Saturday, 17 October 2015

What Ladies will Kill for


Have you ever asked your girl to cut her hair? I am sure you will receive the appropriate reply. Then your reply will be more profound and elaborate if she has just fixed a Brazilian hair extension, na you go advise yourself. I remember asking one of my friends what will trip her off, and smilingly she said 'a Brazilian hair will certainly do the magic'. Well...end of that discussion. But guys, as you dey take her around Ikeja shopping mall, Silverbird, Ozone...and smilingly will you be a good guy, no wahala. Make sure you get your ATM card, oh, no debit card, bros is a senior man. 'You can have worefa you like' will come singing in your mind.....Next!

No confuse, they are chocolates. Happy is that guy whose girl loves chocolates more than Brazilian hair, iPhone 6 worefa...your pockets shall see your children's children. If she smiles, shrugs her shoulder and says 'Chocolates are my favourites'. Yeepi! You are lucky, man. The only thing is that you will have to watch out for her sugar level. Make sure  that she is aware of her limits and cuts down on her sugar intake. Better still, there are chocolates that are sugar free....Next 

This is the latest BB device with Android operating system, not like X3. The good news is that BB is yet to release this high-tech phone. Guys always be on the lookout for the release, it is necessary for you. Because when they finally launch it, make sure that you don't parade with your girl near those stores at the shopping mall...online stores too, if you like use online stores for example...na you go know what's next....

Saturday, 3 October 2015

'Nigeria, If we stay here, we die?'


In a speech rendered by one of the discussants at The Platform, Iganmu, we are meant to understand that Nigeria has got to stand up like the four lepers in the Bible and move ahead or die. This proposition will only warrant us to interrogate our present situation and validate the notion that there is a need to either remain or move ahead to glory. But the sad question has always been 'What do we do?', what is to be done is the hardest question one can answer in the Nigeria situation. It sounds so easy and comfortable for political office holders to tell us that they will do this and that, however, it has not been a reality.

'What do we do' helps us to understand the role we as citizens of Nigeria need to play in order to replace the much vaunted promises of our office holders, who talk and do not perform. 'What do we do', also, informs us of our duties before election, whether it is doable for us to collect money from candidates who will see the money given to us as investments and later await a tremendous turnover when they eventually win. Then, we will understand that it is upon to us to scrutinize people who we intend to give mandate to represent us. 'What do we do' implies that during and after election we should be part of the process and ready to die because of our votes if there is an attempt to cast it into the red sea it. What we have always done is that we let our vote cast into the pockets of poor leaders.
                                  
                                                   What do we do?

This also informs us that we owe Nigeria the voice that shouts vehemently, that speaks out loud when policies implemented are not in the interest of us. If the National Assembly members can afford to fight not minding their Agbada and coat, we should not mind fighting with trousers and skirts, buba and khaki, we should not be ashamed to take a solidarity walk to the government houses. 'What do we do' indicates that we have had enough. It also means that we are ready to move ahead because if we stay here, Nigeria, we die!     

Wednesday, 30 September 2015

The 55th Story, Nigeria












Today is another good day, it’s better than the 54th year of our independence, it will give birth and hope to the 56th year. We are here undivided and strong, very ready to settle amongst ourselves the differences that terrorise our well-being. We are still one, peaceful and loving, amidst daily struggles with insurgency and upheaval. Today we are another Nigeria.
We are no longer the Nigeria that mock our weaknesses and laugh at our undoing, we are together with one voice speaking up against corruption. We are no longer interested in jokes which portray us as criminals and people of low or no integrity, our interest now lies in building our integrity as a nation state. What we have today is not what we ever had, we have a Nigeria with a great responsibility; to be a true nation state where potentials are realities.
These are not mere words, they remain our national goals. They are not futuristic altogether, they are living in our hearts, we think it. Now they are ready to grow out of us, we are this newness, this new story we told yesterday. Today our listeners are become witnesses. For us and we, this is Nigeria which is mine and yours forever.

Emergency Ambulance on a Traffic



Have you ever been on traffic before and an emergency ambulance is looking for a way out? mehn!... a horrible experience. It's just that people are getting use to a lot of things here in Lagos, that's why people get their snatched away from them and nobody did act anything, that na before shey? Mek e be so...But this whole traffic thing must have a solution, seriously there must be a way out. The whole thing for me is stereotypical, all the whole rush-rush. Maruwa will switch from one lane to another, Danfo will run on the culvert, even  Lagbus na don dey join them. Imagine where Lagbus dey commot from im lane dey run on the other ones, na so Danfo dey enter BRT lane dey waka dey go. Abeg, I dey beg una, dis traffic thing suppose don stop by now, even if na to use train, boat, canoe...anything, Keke-na-Wheel barrow, anyhow. Because my heart nearly cut as I dey for traffic come hear emergency siren...mek person no die because of traffic ooooo....mek I drop'm here sha

