Dr Marina Nani
Editor-in-Chief
Editor-in-Chief of Rich Woman Magazine, founder of Sovereign Magazine, author of many books, Dr Marina Nani is a social edification scientist coining a new industry, Social Edification. Passionately advocating to celebrate your human potential, she is well known for her trademark "Be Seen- Be Heard- Be You" running red carpet events and advanced courses like Blog Genius®, Book Genius®, Podcast Genius®, the cornerstones of her teaching. The constant practitioner of good news, she founded MAKE THE NEWS ( MTN) with the aim to diagnose and close the achievement gap globally. Founder of many publications, British Brands with global reach Marina believes that there is a genius ( Stardust) in each individual, regardless of past and present circumstances. "Not recognising your talent leaves society at loss. Sharing the good news makes a significant difference in your perception about yourself, your industry and your community."
Visit website →Articles by Dr Marina Nani(1776)
BooksDr Egilius Spierings Made Headache Science Worth Hearing
A neurologist with over four decades of clinical experience turns headache research into an audiobook that finally explains what your doctor never had time to.
BooksKath Orman on the Money Habits Your Parents Gave You
After three decades in financial planning, Kath Orman wrote a book about the emotional patterns that shape how we handle money.
LifestyleLaura Somma Knows What Happens When a Wedding Crosses Borders
When a wedding spans continents, something usually fractures. Laura Somma built a private collective of 20+ elite planners to hold the thread.
FashionHow to Encore Your Capsule Wardrobe This Spring
The trick to spring dressing is not buying more. It is learning to see what you already have, and when you do, your wardrobe starts to look entirely different.
WellbeingOfuro — The Ancient Japanese Ritual of Taking a Bath at Night and the Impact on Your Longevity
There is a moment, just after the heat of the water settles around you, when the day starts to leave your body. Japan built an entire ritual around that moment — and the science is now catching up with what they always knew.
RelationshipsThe Estrangement Conversation: What No One Tells You When Your Adult Child Doesn’t Need You In Their Life
You did not fail them. But someone told them you did — and that is a different problem entirely, with a different answer.
Inspiration, Female leadershipPaula Allen Built a Legacy From Her Hardest Lessons
From childhood adversity to tribal enterprise leader, Paula Allen’s story is one of forgiveness, cultural identity and quiet, hard-won resilience.
TravelWhy England’s most beautiful places are never the famous ones
England’s best-kept secret might be how many places nobody talks about are worth going to. Wincle, in Cheshire, is one of them.
Female leadershipThe Drummer Who Became Japan’s First Woman PM
From heavy metal drums to a historic election landslide, the story of how an outsider became the first woman to lead Japan.
Royals & SocietyHe Is The First. He Should Not Be The Last.
A former prince arrested on his birthday. Millions of pages naming the powerful everywhere. This should be the moment that changes everything.
Lifestyle, TravelWhy Half of Over-50s Are Planning a Golden Gap Year
Half of British adults over 50 are planning a golden gap year, swapping the annual holiday for months of travel, adventure and long-awaited bucket-list experiences.
Books, SpiritualityChristina Marullo Found Her Strength by Letting Go of Control
A mother of eight and co-founder of Only God, Christina Marullo shares how trusting in something greater became her most powerful act of faith.
BooksAkari Shinobu Is Rethinking What It Means to Lead and Learn
Educator Akari Shinobu draws on twenty years of classroom experience across two countries to challenge how we think about leadership and belonging.
InspirationThe Last Viracocha: Douglas Schofield Writes About Women Who Do Not Wait to Be Rescued
Across six novels, Douglas Schofield has built his career around women who drive the story. His latest, The Last Viracocha, is no exception.
HealthWhat Menopause Is Actually Doing to Your Brain
New research links menopause to grey matter loss in key brain regions, along with higher anxiety, sleep problems and fatigue.
Beauty & StyleThe Ingredients About to Disappear from Your Bathroom Cabinet
From sunscreen UV filters to shampoo preservatives, new EU and UK regulations are banning more than a dozen cosmetic ingredients by mid-2026.
InspirationMelinda French Gates Is Still Learning What Comes Next
After 27 years of marriage, nightmares and days on the floor, Melinda French Gates wrote her memoir from the middle of the mess, not the other side.
InspirationElana Meyers Taylor Won Gold at 41 Then Signed It to Her Sons
At 41, Elana Meyers Taylor became the oldest woman to win individual Winter Olympics gold. She celebrated by signing to her deaf sons.
Inspiration, BooksGisèle Pelicot Refused to Let Shame Be Hers to Carry
At 73, Gisèle Pelicot has published her first full account of surviving abuse, waiving anonymity and choosing to believe in love anyway.
Culture & SocietyThe Bridgerton Factor- How Netflix Sparks A £275 Million Shift in The Ton’s Fashion, Tourism and Shopping Habits
Netflix’s Bridgerton has driven £275 million into the UK economy, sparked a 194% surge in corset sales, and influenced everything from baby names to tourism patterns. Season 4 triggered a 700% search spike. Behind it lies a measurable shift in fashion, tourism, and shopping habits worth hundreds of millions.
Culture & SocietyWhy We Can’t Stop Reading About Other People’s Lives
Memoir sales account for nearly a quarter of all nonfiction sales. Is a memoir a mirror or a window? Find out why we can’t stop reading about other people’s lives? Discover the authors who are excavating family secrets, confronting inherited trauma and wrestling with questions of who gets to tell which stories.
Culture & SocietyWho are you becoming in order to succeed?The Devil Wears Prada 2 Returns with Possible Answers
Two decades after defining workplace ambition for a generation, The Devil Wears Prada returns with its original cast intact and a new question: what happens when the rules change?
Feeling Good and HappyFeeling Good and Happy- Your 20s Are Now Your Unhappiest Decade As Since 2020 Life Satisfaction Rise With Age
The traditional midlife crisis has disappeared. New research tracking western countries shows that since 2020 life satisfaction rise with age and young adults now report the highest levels of despair, with women particularly affected.
FoodHappy Table: Why Japanese Breakfast Is Nothing Like Yours (And What That Says About Health)
Japanese breakfast includes rice, fermented miso and grilled fish served at room temperature. Compare this evidence-based tradition to UK breakfast patterns.