Monday, 16 September 2019
Actress Janet Thompson
Janet Thompson is a Nigerian Actress. Commonly known as Jenny Tee, she stands as one of the most, if not the most, controversial actresses in Nigeria. Both in her movies and real life, she is ever surrounded by all types of critics. She first came to limelight when she featured in the movie, sweet cassava, where she played a possessed a village maiden. Ever since, she has attracted multiple movie producers and evidently, has appeared in many movies.
Janet Thompson Biography
The actress was born on September 23, 1997, in Akwa ibom, to Mr and Mrs ibanga Thompson. Originally hails from Etinan akwa ibom state, Janet Thompson grew up in a family of six children. As the second child, she has three sisters and three younger brothers.
Education
Janet Thompson has mass communication(B.A) undergraduate.
Movie Career
Janet Thompson’s first movie was ‘sweet cassava,’ a role she auditioned for shortly after her B.A. Her excellent performance in the movie launched her into stardom and paved ways for a successful career in Nollywood.
Janet Thompson subsequently featured in other movies such as sweet cassava(2018), The saviour(2018), wayo no be thief(2018), and later took home an award for Best Supporting Actress of the year.
Over the years, the flamboyant actress has featured in movies. Her brilliant ability to act any role has made her the most favourite among fans and a well-sorted actress.
Achievements and Awards
With her hard work in acting, she has earned a number of awards. Aside from several nominations.
Friday, 13 September 2019
ENTANGLED.....New online series project coming soon
#pitch
A considerable amount of people out there believe that love has no chance of surviving without money fueling it- Well, not the kind of love that exists between Kweku and Angela( the lead characters in the series)
The story (primarily but not exclusively) follows the romantic lives of the unbreakable,highly dramatic and humorous couple with matching behavioral charcteristics which makes them perfect for each other.
Circumstances and unscrupulous individuals constantly threatens to push them apart but the gravitational pull of unconditional love and affection brings them back together. Sometimes their actions too causes some tension between them, but they still find their way back together.
Angela wants to pursue a career in modeling, so she exudes a great amount of shrewdness when kweku is not there to ruin it with his unrealistic ideologies and aspirations, and that keeps them going back and forth with limited progress.
The overall vision for the series is to address the day to day issues encountered by the youths of today's generation. Every character in the series will be designed to tackle a familiar subject that burdens our youths of today. It is going to be relatable and educative amidst a good dose of comedy.
Online comedy series coming soon.
Please just subscribe to this YouTube channel 👇
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrMXsozsZwdbEgj9UZZJlkA
And be ready for #ENTANGLED... An ONLINE series .....😍😍😍😍
ANTICIPATE.
A considerable amount of people out there believe that love has no chance of surviving without money fueling it- Well, not the kind of love that exists between Kweku and Angela( the lead characters in the series)
The story (primarily but not exclusively) follows the romantic lives of the unbreakable,highly dramatic and humorous couple with matching behavioral charcteristics which makes them perfect for each other.
Circumstances and unscrupulous individuals constantly threatens to push them apart but the gravitational pull of unconditional love and affection brings them back together. Sometimes their actions too causes some tension between them, but they still find their way back together.
Angela wants to pursue a career in modeling, so she exudes a great amount of shrewdness when kweku is not there to ruin it with his unrealistic ideologies and aspirations, and that keeps them going back and forth with limited progress.
The overall vision for the series is to address the day to day issues encountered by the youths of today's generation. Every character in the series will be designed to tackle a familiar subject that burdens our youths of today. It is going to be relatable and educative amidst a good dose of comedy.
Online comedy series coming soon.
Please just subscribe to this YouTube channel 👇
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrMXsozsZwdbEgj9UZZJlkA
And be ready for #ENTANGLED... An ONLINE series .....😍😍😍😍
ANTICIPATE.
Friday, 6 September 2019
Senator ifeanyi ubah faces ...........
