Tory Lanez charged for shooting Megan thee Stallion.

The Los Angeles country district attorney’s office just announced that, Tory Lanez has been charged for shooting Megan Thee Stallion.

He is facing one felony count each of assault with a semiautomatic firearm, personal use of a firearm and carrying an unregistered loaded firearm in a vehicle.

Tory Lanez is due in court next week and if found guilty, he is likely to be sentenced for 22years.

Davido announces his first Fintech partnership.

Davido has just announced the completion of a project he has been working on. He made the announcement through his social media accounts.

“Been working on this for a while! Glad to finally announce My first Fintech partnership . This one means so much to me! Our very own cure for all your transfer and payment issues.”

Falz , Tiwa Savage, Runtown and many others join the “End Sars” protest today.

Falz, Tiwa Savage, Runtown, DJ spinall, Toke Makinwa amongst others, joined the “END SARS” protest today. The protest which started off yesterday even got more serious today.

Many youths were seen on the streets of major areas in Lagos and other parts of Nigeria making their grievances known.

Below is the video of a policeman trying to scare some of the protesters.

A popular musician , Olamide made a statement on Twitter disclosing how much it pains him not to be in Nigeria at the moment.

Below are also video links of Tiwa Savage and DJ Spinall supporting millions of Nigerian youths to protest.

https://www.instagram.com/tv/CGFLfdxIZNL/?igshid=q7epvvy7acd2

https://www.instagram.com/p/CGFPD3UAsiC/?igshid=mhx686e8tpvm

Shafy Bello-Akinrimisi (Shafy Bello) Celebrates 50th Birthday in Grand Style

Shafy Bello, a veteran Nigerian film actress and singer who is known for her poise and sophistication in movies clocks 50 years today.

The mother of two has shared some lovely pictures to celebrate her birthday.

Here is what she wrote on her Instagram page:

ITS ALL HERE…..Right where I am. The blessings, peace, abundance of joy. Right at the top….the 5th floor and beyond. I SEE IT. I RECEIVE IT. IT HAS BEEN HANDED TO ME. GLORY TO GOD”

We wish her a smashing celebration.

Chacha Eke Faani speaks about domestic violence in her marriage.

Some days ago, I can be recalled that a video of Nollywood actress, Chacha Eke, went viral on social media. In the video, she made a statement which made her fans really worried. She said, “I’m done with the marriage.” She has been married to her husband ,”Austin Faani “, for seven years and they have three children together.

Recently, she took to her instagram page again claiming that her earlier statement had nothing to do with domestic violence. She further said,

“I’m bipolar” .

Watch the video below to know all she said.

Nollywood actress, Laide Bakare celebrates her birthday.

Nollywood actress, Laide Bakare took to her Instagram page to celebrate her birthday. The well known actress and mother shared beautiful pictures of herself .

She stated the following;

“Have you heard that today is a very important holiday? This is not a joke, this is my birthday and I want to celebrate it on a ground scale, so be ready my friends we gonna party so hard”

Below is the video showing clips from her photo shoot session.

Lil Frosh contract terminated, DMW reveals.

Following the accusation of domestic violence by Lil Frosh, the newly signed DMW artist, his contract has now been terminated. Davido made this known via his social media accounts.

The statement revealed the following;

This did not come as a surprise , following the outrage of many Nigerians against domestic violence. In this case of domestic violence, the reputation of Davido’s record label needed to be protected. Domestic violence is a very sensitive issue , which should not be taken lightly.

Hushpuppi’s trial suspended due to pandemic

Due to the covid19 pandemic the trial of Ramon Abbas popularly known as Hushpuppi has been suspended.

According to the Chamber orders of Judge Otis Wright released on September 23, the jury trial will continue by 9:00 a.m. on May 4, 2021.

Hushpuppi had pleaded not guilty to the four-count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, money laundering conspiracies, international money laundering and engaging in monetary transactions in property derived from specified unlawful activity.

In June, the 37-year-old Mr Abbas, also known as Hushpuppi, who is known for flaunting his opulent lifestyle on social media, was arrested in Dubai by some special operatives including the Emerati police officers and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) operatives.

If convicted, the Instagram big boy might spend the next 20 years in the U.S federal prison.

BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL

The birth of the Black is Beautiful movement.

How a photographer, a group of models and a fashion show in Harlem kick-started a cultural and political movement that still inspires toda

On 28 January 1962, a large crowd formed outside Purple Manor, a nightclub in the Harlem neighbourhood of New York City. A fashion show was taking place – an event that proved so popular it had to be held for a second time that same night – which sparked a movement that would change the way black people were represented forever.

