Friday, 23 October 2015

BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION IN GRAND STYLE- TIJANI SHERIFFDEEN OPEYEMI


BRAIN BUILDER AND WE ARE MAD 


17th of October 2015went down in history as prodigy Opeyemi celebrated his birthday in grand style. The CEO of the Brain Builders International marked his birthday with humanitarian gestures which included the sanitation of Kulende Street in Ilorin, kwara state. This was done in conjunction with the MAD initiatives. This clearheaded young man also stretched his kind hands to an orphanage in Idofian (Hope orphanage), Ilorin.
The MAD initiatives and Brain builders were at Kulende Street yesterday to sanitise their area particularly a dumping ground which has since been neglected by the people. The ground which happens to be on the road path and in front of some shops can cause ill-health to the people in that environment, but it’s so pathetic and touching that those in that community don’t see it that way. The cleaning exercise which lasted for hours was a strenuous and herculean one but the cooperation of the two organisations and the youths in that community made it a success.

 
DONATED TOOLS FOR THE JOB

The representative and the director of the MAD initiatives- Miss Tony joy, while responding to questions said it has been the goal of the organisation to strive to see a Nigeria free from dirt and impurities by 2020. She accented that the organization has been working assiduously to making the goal a reality; the vocal lady was fast to say that they have worked in some other parts of the South-Western states too. She did make it clear that other plans are still on-going to sensitising people of the hazards they are prone to if they fail to clean their environment.                                                                                                                    


MEN AND WOMEN AT WORK

Mr Olasupo Abideen- the celebrant, saw the service to humanity as the gift to people on his birthday. What do we know birthdays for? To you, might be a day of partying and celebration but to the CEO of Brain Builders it was a day to give back to the people what they have given to him. He didn’t fail to paint it clear that one is incomplete without service to humanity which he is striving in his best capacity and capability to achieve.


THE PREMISES AT THE COMPLETION OF THE EXERCISE


In a drive to make others happy just the way he was too on his birthday, he visited an orphanage home- Hope orphanage and donated scintillating things to them which includes: Biscuits, Cartoons of Indomie and Caprisonne drinks.



CEO, BRAINBUILDERS  INT'L SIGNING THE LOG-BOOK AT THE ORPHANAGE


BRAIN BUILDERS INTERNATIONAL WITH THE ORPHANS


FELLOW HUMANITARIANS WITH BRAIN BUILDERS INT'L.


TONY JOY, CEO WEARE MAD INITIATIVE

Martin Luther King Jnr answered the call to humanity and did his part, same has the Rolihlaha of South Africa- Mandela. Olasupo Abideen and others are out there weathering the storm of everything to help humanity. What are you doing to help people? What is to be said of you when you are no more? If you think about those questions you will agree with me that the essence of us been human is in the service to humanity.

Wednesday, 21 October 2015

UNILORIN ROAD-WALK CAMPAIGN 2015; an historical event

As part of the preparation towards her 40th anniversary and 31st convocation ceremony,  the University of Ilorin, involves the members of her community in a road walk exercise. The exercise which is a PR campaign aims at informing and keeping the members of the public abreast of the University ' s forthcoming events. The campaign which happens to be the first of its kind in the University sees dignitaries among members of staff and students participating. Look below for more pictures




Monday, 19 October 2015

STRAIGHT FROM THE INK OF A POET- MUBARAK OLADOSU




 i am word


This stream is ablaze with flow of thoughts; 
Thoughts that ferocious feelings   
Across my Rubicon.
Like Caesar,
I ferry these burning memories and dreams
Of belligerent moments,
Besieged missions and hopeful visions.
O Blissful dream that I have, here, come true!
Come alive across my Rubicon, 
For these thoughts, I summon you 
In the name of the only one.


You the sole teacher of truth;
As I captain my maiden voyage 
And I swing mu first spar, 
Whisper the right words
That my pen may not misspeak 
And my mission may not be unmade.


I am smith of words in reclining scabbards;
I, the son of word,
The blade of the untested swords
That spills not but words;
I unsheathe my ink-flow   
To ferry my thought-flow.  

     

I am no Socrates
So friends, force no hemlock down my thirsty throat,
For I am at peace with foes.
I may roam like Rumi
But I am no Hallaj;               
So crucify me not
For these ejaculations.


I am no Wole
And not surrounded by his ancestral wizards:             
But I am me and me.            
Word,
Son of word;
Here, I hand you the ashes 
Of my sea set ablaze.
Tonight,
The sun of inspiration kisses my frozen seas
And this first night, it sets my feelings free.  




