalendar.pirelli.com/en/article?article=3555MAKER would like to extend a heartfelt thank you to Melinda Shaw of Shaw Media, South Africa for making this interview possible.Learn more about MAKER MAGAZINE here: https://www.makeramsterdam.nlMAKER MAGAZINE on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/maker_amsterdam/

Beyond Wealth
How diversity builds business advantage

Beyond Wealth

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2019 23:02


Talking on a panel at the recent Virgin Atlantic Business is an Adventure event, Faith Popcorn, Thando Hopa, Marc Kahn and Tashmia Ismail-Saville discussed how diversity and inclusion has a direct impact on the bottom line. Read the full transcript · Investec · Investec Facebook · Investec Twitter · Investec LinkedIn

Investec Focus Radio
How diversity builds business advantage

Investec Focus Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2019 23:02


Investec — Talking on a panel at the recent Virgin Atlantic Business is an Adventure event, Faith Popcorn, Thando Hopa, Marc Kahn and Tashmia Ismail-Saville discussed how diversity and inclusion has a direct impact on the bottom line. Read the full transcript

Beyond Wealth
How diversity builds business advantage

Beyond Wealth

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2019 23:02


Investec — Talking on a panel at the recent Virgin Atlantic Business is an Adventure event, Faith Popcorn, Thando Hopa, Marc Kahn and Tashmia Ismail-Saville discussed how diversity and inclusion has a direct impact on the bottom line. Read the full transcript

Africa State of Mind
Thando Hopa: "The struggle of living with albinism"

Africa State of Mind

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2019 41:21


In this episode of Africa State of Mind, we get a chance to speak to Lawyer and Activist turned Model Thando Hopa. Hopa shares some of her life challenges and how she overcame the struggle of living with albinism and reimagining what identity is.

Boston Calling
Heads Up

Boston Calling

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2019 26:49


The US Department of Homeland Security is turning to facial recognition technology to keep track of people leaving and entering the US, but privacy advocates have serious concerns. Now, the Electronic Privacy Information Center has obtained documents from US Customs and Border Protection that backup their fears. Also, we visit a hair salon in Boston strictly for women who wear hijab; Thando Hopa makes history by being the first model with albinism on the cover of Vogue magazine; the phenomenon of blackface persists around the globe; and Orthodox Jewish women in New York observe an old tradition in a very modern way. (Image: A facial recognition program is demonstrated during the 2004 Biometrics exhibition and conference in London. (Photo by Ian Waldie/Getty Images)

Across Women's Lives
South African lawyer is first woman with albinism on Vogue cover: ‘The way I look is enough’

