Christopher Akeem Says Creators Are Stuck on a Visibility Treadmill, Here’s How He Got Off It

(The actor, producer, and music manager on why follower counts are a starting point, not a strategy, and what it actually takes to turn attention into a lasting entertainment career.)

By: Olga Amraie

The entertainment industry has never had more visible people. Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube have produced a generation of creators with audiences that rival those of traditional media outlets, and Christopher Akeem thinks most of them are stuck on what he calls a visibility treadmill. “The numbers keep climbing, you keep posting, and somehow the opportunities that actually compound, the ones that open real doors, stay just out of reach,” he says. “That’s not a content problem. That’s a strategy problem.”

The Problem: Visibility Without a Strategy Is a Treadmill

Akeem, an actor, producer, and music manager who has built a career translating social visibility into real entertainment opportunities, is blunt about where he sees most rising creators losing ground. “Social reach, follower counts, viral moments, those are tools,” he says. “What you build with those tools is what determines whether a moment turns into a career or just stays a moment.”

That distinction is grounded in his own experience operating on both sides of the camera and the business side of entertainment. “I’ve watched people treat their audience like a number to be grown instead of an asset to be leveraged,” he says. “The creators who actually break through are the ones who start asking what that audience is for, not just how big it can get.”

From Attention to Positioning

The shift Akeem advocates for is specific: moving from chasing attention to building positioning. “Positioning means being known for something specific,” he explains. “It means being in the right rooms, having the right conversations, being associated with the right projects and people, so that when an opportunity comes up, your name comes up naturally, because you’ve already done the work to be placed correctly in the minds of the people who matter.”

That kind of positioning, he’s quick to note, doesn’t happen passively. “It takes intentionality and discipline, thinking past the next post, the next video, the next campaign,” he says. “Real momentum comes from converting attention into relationships, and relationships into structured opportunity. Skip that conversion step, and you’re just generating noise, no matter how good the numbers look.”

His Advice for Creators Trying to Build a Career, Not Just a Following

Akeem is direct about what he’d tell any creator trying to make the leap from visible to valuable:

  • Stop thinking like a content creator and start thinking like a brand. “A brand has a point of view, a strategy, and a clear sense of where it’s going,” he says. “Most creators are just reacting to what performed last week. That’s not a direction, that’s a feedback loop.”
  • Treat your audience as an asset to leverage, not a metric to inflate. According to Akeem, the question isn’t how large an audience is, but what it can actually be leveraged toward, partnerships, projects, or positioning in a specific industry conversation.
  • Be deliberate about which rooms you’re in. “Your positioning is shaped by the conversations you’re part of and the people you’re associated with,” he says. “That’s not something that happens by accident; you have to choose it.”
  • Play the long game on relationships, not the short game on content. Akeem points to his own trajectory, from building a following to operating on both sides of the camera and in the boardroom, as proof that the creators who last are the ones who prioritize relationships that compound over content that simply performs.

What Separates the Creators Who Break Through

Pressed on what actually distinguishes the creators who successfully make the jump from visible to valuable, Akeem doesn’t point to talent or luck. “It’s almost always patience applied strategically,” he says. “Everyone wants the relationship or the deal that happens overnight. The people who actually build something real are the ones willing to invest in a connection for months before it produces anything visible, because they understand that’s how positioning actually compounds.”

That patience, he argues, is precisely what most of the industry’s content-first incentives work against. “Everything about how these platforms are built rewards instant, visible results,” he says. “The creators who win long-term are the ones who can tolerate a stretch where nothing looks like it’s happening, because the real work is happening in the relationships, not the metrics.”

Why This Matters Beyond Social Media

Akeem’s perspective extends past individual creator strategy into a broader read on where the entertainment industry is heading. “The gap between visibility and opportunity isn’t going away; if anything, it’s getting wider as more people enter the space,” he says. “That means the creators who actually understand how to close that gap are going to have a real advantage over the ones who are just optimizing for reach.”

That perspective is precisely what brought him into Culture X Capital’s pilot episode, “Architecture of Opportunity”, a platform built around the same core premise he’s spent his career proving out. “The conditions where visibility becomes something more, that’s not a slogan to me, that’s literally the work,” he says.

