Television has always played a monumental role in Pearlena Igbokwe’s life.
When she was 6 years old, her family emigrated to New Jersey from Nigeria, where a civil war was raging. It was in America where Igbokwe first fell in love with television and storytelling. Flash forward to today, and Igbokwe is chairman of Universal Studio Group, which is responsible for 109 current series across 27 platforms across the globe.
Igbokwe, now 56, recounted to Know Your Value’s Mika Brzezinski that as a child she was obsessed with “all the worlds you could escape to” through television, adding it was her “introduction to America.”
Her career path, however, wasn’t exactly linear. While she worked summers at NBC in research, sales and news as a Yale undergrad, her first job after college was in the financial services industry. That led her to business school at Columbia University.
Later, she landed entry-level jobs at HBO and Showtime, the latter at which she would spend the next 20 years as a creative executive
In 2012, she was hired at NBC and helped develop hit shows including “This is Us” and “The Blacklist.” And in 2020, amid the Covid-19 pandemic, she was promoted to chairman of Universal Studio Group, making her one of the most powerful women in TV and the first Black woman to head a major studio.
Brzezinski chatted with Igbokwe about what it’s been like leading her 450 plus employees amid a global pandemic, the importance of taking control of your own narrative, the best career advice she has ever received, why women over 50 are an asset in the workforce and more.
Below is their conversation, which has been edited for brevity and clarity.
Brzezinski: With your incredible life story, what do the words “know your value” mean to you?
Igbokwe: …It wasn’t until I had a producer I worked with who was also a mentor of mine, Sara Colleton. I worked with her on “Dexter” and Sara was one of the studio executives in the 80s when it was not easy for women in this business…
…I remember one day [about 13 years ago], I had to give a speech to accept an award, and I just called her to run some things by her and practice my speech. And she heard me, and I said, “let me tell you a little bit of my background and what I’ve been through.” She goes, “That’s an incredible story … You have to know how to tell your own narrative. You have to be the one to tell your story, and you have to not be shy or afraid about telling your story… You have to figure out how to tell this story about what you’ve done so that people understand the steps you’ve taken.
That was the moment where I really understood that in a business environment, people aren’t running around trying to figure out other people’s value and tell other people’s narratives. You have to take control of it.
… I also think sometimes we get in corporate environments where it’s not necessarily in the corporation’s best interests to always remind you how valuable you are, because if they did, you might decide, “Oh, this isn’t for me, I can go someplace else.” So, I think we all have to constantly remind ourselves of “this is what I am capable of. This is what I’ve done …”
Brzezinski: I think women have an easier time when they can articulate their value and weave it into their narrative or their story … For you to not really know your value up until just over a decade ago is surprising to me. It’s very similar to my story. It took us a long time to know our value.
Igbokwe: I think women are used to just getting up every day, doing what they have to do. I watched my mom, a single woman who came to this country with two young children, who didn’t know the country, and she did what she had to do to work and get her children educated.
As women, you don’t necessarily sit back and go one day, “Wow. I did a lot. I did a lot of stuff.” …You’re very busy just trying to either survive or get ahead … There’s no other option but to get up and work really hard every single day.
Brzezinski: There’s something interesting we have in common for different reasons. You have shared that you fell in love with American TV at a pretty young age after moving from Nigeria. I was also obsessed with TV. My parents were immigrants from Poland and Czechoslovakia and they thought TV was the devil. I mean, we weren’t allowed to watch it. I couldn’t get enough of it. Tell me about your childhood obsession with it, and did it play a role in your future?
Igbokwe: Oh my God. I watched everything. Again, I was a child of a single mom and I was the oldest. So, you come home, and TV was the babysitter. But it was the best babysitter because of all the worlds that you could escape to. And I watched every prime-time show, daytime television, old black and white movies. I mean, if it was on, I absorbed it. One of the best days would be, “Oh my God, the new TV Guide is out on the newsstand.” That was my introduction to America.
TV is an amazing thing. It’s in your home, so it’s personal and so accessible…The fact that this box was in your home, and every day these people would come into my home. I felt like I knew them, they were like friends. That’s where I learned the power of television,
Brzezinski: I have found that during this pandemic, a lot of people have drawn on parts of their talents they didn’t know they had. What has it been like doing this job, leading during a pandemic? What have you discovered about yourself? What was hard? What’s new?