Across Women's Lives

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2019


The cover of this month’s Vogue Portugal edition featured a model, like it usually does.But this one is groundbreaking. The issue is about the diversity of African beauty, and it is the first Vogue cover to feature a woman with albinism. Her name is Thando Hopa and she’s a lawyer and activist from South Africa.The world has reacted to seeing Hopa on the cover. "That was so exciting," says Brandi Marie, a social worker and black woman with albinism from Chicago. "I got really emotional because growing up, I didn’t see myself. I looked through these magazines wanting to see myself represented — and I never did."Hopa says that her parents actually taught her that she was "beautiful all the time." It was outside her parents' home that she felt unaccepted by society. "When I grew up, I grew up having parents who were absolutely wonderful, who taught me that I was beautiful all the time, but then when I went into society and I looked at the media space, I wasn't represented with respect to what was portrayed as beautiful," Hopa told The World's Marco Werman. "I started developing inadequacy, as I had a relationship with society that took quite awhile for me to understand beauty in terms of me just being me and accepting that my eyebrows are pale, my eyelashes are pale, that my hair is curly and blonde as opposed to curly and black." Thando Hopa: I had to cultivate a sense of enoughness that freed me from the validation of society and what it considered beauty to be. I had to go into the modeling industry understanding what the media space was saying was beautiful. My purpose was to focus on representation and saying that the way I look is enough whether I am on a Vogue cover or not. I needed to cultivate that sense within myself in order for me to free myself from the societal norms. To be quite honest, when I saw myself on a Vogue cover, I felt more relief than happiness. Relief in that I had gone through so many battles, and a lot of the times when you're going through all of these nuanced battles with respect to representation, when you actually get there, more than anything you just feel relief that you know what you've managed to do.Marco Werman: I know you've probably told this story many times by now, but maybe one more time you could share it with us. How did you go from lawyer and activist to being a model?I was a prosecutor and I used to prosecute in sexual offense cases. I decided to take a sabbatical, but I had already started my modeling career at the time. I went into it as a platform of representation.So, modeling is activism for you? How did the modeling industry respond to a woman with albinism who is also an activist for albinism?I think when I started off in the industry, I was still trying to cultivate my own self-worth with respect to the industry. I started experiencing a great deal of boxing and stereotyping. It was a constant narrative of prejudice in Africa. It wasn't that the narrative was not significant or important; it's that it became an all-consuming narrative and it started chipping away at my complete humanity in that I had experiences that people just did not consider important anymore. I was only the story.Related: Congo: Albino rapper N'Kashh prepares his debut albumDid you ever think that maybe modeling isn't the way to do this kind of activism?To be quite honest with you, I think it was one of the best ways because media was a negotiating medium. It helped negotiate a new narrative with respect to many things and albinism was one of them. I started learning how to harness a more complete identity with respect to how people see albinism using media through the modeling space.How did this Vogue cover come about?I received an email from Portugal. They said that there was a cover opportunity photo shoot and I said "a cover?" I didn't believe it, to be honest. I went to my mother and I said to her that I received an email and it said that it wants to do this particular thing and they wanted to talk about my work as a diversity advocate. She said, "Oh my gosh, do you know this human trafficking stuff that's going on? What if these people want to take you to Cape Town and they're trying to traffic you?" Literally, that's how farfetched the thought was. We had to do a lot of due diligence to believe it.Where was that shot?It was shot in Cape Town. I actually brought some of my family jewelry that was very Southern African because representation is very multifaceted. Yes, there is the woman with albinism, but there's a Southern African Xhosa woman. There's just all of these facets of identity that have a story to it and I wanted to do my best to bring everybody with me in the best way I could.Related: Ostracized in Tanzania, this community of albinos sing songs of acceptanceSpeaking of identity, I've really been wanting to ask you this question since I learned about your story. South Africa is known for apartheid, a government policy that separated whites from blacks from society for years. What did that do to your own understanding of who you are?That's a very intense question. The interesting thing I've learned is that race is an institution that was bred from a figment of somebody's imagination, but had very real consequences. Consequences that lived beyond color, because I am a black woman that still experiences the consequences of what race is and I don't have the color. But I learned something being in this body. It's that the issue isn't racism, isn't patriarchy and isn't issues with respect to albinism. The issue is that we have a behavioral defect with how we deal with difference.When do you think it won't be a big deal anymore for a person with albinism to be on a cover of Vogue or any fashion magazine? When it's just a model on the cover and she just happens to have albinism?It's a very difficult question to answer because I think right now we're getting to a point where people are celebrating for us quite a lot. You're the first woman to do this, you're the first black person to do that, the first person with albinism to do that, the first otherly-abled person to do this. The more you get frequency of representation, the more you'll be able to normalize something that is considered extraordinary. Probably frequency would help a lot because the frequency would not make it a deviance, it would make it a normalization. We need to start setting values that allow for that kind of progress, diversity and inclusion.This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Damon Beard
Thando Hopa Interview

Damon Beard

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2019 6:05


East Coast Radio — Listen to Thando Hopa as she chats in an exclusive interview with Damon about being on the cover of Vogue.

Frank with J and T
Frank Episode 23: Mental Disposition

Frank with J and T

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2017 72:40


In this week's episode, Janine and Tshego discuss SLAYAGE. Thando Hopa, Nicolette Mason, Gabi Fresh, Tracy Oliver, Nthabeleng Likotsi and Khanyi Mbau are all DOING AMAZING (SWEETIE). Then there's the pure trash of Tbo Touch and Arthur Mafokate. The jingle you hear at the start and finish is 'Rise & Shine' by Audiobinger, from Free Music Archive.

mental shine disposition free music archive audiobinger slayage nicolette mason tbo touch thando hopa