About the Show
The Utah Faith-Based Real Estate Podcast: Why The Broker’s Table Exists
A few months ago, a woman emailed me after the first episode of the show went live.
A few months ago, a woman emailed me after the first episode of the show went live. She wrote one line. “I have been waiting for this conversation my whole life and I did not know it until I heard it.” I read the email three times. I cried once. Then I went and recorded the next episode.
The Broker’s Table is a podcast for faith-driven women building generational wealth through real estate, credit, and legacy planning. It launched in March 2026, recorded out of Utah, hosted by me. I am Esther Jackson-Stowell. I am a licensed real estate broker. I am a wife and a mother. I was born in Nigeria and built my own path to real estate ownership in the United States, and I started this show because the conversation I needed when I was starting out did not exist anywhere I could find it.
This is not a marketing post. This is a working brief on what the show is, who it is for, where you can find it, and why faith-driven women in Utah and beyond have started showing up to listen.
What The Broker’s Table Is

The Broker’s Table is a long-form audio and video podcast that publishes new episodes on Thursdays. The format is conversational. Some episodes are guest interviews. Some are solo teaching episodes. The through-line is the intersection most personal-finance content avoids: faith, wealth, real estate, family, and the working life of a woman trying to do all of it without burning out or compromising the parts that matter.
I do not produce a “girlfriend” show. I do not call my listeners “ladies.” I do not yell. I am not selling you a 7-figure dream. I am not telling you to sell your house and put 100% of your savings into anything. I am, in plain terms, an executive who knows the work, talking to other women who are ready to do the work, in the voice I would use sitting across the table from you in a consultation.
Faith is not a marketing layer on this show. Faith is the foundation. Stewardship, calling, and the long view of legacy run through every episode. So does plain math. The two are not in conflict. They have never been.
Where to Listen
The show is distributed wherever you already listen to podcasts.
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-brokers-table/id1883855536
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4KSmMmZircbuDkFkkxmnbg
Deezer: https://www.deezer.com/show/1002755871
YouTube (full video episodes): https://www.youtube.com/@TheBrokersTable
Player.fm, Podcast Index, JioSaavn, and additional directories: the show is searchable as “The Brokers Table” on most major platforms.
The show has been live since March 2026. As of this writing, the published catalog is small and intentional. Each episode is built to stand alone and to add up to a body of work over time. We are early. The early seat is the best seat.
Why a Utah-Based Show Sounds Different

Utah is a market with one of the highest concentrations of faith-active households in the United States, and the home of one of the most concentrated young-family demographics in the country. Real estate is not abstract here. Most people you meet in Utah have either bought a home, helped a sibling buy a home, or had a long conversation with their church community about whether to buy a home. The audience of this show grew up in conversations like that.
Producing the show out of Utah means I am living the market I describe. I am not a national personality flying in for a quarterly clip. I am a working broker. The episodes that touch the Wasatch Front market reflect what I am seeing in week-of inventory, in transaction friction, in lender behavior. That immediacy is part of why early listeners say the show “sounds different.”
It also matters that the LDS, evangelical, Catholic, and Jewish communities are all active and visible in Utah. The show does not assume one faith tradition. It assumes a faith orientation. There is room at this table for a Latter-day Saints listener in Provo, a Pentecostal listener in Atlanta, a Catholic listener in Boston, and a non-denominational believer in Houston. The vocabulary is shared. The applications are personal.
Who the Show Is For
If you have ever sat in a personal-finance content piece and wondered why no one ever mentions God, this show is for you.
If you have ever sat in a faith-and-money sermon and wondered why no one ever mentions cap rates, depreciation, or how to actually buy your first rental, this show is for you.
If you are a woman in your 30s or 40s who is the first investor in her family line, this show is for you.
If you are a couple having the slow, layered conversation about generational wealth and you do not know where to start, this show is for you.
If you are a single mother who has been told what you cannot do, this show is for you.
If you are 55 and just now stepping into real estate because the timing is finally right, this show is also for you. There is no age cutoff on stewardship.
The show is not for everyone. If you are looking for high-intensity hype content, fast-cash schemes, or affiliate-saturated reviews, you will be bored. The Broker’s Table is, on purpose, a slower and quieter show. The signal-to-noise ratio is the brand.
What You Will Learn From the Show

I was born in Nigeria and built my own path to real estate ownership in the United States, and I started this show because the conversation I needed when I was starting out did not exist anywhere I could find it.
t selling you a 7-figure dream. I am not telling you to sell your house and put

