Mara Brock Akil is used to answering a lot of questions. As the prolific screenwriter and producer behind

Girlfriends

,

The Game

, and

Being Mary Jane

, she’s often tapped for panels and interviews to discuss her work and her experiences as a black woman working in Hollywood. Over the past few years, Akil, who often collaborates with her husband—writer, director, and producer

Salim Akil

—has noticed an uptick in a specific question. “I’ve been having a lot of conversations with black audiences, specifically black women,” Akil tells us on the phone from her house in Beverly Hills, “and no matter where I’m at there’s always a time when hands go up and someone says, ‘Yeah, yeah, your career is great, but let’s talk about your personal life. How are you having it all? Personal, professional, parenting—how are you doing it? Girl, give up the secret!’”

The “secret” isn’t one she can fully divulge in time alloted for an end-of-panel Q&A session, so she responded with her latest series,

Love Is__

, which premiered earlier this summer and is inspired by her and Salim’s story. Set in 1990s L.A., the show follows a young couple, Nuri and Yasir, as they navigate pursuing careers in the entertainment industry while working on their on-again, off-again relationship. While there are moments of joy and passion, things aren’t always blissful. In last week’s episode, Nuri and Yasir confront being survivors of sexual abuse—an experience that Mara and Salim also have in common, and shared for the first time publicly when the episode aired.

Before tonight’s season finale, we’re revisiting a chat we had with Mara a few months ago. In it, she walked us through her college days at Northwestern, what drew her to screenwriting, and what audiences can expect tonight. From her sunny, art-filled home in L.A., Akil, in her own words.

On initially pursuing journalism:

“As I ventured out into the [journalism] field, I realized how difficult it was to tell our story, and that even at the journalism stage our humanity would be overlooked, and that was very frustrating. We were also at a time when tabloid news was becoming front page news—not what I believed we should be reporting to the public. Meanwhile

A Different World

was on, and my mind was just blown. There was something about that time that made me connect to storytelling as a possibility. I decided with those two shifts that I would tell the truth through fiction. I thought I would have a better impact on the types of stories I believed were relevant to audiences and people that look like me if I went through a fictional perspective.”

On falling in love with screenwriting:

“I fell in love with screenwriting much in the way that I fell in love with my husband. It was love at first sight. I was thankful that I was able to figure that out, and I had a year left at Northwestern and was able to be soaked in the excellence and training by the professors there, most notably [screenwriting professor] Delle Chatman. When people say teachers and professors can change your life, it’s true; she changed mine. I got to dedicate an episode of

Girlfriends

to her when she passed away. I will always remember the impact she had on me.”

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What she’s watching on TV:

“I really love

Atlanta

. I just like how they are stretching the canvas about our humanity. I think they’re just doing a really great job over there. The imagery is gorgeous and piercing, as well as the storytelling. They have really figured out their voice beautifully. I love it.”

What audiences can expect from tonight’s finale:

“I was listening to a song with my son recently, it was Janet Jackson, ‘You Don’t Know What You’ve Got ’Til It’s Gone.’ I was saying, ‘There are some things in life you’re going to learn that way; you’re going to realize you love something after it’s gone, and it will be too late. But if you lead with a heart of gratitude, you will always see your blessing. You will always appreciate what you have while you have it.’ I think the finale represents that type of love, where sometimes people wake up late, but they still want what they want. It causes a challenge between Nuri and Yasir. Just because you find love doesn’t mean that more love is knocking at the door.”

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