About Me

Hi, I'm Therese

For nearly two decades, my life was shaped by survival. I studied communications and media in college with the hope of becoming a TV journalist, but answering phones at a university paid better. So, given that economic reality, I became an executive assistant.

Later, I earned my law degree from Howard University and passed the bar in two states, but the Great Recession made establishing a stable legal career challenging. Eventually, I ended up working in-house at the world’s fourth-largest company. I thought I had finally arrived. But instead of feeling proud, happy, and secure, I felt like I was disappearing.

Both my creativity and purpose were on mute, buried under the weight of a behemoth corporate financial schedule. I was spinning my wheels working in a system that was never built for people like me and for a purpose that was not mine.

“I could work in corporate, or my life could have purpose, but I couldn’t have both.”

What I'm Creating

JS Media is what came next. It’s my love letter to women. Its content is made by and for those of us who are unbothered, unbroken, and unrestrained; those women who embody the “Jezebel spirit,” the women who were born to be leaders but are expected to follow others who are less worthy.

Later, I earned my law degree from Howard University and passed the bar in two states, but the Great Recession made establishing a stable legal career challenging. Eventually, I ended up working in-house at the world’s fourth-largest company. I thought I had finally arrived. But instead of feeling proud, happy, and secure, I felt like I was disappearing.

Where You Can Find Me

This is where I break down big, complicated systems, patriarchy, capitalism, and white supremacy, and make them make sense. Through my content and series like Red Pill Nation: Inside the Misogyny of the Manosphere, I connect the dots between history, power, and the cultural myths we’ve all been sold.

Across TikTok, Substack, YouTube, and more, my work reaches over 92,000 people who want truth and context, not just hot takes. They want to understand the world so they can change it. It’s time for a cultural intervention. Feminist media is the future.

Fun Facts About Me