Showing posts with label Face of Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Face of Africa. Show all posts

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Model Flaviana Matata

Photo courtesy of Fashion Junkii ON Sugar

Tanzanian beauty queen and fashion model won the first edition of Miss Universe Tanzania Pageant 2007 and went on to represent her country in the Miss Universe Pageant the same year, where she placed among the top 15 semifinalists and ended up in the 6th Place after the fashion parade on the runway. Competing with a shaved hair she was the first of that kind from Tanzania. She now models out of South Africa and recently modeled print advertisement fo Sherril Hill.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Culver Club Chit-Chats

Image courtesy of Dissolve


On October 30, 2009, my buddy, classical music basoonist and pianist, Rudolph Porter, had agreed to locate a spot "and we can hang out." Culver Club was the place. He had performed there before. And Culver Club is where West Coast finest jazz pereformers display their arts, and it is a place of hangout for jazz enthusiasts on Fridays, on the Westside. On this particular day while Rudolph and I were poking around the lobby my phone vibrated and a friend's text message had timely popped up on my screen to check what I was up to and how I'm doing.

This fella, Ebere, loves African-related media hyped issues, news and views, and he is so fascinated about it, especially when it comes to show-biz and the tap of fine leather.

Knowing my spot, he hopped on his car and found himself at where Rudolph and I were hanging out for the evening. On his arrival, after our bumping fists, he noticed jazz at the Culver Club was alive and well as the November line-up and schedule of performers was all over the place. The Culver Club sits on the lobby of Radisson Hotel's L.A.'s westside, the hub of nightlife and promenades.

The line up for November had some interesting, upcoming gigs: Chris Benneth Quartet; Ernie Andrews Quintet; Dr. Bobby Rodriguez' Latin Jazz "Birthday Dance Party" featuring Justo Almario, Joe Rotondi, Eddie Resto, Luis Conte and Richie G. Garcia; Tony Russell Quartet; Rhonda Benin Quartet; and Ryan Cross & The Soul Funk Band.

The music in the lobby was mellow; some contemporary jazz of 94.7 FM the Wave kind of flow. We talked about a whole lot of stuff over some drinks and good, delicious dishes -- college football, the Nigeria 2009 FIFA U-17 World Cup played in several Nigerian cities, the Orange CAF Championship, Nollywood and African films, Naija politics, Igbo Diaspora, Fela, President Barack Obama's visit to China and M-Net Face of Africa's new season, among others -- becoming one of those evening happenings around my neck of the woods.

Surprisingly, Ebere first raised the issue of Los Angeles Times' veteran music critic, Robert Hilburn's new book, "Corn Flakes with John Lennon and other Tales From Rock 'n' Roll Life." I did not read the book, but I did comb some pages about three weeks ago, I believe, at Borders, while cooling off from a bumper-to-bumper, crazy-dubby Los Angeles traffic. Frankly speaking, I was never a Lennon fan and that does not mean he was not good, but I did love the Beatles'years when the incredibly Liverpool kids -- Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr -- had it going on with a lasting blast that rocked America in the 60s.

Ebere, who loves the Beatles, also, gave most credits to Lennon he said "made it happen for the Liverpool kids." I'm not really sure, though, I did not know Lennon's mom left him (Lennon) in a relatives care for much of his childhood...and reunited when Lennon was in his teens until Ebere gisted us on the excerpts he read from the L.A. Times. I agree with Ebere that the Beatles' years was what changed America and the concept of rock and roll.

On college football, it's obvious no one liked the goings-on with USC's football program this season and a little bit not impressed, he said "all but full of uncertainties with a team that has gone through a whole lot including scandals, on and off campus." Not bad, since USC has lost only two games at the time of the Culver Club Chit-Chats. Coach Pete Carroll's choice of a freshman quaterback as starter was not what we wholly talked about, but that of the offensive and defensive linemen. And what they are saying is that Jethro Franklin's approach has been working wonders for Trojans defense. "I dunno about that."

