Born in Portsmouth, she became a pharmacist after failing to get into medical school, and spent more than seven years working in the National Health Service (NHS).
She was a finalist during the 2019 Beat the Frog World Series and at the 2021 Funny Women awards, and performed at the UK's first socially distanced comedy show in July 2020.
[9] In December 2021, Slim, Thanyia Moore, Labib, Babatunde Aléshé, Eddie Kadi, Nana Ntorinkansah, Stephen Asamoah-duah, David Ohene-Akrasi, and Charles Mensah Bonsu performed at The O2 as part of Mo Gilligan & Friends: The Black British Takeover,[14] which aired on Channel 4 in October 2022,[15] and in February 2022, Labib withdrew from medical work to focus on comedy full-time.
[7] In October 2022, she, Sophie Duker, Dane Baptiste, Thanyia Moore, Big Zuu, Jason Forbes, Kemah Bob, and Darren Harriott appeared on Dave's Just Jokes, a programme broadcast to mark Black History Month, in which they shared anecdotes on growing up and breaking into comedy.
[16] In early 2024, she appeared on an episode of World's Most Dangerous Roads with Mike Wozniak, another Portsmouth-based comedian, with whom she exchanged local slang,[17] and in April 2024, she hosted that year's London Eid in the Square.
[19] After following him on social media and finding that her direct messages were going unanswered, she visited him at a TED talk in Sudan[7] on 12 July 2016,[19] where she tried to pretend she did not know who he was – only for her younger brother to blurt out that she was a regular visitor to his Instagram account.
[7] In a 2022 interview, she stated her "biggest hero and influence" is her father, on the grounds that the way he told stories could "keep people listening for hours and hours",[21] and said in an interview the following year that Dave Chappelle, Ricky Gervais, and Slim were among her comedy heroes and that Gervais' comments about cancel culture had resonated with her, because there were "loads of jokes" she wanted to tell but could not.