Naija at 54-55


 
Tomorrow this great nation will be 55years old. Then all of us will shout Happy Birthday to you, and we will congratulate ourselves. Finally we don try, at least we have disappointed all them deadliners who said that we will disappear or disintegrate by 2015, but we still dey kamkpe, we full ground. For all our trials and fighting, even when our leaders dey throw punches and kicks at the National Assembly upon sey dey wear agbada and coat, we still carry on. E no mean sey we no get common sense, for after the fight we share the news, the news...(laughs). Nigeria!
I just want us to reflect on all our weaknesses, how can we turn them into our opportunities, theory, right? But we can work out something for ourselves, we have the market for goods, we have the human capacity for work, 'there is no work o'. Weeeelll, that's another matter. That's why I'm calling you to think with me, let's make Naija a better place to stay...anyway, mek we dey wait for tomorrow as we dey think. 

Friday, 25 September 2015

'Kind of Hairstyle Every Girl Ask For'



Both hairstyles look exquisite, I know tomorrow will be a day for your hairstyle rendezvous. There are other good looking hairstyles you wanna try out. Make sure you have your money for it. They are gonna look good on you. I am not particularly into this hair thing. Well that's why I am gonna let it be so short out...like no much commenting, I will let my good girl do her thing.,



Well, this is probably a good countdown on the woman's thing. Oh! she is gonna kill me for it. I want to make a choose for her, bad English for you, for me, its good styling for the conversation. I hope you are looking at the pictures, I mean the hairstyle because if not...well, ladies, lets go ahead with the countdown.



Lets leave it here...we will sha continue from here later

Car of the Day: Danfo



The new Danfo A1 class is fully conditioned for the necessities of the normal Lagos road, which we are hopeful to improve. One look at the vehicle reassures one of the dynamism of spending in Lagos transportation matter. So relax in your seat and watch the traffic roll by. At least you can enjoy the comfort of running fast enough on the culvert, with all the jerking and women shouting and all the 'driver our life dey important o'. Check out the interior

         
With multiple of seats, you can not be threatened by those whose body, mass and weight will deprive you of some breath space. Today, with the new Danfo A1, your travel experience has been improved by the latest automobile outfit, fit for Lagos Transport. It is Danfo all the way!

Two Cars in One: Mercedes Benz 'Concept IAA'

The Mercedes-Benz “Concept IAA” (Intelligent Aerodynamic Automobile) is two cars in one: an aerodynamics world champion with a Cd value of 0.19 and a four-door coupé embodying irresistible design. The study, which is celebrating its world premiere at the IAA Cars 2015, switches automatically from design mode to aerodynamic mode when the vehicle reaches a speed of 80 km/h, whereby numerous aerodynamics measures alter the shape of the vehicle. Inside, the “Concept IAA” continues the design line of the S-Class and S-Class Coupé and offers new touch-based functions.

Fascinating transformation.

At the touch of a button, or automatically on reaching a speed of 80 km/h, the Mercedes-Benz “Concept IAA” performs a fascinating transformation in which the captivatingly beautiful four-door coupé turns into an aerodynamics world champion: eight segments extend at the rear, increasing its length by up to 390 millimetres; front flaps in the front bumper extend by 25 millimetres to the front and 20 millimetres to the rear, improving the air flow around the front end and the front wheel arches; the Active Rims alter their cupping from 55 millimetres to zero; and the louvre in the front bumper moves 60 millimetres to the rear, improving the underbody air flow. “The “Concept IAA” applies intelligent innovations to resolve the conflicting aims of functionality and aesthetics and shows that we still have plenty of ideas on how to achieve further improvements in efficiency,” says Prof. Dr Thomas Weber, Member of the Daimler Board of Management responsible for Group Research and Head of Mercedes-Benz Cars Development.
 
Source: Mercedes Benz Website

Monday, 21 September 2015

I Think Music is also Into ME: Dunnie


 