We talked about college sports in general and how it's good for academia. We talked about how USC has played a very significant role in the renaissance of our hood and Downtown Los Angeles. As one of the nation's finest private research universities, USC is a major contributor to the City of Angel's economic growth, creativity and cultural diversity. An institution that enrolls more international students than any other American university.

We talked about USC being a builder of people and of society with its intellectual capital known to have built enormous bridges. Many of the nation's best doctors, lawyers, judges, teachers, dentists, pharmacists, urban planners, and government officials are USC-trained. Compared to Nigerian universities, he was pissed. Check this out;" he would say. "Last year alone, USC's faculty, staff, students, and friends donated $1.1 million through the USC Good Neigbors Campaign to fund education, health, and safety programs for the 16,000 children who live near USC's campuses or who attend one of the 14 neigborhood schools USC has adopted.

"Does such exist in your fabricated nation-state called Nigeria?" he would question sarcastically. "USC's faculty, staff and students also work as volunteers in these programs, tutoring school children, advising enterpreneurs on business plans, bringing high-schoolers into university labs to do hands-on scientific research, providing dental care for young people, and helping neigborhood kids prepare for college.

"Can you say that about your contry's retarded and ill-equipped higher institutions despite its huge human capital?" he would again utter.

On Nigeria 2009 FIFA U-17 World Cup played in several Nigerian cities, he talked about how technology has significantly changed bringing the world so close to our fingertips. "Without physically being in Nigeria, we watch Nigeria Television Authority news live. We read the newspapers online immediately they are released. We watch the movies -- Nollywood Babylon, Pretty Woman, Secret Fantasy, Yankee Girls, Lord of Host, Sister's Love, Escape, Blood on Ice, Keep My Will, War Game, Extreme Measure, On My Wedding Day, Reloaded, Girl's Cot, Women's Cot, Coincidence, Osuofia in London and uncountable others -- in our living rooms without stepping out.

Ebere was very sure Nigerian Golden Eaglets "will pull that one out," and that the Latin American teams would be the obstacle even though there had been upsets in the First Round of the tournament. "Latin American teams are masters of the game and they do know how to finish," he would lament. Again, that I was not sure for a lot of reasons: time has changed and it is a different era. Ebere was wrong. Latin American teams could not "pull that one out" and the Golden Eaglets lost in the Finals.

On the Orange CAF Championship which I did not pay attention to and never had, he was sure the Owerri Heartland FC will lift the African Championship League trophy and its $1.5m prize tag when Heartland meets Congo DR TP mazembe on a homecourt and away aggregate score saying he has faith in Kelechi Emetole and his boys. Heartland lost. Ebere was wrong.

On Nollywood and African films, he talked about Sophie Okonedo's Anthony Fabian directed movie, "Skin," now showing in select theatres, among them: L.A.'s The Landmark on Pico Boulevard in Westwood. He talked much about how Nollywood did improve in its film editing, score, adaptation and visual effects. He talked about the industry being bent on the same concept in its movie-making, that it needs to drift to more creative stuff to allow room for unversal awareness as in the Oscars and other global film festivals that would enhance Nollywood.

On Naija politics, he talked about why Niger-Delta militants shouldn't have given up arms yet, based on the fact that for fifty years the "damn oil" has been flowing from under the feet of the people to the barren and rat-ridden lands of the murderous, northern Islamic Jihadists. He asked "how could fifty years mean fifty years of misery and hopelessness when our own resources is being used to feed fat the northern caliphates and blood-thirsty cannibals? Enough is enough and the fight must continue."

So pissed on nasty Naija politics, he said Charles Chukwuma Soludo, Anthony Anenih, OBJ, Alex Ekwueme, Andy Uba and a bunch of the raggedy ass politicians are all whack, and it sucks. He talked about how Soludo had been in the nation's political gimmicks.

