'Meet The Girls' , a realty talk show with four female presenters and guest, will start showing on etv Ghana from August 11 this year.
The 30-minute show will discuss issues ranging from lifestyle, fashion, politics and the entertainment sides of their guests.
The guests to appear on ' Meet The Girls' will be local and international celebrities of all fields. The girls are Frosta Asiedu, Jay Gyebi, Nana Ama Ayensua Tham and Lisa Sowa.
The concept is to have celebrities pay the girls a visit in their home and for a 30-minute discussion on issues.
The four girls will drive the show with their own unique personalities and seek to completely exhaust the guest or issues up for discussion.
'Meet The Girls' will give viewers a medium to understand issues in the easiest way from makeovers to politics, new talent, celebrity interviews, personal advice on romance, health, fashion dos and don'ts.
The show will engage viewers as they meet expert guests, women on the move, and rising stars as they chat with the girls. Also, there will be special episodes centred on eating places, visits to tourist sites with viewers and celebrity visits to homes of their fans.
'Meet The Girls' will be shown every week from 9:30pm and repeated at 12:00pm on Sundays on etv Ghana from August 11.
By George Clifford Owusu


GJA Applauds Ghana’s Sharp Rise in Global Press Freedom Rankings
US Embassy Cautions Against Censorship in Fight Against Misinformation
Interior Minister Blames Weak Enforcement by Assemblies After Avenor Building Co...
Gov’t Warns Against Rising Misinformation, Calls for Stronger Journalistic Stand...
Ramaphosa Warns Against Vigilante Crackdowns on Foreign Nationals
Global InfoAnalytics Boss Rejects Claims Polls Are Destabilising NDC
Bawumia to Propose Policy Alternative as Cocoa Sector Tensions Deepen
ECG Announces Scheduled Outages and Technical Fault Affecting Multiple Regions o...
Investigation committee uncover GH¢19.5m loss at Bolgatanga Technical University...
Afenyo-Markin calls for protection of journalists, warns against suppression of ...