What’s Next

Akeem continues to operate across acting, producing, and music management, applying the same positioning-first philosophy to each new project he takes on. For him, the throughline remains constant: visibility opens the door, but it’s positioning, deliberate, relationship-driven, and built with intention, that determines what happens once you’re standing in the room.

https://free.ikesteele.com/culture-x-capital

Dr. Jessica Lowe: From Stroke Codes to Social Media, A Doctor Who Refuses to Dim Her Light

The sound of alarms, the rush of feet, the tension of seconds ticking away this is the world where Dr. Jessica Lowe has spent much of her career. A neurologist and epileptologist, she has led life-or-death stroke codes and run epilepsy programs where every decision carries weight. Yet if you search her online, you might just as easily find her in pink scrubs, sharing a brain health tip with thousands of viewers scrolling through TikTok.

It is this duality that defines Dr. Jessica Lowe, known across social platforms as Doctor Brain Barbie. She has carved out a space where medicine feels human, approachable, and perhaps unexpectedly stylish. Her mission is not only to treat patients but to reshape how medicine is experienced, especially for women who have too often left the doctor’s office feeling dismissed or misunderstood.

Her journey began in The Bahamas, where she grew up with dreams bigger than the borders of her island home. Scholarships carried her to the University of Vermont, then to medical school, and finally into advanced training in neurology and epilepsy. Along the way, she collected accolades: top scholar awards, leadership roles, and board certifications that placed her at the forefront of her specialty. But the real lessons came outside the textbooks.

Dr. Jessica Lowe: From Stroke Codes to Social Media, A Doctor Who Refuses to Dim Her Light

Photo Courtesy: Dr. Jessica Lowe

She recalls moments that would test anyone’s confidence being mistaken for a nurse after introducing herself as the doctor, being judged more for her appearance than for her expertise, and feeling the weight of gender bias in a profession where leadership still looks overwhelmingly male. Some might have toned down their style or softened their voice. She chose a different path. She leaned in.

That choice gave birth to Doctor Brain Barbie. What began as short videos explaining migraines or seizures quickly became a platform with impact far beyond likes or views. One follower recognized seizure symptoms in herself after watching a clip, sought care, and messaged Dr. Jessica Lowe to say it had changed her life. For Dr. Jessica, it was confirmation that her work online mattered just as much as her work in clinics and hospitals.

Her presence is not a performance; it is a statement. She can walk into a stroke code in stilettos and still command the room with authority. She can film a video with humor and clarity while still teaching complex neurology. She can embrace the bows, the pink, and the glam without compromising the science. For her, this is about proving that brilliance and femininity are not opposites but allies.

The recognition has followed. She was named Delaware’s Woman of Impact in 2025 by the American Heart Association, after leading a campaign that raised more than $88,000 for heart health initiatives. She serves on the board of the Epilepsy Foundation of Delaware and continues to lead advocacy efforts through the Go Red for Women campaign. In 2024, she was honored as one of Delaware’s Top Doctors. Each award, she says, is not just for her but for every woman who feels unseen in medicine.

Her personal story adds even more weight to her work. She openly shares that her path has not been free of obstacles – burnout, bureaucracy, and the pressure to always be perfect in a system that rarely gives grace. But instead of letting those challenges push her out of medicine, she carved a new lane. Doctor Brain Barbie became a way to educate, to advocate, and to inspire while also giving her the creative freedom that traditional medical settings could not.

Looking ahead, Dr. Jessica Lowe has no plans to slow down. She envisions her brand growing into a global movement that brings health education to television, large-scale media, and community platforms around the world. She hopes to create patient education tools that are both engaging and empowering, and she dreams of mentoring young women in STEM who need to see someone unapologetically leading in her own way.

Her story is ultimately about more than brain health. It is about challenging expectations, breaking down barriers, and proving that authenticity is itself a form of leadership. “Competence speaks louder than stereotypes,” she says, and every part of her career, from the emergency room to Instagram, proves her right.

Dr. Jessica Lowe is not only a doctor. She is a voice, a symbol, and a reminder that the future of medicine looks brighter when it makes room for brilliance in every form it comes in.

Follow her journey on Instagram @doctorbrainbarbie and TikTok @doctorbrainbarbie.

 

Disclaimer: The content provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Readers should always consult a qualified healthcare professional for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.