Alright, The Musician Dunnie, What's up with her?
Dunnie the musician has a lot going on Right now… She is a singer, songwriter, rapper, multi-instrumentalist and record producer.
 Released my single 'my tomorrow' some months back… And I’ve been performing at various shows around Abuja. Which includes the recently held ‘Abuja Acoustic Night’ that had 2face, Wizkid, Sound Sultan, Lynxx, Timi Dakolo etc., in attendance
That's great...Our girl is doing fine...
 Yeszo!... God has been faithful to me
Right, where did she start from? Choir?
 Oh Yes... Definitely, music for me started way back in the children's choir. I used to always disturb my parents at home with my loud singing when I was younger, so one day my mum got tired and took me to church, introduced me to the children's class teacher and told her I have been disturbing her with my singing, that she wants me to join the choir so I can focus on singing with a purpose rather than disturbing…lol
So along the line. I taught myself how to play drums, next thing I know I am playing drums in the adult church. I got tired of drumming, because I wanted to sing and accompany myself with an instrument so I learnt how to play the guitar. So, I wanted to also produce my music by myself so I learnt how to play the Piano. That’s how the journey started for me.
That's funny...Kudos to your Mum…
Yeah... Lol... Shout out to my mum…
I'm so inspired...You are really into Music…seriously...
Yes u can say that… I think music is also into me too
Yeah...I love singing, at home quite often...but I don't want to take it outside...what do you wanna do with all them skill? Money?
Lol… Funny u
Well, money is good. I won’t deny that fact. But I'm too driven to be satisfied by money alone. My dream is that the music I make will touch lives, inspire people to be better, motivate people to never give up and make a mark in this world not just Nigeria or Africa but the world and that after I am long gone, my music will remain and survive the test of time.
And I tell, your music is gonna go way beyond that...
Amen to that...
Well, but most Nigerian musicians hardly think of that...money first for them...that's probably why their songs don't pass a second. What do you think of the industry?
 Exactly... Not only music though, it affects every part of society. Whenever you put money first in whatever you do, it can never last. There must be something driving you other than money. Money will always come eventually
So, what do you think of the industry?
Well, I think the Nigerian music industry has come a long way, it has grown and is still growing. I see a future in the Nigerian industry where every genre has its own dedicated listenership. Of course pop music will always be what it is, 'popular music' but I believe that with time, equal accolades and achievement will be awarded to people who do a different style of music. The basis for judging someone’s music will not be the tempo or whether it’s danceable or not. But will be the Content and the quality
That's good...I hope we get there sooner
Me too
 
So far, personally, any regrets? Any 'how I wish'?
Normally I don’t like to regret things, I just learn from whatever happens and move on. Not to sound too serious or cocky but I really do not wish; I just dream it, imagine it and go for it...
Wow, good girl is right on track                                         
Thank u so much... I’m blushing sha
Lol…                                                      
Any other adventures for good girl?
Oh! Of course… But u know na… I am a very serious person… So my adventures are always serious and purpose driven lol... So I am passionate about women and children. So I intend to in any way that I can to support them...Recently 41naija Entertainment did a project called ‘The Save Tomorrow Project’ and I was privileged to be a part of it. We had a novelty match in Abuja, then we went with our friends to the orphanage, we partied with the kids, sang for them, danced for and with them. It was an amazing experience
Good work girl
We gonna wrap it up with one good word from you...
I would like to thank you very much for taking the time to talk to me, and to everyone reading; sit back. relax there's about to be an explosion. (not boko haram o) lol. A musical explosion called ‘Dunnie’. kindly follow the process on twitter and instagram here @OfficialDunnie thank you very much
Thanks too girl                                                                                                                                                 

