Girlfriends Health Guide, published by
Girlfriends Holdings, LLC, is healthy lifestyle magazine for women of
color between the ages of 30-50. Girlfriends Health Guide’s mission is
to uplift, promote and inform women of color about health related
disparities that focus on ethnic women who are underserved and
under-represented throughout the country
and the world. Often, women take care of their husbands, children,
pets, households and careers before they take time for themselves.
Girlfriends Health Guide features columns
with information provided by
leading health organizations who specialize in treating women,
including
professionals who specialize in women's health and articles about
healthy cooking, nutrition, fitness and prevention. The guide covers
wellness issues, such as finance, business, depression, stress
reduction.
Girlfriends Health Guide encourages the
everyday women of color to understand that they’re not alone and being
there for one another is truly the everlasting bond of friendship that
will never be broken. Girlfriends Health Guide will educate women of
color about the holistic circles of life; Mind, Body and Soul. This
colorful purse size urban magazine is designed for working and on the
go women who love themselves, their family and the men in their life. Girlfriends Health Guide aims to inform and educate
these women in a quick to read, pocket-size, glossy magazine. By
educating these women, Girlfriends hopes to have a positive impact on
the statistics for these diseases among women of color. By introducing
healthy lifestyle concepts and giving tips on how to maintain the
healthy lifestyle regimen the negative numbers can be reduced.
Girlfriends Health Guide for Women of Color...the magazine for women color who want to be empowered.
Girlfriends Health Guide understands that many issues of health begin
at a younger age. To assist young women into the transition to
adulthood, Girlfriends Holdings, LLC has partnered with the health
community to launch Girlfriends For Girls, G4G, targeting ages 14-22.
G4G will feature articles and updates designed to address self esteem,
peer acceptance, obesity, higher education and how to live an overall
healthy lifestyle. G4G is written by professional young women who
strive to excel and teach other young women to be the best they can be
and to introduce them to life and career support systems from our existing girlfriend professionals in our Network.
F
or the past twenty-five years the business of media & entertainment has been in the forefront of Matthew Johnson’s life.
Since 1983, Matthew Johnson has made a name for himself in the
communications and entertainment business. In 1990, he founded the
Strive Foundation organization that supported the African American arts
community in Milwaukee. He produced well over a half dozen Broadway
plays such as “Ain’t Misbehaving”, “Your Arms are Too Short to Box with
God”, “Mississippi Delta” and “Raisin in the Sun” to name a few. His
big theater success can when he was the first ever African American
producer in Milwaukee to sell out three shows at the Performing Arts
Center’s 2300 seat theater to a 99% African American audience in 1991
with the off Broadway play “Our Young Men Are Dying and Nobody Seems to
Care”.
If Broadway plays were not enough, Matthew also served as the
entertainment coordinator for African World Festival that showcased
acts like O’Jays, Levert, Men At Large, Keith Washington, Grover
Washington Jr., Cameo and many more. He also produced and promoted
several concerts of his own in Milwaukee. His most recent concert
featured Angie Stone in 2004.
In 1991, Matthew was offered an opportunity to produce a one-hour live
teen talk show special with Black Entertainment Television (BET),
called “Young Sister’s and Brother’s-Teen Forum. He quickly jumped at
the opportunity to get into the television industry. Teen Forum’s first
show aired on Time Warner Cable and got the attention of the local Fox
affiliate’s general manager. Matthew served as executive producer and
produced six half-hour specials on the local Fox affiliate during that
year. Now, wanting to expand his show’s reach, he inked a deal with
the ABC affiliate (WISN) to 26 shows in 1992. Over the next nine
years, Matthew went on to produce over 200 episodes, received six Emmy
nominations and won two Emmy awards.
What started simply as a teen television show, Strive Foundation grew
into the formal training of high school aged teens in a comprehensive
curriculum of five fields of mass communication at Marquette University
under the new name of Strive Media Institute. Areas of focus: print
journalism, integrated marketing communications, technology, film and
video production, and radio broadcast. Students participated in the
accredited four-year curriculum after school and on weekends out of the
organization’s high-tech downtown state-of-the-art media institute, and
upon their high school graduation received scholarships to assist with
the tuition costs at the University of their choice. One hundred
percent of Strive Media graduates went on to college. Five hundred
teens participated in Strive Media Institute over the fourteen-year
period.
