The second season of The Miss P Show hit TV screens all over the national territory on Friday, December 11.
This will be a bold step towards concretizing huge efforts already made by the team of a production company to provide local entertainment content to our television stations, in particular, and the entertainment industry, as a whole.
Due to the paucity of TV programmes based on local content and the influx of syndicated material, The Miss P Show has come as a stitch in time to solve this disturbing reality in the industry.
The show is a bi-monthly talk show based on how young people become life starters and how they can serve as role models and game changers in their community.
Everywhere in the world, countries strive to hold on to their values. We hear of Nigerians, Ghanaians, Ugandans and South Africans all over in the world. Apart from the good old days of Roger Milla’s exploits, what is our legacy as Cameroonians?
The show is aimed at promoting our culture in a way that is interesting and fun for the viewers.
It is both a setting for serious debate or exchanges on how it takes to succeed in a complex society like Cameroon and the various upheavals that come in the way of making it to the top.
The first season of the show recorded huge successes; names in local entertainment like Ambe the artist; radio personalit, Brice Albin; ACMAR CEO, Bony Dashaco; and former Indomitable Lion, Joseph Antoine Bell, amongst others, were on hand to grace the show. International content and guests such as Alex Ekubo, Nigerian model and movie star, was also the highlight of the season 1 finale.
The show has, so far, recorded a huge following on social media with over 12,000 fans and followers on Facebook and Twitter cumulatively.
Season 2 will be even more exciting with the show evolving from an initial broadcast on STV to Equinoxe TV, CNTV in Bamenda and HiTV in Buea for more emotional proximity and connection with the grassroots communities.
According to Pamela Happi, the host and producer, “the overtone of the Season 2 will be light and fun, but with enough heart to veer into the realm of more serious issues of interest to our culture and society, especially on role models and how people in our society carve out a niche to succeed, from various social strata. We aim at building a platform for building and promoting our talents to become celebrities”.