Soludo, a man of high integrity. A financial scholar. A learned man who could have left the ugly political atmosphere with dignity and honor, but rather reduced himself to mudslinging Anambra politics run by greedy bastards and thuggish elements of Chris Uba's ilk. That Soludo is now akin to Anambra political thugs.

Soludo has become an example of infallible men who had thought they got it all figured out in not realizing they had deliberately opened up their vulnerability to riffraffs who had taken charge, including the "profound laws" of the land in their own hands, and not knowing they will be destroying their character and "political career" in a state of empire and anarchy. Such tragedies follow infallible men when they take their political allies and foes for granted. He is paying the prize and has lost every credit.

Of greed and coercion. A volatile "Anambra State." A people without human consciousness. A confused, infallible Diaspora bunch. A case of sad reality and critical situation where fixing the problems of Anambra could only be done by the people of Anambra; and if they don't, they can go to hell and leave the rest of us out of it. Anambra politics has destroyed every aspect of Igbo ideals one begins to wonder if it's the same Anambra we once knew -- the home of Chinua Achebe, Cyprien Ekwensi, Nwafor Orizu, Louis Mbanefo and the rest.

On Igbo Diaspora, he laughed so hard his ribs began to hurt him. Starting from an impotent World Igbo Congress, he said the bunch and casts of money-chasing, pot-bellied "chiefs," the so-called Igbo umbrella are not real. "These are gullible, vulnerable, crumbs-seeking red cap chiefs of an organization that is desperately going to hell and the only way out being dissolution," he would say. A bunch that has lost touch with reality and had no clue what had been done to them by a mouth-watering, misleading "executives" and "board members" who found it comfortable keeping funny books.

On Fela, the Chief Priest, he hailed Baba for all he did in using his music as a weapon to send his message across, fighting a bastardized and corrupt regimes of the military juntas including the civilian embezzlers. Fela is just king and he has been resurrected by Tony Award winning director, Bill T. jones in a manner that makes the legend more accessible to Western audiences.

Fela's Broadway resurrection takes the audience into the legendary nightclub, The Shrine, where the musical icon and political activist played for several years, perfecting his music and criticism of the military juntas in a fabricated nation-state.

Ebere recited some of Fela's songs and (he) kept talking about the legend. The spirituality in his perfomances on stage. The invocation of the gods and the evils of colonialism -- all in English, pidgin English and Yoruba. The smoking room and spirits. "Fela's the man, ah, baba!" he would continue.

On M-Net Face of Africa's new season, he called it "Africa's media sensationalism," and that it's all hype which do not take the aspiring models far enough to reach out globally. He said it's only the winners that takes it to another level leaving the runners-up and other contestants abandoned and vanishing to the thin air. He did not go further.

On President Barack Obama's visit to China, he brought up the president's half brother, Mark Okoth Obama Ndesandjo, who lives in China, married to a Chinese and has written a new book "Nairobi to Shenzhen," which is about the author's bad memories of his childhood. Born to the third wife of Barack Obama Sr., President Obama's father, Ndesandjo moved to the United States, earning degrees in physics from Brown University and Stanford, and an MBA from Emory University. He plans to donate 15 percent of the proceeds from the book to a charity for children.

Ebere was so excited about Obama's presidency. "Whoever could have imagined that after all the pains of slavery, the separate but equal laws, the Dred Scott Case, the 1890 Louisiana statute -- Plessy Vs. Ferguson -- the Civil Rights movement and things of that nature, that eventually America will do the right thing -- electing a black president?"

On societal ills and global problems, grand and small, he said "Obama cannot do it alone. He will need the unconditional input of global (political) leaders including religious leaders."

Ebere talked about how we should see the poor and how we need to always start with the poor because they are totally left out in today's society. That the poor aren't in our same networks. That they cannot afford our networks. That they do not belong to councils and committees. That the poor don't have access to anything. School is free and so too are other social programs out there; but the poor do not see it and we must reach out to them for them to have access to all the available social programs and benefits out there in the public.