SENATOR IFEANYI UBAH THANKS FRIENDS AND WELL WISHERS FOR BIRTHDAY EULOGIES, CONDEMNS GRUESOME KILLINGS OF NIGERIANS IN SOUTH AFRICA.
I wish to thank my family, friends and well wishers for making my birthday the most special and making me recognize how important my existence is. Your wishes were all that was needed to make my birthday much more special.
I cannot thank you all enough for the unforgettable moments that each one of you made me witness, it gives me great pleasure to know that my personal relationship with people have added inestimable value to our lives, the scintillating memories created by virtue of pictures and “one on one” moments shared with different individuals makes me want to get closer to many more people as possible. “Thank you’ is too short for me to express my gratitude to you all for making my birthday such an eventful day.
To my political structures; Ifeanyi Ubah Solidarity Movement (IUSM), Afa Igbo Efuna and others, the outreach gestures which you all embarked on my behalf to various hospitals, prisons and orphanage homes did not only make my celebration unique but an outstanding event that I will cherish throughout the year and even beyond.
However, regardless of the celebration, my attention has been unavoidably drawn to the recent spate of mindless xenophobic attacks on Nigerians, the majority of which are my constituents from Anambra South Senatorial District. These baseless and senseless attacks which destroy the very fabric of our unity as Africans are highly deplorable and condemnable, to say the least.
South Africa seems to have forgotten so soon. Memories of their not too distant past appears to have eroded them. A country that Nigeria fought so hard, alongside other African countries to liberate from the apartheid regime have become the thorn in the flesh of fellow Africans, maiming and killing at will. Nelson Mandela would be weeping in his grave.
Nigeria and Nigerians are known to be very accommodating people. Some of the biggest businesses in Nigeria are owned by South Africans as well as nationals of other countries. Yet, we endeavor to always live in peace while being our brother’s keeper as we believe that economic migrants are contributors to the growth of our economy.
It is pertinent to state at this juncture that the South African Government have been complicit in this matter as no stern and firm step has been taken to stem the ugly trend till date. What is more disturbing is the fact that some elements of government have subtly called for the continuation of these attacks by failing to condemn them unreservedly. If a South African deputy commissioner of Police could make such an undemocratic and inciting statement and nothing was done to him, then our citizens and other Africans in South Africa are in grave danger.
Enough is enough! The killing of Nigerians and destruction of property and businesses belonging to Nigerians in South Africa must stop immediately as we cannot continue to sit back and watch men and women from my constituency and Nigeria in general being killed, leaving their families and businesses in unquantifiable ruins.
South Africans are by this statement hereby urged to cease and desist from carrying out further attacks on Nigerians. Failure to adhere to this advice would be met with stiff resistance which would certainly lead to robust reprisal measures of equal magnitude. While we have always been an advocate for peace as peace-loving people, we as Nigerians refuse to be taken for granted.
Africa is ours, we must therefore come together as one and build for ourselves a continent with love as a pillar of our existence.
A word is enough for the wise!
May God continually bless you all and crown our endeavours with resounding success.
Senator (Dr.) Patrick Ifeanyi Ubah;
Anambra South Senatorial District.
I wish to thank my family, friends and well wishers for making my birthday the most special and making me recognize how important my existence is. Your wishes were all that was needed to make my birthday much more special.
I cannot thank you all enough for the unforgettable moments that each one of you made me witness, it gives me great pleasure to know that my personal relationship with people have added inestimable value to our lives, the scintillating memories created by virtue of pictures and “one on one” moments shared with different individuals makes me want to get closer to many more people as possible. “Thank you’ is too short for me to express my gratitude to you all for making my birthday such an eventful day.
To my political structures; Ifeanyi Ubah Solidarity Movement (IUSM), Afa Igbo Efuna and others, the outreach gestures which you all embarked on my behalf to various hospitals, prisons and orphanage homes did not only make my celebration unique but an outstanding event that I will cherish throughout the year and even beyond.