Gumbo Teen Magazine, a teen magazine produced for teens by teens was
born inside of the Marquette program in 1998. Gumbo Teen Magazine,
(“gumbo” means diversity), became yet another successful tool for
Matthew to train and prepare his teens as reporters, writers,
photographers and editors for the real world. This sixty-eight page,
glossy magazine was distributed to teens in twenty-four cities and six
countries. In 1999, Teen Forum was discontinued on ABC and Gumbo TV
(GTV) aired for the first time on the WB Affiliate in the summer of
1999. Gumbo Teen Magazine teen reporters traveled the world covering
stories in Brazil, Europe, Africa and Costa Rica. Gumbo TV was created
to help “brand” the magazine and TV show together. Gumbo Teen
Television went on to earn more Emmy nominations, and winning two more
Emmy Awards in 2006 and 2007.
As Gumbo Teen Magazine was changing the lives of teens across the
country, Ya Heard Magazine’s Urban Music Pocket Guide rushed onto the
young urban scene in 2001. Matthew wanted to promote positive music
and positive urban artist on the pages of this new niche magazine that
targeted a young impressionable college audience in twenty urban cities
across America. This was the start of the pocket-size/purse size
trademark concept that is so popular today with Girlfriends Health
Guide. Ya Heard Music Pocket Guide had nearly 2.5 million readers and
was distributed to over four hundred urban radio stations, record
labels and Historically Black Colleges and Universities for over six
years. This was the start of Matthew’s multi-titles publishing
business.
In 2001, Matthew was recognized as a social entrepreneur and was
awarded an international fellowship of $150,000 from Ashoka US/Canada.
The fellowship was awarded to Matthew in recognition of his innovative
approach to ending the under-representation of minorities in mass
communications. Matthew is also a Pieper Fellow, a program that exposes
nonprofit leaders to the management principles of the Peter Drucker
Foundation.
Due to his expertise in mass communications diversity, disadvantage
youth development, and a social entrepreneur, Matthew is a much sought
after public speaker in schools and seminars around the country. In the
fall of 2003, Matthew traveled to the cities of Sao Paulo and Brasilia
in South America to participate in the International Seminar for
Democracy and Communication sponsored by Dombali of Brazil. He spoke
on the experiences of diversity and inclusion of youth in the media. He
has also traveled to Florence and Rome.
Matthew has personally been honored and recognized throughout the years
with several awards, including The Business Journal’s “40 Under 40”
designation in 1997, the Milwaukee Times Newspaper’s Black Excellence
Award in 1998, Price Waterhouse Coopers’ Star-stream Award in 1998,
Wisconsin Black Media Association, Clear Channel 1999 Communication’s
Peace Achiever Award in 2000, the Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority’s Trail
Blazer Award in 2002, Phi Beta Sigma’s Voice in the Community Award in
2003 and in 2005 the Baha’i Faith Award. Most recently, in 2007 he won
the Business journal’s Inner-City growth Business Award.
On April 6, 2006 Matthew’s life took a change of direction. Matthew
lost his “#1 girlfriend” to congestive heart failure-his mother. He
spent her last 15 minutes holding his mother’s hand before she passed.
This was a devastating lost to him- never losing anyone in his family
that was so close to him.
While on a business trip to Atlanta in July 2006, he came across a
magazine that gave him the idea to publish a magazine of his own for
women of color. He named it Girlfriends Health Guide for Women of
Color.
Matthew is currently the President & CEO of Girlfriends Holdings,
LLC. Founded in August 2006, Girlfriends Health Guide launched its
first publication, selling out all the ads that were available in three
short months, in January 2007. This health guide is the only health
guide in the country that targets women of color exclusively.
Girlfriends Health Guide is published in Milwaukee, Chicago, and
Atlanta and has over 3 million readers. Nearly one million magazines
have been printed in the first 22 months. The goal is to expand into a
total of ten targeted cities in the next two years, print eight million
magazines with 30 million women readers.
Matthew continues to use his many years of media experience by creating
Johnson Media Consulting. He recently formed the Johnson Media
Consulting Firm that specializes in developing media curriculum for
community media organizations and schools while still consulting with
other clients on developing media plans, comprehensive media campaigns
and broadcast television projects across the country.