He talked extensively to near exhaustion about teaching the poor help themselves and not by giving them handouts, which goes with the saying "give me a fish and you feed me for a day; but teach me how to fish and you feed me for life." "We should always try to help the poor help themselves." He summarizes his analysis on the poor quoting Pope John Paul II on the Papal's 1988 Encyclical on social concerns:

"Because of our love of preference for the poor, we cannot but embrace the immense multitudes of the hungry, the needy, the homeless, those without medical care and, above all, those without hope of a better future. It is impossible not to take account of these realities. To ignore them would mean becoming like the 'rich man' who pretended not to know the beggar Lazarus lying at his gate (Luke 16: 19-31).

Unfortunately, instead of becoming fewer, the poor are becoming more numerous, not onl;y in less developed countries but -- and this seems no less scandalous -- in the more developed ones too. It is necessary to state once more the characteristic principle of Christian social doctrine. The goods of this world are originally meant for all. The right to private property is valid and necessary, but it does not nullify the value of this principle."


On suffering and what it means, Ebere came to the fore of the Holy Scriptures with what most of us, if not all, have encountered in life. The question of why me when every other thing is going on well for others while "yours" keeps going down with severe pain and no end in sight. He goes on to lament suffering being punishment for foolish or sinful behavior; or a discipline, an experience from which we can learn and become better persons; or suffering being for the benefit of otherrs, citing running backs, quarterbacks and athletes in general who sacrifice themselves and their own glory for the good of their team; firefighters who risk their lives to save others; and Martin Luther King Jr. who was killed for proclaiming the gospel of justice and freedom, and his witness having significance for all Americans.

He talked about Nelson Mandela and the suffering and sacrifice to free his people from bondage which bordered on understanding the redemptive value of suffering; that is, the idea that the suffering of one person (or group) may benefit many others.

He enumerated a stretch of biblical verses regarding suffering. Among them: Proverbs 11:3; Deautronomy 30: 15-20; Eccl 7:15; Luke13: 1-5; John 9:3; Isaiah 52:13-53:12 and Job 4-37.

He (Ebere) had turned our evening of smooth jazz, lullaby, good feelings and good times into the temple of the Lord, like in a spiritual revival, rejoicing and invoking the name of the Lord. "Jesus is Lord, Amen! Amen!

Finishing his sermons on the Holy Scriptures, he changed the whole subject entirely and talked about what our women are doing to us and what we are in turn doing back to our women. Though I tried not to dabble into what he was about to say regarding the morally outrageous relationships that has become a commonplace thing on the shores of our adopted land -- America -- I asked him if he would marry again since his near fatal bitter divorce.

"Of course, I will marry again, but this time around since I have learned my lessons the hard way, I will keep her ass in my village and she will never smell America, never, and you can quote me on that," he replied.

Ebere's touch was magic but we were kind of getting the buzz when Rudolph chipped in with some more booze as he began to tell his own stories. Rudolph had done all kinds of stuff. He'd sold cars. He'd been Muhammad Ali's special guest when he entertained at Ali's home back in the 70s. He'd played gigs alongside jazz greats -- McCoy Tyner of which he was at backstage when Tyner performed at UCLA's Royce Hall last weekend. He had been everywhere and seen everything. In South Central Los Angeles, back in the 50s, he rolled at then Babe's and Ricky's Club on 50th Street. He's a regular at the historic Leimert Park, the home of World Stage Performing Arts Gallery's jam sessions and voice overs. And according to him, "at 60 I feel great!"

So was such an evening on the Westside around the neck of my woods.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Face of Africa Begins New Season




Benedicta Tweneboa-Kodua to represent Ghana. Photo courtesy of Show-Biz Peace FM Online

Last year, Gahanaian Kate Menson in her second attempt walked away the newest African face on the runway. The catwalk has now been rescheduled and the organizers are taking it to a whole new heights.

The director of this years events, Bola Alabi said “Over time, this initiative has shown that it is about so much more than just fashion and beauty.

