This fall, Oprah and OZY created something unprecedented: intimate conversations between 100 Black women on key issues that affect our lives. The results were surprising and uplifting.

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From the editor | December 22

This fall, Oprah and OZY created something unprecedented: intimate conversations between 100 Black women on key issues that affect our lives. The results were surprising and uplifting.

Fay Schlesinger, OZY Managing Editor

Opinion

Black Women OWN the Conversation

Share intimate dialogues, honest opinions and surprising solutions in our transformative discussion show. Watch now on the Oprah Winfrey Network.

The Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN) partnered with OZY to bring you an unprecedented new discussion show in 2019: Black Women OWN the Conversation. Each "speak easy" episode stars 100 Black women, celebrity guests and experts from all walks of life, sharing intimate dialogues, honest opinions and surprising solutions. This is a show for our time.

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True Story

My Best Friend Thought I Was Too Fat … to Be in Her Wedding

Quinn Bartlett struggled with her weight and abuse from her mother. At 37, her search for love and acceptance is ongoing.

I was always a big, healthy girl — always was the biggest, tallest in the class. I was always teased, always shunned. I was never part of the girls’ clique. Family never supported me — especially my mom. So I had no support, which made me introverted and afraid to talk.

I grew up thinking that my mom hated me. At a young age, I even thought about suicide. And I didn’t know what it felt like to be loved — by anyone — until I was 16 when I met a girl. We just automatically connected and considered ourselves “distant cousins” as if we were more family than best friends. She saw how I was suffering and she felt bad. As little girls, we would fantasize about getting married and having big weddings, and how we would include each other. So when she called me to tell me she was getting married, I was happy. But then … a bomb. “I’m having all petite girls in my wedding party — you’ve got to lose some of that weight.”

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Acumen

Black Views on Beauty Are Shaped by Women, Not Men

At a one-of-a-kind town hall in Atlanta, Black women opened up about their perceptions of beauty.

Acumen

Lonely Black Women Get Depressed More Than Men

Loneliness makes African American women particularly susceptible to depression and anxiety.

Wildcard

Talking About Motherhood With 100 Black Women

Black motherhood is complicated — but talking about it can help. 

Wildcard

Love, Joy and Pain Dominate Talk on New OWN TV Show

Panelists and audience members talk about healing on Black Women OWN the Conversation.

Acumen

Black LGBTQ Women Beat Depression Best

African American women are taught to be strong, and they’re internalizing that strength when it comes to mental health.

 one last thing 

Beyond Black Girl Magic

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