SkyVlog

Ibrahim Yekini reaches for new heights with 'Kesari: The King'

The Yoruba language action film was initially released in 2018 on YouTube with the following sequel titles; Kesari 2, Return of Kesari and Return of Kesari 2. Yekini, the writer and director of the movie, shared his inspiration during an interview in 2018, stating that watching Hollywood's Black Panther inspired him to make Kesari: The King. ADVERTISEMENT The four-part project has gone on to win Best Movie and Best Producer of the Year in the Yoruba category at the 2019 City People Entertainment Awards.

In Illinois: Festival of the Fed-Up

Dennis Barrett, in camouflage fatigues and walrus mustache, is telling about the first man he killed. “He was running toward me and I got him with 18 bullets right in the chest, brrrrrrrt! So I go over to where he went down, and he’s not there. I finally find his body 50 ft. away. Now it seems medically impossible he could have crawled that far with his heart and lungs tore clean out like that.

Lagos distributes food boxes to 20,000 Christian, Muslim residents

It states further that the motive is to cushion the effects of hardship among the residents of the state The distribution began at the Lagos State Auditorium, Alausa, Ikeja on Wednesday, Mr Abdullahi Jebe, the Special Adviser to the Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu on Religion (Islamic), said. He said that the governor had been getting palliatives across to various sections of the society in the state. ADVERTISEMENT Associations such as the Community Development Associations (CDAs), and Community Development Committees (CDCs) have benefitted from the distribution of palliative.

Life After Gold: Swimmer Joseph Schooling Talks to TIME

Joseph Schooling, Singapore’s first and only Olympic gold medalist, is slightly embarrassed by a cardboard cutout of himself perched near the door of his parents’ office. The standee, designed for a meet-and-greet session in 2015, shows a young Schooling, then a rising swimming star, grinning ear to ear, frozen in time. He keeps pestering his mum to get rid of it, he says, but she won’t budge. Can you really blame her for wanting to keep around this life-sized memento of a time when her son seemed on top of the world?