Meet Lande Yoosuf

Meet Lande Yoosuf, a speaker on our panel Story Telling as Nation Building.

Lande Yoosuf is a Nigerian-American novelist, screenwriter, filmmaker and cofounder of the non-profit organization Black Film Space. She has 15 years of production, development and casting experience in non-fiction programming, and has worked with several networks, including MTV, A&E Networks, NBC, WEtv, and Bravo. Her short film, “Privilege Unhinged”, screened at the Martha’s Vineyard African American Film Festival, Big Apple Film Festival, the DC Black Film Festival, aired on AMC’s Shorts TV and was a finalist for “Insecure” star Jean Elie’s short film contest under his company banner, Bassett House.

Yoosuf’s second film, “Second Generation Wedding” screened at the Bronze Lens Film Festival, Black Girls Rock! Film Festival, and inspired the novel, “Ko-Foe.” She has an affinity for telling stories that explore media influence, sociology, gender/race relations, pop culture and self-image themes. Lande is currently developing a mixed slate of feature films, documentaries and television pilots through her production company, One Scribe Media.

Yoosuf directed Antu Yacob’s dramatic short film “Love in Submission”, which screened at the Afrikana Film Festival, Noire Film Festival and the New York African Film Festival. The film was accepted into the “Emerging Black Filmmaker Film Collection”, screened in over 60 theaters throughout the country, and was part of a diversity case study discussion about Hollywood at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival.  

As Co-founder and Partnerships Director of Black Film Space, Lande works to contribute to expanded control, ownership and media management for content creators of African descent across all cinematic formats and content platforms. She served as a host, workshop facilitator, speaker and moderator for events with organizations like ARRAY, HBO, ABFF, BAM’s New Voices in Black Cinema, The Root and many others. Her speaking engagements received coverage from outlets such as The New York Times.

Lande earned a Bachelors of Arts from Brooklyn College in Television and Radio, and honed her writing skills through classes taught by Jackson Taylor, the Associate Director at The New School’s Graduate Writing Program. In her spare time, she loves to sing, read, travel and spend time with her loved ones. She reps her Nigerian background proudly and holds down her hometown, the world-famous republic of Brooklyn, New York.

Stay In touch with Lande @LandeYoosuf and @OneScribeMedia on all social media platforms, or through her website www.onescribemedia.com. 

Learn more about Lande’s non-profit organization Black Film Space through the handle @Blackfilmspace, or at www.blackfilmspace.com.

If you would like to view Lande’s director reel, please do so here.

Meet Lande at the panel here.

Meet Caleb Femi

Meet Caleb Femi, a speaker on our panel Storytelling as Nation Building.

Caleb is a poet and director. His debut collection, Poor, was published in 2020 by Penguin Press. He has written and directed short films for the BBC, Channel 4, Bottega Veneta and Louis Vuitton.

A former Young People’s Laureate, Caleb won the Forward Prize for Best First Collection (2021) and has been shortlisted for the Rathbones Folio Prize (2021), and longlisted for the Jhalak Prize (2021)

He has been featured in the Dazed 100 list of the next generation shaping youth culture.

Meet Caleb via the Storytelling panel here.

Meet David Hundeyin

Meet David Hundeyin, a speaker on our panel, Storytelling as Nation Building.


David Hundeyin is from the Ogu ethnic group in Nigeria. He is a writer, investigative journalist and broadcaster whose work has appeared on CNN, The Africa Report, Al Jazeera and The Washington Post. His work as a satirist on ‘The Other News,’ Nigeria’s answer to The Daily Show was featured in the New Yorker Magazine and in the Netflix documentary ‘Larry Charles’ Dangerous World of Comedy.’ David is currently a James Currey Fellow at Cambridge University, and a member of the SafeBox Network run by Forbidden Stories, which safekeeps the work of journalists in danger.

For his brave and audacious work, David has been nominated for several awards and grants:

In 2018, he was nominated by the US State Department for the 2019 Edward Murrow program for journalists under the International Visitors Leadership Program (IVLP).

In February 2021, he won the People Journalism Prize for Africa 2020 for my work unraveling predatory legislation that was being rushed through Nigeria’s House of Representatives.

In June 2021, he was selected as Africa’s only representative on a list of 12 writers and journalists from around the world chosen to take part in Substack’s inaugural $1 million Substack Local program.

In December, he was named the GRC (Governance Risk Compliance) Anti FinCrime Reporter Of The Year at Nigeria’s GRC Awards. Most recently in March 2022, his OSINT investigation “Who Killed Hiny Umoren?” made the global shortlist at the 2022 Sigma Awards for data journalism.

You can find him tweeting his uncut and uncensored thoughts from the handle @DavidHundeyin.

We look forward to hosting this brave storyteller on our panel. Get your tix here.