The show, titled Naturally ’62, was organised by the African Jazz-Art Society & Studios (AJASS), a group of creatives, including photographer Kwame Brathwaite – now aged 82 – and his brother Elombe Brath (who died in 2014). It featured black women who had chosen to move away from Western beauty standards: the models who walked down the catwalk that night wore their afro hair with pride; their clothes were inspired by designs from Lagos, Accra and Nairobi; and their skin was darker and their bodies fuller-figured than the women pictured in fashion magazines, including black publications. “There was lots of controversy because we were protesting how, in Ebony magazine, you couldn’t find an ebony girl,” Brathwaite told Tanisha Ford, the author of Liberated Threads: Black Women, Style, and the Global Politics of Soul in Aperture magazine.

A self-portrait of Kwame Brathwaite, 1964, who was at the vanguard of the Black is Beautiful movement (Credit: Courtesy of the artist and Philip Martin Gallery, LA)

These women were known as the Grandassa Models (taken from the term ‘Grandassaland’, used to refer to Africa by Black Nationalist Carlos Cooks, whose teachings Kwame and his group followed). The fashion show was about more than just appearances however – it kick-started the Black is Beautiful movement that spanned the 1960s and ’70s. And it is now the name of a touring exhibition of Brathwaite’s work, currently on display at Columbia Museum of Art in South Carolina.  

The first Grandassa Models were also followers of Marcus Garvey’s ideology

At the time, Brathwaite was known as the ‘Keeper of Images’. His numerous photographs showed young black people coming of age. “He always had his camera, snapping shots of everything that happened,” Ford tells BBC Culture. “If you’re constantly taking pictures, think about the archival photos you amass by the end of a year, five years or even 10 years.”

This portrait of the photographer’s wife, Sikolo Brathwaite, is displayed at the Black is Beautiful exhibition (Credit: Courtesy of the artist and Philip Martin Gallery, LA)

Throughout the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s, Brathwaite photographed many famous black musicians, including Stevie Wonder and Bob Marley, as well as the Grandassa Models at numerous events. It was these photographs that propelled the movement into the mainstream – and that help us to understand now what was happening then. 

The bigger message

For Brathwaite and his friends, style was always used to relay a bigger message. Those involved in the Black is Beautiful movement wanted black women and men to feel empowered both inside and out, and listened to the teachings of Marcus Garvey. Garvey, whose ideas were kept alive by Cook, was an early-20th Century political activist who advocated black liberation through economic self-reliance. The original eight models who were chosen to be the first Grandassa Models were also followers of his ideology. “They were women in the community. They’d been a part of the African Nationalist Pioneer Movement (ANPM). They were writers, stylists, educators who embraced the ideas of Garveyism from the beginning,” says Brathwaite’s son Kwame Brathwaite Jr, who has been archiving his father’s images for six years.

The Grandassa Models, New York, 1967, photographed by Kwame Brathwaite (Credit: Courtesy of the artist and Philip Martin Gallery, LA)

“It was empowerment. It was about self-sufficiency and supporting your community,” he continues, pointing out that money spent in the black community in the US didn’t stay in it for long. “In the book, there are images where a sign saying ‘buy black’ is in the background. That was part of the lexicon of what they were teaching.” Black was also a progressive term at the time, as ‘coloured’ and ‘negro’ were still widely used to refer to African-Americans.

In 1956, at the age of around 18 or 19, Kwame had formed AJASS with his brother and other graduates from the School of Industrial Art in Manhattan (now the High School of Art and Design) where they both went. The group was a space for jazz enthusiasts to play, share and talk about music. They would often put on shows at Club 845 in the Bronx. And it was after being inspired by a collection of photographs by a member of his group that Kwame decided to start photographing the shows himself, using cameras he borrowed from his uncle. 

The new black vanguard is a global movement of young black photographers – Antwaun Sargent

“Jazz was the African-American music that was formulated back then. It was what hip-hop was to my generation: music of rebellion,” says Kwame Jr. “This was at the beginning of the civil rights movement. And this was as they were starting to discover who they were going to be as individuals.”

The worldwide Black Lives Matter protests after the murders of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and George Floyd in the US inspired Kwame Jr to create a multimedia experience in collaboration with musicians Marcus Gilmore, Nicholas Payton and Marc Bamuthi Joseph, using Brathwaite’s photography. Together with executive producer Brandon Baker, they have created the song “We Will Breathe” to be released this week, turning the commonly used “I can’t breathe” mantra on its head in a bid to empower black people to take back control of the narrative surrounding their lives.