I have a Right to Peace #PeaceDay is Today


Take Action Today

Anyone, anywhere can celebrate Peace Day. It can be as simple as lighting a candle at noon, sitting in silent meditation, or doing a good deed for someone you don’t know. Or it can involve getting your co-workers, organization, community or government engaged in a large event. You can also share thoughts, messages and pictures to commemorate Peace Day on social media. Here are a couple of other ideas to get you going..
Search for an organized event in your local area.
Share a selfie on social media using the #PeaceDay hashtag. Use our downloadable art to reflect this year’s Right to Peace theme. Get your friends and family members involved too! IHaveARightToPeace.pdf  WeAllHaveARightToPeace.pdf
Help us Make #PeaceDay Trend on September 21 by tweeting, posting and sharing your thoughts, pictures and message of peace throughout the day.
Join people across the world in a Minute of Silence, Moment of Peace at noonin every time zone.
https://www.facebook.com/MinuteOfSilenceMomentOfPeace
Consider gathering for a Global Feast for Peace, including foods from different cultures, or interfaith dialogue, or just gather to break bread.
https://www.facebook.com/GlobalFeast
Have a discussion or create an art activity around what this year’s theme, “Right of Peoples to Peace” means to your group.
Involve your Faith/Spiritual Community in Peace Day
Participate in a Global Meditation on September 21 for the International Day of Peace at 19:00 UTC/ GMT worldwide.
https://www.facebook.com/events/1530247320527153/
Give Peace Breathing a try, and share it with others.
Open or close your gatherings with the simple universal statement of peace, “May Peace Prevail on Earth.” Or display the message of peace, “May Peace Prevail on Earth”, with your own Peace Pole.
http://www.peacepoleproject.org/
Bring music and inspiration into the lives of children around the world. Join in on the 4thAnnual Playing for Change Day on September 20.
http://playingforchangeday.org/
Participate in PeaceCast, a free, not-for-profit webcast streaming video online that will run continuously for 48 hours spanning all global time zones, starting from Peace Day’s first minute on September 21, 2014 in Auckland, New Zealand until its last in Honolulu Hawaii.
http://www.peacecast.tv/
36 hour, 6th Annual Peaceday.tv broadcast. Live from the United Nations. Music, messages of peace from celebrities and humanitarians, and educational presentations.
http://www.peaceday.tv
If futbol/football/soccer is a part of your life and you are passionate about inspiring peace within your community, get involved withOne Day One Goal.
http://www.peaceoneday.org/campaigns/one-day-one-goal
If you are a dancer, a dance teacher or simply someone who loves to dance, then One Day One Dance is the perfect way to express your passion for peace.
http://www.peaceoneday.org/campaigns/one-day-one-dance
If you love singing and belong to a choir, run one or want to create one just for the day, then One Day One Choir is a perfect way to get together and sing for peace.
http://www.onedayonechoir.org/
Listen to an inspiring Radio broadcastwith Joan Kenley 
http://www.joankenley.com/20140905.html
Watch a Peace Day Roots & Shoots message to live in harmony with all living things on this Earth from Dr. Jane Goodall 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T_N8asnc1Xc&feature=youtu.be
FUN ACTIVITIES TO GET CHILDREN INVOLVED
“A key ingredient in building culture of peace is education. The young of today deserve a radically different education – one that does not glorify war but educates for peace, non-violence and international cooperation.”
  – Ambassador A. K. Chowdhury, Former UN Under-Secretary-General & High Representative and former head of UNICEF
Create and fly Peace Doves in cooperation with Dr. Jane Goodall’s Roots and Shoots.http://www.janegoodall.ca/documents/SmallDoveInstructions_000.pdf
For teachers, find out how you can involve your school in Peace Day activities.
Get your college or university involved.
Encourage your local school district to get involved in Peace Day activities. For inspiration, read how the Chicago Public Schools have gotten involved since 2008.
Make Peace Cranescontaining wishes and poems for peace, and share them locally or with kids across the world.http://armedwiththearts.org/peace-crane-project/
Create a visual reminder that we live in one world and all share similar hopes and dreams with a Peace Flag.
http://thepeaceflagproject.org/workshops/how-to-make-peace-flags/
Promote the arts by coordinating assemblies of young artists of all ages to draw their vision of peace with the CHALK4PEACEproject.http://www.chalk4peace.org/eventinfo.html
Celebrate International Day of Peace with “whirled peace” by “planting” a Pinwheel for Peace.
http://www.pinwheelsforpeace.com/pinwheelsforpeace/home.html
Paint and plant Peace Rocks to line walkway so people see them daily.

Thursday, 17 September 2015

Plays You Can't Miss

Tickets to THE PRIME MINISTER’S SON

Mono characterisation is something quite unusual in Nigeria, Africa too. The fact of one man playing the role is most enigmatic, also the ability to have exhausted the entire script in one individual takes creativity to another level. Mr Greg Mbajiorgu, a lecturer at the department of Theatre and Film Studies, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, has demonstrated his ingenuity in this wholly unique genre of play with his The Prime Minister's Son,  which has also won him several awards. This play will be staged at Terra Kulture, Victoria Island, Lagos, from the 19th of this month. You just can't miss it...

Tickets to Wole Soyinka's KING BAABU

From Wole Soyinka, our own Nobel Laureate, we have King Baabu, which will be staged at Terra Kulture too . This interesting play is directed by Toyin Oshinnaike. We all know Soyinka, our great literary icon. It is oftener said that every writer has a genre where he or she plays as the lord, but we have writers like Soyinka who have beaten down the normal, with profound presence in all the genres of literature. Here is one reason why some persons regard him as the father of African literature..Don't miss out at the Terra Kulture

Today's Treat



Good morning, I believe that you are already at your thing, work, school or home with AM. Anyways, like my friend will always say, I hope you don't plan to go on hunger strike as part of the national agenda on economic brouhaha. If you like act like you don't recognise the nutritional implication of the matter before you. This will transcend you to that realm where angels are dancing mamako in a hydraulic praise of political brouhaha (Gordons 2011). So, go to the nearest buka, which can be your Mama, Girlfriend, boyfriend, own kitchen as the case may be and serve yourself. Then for afternoon...



This is the afternoon 'Oga at the top', so you cannot categorically say one thing and this baba here will say another one. Now that you worked out yourself hard and you are ready to call it an after-before-evening, chill out with this and your life will not remain the same. If not that I have a strong appetite, I would have invited you for lunch at Terra Kulture. Abeg, Abeg, no talk sey you know the place, because if I see you dancing shoki near my corner...I swear........, well let's leave it there.


Finally, after all said and done, you have to end on a light and happy note. Please if you don't know how to prepare this, call on me in the time of nutritional jigripogri and I will come at your aid..