There is a bigger picture there to see, something more than shoes, and cameras and clothing. It’s about young women with so much courage that they will leave their homes to find new experiences, so much determination that they will venture into the unknown to discover themselves, so much passion that they will chase their dreams.”

The show however will run for 17 weeks, so stay tuned!

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Kamala Harris for 2010 Primaries



Kamala Harris last month announced her intention for the post of California Attorney General for the 2010 primaries upon Barack Obama's election victory, there are now talks Obama might invite her for a post at Washington before her anticipations for California's top cop. She has already filed her papers for the June 2010 primary election. Harris is also the first Black woman district attorney in California.

In Harris tenure, more than 1200 domestic violence offenders have been convicted in San Francisco. She is just another woman of substance and her dedication to servive is paying off.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Noella Coursaris, Super Model and Superb Humanitarian



Who is more courageous than Congolese-born Noella Coursaris of Congolese mother and Cyprus father whose father passed when Noella was just five years old? Without a doubt, she was a girl with destiny.

She is doing stuff and the world is grateful for what she has put together to help children in her native land the opportunity for a better education. Starting the Georges Malaika Foundation (GMF), in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a cause worthy for humankind, many disadvantaged Congolese girls have been able to attend school on the goodwill of GMF and the project is quite becoming.

Women of Coursaris magnitude are really a source of inspiration and she should be adored. With her and many others of that nature, Africa certainly will be a better place in a matter of time. According to the African Path website, Olivier Smekens ran the ING New York City Marathon on behalf of Round Table New York in support of the GMF.

Monday, October 13, 2008

The Critics and M-Net Face Of Africa

Hamamat Montia & Kate A. T. Menson -- Daily Graphic File Photo

While 20-year-old Hamamat Montia and 22-year-old Kate Aba Techie Menson were last week picked to represent Ghana in Face Of Africa contest, there has been all kinds of stuff popping up from the rumor mills that the casting crew and scouts weren't living up to the creed of the draw from the moment it began about ten years ago when then 17-year-old Nigerian-born Oluchi Onweagba captured the crown in its debut.

Reports last week echoed by Zimbabwe's The Herald, Trust Khosa had pointed out that 20-year-old Gamuchirai Tawengwa and 23-year-old Rudo Ndugu did not make the draw during the casting held in Zambia on the ground the 2005 Face Of Africa winner, Botswana's Kaone Kario who has been on the helm of affairs in this year's castings and scoutings had used her position to deny them the privilege of sailing through.

Meanwhile, Gamuchirai and Rudo weren't happy from what had unfolded and as a result, they threw all sorts of insults at Kaone. With the final casting that took place at the Hotel Alvalade, Luanda, Angola, last weekend, the finalists will now head to Zanzibar's Scenic Island where the ten finalists will emerge for the catwalks and eventual winner of the contest.

The results not being announced or revealed on time from the various cities is not adding 'spice' to the contest, according to the critics. Hopefully, all the results will be revealed in a timely fashion with the best announced as winner in the view of the casting and scouting crew.

Go Africa Go!

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Hamamat And Menson To Represent Ghana In Face Of Africa

Hamamat Montia -- Ghana Web File Photo


As the final casting venue for the Face of Africa comes up at the Hotel Alvalade in Angola, 20-year-old beauty queen, Hamamat Montia and 22-year-old Kate Aba Techie Menson were chosen by the model scouts in Accra, Ghana, held about a couple of weeks ago.

With casting now almost complete, the showdown begins in earnest as all the contestants heads to the Scenic Island of Zanzibar where 10 finalists will emerge for the catwalk and runway shows in Sun City, South Africa on Saturday, November 29.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

South Africa's Nyasha Zimucha For Miss Africa USA 2008

The line up for this year's Miss Africa USA Competition is obviously becoming engaging and the characters quite interesting. 23-year-old Nyasha Zimucha who grew up during the Apartheid era in South Africa knows what it is and as a living witness she learned to forgive and renconcile as did the Truth and Reconciliation Commission established by the Nelson Mandela administration when the curtains of Apartheid fell.

