Chip and Joanna Gaines weren’t always the massive successes they are now.
18.06.2020 - 18:57 / etcanada.com
Chip and Joanna Gaines are looking to raise their five children with an awareness of racial injustice. The former “Fixer Upper” stars appeared on the latest episode of Emmanuel Acho’s new headline-making video series, “Uncomfortable Conversations With a Black Man”.
“Our family wants to hear what you have to say and the idea of having an uncomfortable conversation with a black man is exactly what we need for this exact time,” Chip tells Emmanuel in the clip.
Throughout the video, topics of
Chip and Joanna Gaines weren’t always the massive successes they are now.
Chip and Joanna Gaines after meeting in 2001 in Waco, Texas, and setting out to make a life together.The Kansas native and New Mexico-born carpenter tied the knot in 2003, and share five children, Drake, Ella, Duke, Emmie Kay and Crew.Shortly after getting married, the pair began building their life in Texas — which included their first business ventures, Magnolia Market and Magnolia Homes. They rose to fame nearly a decade later when they landed their own TV show, Fixer Upper, in 2012.
Joanna Gaines stopped relying on micromanaging to balance her career with her five children.“This business isn’t going to run me, I’ve got to run this business,” the Fixer Upper alum, 42, said on Wednesday, July 1, during Salesforce Presents Stories of Resilience: A Conversation With Chip and Joanna Gaines on Finding Inspiration. “I’m busier, I have more on my plate, but I dictate what I’m doing and what the business is going to do for me.
The famous married couple is doing great as far as their career is concerned but things were not always like this! Just like most people, they struggled a lot when starting out their own business. Now, during a video interview for Salesforce’s Stories of Resilience, Chip and Joanna opened up about their struggles and what got them and their Magnolia empire through all those hard times.
Chip Gaines and Joanna Gaines‘ Magnolia empire dominates the home decor market and one of the secrets to their success is using their different personality types to their advantage.The couple opened up about the lessons they’ve learned as they built their company over the years on Wednesday, July 1, during the virtual event Salesforce Presents Stories of Resilience: A Conversation With Chip and Joanna Gaines on Finding Inspiration.“I think that’s where we balance,” Joanna, 42, explained.
Chip and Joanna Gaines' business wasn't always successful. In a video interview for Salesforce's «Stories of Resilience» series, the longtime couples discuss what got them and their Magnolia empire through the toughest times.«When I think back to those days, I remember moments when Chip and I would look at each other and just think, 'Are we going to make it?' And not seeing the end.
It wasn't always easy for Chip and Joanna Gaines as they built their decor empire. The owners of thriving Magnolia – which sells decor, apparel, jewelry, books, magazines and more in addition to offering stories and advice via Joanna's blog – revealed they faced hard times as they built the business from the ground up.
Chip and Joanna Gaines point to teamwork as their secret to overcoming past struggles as they fought to get their now-thriving business off the ground.“Chip and his family have always had this thing that Gaines never quit, so he’d say, ‘Jo, we’re not going to quit, we’re going to make it through this,’” Joanna, 42, recalled during a virtual discussion on Wednesday, July 1.The former Fixer Upper stars revealed why their business risks paid off — even if they didn’t believe they would — while
Emmie Gaines asked a big and important question during the latest episode of Emmanuel Acho‘s Uncomfortable Conversations with a Black Man series.
Joanna Gaines and Chip Gaines brought their five children to chat with Emmanuel Acho about race on Wednesday, June 17.“Our family wants to hear what you have to say,” the Capital Gaines author, 45, said to the former professional football player, 29, in the YouTube video.
Chip and Joanna Gaines are looking to raise their five children with awareness of racial injustice.