However, regardless of the celebration, my attention has been unavoidably drawn to the recent spate of mindless xenophobic attacks on Nigerians, the majority of which are my constituents from Anambra South Senatorial District. These baseless and senseless attacks which destroy the very fabric of our unity as Africans are highly deplorable and condemnable, to say the least.
South Africa seems to have forgotten so soon. Memories of their not too distant past appears to have eroded them. A country that Nigeria fought so hard, alongside other African countries to liberate from the apartheid regime have become the thorn in the flesh of fellow Africans, maiming and killing at will. Nelson Mandela would be weeping in his grave.
Nigeria and Nigerians are known to be very accommodating people. Some of the biggest businesses in Nigeria are owned by South Africans as well as nationals of other countries. Yet, we endeavor to always live in peace while being our brother’s keeper as we believe that economic migrants are contributors to the growth of our economy.
It is pertinent to state at this juncture that the South African Government have been complicit in this matter as no stern and firm step has been taken to stem the ugly trend till date. What is more disturbing is the fact that some elements of government have subtly called for the continuation of these attacks by failing to condemn them unreservedly. If a South African deputy commissioner of Police could make such an undemocratic and inciting statement and nothing was done to him, then our citizens and other Africans in South Africa are in grave danger.
Enough is enough! The killing of Nigerians and destruction of property and businesses belonging to Nigerians in South Africa must stop immediately as we cannot continue to sit back and watch men and women from my constituency and Nigeria in general being killed, leaving their families and businesses in unquantifiable ruins.
South Africans are by this statement hereby urged to cease and desist from carrying out further attacks on Nigerians. Failure to adhere to this advice would be met with stiff resistance which would certainly lead to robust reprisal measures of equal magnitude. While we have always been an advocate for peace as peace-loving people, we as Nigerians refuse to be taken for granted.
Africa is ours, we must therefore come together as one and build for ourselves a continent with love as a pillar of our existence.
A word is enough for the wise!
May God continually bless you all and crown our endeavours with resounding success.
Senator (Dr.) Patrick Ifeanyi Ubah;
Anambra South Senatorial District.
Thursday, 5 September 2019
Monday, 2 September 2019
Nollywood gist with actress Grace kubiat
From million-dollar budgets to Netflix partnerships, Nigeria’s film industry, Nollywood, has burgeoned in the past decade. Nollywood films have dominated international film festivals, making the industry a creative force to be reckoned with.
But with more movies being made abroad, funded by foreign investors or directed by Africans in the diaspora, it’s no wonder there’s a growing debate in and outside the industry on what exactly counts as a Nollywood movie today?
“It’s not a term that’s as simply defined,” said 31-year-old Nigerian-American filmmaker Faraday Okoro. “One person’s criteria may be different from the next.”
Okoro is the writer and director of the heist thriller Nigerian Prince, the first movie to win the AT&T/Tribeca “Untold Stories” initiative, an inclusive film program run by AT&T and the Tribeca Film Institute that helps diverse filmmakers and awards $1 million in funding to the winning script.
Nigerian Prince with its diasporan lens and plot about the notorious 419 phenomena, particularly the popular email scam that targets Westerners, represents an emerging crop of movies that are expanding the scope and definition of the Nollywood film. For Okoro, the movie, like him, has a dual citizenship as despite its foreign funding, Nigerian Prince was set mainly in Lagos with a majority Nollywood cast—except for its leading stars, the African-American Antonio Bell who plays a Nigerian-American, Eze, and the Nigerian-American, Chinaza Uche.
In the past, the term Nollywood did not just refer to a direct-to-video filmmaking industry but also the guerilla filmmaking process where movies were made with any and all tools available. Nollywood has since matured into the tiered million-dollar industry it is today featuring both the low-budget movies that paved the way for its success and high-budget ones, made locally and abroad, that signal its future.