Nyasha, now an activist due to the recent racial attacks in her native land is promoting peace and oneness so xenophobic attacks could be stopped once and for all, and peace could be given a chance. And as Miss South Africa USA 2008, she is definitely using her position to effect that.

Adding to her resume, she is a dancer, a singer, a model and public speaker. She is currently filming a show titled "Little Miss Perfect" about a "celebrity judge on a Pageant show" which airs on WETV in late Fall.

On November 1, at the Clayton County Performance Arts Centre in Jonesboro, Georgia, Nyasha will be joining Esosa Edosomwan (Nigeria), Victoria Njau (Kenya), Daniele Ntahonkiriye (Burundi), Daniele Fochive (Cameroon), Andrea Mvemba (DR Congo), Kristle Simpson (Ghana), Imat Akelo-Opio (Uganda), Tanta Badjan (Gambia), Belloh Julius (Liberia), Mariamma Brown (Senegal), Philippa Lahai Swaray (Sierra Leone), Nathali Zambakari (Sudan) Bita Dioa (Guinea), Aziza Elteib (Ethiopia), Mutinta Suuya(Zambia) and Busi Mlambo (Zimbabwe) in the race for the crown.

Goodluck and I am looking forward to this event.

Go Africa Go!

Photo courtesy of Miss Africa USA

Saturday, September 27, 2008

PHOTO OP: Nnenna Agba, Chemist and Model

Yes, we saw this face on national TV a couple of years ago when the Houston born Nnenna Agba who was judged to be the favorite in the sixth edition of America's Next Top Model in 2006 made headlines all around the globe. Still a model, a chemist and proud to have shown motherland Africa that Black is Beautiful. I like your courage!

Monday, September 22, 2008

Uganda And Tanzania Gets Its Pick For Face Of Africa

23-year-old Lucy Torr of Uganda

19-year-old Hellen Avelinus Ambrose of Tanzania

While Ugandan's pick Lucy Torr, a bi-racial of Canadian and Ugandan parents whose identity is yet to be known since she was selected over a week ago, 19-year-old Hellen Avelinus Ambrose was Tanzania's choice in M-Net Face Of Africa beauty contest, making her the fifth finalist to head to Zanzibar's Scenic Island in October for the Boot Camp where the top 10 finalists will emerge for the final showdown in Sun City, South Africa. Lucy and Hellen now joins Totwana, Albertina and Maria in the quest for the crown.

Friday, September 19, 2008

M-Net Face Of Africa 2008 Call Sheet

When M-Net Face of Africa casting crew and scouts finally announced Totwana 'Tito' Tema as the choice from Botswana and the first pick in this year's contest followed by the picks of Albertina Shigwedha and Maria Hiwilepo from Namibia, the good guess was other picks would be made public as soon as possible.

Apparently, the contest seems to be going through a lot of careful examination since its cross continental expedition began when Tema was selected in Botswana. Whatever the process, the results from Kampala, Uganda on September 6; Dar'es Salaam, Tanzania on September 9; Nairobi, Kenya on September 13; and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on September 16 are yet to be announced (Lucy Torr of Uganda rumored to have been the pick) with its next move to Lagos, Nigeria on September 20. It is becoming interesting and the nosy public wants some lights to be shed and we all wish this prestigious event the best.

Go Africa!

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

PHOTO OP: Victoria Njau, Kenya's Rising Star

Victoria Njau was born in Kenya 23 years ago and has a double major -- Biology and Business Management -- at the University of Texas in Dallas and aspires to enlist in medical school when she gets over her first degree.

She has submitted her bid for the 4th Annual Miss Africa USA Pageant 2008 which will be held at the Clayton County Performing Arts Center in Jonesboro, Georgia on Saturday, November 1, 2008. Njau said as the new Miss Kenya her 'desire' would be focussed on the Kenyan community in the United States and in the event she is crowned Miss Africa USA 2008, that she will "seek more sponsorship and support to continue making positive changes in the lives of Africans."

