RÉSUMÉ RUNDOWN
Essence
|July/August 2025
How four former interns found purpose, power and sisterhood at ESSENCE
Before they were founders, editors and media darlings, they were dreamers—young Black women hungry to tell stories that mattered. For Brianna Arps, Taryn Finley, Maya Allen and Sylvia Obell, that hunger led them through the iconic doors of ESSENCE magazine. What they found inside wasn't just opportunity. It was a transformation.
Each of them came to ESSENCE at a pivotal moment in her life, drawn not just to a brand but to a legacy. "ESSENCE was the whole ball game," says Obell, who finally landed her internship in 2013, after multiple tries. "It was my dream job—the reason I even wanted to be in this industry. It was my first taste of purpose."
Allen agrees. "ESSENCE was the first magazine where I saw myself represented—my hair, my skin, my story," she says. "My mom and I used to read it together. It was a ritual. It gave me confidence, before I even had language for that."
Such deeply personal connection, derived from stacks of glossy pages in their childhood homes, would one day carry each woman to Time Inc., then the parent company of ESSENCE. For Finley, it was never a question of where to intern. "I was in the ASME program with all these big names—Vanity Fair, People and Harper's—but for me, it had to be ESSENCE. I grew up on Susan Taylor's editor's letters. That was nonnegotiable."After she got the ESSENCE confirmation, the summer of 2015 was magic. "We were all hungry, but we weren't competing," she recalls. "We were rooting for each other. It was one of the first media spaces where I didn't feel like I had to shrink myself to fit in."
This story is from the July/August 2025 edition of Essence.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Essence
Essence
A Blueprint for Your Best Year Yet
From love to finances, move beyond resolutions and enter 2026 with peace—and a clear plan
5 mins
Fall/Winter 2025
Essence
WHERE BLACK ART BREATHES: MOMENTS THAT TRANSFORMED 2025
In these pages, we witness a year of Black artistry that moved hearts, shook stages and reshaped the contours of possibility
22 mins
Fall/Winter 2025
Essence
Résumé Rundown: Nia Sioux
Growing up at the \"bottom of the pyramid,\" Sioux is turning that disempowering label into a legacy
3 mins
Fall/Winter 2025
Essence
Jaylen Brown IS STANDING ON BUSINESS
The NBA superstar opens up about love, leadership and learning to shine
3 mins
Fall/Winter 2025
Essence
Leon Thomas IS OWNING HIS AURA
The artist opens up about self-care, commitment and the quiet confidence that has made him one of music's most compelling voices today
2 mins
Fall/Winter 2025
Essence
Leaders of the New School
How Historically Black Colleges and Universities are defying the odds and creating innovators in business, fashion and STEM
9 mins
Fall/Winter 2025
Essence
New Voices Foundation at the 2025 ESSENCE Festival
For the 2025 ESSENCE Festival of Culture, the New Voices Foundation presented a robust lineup of programming-designed to empower entrepreneurs from New Orleans and across the country
1 mins
Fall/Winter 2025
Essence
THE MOMENT IS heirs
The boy was a hook; Brandy and Monica were the history. Their return proves the moment belongs, and always belonged, to them.
14 mins
Fall/Winter 2025
Essence
Nourish to Glow
We're constantly being sold on the idea that a miracle serum can give us perfect skin when, in reality, it's about what's on our plates
3 mins
Fall/Winter 2025
Essence
The Business of Being Druski
From viral skits to sold-out stages, this creative is proving that betting on yourself pays off
8 mins
Fall/Winter 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