And that future is looking increasingly bright owing to the growth of Nollywood’s two sizable markets: Africans on the continent and Africans in the diaspora—with the latter wielding more economic power than the former on a per capita basis, especially as more Africans migrate to the West. The diaspora’s financial clout is evident in their high remittances back to the continent , estimated at $37.8 billion in 2017. And the rising appetite among Africans back home can be seen in investments in movie theatres and calls for more.
Nollywood was built on the idea of Nigerians telling Nigerian stories for Nigerians, and that broadened to storytelling by Africans for Africans as Nollywood collaborated with and recruited talent from other parts of the continent. As such—through its filmmaking process and range of stories—the industry has long reflected the lived experiences of its audience thus necessitating its wider definition today.
One particular trait that is endemic to the industry is the Nigerian entrepreneurial spirit and that is seen in the evolution of distribution channels from the inexpensive VHS tapes and players to movies on low grade video-CDs and now to streaming platforms such as iROKOtv, SceneOneTV, Netflix and YouTube; all of which allow Africans in the diaspora with better internet connectivity to access them.
For this fast-adapting industry, evolution is also about responding to the demands and realities of globalization as the industry sets its distribution sights beyond the West, seizing opportunities wherever they rise. China-based Pay-TV operator StarTimes, for instance, is working with movie distributors in China to export Nollywood content to the Chinese market.
“Nollywood isn’t looking into getting into Hollywood. They’re more interested in their work getting beyond the shores of Nigeria…and to get some monies back for the industry,” explains Shaibu Husseini, a Nigerian Nollywood film critic and jury member of the African Movie Academy Awards.
Contrary to other film critics who see the emergence of high-quality cinema from Nigeria as a deviation from an old “stigmatized” Nollywood or the rise of a “new Nollywood,” Husseini asserts it is simply an inevitable evolution with the times as the idea of Nollywood grows into an umbrella term for films produced by Nigerians.
Husseini says an entirely Nollywood film is a movie by a Nigeria-based filmmaker, produced and shot on the continent with a relatable narrative, predominantly Nigerian cast and local/industry-driven funding.
Nonetheless, films like Nigerian Prince by diaspora-based Nigerians will still get due recognition back home. Africa-based awards like AMAA have special categories for diaspora films and storytellers. This addresses any concerns from domestic filmmakers regarding competing with non-local players in the industry on an uneven playing field.
But with more movies being made abroad, funded by foreign investors or directed by Africans in the diaspora, it’s no wonder there’s a growing debate in and outside the industry on what exactly counts as a Nollywood movie today?
“It’s not a term that’s as simply defined,” said 31-year-old Nigerian-American filmmaker Faraday Okoro. “One person’s criteria may be different from the next.”
Okoro is the writer and director of the heist thriller Nigerian Prince, the first movie to win the AT&T/Tribeca “Untold Stories” initiative, an inclusive film program run by AT&T and the Tribeca Film Institute that helps diverse filmmakers and awards $1 million in funding to the winning script.
Nigerian Prince with its diasporan lens and plot about the notorious 419 phenomena, particularly the popular email scam that targets Westerners, represents an emerging crop of movies that are expanding the scope and definition of the Nollywood film. For Okoro, the movie, like him, has a dual citizenship as despite its foreign funding, Nigerian Prince was set mainly in Lagos with a majority Nollywood cast—except for its leading stars, the African-American Antonio Bell who plays a Nigerian-American, Eze, and the Nigerian-American, Chinaza Uche.
In the past, the term Nollywood did not just refer to a direct-to-video filmmaking industry but also the guerilla filmmaking process where movies were made with any and all tools available. Nollywood has since matured into the tiered million-dollar industry it is today featuring both the low-budget movies that paved the way for its success and high-budget ones, made locally and abroad, that signal its future.