Listen to The Broker’s Table
Subscribe and never miss an episode. New conversations every Thursday on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube.
Across the catalog, the show covers four core threads. Each thread maps to a pillar in our written content.
Real estate investing for faith-driven women. This is the largest thread. Episodes cover first-property strategy, market selection, deal analysis, and the working life of an investor. Read the full pillar at real estate investing for faith-driven women.
Faith and finance. Episodes covering biblical stewardship, the parable of the talents, the Proverbs 31 woman as a model, and how to integrate giving and investing. The companion teaching is at biblical stewardship in the modern economy.
Credit as a wealth tool. Episodes covering personal credit, business credit, the 90-day plan, and the credit-to-real-estate bridge. The pillar is at credit as a wealth tool.
Generational wealth and legacy planning. Episodes covering family money meetings, estate planning, teaching children about money, and the multi-generational view of wealth. The pillar is at building generational wealth, a faith-based framework.
The show and the writing are designed to work together. Episodes go deeper on the conversational and personal side. The written pillars give you the structured frameworks you can return to during decisions.
How I Got Here
I was born in Nigeria. I came to the United States with no credit history, no network in the property market, and no map. I built one. I learned the American financial system the slow way. I made the mistakes you would expect a first-generation immigrant woman to make. I corrected most of them. I built a portfolio. I got my broker’s license. I served families. Eventually it became clear that the conversations I was having one at a time across my desk needed to happen at scale, in a format that could outlast any single year of my career.
That is what The Broker’s Table is. It is the conversation I would have with you if you were sitting across the table.
I have helped more than 200 families navigate real estate decisions [NEEDS VERIFICATION 2026-Q2]. I am still doing that work. The show is the broader version of it. The 1-on-1 work continues alongside the show.
How to Engage With the Show Beyond Listening
There are three ways listeners typically deepen their engagement with the show, in order of effort.
First, follow on your platform of choice. Following is a quiet vote. It tells the platform’s algorithm that the show matters. For an early-season show, follows compound.
Second, write a review on Apple Podcasts. Reviews are the single most useful piece of feedback for a podcast at this stage. They also help other faith-driven women find the show through search.
Third, share an episode that helped you with one woman in your life. The show has grown, and will keep growing, primarily through one-to-one trust. The recommendation from a friend will always carry more weight than any algorithm placement.
If you would like to keep the conversation going, you can follow Esther on LinkedIn, watch the full video versions on YouTube, and read the long-form written companion to the show through the pillars listed above. Newsletter and community announcements live at https://thebrokerstable.com.
A Closing Note on Honesty
I want to be plain about something the marketing world rewards us for hiding. The show is in its first season. The catalog is small. The audience is growing. We are not a 50-episode juggernaut yet. We are a working show with a clear vision and a small, real, growing listener base.
I have decided not to inflate any of those numbers. The faith-driven women I serve deserve a show that is honest about its own season the same way I would advise them to be honest about theirs. That is the brand. The brand is the standard. We will grow. The growth will be earned. The seat at this table is real even when there are not yet a thousand chairs around it.
If you have read this far, you are likely the woman this show is for. Press play on the most recent episode. Take the First-Property Readiness Checklist linked in our pillar pages. Come back next Thursday for the next episode.
The table is set. There is a seat for you.
About the Author
Esther Jackson-Stowell is a licensed real estate broker, real estate educator, and host of The Broker’s Table, a podcast for faith-driven women building generational wealth through property ownership and legacy planning. She has guided 200+ families through real estate decisions [NEEDS VERIFICATION 2026-Q2] and produces new episodes every Thursday at https://thebrokerstable.com.
Educational Content Only: The content on this page is for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not personalized financial, investment, legal, or tax advice and should not be relied upon as such. Esther Jackson-Stowell is a licensed real estate broker. Her broker license covers real estate brokerage activity in the states where she is licensed; it does not authorize her to provide personalized securities investment advice. Results discussed are illustrative of specific circumstances and are not typical. Past results do not predict future outcomes. Consult a qualified financial adviser, licensed attorney, or CPA before making any financial decision.
EDUCATIONAL CONTENT NOTICE
Educational Content Only: The content on this page is for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not personalized financial, investment, legal, or tax advice and should not be relied upon as such. Esther Jackson-Stowell is a licensed real estate broker. Her broker license covers real estate brokerage activity in the states where she is licensed; it does not authorize her to provide personalized securities investment advice. Results discussed are illustrative of specific circumstances and are not typical. Past results do not predict future outcomes. Consult a qualified financial adviser, licensed attorney, or CPA before making any financial decision.