....an excerpt from the book 'MIND MANTRA' by OLADOSU MUBARAK... 
     Oladosu Mubarak writes for and broadcasts at the UNILORIN BULLETIN and UNILORIN FM respectively


call: 07034426998, tweet @mubarakng


MO'CHEDDA TURNS 25

Nigerian singer Mo'Chedda turned 25 yesterday 16th October. She celebrated her 25th birthday with a small dinner hosted by her boyfriend, Bukunyi Olateru-Olagbegi along with family and close friends. See more photos below...



Sunday, 18 October 2015

"WE STAND ON THE SHOULDERS OF GIANTS"- CHUDE JIDEONWO

The inaugural edition of the Red Summit which took place in Lagos this week hosted by Red Media Africa analyzed and promoted yesterday and today’s media in Nigeria. With high profile speakers from different facets of media, it was a successful event. To close, the Red Gala was an interesting celebration of 10 years of Red Media’s impact as well as media industry i by nfluencers and veterans. The event included the official launch of the West Africa Media Industry Report.

Founding partner of Red Media Africa,Chude Jideonwo delivered this speech – celebrating media legends at The Red Summit Gala last night.

Launching the West Africa Media Industry Report at the 2015 Red Summit Gala....
.


I speak often about culture. It is my favourite topic. I speak often, and passionately about the cultures that define our nation, and how many of those behaviours appear to be at the root of our national decline.

By this I don’t mean who we are more than I mean what well have become: the attitudes, prejudice, stereotypes and behaviours we have learnt as we have tried to survive corruption, military dictatorship and several civil and other wars.

One of those cultural anoles is the arrogant dismissal of the past. It has never ceased to amaze how every time someone wants to do something new in Nigeria, they start by dismissing what everyone else there has done before they. You hear ‘Oh, TV was rubbish! Oh radio was bad! Gosh, what have our advertisers been doing?”

There is also the epidemic of people – especially younger people – declaring that ‘XYZ has never been done before’, or ‘this is the first time this is being done in Nigeria’ or ‘I am finally going to do this right.”

I grew up hearing this from peers, but years after it hasn’t ceased to shocked me. This pervasive sense of disdain, of disrespect can only come from the collapse of perspective and the absence of history as an imperative.

And that is why Nigeria is stuck in a vicious cycle in many areas – without the benefit of history, of institutional memory, of learning what we did well and what we did not, of not knowing where the rain began to beat us, how can we know how to do better, what to stand on, where to begin to build? If we do not know where we are coming from, how on earth can we know where we are going to?

Surely the same gaps in knowledge that make young musicians feel that they are first to reach massive international audiences, and deal massive global collaborations in a country where everyone from King Sunny Ade to Majek Fashek to, of course Fela Anikulapo-Kuti have been there, done that, have the t-shirt, threw it away, bought a new one and then rocked it for years. We have a history so rich by success, by victory, by massive accomplishment in the media and creative industries.

That’s not just something I say, that’s the philosophy that underlines our work – a deep humility and abiding appreciation for the history of our country, for the leaders who worked under extremely difficult circumstances, at a time when very few people understood the media, at a time when it was yet emerging, to build this industry that we have now.

But then maybe it’s because many of us in RED grew up on ‘I am Prince Jide Sokoya, the only son of the soil and by the grace of God, the youngest millionaire in the whole universe’, on Nigerian content, and therefore we have an understanding of what makes it special, of why what our forebears did was special.

Up until this moment, I remember I felt in the public relations activation of Onyeka Onwenu and King Sunny Ade preaching the message of birth control, I remember how perplexed my young mind was that every show on TV had on its credits Peter Igho and Grace Egbagbe, I grew up interesting in knowing how my former boss Levi Ajuonuma did that magic where he spoke to the camera and everyone watching felt he was talking to you directly.

I think of the genius of the Bagco Super Sack ad and how viral it went before many of us knew what viral meant, or the forever standard that the ‘MKO is our man’ ad from Rosabel set those 22 years ago. I grew up in awe of these creators.

And I see all of them here today, and my heart swells with pride, with excitement, with joy, with love, with reverence, with awe.

We are truly standing, this generation, on the shoulders of giants.

You, our mentors and forbears, icons and legends, across television, radio, print, public relations, advertising, are those giants.