You go girl, and goodluck!

To check the schedule of events, visit Miss Africa USA

Photo courtesy of Dave McKeen

Monday, September 15, 2008

PHOTO OP: Ugandan Model Salma Nassanga

Former Ugandan Beauty Queen was the first Ugandan model to have cleared the hurdle up to the Boot Camp two years ago in M-Net's Face of Africa Contest. The pick from Uganda in this year's contest which was held on September 6 is yet to be announced. So far three models --Totwana 'Tito' Tema, Albertina Shigwedha and Maria Hiwilepo -- have been selected for the finale of the new season's show which will be held in Sun City, South Africa on November 29.

The scouting team's next stop will be in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on September 16, followed by Lagos, Nigeria September 20; Accra, Ghana September 23; Maputo, Mozambique, September 27; Lusaka, Zambia, October 1; Johannesburg, South Africa, October 4; and Luanda, Angola, October 7 before the booth camp and final showdown.

Go Africa!

Photo courtesy of SOHU

Monday, September 8, 2008

Three Down And Twenty-One To Go On Face Of Africa

19-year-old hairdresser Albertina Shigwedha

24-year-old student pilot Maria Hiwilepo Photo courtesy of Faith Models

The heat is definitely on with choices going through rigorous scrutiny giving Africa's most vibrant beauty contest a mark that is beginning to set its tone globally. Since no one was picked in Malawi and while the identity of the girl from Uganda in Saturday's search is yet to be known, two more names has been added --Namibia's 19-year-old hairdresser Albertina Shigwedha and 24-year-old student pilot Maria Hiwilepo, joining Botswana's Totwana 'Tito' Tema in the quest for an Africa beauty queen to be held in Sun City, South Africa in November.

The pick from Uganda during the weekend scouting will be announced later this week. Go Africa Go!!

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Face Of Africa goes beyond Beauty in its Pick

Another beauty has been added to the list of Face of Africa Contest. She is Totwana "Tito" Tema, a 24-year-old psychologist from Botswana. She was picked to represent Botswana in the upcoming M-Net Face of Africa Finale on November 29 in South Africa.

And of course, as a psychologist there is no telling that she was dedicated, committed, had discipline and very nice in every aspect to have captured the attention of the selection scouts.

Go Africa!

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

PHOTO OP: Ethiopian Supermodel Liya Kebede

Ethiopia's supermodel Liya Kebede will be joining my girl Oluchi Onweagba, Naomi Campbell and Tyson Beckford in This Day's Africa Rising Festival on October 14, 2008 at the Royal Albert Hall in London. The show will feature a cast of models, designers and actors.

Friday, September 7, 2007

Oluchi Onweagba, The Face Of Africa

Ain't she beautiful? I popped her up because she is just too good of a look. Born on August 01, 1980 in Lagos, Oluchi Onweagba has become a household name in international supermodelling. Her career as a model began when the South African television channel M-Net and the French modelling agency Elite organized the inaugural edition of beauty show. Her life, however, would change instantly and the rest would be history. Measuring 34-24-35, 128 lb and standing at 6ft 1in, Elite Model Management awarded Oluchi a three-year modelling contract to kickstart her career.

Moving to New York, her connections in modelling would catapult her to the top meeting and campaining for top-notch designers in the fashion industry. Feauturing in Sports Illustrated Swimsuit she made it three times in a row (2005, 2006 and 2007)making her the first model from her nativeland ever to market for SI Swimsuit Collection. She has also graced the covers of Vogue, ELLE, Marie Claire, Allure and other publications around the world. In addition to her haul of promotions in the international fashion industry, she played a major role in Victoria Secret's "Backstage Sexy."

Still living in New York and shuttling around the world for series of fashion shows, she married Italian designer, a long time companion, Luca Orlandis, in 2005.

You go girl! I like your style!