On Saturday, August 7, the former KFCB boss shared a long post on Facebook detailing his accomplishmentsMutua was accused of making free expression through film and television markedly difficult during his tenure in officeChristopher Wambua from the Communications Authority of Kenya (CAK) was appointed as Mutua's replacementPAY ATTENTION: Help us change more lives, join TUKO.co.ke’s Patreon programme
The Atheists In Kenya Society (AIK) has celebrated the ouster of Ezekiel Mutua from the helm of the Kenya Film Classification Board (KFCB).
The pictures of Davido and Wizkid have been sighted at Burna Boy's house while he was making a live videoHis mother and another person were sitting down to watch the TV and close to them the portrait of the two singers were seen close to each otherThis came amid the supremacy battle between the three of them as Burna Boy had ditched them in one of his songsThe portraits of David Adeleke, better known as Davido, and Ayodeji Balogun, aka, Wizkid have been sighted in Burna Boy's house amid the supremacy battle silently going on among the three.
Amelia Earhart helped found Northeast Airlines 35 years ago, and some critics insist that that was the highest Northeast ever flew. Its equipment included the oldest DC-3s flying regular service in the U.S. Schedules through and out of New England were as patchy as a Cape Cod fog, baggage and reservations were often scrambled. Anguished anecdotes about Northeast service became a fad. There was, for instance, the plane that loaded up and then sat for so long on the apron that passengers joked to one another about not having a pilot.
In a stunning finding that set off shock waves of grieving through much of the world, University of Oxford researchers announced that the beloved bipedal cryptid known globally as Bigfoot is dead—or, more specifically, that he never existed.
Mr. Foot, who also went by the name Sasquatch, or Sásq’ets in the original Halkomelem, was 4,000 years old. Or maybe not.
The Oxford finding was the result of a three-year study that began in 2012 when researchers issued an open call for hair samples held in museums and private collections that were said to come from “an anomalous primate,” which is the kind of term scientists from a place like Oxford University often use when they’re publishing a peer-reviewed paper on, you know, Bigfoot, and don’t want to be snickered at by other Oxford University scientists in the faculty lounge.
Christopher Nolan is freaking me out.
“There’s a pretty simple argument mathematically for saying the world will end in nuclear Armageddon simply because that’s a possibility,” he’s calmly explaining. “Over an infinite timeline, it’s going to happen at some point.”
It’s hard to dispute Nolan’s logic that civilization will one day vaporize, but as he tops off his mug of Earl Grey tea from a small kettle on the table in front of him, he hits a slightly more hopeful note.