Monday, 14 September 2015

'Dis Lagos Sef': Daddy Showkey: My Life on the streets

'Dis Lagos Sef': Daddy Showkey: My Life on the streets:   John Asiemo, aka, Daddy Showkey, in this interview with our Entertainment Editor, Ogbonna Amadi, tells the story of his life in the ghet...

Daddy Showkey: My Life on the streets

 

John Asiemo, aka, Daddy Showkey, in this interview with our Entertainment Editor, Ogbonna Amadi, tells the story of his life in the ghetto.  It’s as explosive as you’d soon find out. Enjoy it.

You said you failed woefully in school?
Yes O!  I fail for class three.  They asked me to go home.
But when my school was about going for a competition, I was not only brought back to help them, I was given double promotion to class five.
Did you fail all your subjects?
Yes, F-parallel. They brought me back to lead the school at a singing and dancing competition at Agboju.
Were you not supposed to repeat class three?
Yes, but I got promoted so that I could join the class five  students to represent the school. The school knew I’m good in dancing and singing competition and they did everything to have me back.
So many stars like you have abandoned their neighbourhood to seek a new life because of fame and so on . . . ?
They did that because they didn’t realise themselves from the beginning.  They allowed their dreams to overshadow them. As for me, I was sleeping in Ajegunle and dreaming to become somebody in life. I slept with these people and my prayer was that God should not take me away from this neighbourhood.
So, what was the dream about?
The dream was about everything I went through in Ajegunle. I dreamt that one day, this neighbourhood would have somebody that could speak and fight for it;  someone that could turn their sorrow into joy and that  is what God is using me to do today, though there are some things I did wrong.
Have you actualised this dream?
In way, I’d say yes. But financially I’m trying. When I say yes, I mean that at least, people in my neighbourhood can beat their chests and use me as an example.
No be this Showkey wey dey fight fight for Ajegunle come become somebody wey people dey talk about? I’m not accomplished.
You said there were things you did wrong in the course of your dream. What were they?
As a young lad growing up, I couldn’t harness  my vision. And I call that youthful exuberance. But today, God directed me on the path to follow.
I’ll say it was youthful exuberance that made me live the way I did in the past. And that is why I’m moving forward.
I wouldn’t say I had a bad upbringing because my mother gave me the best. I lost my dad when I was nine but my mum did her best to bring me up in the right way. But I went into the streets and I decided to study the streets.
Today, I’m a teacher because I’m the son of a teacher. The teacher taught me how to protect and express myself. But the street gave me the will power and the heart I needed to help the child of the common man realise himself.
Can you share some of your experiences as a growing child on the streets of Ajegunle?
After my father died, my mother and grandmother took good care of me. But I left them when I was about 11  to go and live  with my friends.
And we were doing what we called scavenging, which is going to waste dumps to pick bottles and aluminum sheets to sell to the multinational companies. I went through a lot of violence during this time. But I’m sorry I can’t disclose anything to you.
But we need to share some of these experiences . . .
I was a very gifted lad physically, spiritually and otherwise. The spiritual gift is what eventually saved my life because I was really in the street. And I can tell you today that I’m one of those people who overcame the streets of Ajegunle.
Tell me some of those things you did on the streets that made people think you’d never become something in life…
I was a very stubborn lad. As a 13-year-old boy,  I once punched and boxed my way out of danger when some group of boys tried to steal from…
You said you were not brilliant in school . . . ?
I was not brilliant and was expelled because I was supposed to repeat a class which I couldn’t do but was called back. Our principal then was Mrs. Omotiga who was like a mother to us (better mama wey money no fit buy) at Dr. Lucas Memorial Grammar School. When they called me back, she sat me down and talked sense into me.
That woman saw my talent and my ability as an entertainer and made me believe in myself. She gave me the opportunity to entertain the school at every event.
She also gave me the opportunity to represent the school as a boxer. When the Village Headmaster crew of NTA came to my school to pick me, she didn’t object because she knew I’m gifted.