For sure, older people bear some culpability for the Nigeria that we have today, but you won’t find many of those ones in this room today.

You are a different breed, truly worth celebrating. You inspired this young boy in Ijeshatedo who grew up on the columns of Helen Ovbiagele and Mike Awoyinka, and watched Frank Olize every Sunday night. Who looked longingly at Insight when he was in Secondary School and wanted to join that company as soon as he was out. You inspired a generation.

You made it possible for us to dream, you made it possible for us to imagine as far as our passions could take us, you took the path less travelled at a time when your peers chose the usual and the convention – banks, politics, oil. You created something truly special.

You know, in a country where most awards are given to politicians, to billionaires, to corporate fat cats, and to anyone who can pay money for it, some of our honourees here were shocked when call we called them: “Why are you doing this?”

The underlying question obviously was: In Nigeria, why would anyone do something so obviously not for financial gain?

The answer is simple, and this is the simple answer truly: it is a decision of the heart and not of the head, driven by gratitude rather than balance sheets. Our hearts wanted to do this. Our souls wanted to do this. Our very beings wanted to do this.

We wanted to say thank you. For courage, for chutzpah, for character, for creativity, for depth. Thank you for passion, for ambition, for purpose.

So tonight, we thank you. Red Media Africa thanks you. Nigeria thanks you. I thank you.

. .

Saturday, 17 October 2015

FROM THE DESK OF TIJANI SHERIFFDEEN OPEYEMI, V





DO POLITICAL WOMEN MAKE THE BEST OF MOTHERS?


With the events of things, I was forced to take my pen to write something on this mind perturbing issue. In recent time, women have been seen to be wanting in unethical acts mostly corruption and indiscipline.  I then find it hard to understand why role models should be the steering to social vices in our society. Or don’t you see women as role models?
In my quest to find a reasonable and justifiable answer to this momentous question, I sought to use the social media to pass the question across to intellectual minds to hear what they have to say on this critical topic. Comments were fighting their way into my notification box onFacebookjust the way my android phone was buzzing of messages on whatsapp and other social media, everybody had something to say, am sure you have something to say too, but before then, let’s see what some quick-witters had to say.
Koyum Kolade Afolabi- a chemical engineering student of the better by far university (university of Ilorin) said in his opinion that, political women don’t make good mothers not to talk of “best” as used in the topic. He argued that women are not like men that can take care of too many things at a time and as such, it would be difficult for them combining two herculean tasks. He stressed his point saying, if you see a good family and you want to give credit to anyone at all, the mother is next to none on who you should give it to, and for a family to be upright, the mother has to sacrifice her time. He frankly said he doesn’t think a political mother can give all the necessary education to her children.
And when I got that submission, I was blown off, only to get a counter message from another student of the University of Ilorin, Ashir Faridah, who said in her words that a political woman can make the best of mothers, even something better than the best. I wonder if we have anything better than the best. She said it’s all about finding time. She accented that she just doesn’t have to mix business with family, if she isn’t a good mother then believe me she isn’t cut out to be one was her concluding sentence.
On whose side do we fall? Are you confused too? You needn’t be. Maybe this would convince you. An astute writer and jack of all trade-Rufai Ajibola commented outstandingly. He said statistics has never gone a single way to favour two different hypotheses unless problems are encountered in the sampling. In his own words “first of all, I would be keen to find out if we have arrived at the consensual meaning of ‘best of mothers’ and who exactly does the subject refer to as the ‘women in politics?’ Are we looking at ilks of female political heavyweights (Oyewole, 2015) like Gbemisola Saraki in Ilorin, the Aisha Alhassan of Taraba or late Simbiat Atinuke Abiola in Ogun state? There are also the female political kingmakers cum appointees: the Stella Oduah, Remi Tinubu, Alison Madueke, the Okonjos, Bolajoko Kadiri, Bola Shagaya and the rest from the non-exhaustible list. I’ll also mention the female ‘Bole-kaja’ touts, or female political crowd who can be hired for a few thousand naira to attend rallies, mount road blocks, and hawk tailored placards. So, if we want to critique if this are the best or worst of mothers, the fair thing to do is just to ask their children!
Are the children in the best position to answer the logical question? Are you in supportof what the scholar highlighted? Interestingly, a young boy looked at the topic from another perspective, and here is what he said. Political women don’t get enough time for their children; he argued that they are likely to set more bad examples for their children since politics has got a stinky downside. And finally he said the children or kids as the case maybe, run a high risk to their safety by virtue of the status of their parents, since political opponents may want to attack the children. Do you think Muhydeen Tiamiyu who happens to be a Jambite has seen it from the right angle?
At Lagos junction, Maryam Yusuf of the University of Lagos also had something reasonable to say. She said you don’t give what you don’t have, for a woman to say she wants to actively partake in politics that means she must be there for her immediate family. She further stressed that the post of motherhood is one big post that one without leadership aptitude can’t succeed with. And as such you having that makes you qualified to rule brilliantly over others.
The scope of discuss wasn’t limited to the western educationist alone, an Arabic scholar of the Madrasahtu Talim of Ibadan contributed too. He brilliantly said politics is just a professional game in which any one could venture into irrespective of their sex. The Arabic scholar said we shouldn’t turn women into weaker vessels, they should be allowed to venture into any career they feel like, including politics in discuss. He strengthened his point saying they being good mothers doesn’t depend on their job but their own individual quality, which may include how they cherish their children and other relatives. He believes Nigeria’s politics isn’t a clean one, but hestill highlights the fact that we have bad mothers who are not even politicians.
Hmm! I guess you just said that, I did too when I read the unending comments sent by eggheads. Those I highlighted above are just a few of the replies I got, people really had convincing points. You must be eager to know which side I fall into, what class I support and points I sincerely don’t agree to. I was moved to seeking people’s opinion on this issue because in recent time, some women have been painting motherhood colours, they have been remodelling good attitudes and characters with unethical attitudes they pose. See what’shappening in our society today, you hear of women laundering country’s fund, involving in bribery, indiscipline turning their second nature among many other vices that roughen the good painting of motherhood. If one would be found in acts like this should it be a mother or a woman as the case may be?
Exclusively, this piece is for people’s opinion and for you also to decide on which side to fall to. To be abreast of my own opinion on this critical issue is to wait patiently for the second part of this interesting topic!
Your comments are welcome; you can always reach me at 07033254385 or mail me at s_opeyemi42@yahoo.com. From the desk of Tijani Sheriffdeen (docshe), a student of the better by far university- Unilorin.
TIJANI, sheriffdeen opeyemi.