Marcus Garvey Day parade, Harlem, 1967, by Kwame Brathwaite (Credit: Courtesy of the artist and Philip Martin Gallery, LA)

For AJASS, it was Garvey’s teachings that influenced them to also focus on beauty standards. The 17th of August each year is still known as Marcus Garvey Day, and in Harlem at the time, a ‘Miss Natural Standard of Beauty Contest’ was held to commemorate this. While competitors had to wear their hair naturally to take part, members of AJASS noticed that the winners would often return to straightening their hair once the competition was over, because they had to in order to go back to work. As a group, they felt they needed to do something to change the relationship between black people and their hair, which is how the Grandassa Models, who willingly kept their hair natural year round, were formed.

And, as more Naturally events occurred, and the more musicians such as Nina Simone were seen with similar looks, the more afros were normalised. But, it didn’t come without struggle. “Black women who made the choice to be natural in the late ’50s, early ’60s, definitely suffered all kinds of ridicule and rejection,” says Ford, noting that black beauticians would refuse to style afro hair. “A lot of those women had to either go to black men’s barbers or women like Black Rose, who was a member of the Grandassa Models, [and] had to learn how to barber hair on their own.” It wasn’t until the market grew significantly that beauticians began to educate themselves on natural hair and to create related hair products to sell. 

The work of contemporary photographer Adrienne Raquel is featured in the book The New Black Vanguard (Credit: Adrienne Raquel)

Today, black beauty and style is still extensively explored by black photographers, as made clear by the recent book The New Black Vanguardwhich highlights 15 emerging and established contemporary black photographers in fashion who are striving to make the industry more inclusive. “The new black vanguard is a global movement of young black photographers who are working between the spaces of art and fashion to make the images that they want to be seen in the world,” author of the book Antwaun Sargent tells BBC Culture. “One of the defining characteristics is that these photographers don’t necessarily care about the neat genre separations that have dominated the history of photography, and the garments become an opportunity to create and express not only identity, but a positionality.”

New York-based photographer Adrienne Raquel, whose beautiful images feature in the book, agrees, adding that it’s important for black photographers to be the ones taking photos of black people. “I think black photographers photograph other black people with attention and care. We understand each other’s stories, and how people would like to be represented or depicted.” 

And black entrepreneurs also continue to be inspired by the Black is Beautiful movement. Last year, Rihanna cited Kwame as an inspiration for the first collection of her luxury brand Fenty. She marked the occasion by sharing a photograph on Instagram by Brathwaite of the Grandassa Models at the Renaissance Casino Ballroom in Harlem on Garvey Day in 1968, where a ‘buy black’ sign can be seen in the background. “When I was coming up with the concept for this release, we were just digging and digging and we came up with these images – they made me feel they were relevant to what we are doing right now,” Rihanna told Vogue

The touring exhibition Kwame Brathwaite: Black is Beautiful tells the story of the movement (Credit: Courtesy of the artist and Philip Martin Gallery, LA)

Brathwaite’s images have inspired many to see and photograph themselves free from Western expectations. And Kwame Jr believes his father’s work will continue to inspire people, joking that he is of course biased, but that his encounters and the stories he has been told make it hard to think otherwise. “I did a talk at a local high school in LA three years ago, and a woman came up to me and said, ‘I want you to tell your father, thank you, because, I was 12 years old when I heard of him, and up until that point, I never considered myself beautiful

I Spent over N2m to ensure Laycon wins BBNaija and I didn’t get anything in return – CEO of ROYELX Group Laments 

CEO of ROYELX Group, Prince Royelx, has called out winner of Big Brother Naija Lockdown season, Olamilekan ”Laycon” Agbeleshe, expressing disappointment in the reality TV star’s attitude after the show.

The business tycoon said he is disappointed in Laycon for not recognizing everyone who supported him financially, particularly business people who ensured he emerged winner of the reality show.

According to Prince, he spent over N2 million to ensure that Laycon won the show but ever after, no appreciation for that.

He wrote:

“I want to Clear up PEOPLE CALLS AND QUESTIONS ABOUT IF @itslaycon CALLED OR SHOWED ANY APPRECIATIONCATION ON ALL MY HELP AND FINANCIAL SUPPORT I GAVE HIM, WHICH KNOW I SPENT MORE THAN 2million DURING HIS VOTES.. The Truth is that No He have not and I DON’T THINK HE HAVE TIME FOR BUSINESS MEN(NON- CELEBRITY) And as a Business Man, I feel i helped a Young Boy, I fought so Tirelessly for him to win the BBNaija(EVEN WHEN MANY KEEP ASKING ME WHY I CHOOSE TO SUPPORT A YORUBA BOY INSTEAD OF ỊGBỌ, & MY ACCOUNT WAS Shadow Banned many times.. Because of Laycon,AM NOT ANGRY, AM HAPPY, But what surprises me, is the Celebrities he’s called, many of them Never spent 1 Naira on Laycon Votes.. Instead they keep begging for Money from one Big Boy Dm and another.. The come to do show off.. I know of a woman.. Who Carry the Matter for head.. I AM SURE SHE GOT MORE THAN 10 MILLION NAIRA FROM PEOPLE.. But the Airtime she’s Displaying is not up to 100k to 200k..which I knew she kept Millions for herself..