She made me understand that I can become something from making people to be happy, which is what I still survive on.
And after secondary school . . . ?
I became a bus conductor.
A son of a teacher?
My mother never knew what I did after I left the house.
She didn’t hear stories?
I no know whether she hear sha o. But I knew that my grandmother was intelligent enough to suspect all I did, although my maternal grandmother knew all I did and she stood by me through thin and thick.
If your mother heard your stories then, what would she have done to you?
Ah! My mama, she go come there beat me.   She’s remained the most important thing that happened to my life. I’m not her only child but I’m the last. She was doing her best with the little salary she had to bring us up. I left home because I had to learn from the street which I call Youth Service.
In fact, every Nigerian child should go through that Youth Service, not the university own – O. I’ll like every Nigerian child between the ages of 16-17 to go through this youth service I’m talking about. In the end, we’ll have great men and women.
Why would you recommend such for every Nigerian child?
You’ll not understand it. If you grew up in a place like Ajegunle where a 13-year-old child is already a matured man, you’ll understand it better.
Between fighting on the street, boxing and being a bus conductor, where did music come in?
Music has been with me from my childhood. My father was a show promoter and I started entertaining people even before my father died.
I don’t want to say I was doing comedy because doing that will mean restricting my gift.
How far did you go with boxing skill?
I went through amateur boxing and represented the different arms of the  force. I won some medals too.
But God knew I was the key to the show and that’s how I came back to music and galala came to reality.
Daddy Showkey is the key to the show because boxing is sports and sports is show, music and drama are equally show. So, I was able to combine everything and that’s how I came about the name Show kid.
Did you say Showkid?
Yes, my grandmother’s elder sister’s son was known as Showboy and he brought me up. So, I had to adopt  Showkid as a child. But as I was growing up, my friends changed it to Showkey.
How did you become  a musician?
Yes, I played with so many groups. From Royal All Star Band to Bajasca which was formed when I was in secondary school with Benneth Ogbukole, Daniel Young, Sarah Uzoagwa, John Asiemu (me).
And from there, I formed another band with my friend Tallman called JTom (John and Tallman).
After Tallman’s father took him away to go and learn trading, I got in touch  with one other guy called Innocent Onyemauwa called Daddy Fresh and that was when the group Rap warriors was formed in 1996. Before then, I had been established already.
One day, I went to NTA Channel 10 and to meet Dejumo Lewis whom I’d known since 1982-83 when I used to perform acrobatics in The New Village Headmaster.
While I was with him, I met Danladi Bako who auditioned me. After the auditioning, he asked for my group and I went back to call them. (Labasta, Obanla and Innocent Onyemauwa, aka Daddy Fresh).
I took them to NTA but when Danladi Bako saw us, we were very dirty, especially me. So, he gave us money to dress up and come for Morning Ride the following day. We came and performed on  the same day members of the Golden Eaglets returned who’d from China also performed.
Danladi Bako commended us and said we were gifted. That some day, we had a problem among ourselves. One guy called Prince Grino Momoh who saw us on the screen that same day asked us to come and perform in a naming ceremony at Queens Barracks after which he gave us money.
That was how our problem started. The second day, we went to a literary and debating competition and came back with Rowland Okafor. I brought him and David Onohusofe (a.k.a. Cashman David) to the group because I saw their singing talent in that school (Adeolu Secondary School Ajegunle).
The same night I brought them, we went to Wazobia night club in Apapa only to discover that one of us, Daddy Fresh was already there with two other boys in our neighbourhood. And they were posing as rap warriors.
The DJ there Rowlingstone who’s late now was the person who settled our case that night. But there was no way we could drive away David Onuhusofe and Rowland Okafor a.k.a. Pretty.
From there we changed our name to the “Pretty Busy Boys.” Danladi Bako was still assisting us financially.
He was standing for us as if we were members of his family. Later, he took us to a competition called “Children of Africa” before Onwuka Kalu did his own and we saw some children from Apapa that came from Switzerland perform.
That day, we also saw Mustapha Amigo in his office and the MC of that occasion was Segun Awolowo.


