What I Learnt at The Nelson Mandela Exhibition
By, Jacky-Jackson Mbungu-Bueya
A quick 1 minute video about the things I learnt.

seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Taiwan

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Poland
seen from Estonia
seen from Estonia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Ukraine
seen from United States
seen from Azerbaijan
seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States
What I Learnt at The Nelson Mandela Exhibition
By, Jacky-Jackson Mbungu-Bueya
A quick 1 minute video about the things I learnt.
Drake: Thank Me Later Album Review (Remastered)
By Jacky-Jackson Mbungu-Bueya
It was the year 2009, and Canadian artist Drake captured the world, via the release of his project So Far Gone – and beefing with Chris Brown over Rihanna.
So Far Gone was a fascinating experience. Drizzy’s vulnerability (especially regarding relationships), lack of blatant misogyny and homophobia, coupled with his palatable style of rap, proved to be a real attention arouser for men and especially women – which meant ESPECIALLY men, but mostly women. Thus, with his R&B/Rap hybrid style, Drake’s mission was to validify the hype to be the world’s next big hip-hop star. To do so, he would release a dazzling debut album that commanded subservience.
It was going to be a CLASSIC!
Drake was bound to release a CLASSIC(exclamation mark), forever held to the standards of debuts such as: Enter the 36 Chambers, Ready To Die, Illmatic, Get Rich or Die Trying, The College Dropout, Lupe Fiasco’s Food & Liquor, Man on The Moon: End of Days, the list goes on. Civilisations would never forget the day Drake dropped Thank Me Later. June 2010 would see his popularity cemented, and his ability to make life-changing, quality music certified.
Now, needless to say, civilisations forgot the day Drake dropped Thank Me Later.
Why?
Well, it’s a forgettable experience.
Photographer's Gallery
Two weeks ago, on Friday 15th March, we attended a photography workshop at the Photographer's Gallery. We spent time interpreting the meanings of various professional photographs, each of us having very different viewpoints. Interestingly, almost none them matched those of the respective artists.
The photos posted were taken when we were unleashed upon the streets during the day, in order to take our own photos. Renée, Millie, Anisa, Jessica and I decided to focus on the theme of homelessness.
The one we were most proud of was the first picture. It was captured via an accident and a keen eye.
Sleep = Good
A quick video about sleep.