And that future is looking increasingly bright owing to the growth of Nollywood’s two sizable markets: Africans on the continent and Africans in the diaspora—with the latter wielding more economic power than the former on a per capita basis, especially as more Africans migrate to the West. The diaspora’s financial clout is evident in their high remittances back to the continent , estimated at $37.8 billion in 2017. And the rising appetite among Africans back home can be seen in investments in movie theatres and calls for more.
Nollywood was built on the idea of Nigerians telling Nigerian stories for Nigerians, and that broadened to storytelling by Africans for Africans as Nollywood collaborated with and recruited talent from other parts of the continent. As such—through its filmmaking process and range of stories—the industry has long reflected the lived experiences of its audience thus necessitating its wider definition today.
One particular trait that is endemic to the industry is the Nigerian entrepreneurial spirit and that is seen in the evolution of distribution channels from the inexpensive VHS tapes and players to movies on low grade video-CDs and now to streaming platforms such as iROKOtv, SceneOneTV, Netflix and YouTube; all of which allow Africans in the diaspora with better internet connectivity to access them.
For this fast-adapting industry, evolution is also about responding to the demands and realities of globalization as the industry sets its distribution sights beyond the West, seizing opportunities wherever they rise. China-based Pay-TV operator StarTimes, for instance, is working with movie distributors in China to export Nollywood content to the Chinese market.
“Nollywood isn’t looking into getting into Hollywood. They’re more interested in their work getting beyond the shores of Nigeria…and to get some monies back for the industry,” explains Shaibu Husseini, a Nigerian Nollywood film critic and jury member of the African Movie Academy Awards.
Contrary to other film critics who see the emergence of high-quality cinema from Nigeria as a deviation from an old “stigmatized” Nollywood or the rise of a “new Nollywood,” Husseini asserts it is simply an inevitable evolution with the times as the idea of Nollywood grows into an umbrella term for films produced by Nigerians.
Husseini says an entirely Nollywood film is a movie by a Nigeria-based filmmaker, produced and shot on the continent with a relatable narrative, predominantly Nigerian cast and local/industry-driven funding.
Nonetheless, films like Nigerian Prince by diaspora-based Nigerians will still get due recognition back home. Africa-based awards like AMAA have special categories for diaspora films and storytellers. This addresses any concerns from domestic filmmakers regarding competing with non-local players in the industry on an uneven playing field.
Hon. Chief chukwuma umeoji
Following the menace of shoreline erosion in some parts of Aguata...
the Member Representating the good people of Aguata Federal Constituency Rt. Hon. Chief Chukwuma Umeoji (Oba Aguata) accompanied by the local Chairman of Aguata Hon. Eche Ezeibe on a fact finding Inspection of some parts of Umeze Village Uga in Aguata local Government Area devastated by erosion.
Oba Aguata lamented that the erosion menace
has adversely affected the agricultural and socio-economic lives of the people of Uga but stated if nothing is done urgently, the existence of people living there might become history in no distant time.
The Honourable Lawmaker regretted that farmlands, many houses has been destroyed by erosion but promised to draw the attention of the Federal Government.
Oba Aguata promised that both technical assistance and expertise will be put in place in no distant time to remove fear on the life of people as a result of the negative impact already caused by the erosion menace on their lives.
the Member Representating the good people of Aguata Federal Constituency Rt. Hon. Chief Chukwuma Umeoji (Oba Aguata) accompanied by the local Chairman of Aguata Hon. Eche Ezeibe on a fact finding Inspection of some parts of Umeze Village Uga in Aguata local Government Area devastated by erosion.
Oba Aguata lamented that the erosion menace
has adversely affected the agricultural and socio-economic lives of the people of Uga but stated if nothing is done urgently, the existence of people living there might become history in no distant time.
The Honourable Lawmaker regretted that farmlands, many houses has been destroyed by erosion but promised to draw the attention of the Federal Government.
Oba Aguata promised that both technical assistance and expertise will be put in place in no distant time to remove fear on the life of people as a result of the negative impact already caused by the erosion menace on their lives.
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