Anjula Mutanda born in East Africa of mixed African and Indian heritAnjula Mutanda is a British broadcaster, social scientist, counselling and relationship psychologist, life coach and therapist. She studied and trained at Durham University (alumni of Durham university), and also holds senior accredited practitioner status (MBACP) registered with the BACP.She has appeared on and presented many prime time popular television programmes giving psychological analysis, such as the Bafta award winning first series of Big Brother, Daybreak, BBC Breakfast, Loose Women, The Alan Titchmarsh Show and The Wright Stuff. She was the resident psychologist on This Morning for five years.Mutanda wrote and presented a programme on Radio 4 called "Diversity Works". This was an in-depth examination on mixed race marriages, and how people over-come barriers in order to make them work successfully. This made pick of the week.Mutanda was the phobia expert on ITV's Feel the Fear, where she supported the shows two presenters: Holly Willoughby and Steve Wilson, to overcome their fears. This 12-part series was a hit with its target audience of 7-to-12-year-olds. She also featured on the program Generation X:Cess. She regularly appears on day time shows and is also a regular on Tonight; ITV's flagship current affairs documentary series. She has also appeared on BBC1's The One Show.She has appeared on DNA stories with Lorraine Kelly for Sky Real Lives.She has worked with Martine McCutcheon on The Truth about Beauty for UKTV style.She has written numerous articles for magazines, and newspapers on a wide range of topics. She has been invited to be agony aunt for several magazines during her career so far including: Mizz, Reveal, More and Top Sante magazines. She regularly contributes to Closer, Heat, Glamour and Psychologies magazines. Her first self-help book, Celebrity Life Laundry, was published in 2007.Mutanda hosted Family Contract, a six-part prime-time series for BBC1. In this show Mutanda helped families live more harmoniously.Mutanda presented a prime-time eight-part series for channel 5 in 2008 called How to Have Sex After Marriage. In this show Mutanda led a team of experts to help couples re-ignite the passion in their relationships. She counselled the couples, and set them challenges to help them improve their self-esteem, body confidence and communication.Mutanda co-hosted Body Language Secrets, a prime-time eight-part series on Sky 1, in 2010.Mutanda presented My Naked Secret 2011, a series about people living with physical abnormalities that were heavily impacting on their emotional lives, relationships and working lives. This 12-part series is part observational documentary and part emotional transformation.Mutanda accepted the invitation to be an Ambassador for BME cancer voice—cancer does not discriminate 2012—and spoke to an invited audience at the House of Commons.Mutanda's second self-help book How to do relationships was published in July 2013. Pub