 

Thursday, 15 October 2015

WHEN PEOPLE RIGHT YOU OFF, GET RIGHT IN...-ali baba

The comedian shared a few minutes ago on his
instagram page. Read below:
In life,there are many reasons some people will
hate you. There are many reasons some will run
you down. Some will say all sorts to make
themselves feel important. Or get out of a tight
corner. Some do it just to be happy. The people
that you should beware of are those who say
things and in spite of how wrong what they said
are, still try to tell you they did not mean it. Or
didn't mean what they said "that way". There are
those who make you feel comfortable and just
when you are settling into the besto zone, stab
you in the back. I have heard all sorts in my
short life time. One time, an event planner
wanted me to be Mc of an event and wanted to
get a female co-mc, so I suggested 2 names.
One of the ladies I suggested, told the lady she
should get another Mc that she could work with.
Why? The event pLanner asked. Ali is old, get a
younger Mc. As fate would have it I still worked
with her.
During the event, as I wrote notes for her, to
introduce several segments of the show and how
to bring on different dignitaries, the event
planner will come backstage and smile. She
came in backstage once, while my co-mc was on
stage, using an intro I gave her and said, "Ali you
are rare. Someone just commented on how
awesome the introduction ********* (co-mc's
name) gave the last speaker was. I nearly told
him you wrote it. Especially after what she said
when I was trying to book her." Not necessary, I
replied. When people write you off, get right in.
Some two years ago, someone said Ali Baba's
time has passed, I did a straight 6 hours of stand
up comedy. All of my original stuff. Many of the
comedians who were at the show, have since
boosted their jokes arsenal with some of the
materials used in that epic performance. And
since that 6 hours, many comedians have
received free jokes as often as we meet. My
producer @officialbunmidavies told me jokingly
that if the 6hr video is made public, many people
will see the source of some great jokes. But as
Zakilooooo will say Judas no stop Jesus. It's
allowed. People who don't see you in economy
class are unaware you are lounging in First
class... Even when you are on the same flight.
(thanks @mi_abaga) Who the cap fits...


AFRICAN MUSIC STARS SET FOR THE AFROREPUBLIK FEST IN LONDON

The Afrorepublik Festival in London, which is being organized by Wizkid and his team, is just a few days away and the major acts are all tro...