“Now I watch Laycon even had the time to be going around Lagos with other HOUSEMATES He beat in the game.. They are using His Fame to become more Famous same thing with other CELEBRITIES.. Instead of him to BOOK HIS OWN PRIVATE MEDIA SECTION, give them what type of Questions they should ask him and how it should be Aired.. So he will get his Game properly managed and make more eCash in his BANK… Look at Mercy.. That Lady won’t stop getting ENDORSEMENT until next 5 to 9 Years.. Because she keep allyining along with Mostly Business men instead of Clouths chasers THIS IS WHERE I SUPPORTS WHAT @bobrisky222 SAID ABOUT LAYCON MEDIA”

NairaMarley cancels today’s protest.

Following the recent outburst of Nigerian youths on Saturday to end SARS through the social media , it can be recalled that NairaMarley amongst other celebrities promised to lead a protest .

Many youths however anticipated the protest as NairaMarley revealed he would be leading the peaceful protest. As it stands now, Naira Marley has cancelled the protest.

Mercy Eke celebrates 1 year anniversary of leaving the BBN house.

Mercy Eke, the winner of big brother NAIJA season 4 took to her Instagram page to celebrate 1 year anniversary of her big win. Ever since her success of winning BBN season 4, she has been involved in so many deals and businesses. Her achievement so far has been obvious to fans via her social media platforms.

She wrote the following on her Instagram page;

“It has really been a year. A whole 365 days have passed and it feels so surreal. On this day, we changed the narrative.”

Alleged assault: Broadcasters beg Alaafin to strip K1 of Mayegun title

The Freelance and Independent Broadcasters Association of Nigeria has called on the Alaafin of Oyo Oba Lamidi Adeyemi to strip Fuji singer K1 De Ultimate of his title as Mayegun of Yorubaland.

The group made the call on Friday in Abeokuta, Ogun State

They alleged that K1 brutalised an Ogun State-based broadcaster Wole Sorunke alias MC Murphy at the 60th birthday party of the Olu of Itori Oba Abdulfatai Akamo in the Ewekoro Local Government Area of Ogun State.

K1 and Murphy were both invited to the party to perform as musician and compere respectively.

FIBAN President Desmond Nwachukwu said K1’s conduct was a mockery of Yoruba race, and that the incident had been reported to security agencies. They also threatened legal action.


“We would like to tell His Majesty that it is not too late to strip him of that title. We have to understand that this is Yorubaland and this is where culture and tradition are held with a lot of candour,” he said.

Murphy, a popular radio personality, said the feud began after K1 snubbed his client Fasina Olajide whom he took up stage to be eulogised by Ayinde as is customary of Fuji singers.

Murphy said after the attack, K1 apologised to him.

K1’s media manager Kunle Rasheed, when contacted, said in a text message to PUNCH: “Nothing of such happened. Anything that happened to him (Murphy) has nothing to do with Alhaji (K1)

Simi releases new album.

The popular singer and new mum who delivered her baby girl in May has dropped a new album. Simi disclosed this earlier today through her instagram page.

Apparently, she has been working on this album during my pregnancy. The album titled “RESTLESS II” contains 6 songs.

Simi is known for her sonorous voice and style of music which revolves around soul, hip-hop, rhythm and blues music genres.

She is married to the popular singer and song writer, Adekunle God. Recall that Adekunle Gold recently rebranded his style of music to “Afro pop”. We hope to see Simi also revealing a different style in her new album.

Nigerians React To DJ Cuppy As She Poses With Anthony Joshua In A Suppose Pre Wedding Photo

The “Jollof On The Jet” crooner recently took to social media to share images featuring her with AJ to mark Nigeria’s 60th independence.

However, it didn’t turn out as expected as Nigerians dashed into the comment section to react with some condemning her actions.

What we could see about the image shared by Cuppy on Twitter – it’s nothing far from a shot being photoshopped or edited – well, who knows.

Swipe up to see some of the reactions expressed by Nigerians below;

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