Listen To Your Footsteps

Kojo Baffoe | Zebra Culture

Kojo Baffoe is a South Africa based storyteller, writer, author & content strategist, driven by curiosity & a fascination with how people got to where they are and how they do what they do. In the Listen To Your Footsteps podcast, he has in-depth conversations with Africans operating across various fields like the arts, design, advertising, media, entertainment, technology and business about their life’s journey and the lessons they have learned along the way. It is a space for reflection, introspection, acknowledgement and celebration.

  1. APR 16

    Nzinga Qunta, From Newsroom Lights To Law

    From teen model and Channel O presenter to SABC business news anchor and, now, advocate of the High Court of South Africa, Nzinga Qunta has lived several professional lives before forty. In this intimate conversation, she opens up about feeling like she was “performing smartness” on television and why she walked away from the newsroom to test the true limits of her mind in the notoriously gruelling Johannesburg Society of Advocates pupillage programme. Nzinga traces a childhood spent in exile across Botswana and Zimbabwe, the shock of coming “home” to South Africa to confront race labels and class divides, and how language, Pan-African politics and Black Consciousness shaped her sense of belonging. She speaks honestly about imposter syndrome, becoming a beginner again among younger lawyers, and the quiet discipline of building a reputation through work rather than social media performance. Along the way, we move through modelling castings and music television stages, the baptism of fire that was ANN7 and SABC live news, to international moderation gigs with presidents and CEOs, and her commitment to showing up as a fully visible Black woman—headwrap, Umbhaco fabric and all—without dimming her intellect. We also sit with motherhood, scouts, school runs and the realities of raising a daughter while fighting through one of the toughest spaces for Black women in South Africa’s legal profession. If you have ever wondered whether it is too late to start again, whether your mind can stretch further, or how to find your place when you do not quite fit the mould, this episode is a masterclass in purposeful reinvention, humility and courage. Listen in, share it with someone who needs to hear it, and leave a review so more people can discover these stories. #NzingaQunta #ListenToYourFootsteps #AfricanStories #BlackWomenInLaw #CareerReinvention #SouthAfricanPodcast #BusinessNewsAnchor #AfricanIdentity #JohannesburgSocietyOfAdvocates #Storytelling

    1h 19m
  2. MAR 26

    Kutlwano Masote, Conducting Life’s Imperfect Harmony

    South African conductor, cellist, broadcaster and now author Kutlwano Masote joins this episode to trace a life lived between orchestra pits, radio studios and a Soweto home that doubled as a musical oasis. From grandparents who mixed political activism with choir rehearsals to his father Michael’s pioneering work with township orchestras, Masote shows how classical music was never far from Black South African life – even when it seemed unlikely.​ We talk about his memoir Imperfect Harmony and what it means to conduct a life that holds family, faith, work and addiction recovery in the same score. He shares the story of homeschooling his son Pendo so he could pursue the violin all the way to the Yehudi Menuhin School and the Royal College of Music, and the equally brave decision to let his younger son Kago walk away from a music scholarship to chase cricket instead.​ In a conversation that moves from Baroque favourites to TKZee, from church choirs to Classics on Turf, we explore how to de‑mystify classical music, how to turn creative skills into a portfolio career, and why each generation’s job is to raise the platform for the next. If you are a creative, a parent or anyone trying to balance passion with responsibility, this episode offers language, lessons and permission to embrace your own imperfect harmony.​ Listen, follow and share this episode with someone who loves music, works in the arts, or is raising the next generation of creatives; and if it resonates, leave a rating and review so more listeners can find these stories. #KutlwanoMasote #ImperfectHarmony #SouthAfricanClassicalMusic #SowetoStories #AfricanCreatives #MusicAndFatherhood #PortfolioCareer #ClassicsOnTurf #ListenToYourFootstepsPodcast

    1h 42m
  3. MAR 19

    Donovan Goliath, Notes From A Relentlessly Curious Storyteller

    Donovan Goliath has built a career out of saying “yes” to his curiosity – from comedy stages and Netflix campaigns to design studios, cameras and a 365‑day make‑and‑share project. In this deeply reflective conversation, we slow everything down and unpack what actually sits behind that restless output.​ We talk about the multihyphenate struggle to find a stable “why”, how childhood rejection and art‑school doubt still shape his drive, and why he keeps gravitating towards ordinary moments with a quiet twist. Donovan opens up about beating procrastination with daily deadlines, using analog notebooks and Post‑it notes to simplify ideas, and resisting the pull of algorithms and metrics when they start to define his value.​ Along the way, we explore journaling as a creative practice, the power of limiting your tools and inspirations, and the hard questions around legacy: what your kids will really remember, and how podcasts, photos and books become the archives our families inherit. If you’ve ever felt torn between too many creative lanes – or wondered whether any of it really matters – this episode will sit with you for a long time.​ Listen, save and share this episode with a fellow relentlessly curious storyteller, and tag us with the one idea you’re taking into your own practice. #DonovanGoliath #ListenToYourFootsteps #CreativeProcess #Multihyphenate #Storytelling #SouthAfricanCreatives #365Project #CreativePractice #Journaling #Photography #Comedy #DesignThinking #Legacy #ContentCreation

    1h 51m
  4. MAR 5

    Athambile Masola, Reading the World Anew

    Dr Athambile Masola is a writer, poet, researcher and lecturer whose work centres Black women’s histories, reading and education in South Africa. In this episode she traces her journey from a childhood upended by her mother’s mental illness to finding anchors in school, church and the written word, reflecting on how journalling and poetry became a way to witness chaos and grief.​ We dive into South Africa’s reading crisis, overcrowded classrooms, mother‑tongue bilingual education and the “inequality of experience” between public and private schools, as well as the invisible emotional labour teachers carry as the “aunties and uncles of the world”. Athambile also grapples with phones, AI and attention, asking what is lost when we outsource thinking instead of doing the slow work of reading and writing for ourselves. Dr Athambile Masola – links: UCT profile: https://humanities.uct.ac.za/department-historical-studies/people-academic-staff/dr-athambile-masola​ Poetry collection Ilifa: http://uhlangapress.co.za/athambile-masola-ilifa​ The Conversation articles: https://theconversation.com/profiles/athambile-masola-1289114 If this conversation with Dr Athambile Masola helped you read the world a little differently, take a moment to support the work: follow or subscribe to the show, leave a quick rating or review, and share this episode with someone who cares about books, teachers or Black women’s histories. Recorded at Vodcast TV #AthambileMasola #ReadingTheWorldAnew #SouthAfricaReadingCrisis #BlackWomenWriting #Teachers #AfricanPodcast #Educational #Literature

    1h 39m

About

Kojo Baffoe is a South Africa based storyteller, writer, author & content strategist, driven by curiosity & a fascination with how people got to where they are and how they do what they do. In the Listen To Your Footsteps podcast, he has in-depth conversations with Africans operating across various fields like the arts, design, advertising, media, entertainment, technology and business about their life’s journey and the lessons they have learned along the way. It is a space for reflection, introspection, acknowledgement and celebration.

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