Which children?
Then people saw them as children of the rich but me I know send them message to all.
Danladi Bako gave us money to polish ourselves and perform in the occasion with them. My brother, I eat all the food wey dey there that day.
If there’s any person that made the “Pretty Busy Boys” what they are, it’s Danladi Bako because he was a father. In the same week, Rowland Okafor told us that his elder brother said he should go to the University.
After that Jerry and Junior joined our group after winning a talent hunt organised by Grand master Lee. There we saw our friend who said his brother asked him to go to college in “Pretty and Junior.” By then, we’d released our first album in 1991. I went to him and asked him say Omo, na University be this one?
I was the one taking Junior and Pretty album to marketers. Along the line, I couldn’t stand the tension anymore. So, I went into Nigerian Army.
You went to join the army?
Yes. I went to NDA in 1992 to see if I could make it because I didn’t know that it’s music that would bring me this far. The people of Ajegunle really saw the music talent even while I was doing my bus conductor job.
So when members of “Pretty Busy Boys” decided to go solo, I went to Kaduna and tried my best.
I spent about a year and six months in the NDA.
And you went on awol . . .
Yes na, no be Daddy Fresh write letter give me say in wan do Follow me, Follow me.. and both of us had agreed to be a group.
And you abandoned your career in the army?
It’s not like I abandon my career but I came back so that we could do some recording. Then came DJ Jimmy Jatt, with his street Jamz in Odo Obalende.
When I arrived from Kaduna in a military uniform and immediately I started singing, people were happy and decided that I wouldn’t go back to the army.
People started calling me Ghetto Soldier on  stage.
Meanwhile, abeg make God dey bless Jimmy Jatt because without him, I wouldn’t be anything, Jimmy encouraged me and I started again.
In the old Pretty Busy Boys, it was Daddy Fresh that had the voice. That is why till today, they find it difficult to believe that it’s me who had no voice that God suddenly gave a voice.
I and Cashman David were the rappers in the group. In fact, we’re the originators of broken English raps. Pretty was rapping in English language. Then Tolu Gay came and advised us to convert ourselves to singers in EMI.
Morgan Okonuga can bear me witness. Before the group, Emphasis, we’d started  because Morgan and Tolu Gay advised us to sing in Pidgin . . .
“You never marry, big bele” but we never knew it was going to give us a break. I’m not better than Daddy Fresh, Pretty nor Cashman David or even Sexy Pretty and Labasto.
I’m here because God had a purpose for me. I might have been dead from my dangerous lifestyle on the streets.
Why?
Just take it the way I said it. I used to be very strong in those days. Now that I have children, them don take all my power.  God wanted to use me as an example for  other children. If he could make me what I am today, every child in my neighbourhood can be useful.
How did your mother see you as a stubborn child?
She changed her name as Mama Daddy Showkey.
How did she cope with your stubbornness?
Ah! My mother never knew that I was stubborn. I always hide myself when I’m in her presence. Even if I go to jail today, it will not be because I robbed anybody.
I never robbed because I knew that if I was arrested, my mother would not come to my rescue. Everybody in my neighbourhood knew her as Holy Mary pikin and a teacher.
How did you react to money and fame?
I never saw the money but I saw the fame.
How did your fame affect your people in the ghetto?
The day I knew I would be famous was the day Chief Raymond Dokpesi presented an award to me and the day you put me on the pages of the Vanguard Newspaper. It was you and Smart of the Champion that first put me on the pages of newspapers.
When I entered the hall of that Fame Award at Museum Centre, I never knew I could sit around such magnitude of persons.
That day, I saw Obey Commander, King Sunny Ade, Wasiu Ayinde, and there was this my friend who was with Wasiu Ayinde.
So I gave him N50 then to introduce me to his boss. And there was this photo journalist (Tunde Thomas) who took me to Wasiu Ayinde. I never knew that I’ll be who I am today.
I know you have a lot of respect for Dr. ‘Felin’ Obiefuna. Why did you leave him?
I left Dr. Obiefuna because I didn’t want to fight with him. He picked me from the street, from nothing to something.
But as a young man who had wants and needs, I had to leave.  I had my mother, and my girlfriend (now my wife ) whom I was seriously in love with to cater for, and my child. I didn’t even leave him at that point.
I went to Germany in 1996 and released a record for Steven Records. But I went back to him (Dr. Obiefuna) because I saw him as God sent.
Was that record made for your mother?
No, not for her. It’s a true life story of a family in Ajegunle where I’d prayed for Diana and she had a child. So, I told the family I’d like to put it in my music and they allowed me.
Diana’s mother-in-law was always troubling her because they didn’t have a child and after that, the trouble stopped. That song was also linked to my mother because she believed in me.
What was it like when you were travelling all over the world?
You’ll never understand what I want to tell you if you didn’t grow up in a place like Ajegunle where you don’t have a father and your mother is not financially buoyant.
In Ajegunle then, there were some parents who sold off their belongings to send their children abroad so that they could come back to build house and buy cars for them.
But my mother tried all she could but didn’t meet up. When I went abroad, my mother didn’t believe I’d come back to Nigeria. This same abroad that she dreamt and hustled  to see how she could send me.
While I was in Germany, I had a dream where I and my elder brother Jeff were sleeping in one room and I woke up to see my hair coiling.
So when I woke up, I started growing deadlocks. In that same dream, all my dancers were leaving me and my elder brother asked me to come, let’s go home.
So when my mother saw me, she asked Jeff if he was the one who asked me to come back and he said no, that it was my dream that made me come back. Most people have failed to understand and follow their dream, which is wrong.
I didn’t start growing dreads because I wanted it. I started it after that dream.

Source: Vanguard Newspaper

Saturday, 12 September 2015

Lagos Scenes

Traffic wahala

When you want to cross

Running after Danfo

Agric-Ikorodu market 


Friday, 11 September 2015

A Super Lagosian and Nigerian: Akintola Williams



Chief Akintola Williams (born 9 August 1919) was the first African to qualify as a chartered accountant.[1]He began his education at Olowogbowo Methodist Primary School, Bankole street APONGBON, Lagos Island, Lagos state Nigeria in the early 1930s; the same primary school his late junior brother Chief Rotimi Williams attended..
His firm, founded in 1952, later grew organically and through mergers to become the largest professional services firm in Nigeria by 2004.[2] Williams participated in founding the Nigerian Stock Exchange and the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria. During a long career, Williams received many honours.[1]

Birth and education

Akintola Williams was born in 1919. His grandfather Z.A. Williams was a merchant prince from Abeokuta and his father Thomas Ekundayo Williams was a clerk in the colonial service who set up a legal practice in Lagos after training in London, England.[3] He was the older brother of Rotimi Williams, who later became a distinguished lawyer.[4] For his primary education in the early 1930s, he attended Olowogbowo Methodist Primary School situated at Bankole street Apongbon, Lagos Nigeria. This was the same primary school attended by his junior brother the late legal titan; Chief Rotimi Williams. Williams attended the CMS Grammar School, Lagos.[3] He went on to Yaba Higher College on a UAC scholarship, obtaining a diploma in commerce. In 1944 he travelled to England where he studied at the University of London. Studying in Banking and Finance, he graduated in 1946 with a Bachelor of Commerce. He continued his studies and qualified as a chartered accountant in England in 1949.[5] A Yoruba of chiefly background, the Oloye Williams was one of the founders of the Egbe Omo Oduduwa society while in London, with Dr. Oni Akerele as President and Obafemi Awolowo as Secretary.[6]

Accounting career

After returning to Nigeria in 1950, Williams served with the Inland Revenue as an assessment officer until March 1952, when he left the civil service and founded Akintola Williams & Co in Lagos. The company was the first indigenous chartered accounting firm in Africa.[7] At the time, the accountancy business was dominated by five large foreign firms. Although there were a few small local firms, they were certified rather than chartered accountants. Williams gained business from indigenous companies including Nnamdi Azikiwe's West African Pilot, K.O. Mbadiwe's African Insurance Company, Fawehinmi Furniture and Ojukwu Transport. He also provided services to the new state-owned corporations including the Electricity Corporation of Nigeria, the Western Nigeria Development Corporation, the Eastern Nigeria Development Corporation, the Nigerian Railway Corporation and the Nigerian Ports Authority.[3]
The first partner in the firm, Charles S. Sankey, was appointed in 1957, followed by the Cameroonian Mr. Njoh Litumbe. Litumbe opened branch offices in Port Harcourt and Enugu, and later spearheaded overseas expansion. In 1964 a branch was opened in the Cameroons, followed by branches in Côte d'Ivoire and Swaziland and affiliates in Ghana, Egypt and Kenya. By March 1992 the company had 19 partners and 535 staff.[3]
Demand grew as a result of the Companies Act of 1968, which required that companies operating in Nigeria formed locally incorporated subsidiaries and published audited annual accounts. The drive in the early 1970 to encourage indigenous ownership of businesses also increased demand. In 1973 AW Consultant Ltd, a management consultancy headed by Chief Arthur Mbanefo, was spun off. The company acquired a computer service company and a secretarial service, and in 1977 the company entered into an agreement with Touche Ross International based on profit sharing. Williams was also a board member and major shareholder in a number of other companies. He retired in 1983.[3]
Between April 1999 and May 2004, Akintola Williams & Co merged with two other accounting firms to create Akintola Williams Deloitte, the largest professional services firm in Nigeria with a staff of over 600.[2]

Public roles and honours

Williams playing a leading role in establishing the Association of Accountants in Nigeria (AAN) in 1960 with the goal of training accountants. He was the first President of the association.[7] He was founding member and first president of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN).[1] He was also involved in establishing the Nigerian Stock Exchange. He remained actively involved with these organisations into his old age. At a stock exchange ceremony in May 2011 he called on operators to protect the market and ensure there was no scandal. He said that, if needed, market operators should not hesitate to seek his advice on resolving any problem.[8]
Public sector positions include Chairman of the Federal Income Tax Appeal Commissioners (1958–1968), member of the Coker Commission of Inquiry into the Statutory Corporations of the former Western Region of Nigeria (1962), member of the board of Trustees of the Commonwealth Foundation (1966–1975), Chairman of the Lagos State Government Revenue Collection Panel (1973) and Chairman of the Public Service Review Panel to correct the anomalies in the Udoji Salary Review Commission (1975). Other positions include President of the Metropolitan Club in Victoria Island, Lagos, Founder and Council member of the Nigerian Conservation Foundation and Founder and chairman of the board of Trustees of the Musical Society of Nigeria.[7]
In 1982 Williams was honoured by the Nigerian Government with the Order of the Federal Republic (OFR).[1] Following retirement in 1983, Williams threw himself into a project to establish a music centre and concert hall for the Music Society of Nigeria.[3] In April 1997 Williams was appointed as a Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire.[1] for services to the accountancy profession and for promotion of arts, culture and music through the Musical Society of Nigeria.[5] The Akintola Williams Arboretum at the Nigerian Conservation Foundation headquarters in Lagos is named in his honour.[9] On 8 May 2011 the Nigeria-Britain Association presented awards to John Kufour, past President of Ghana, and to Akintola Williams, with awards for their contributions to democracy and development in Africa.

Source: Wikipedia