Vanguard News
Comedian Whale mouth, partner on comedy series ‘The Police HQ’
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White Gorrilaz Media, a content production outfit, owned by comedian Whale Mouth and his partner, Frank Obiadi, has signed a multi-million naira partnership deal with Nevada Bridge TV to produce their first comedy web/TV series The Police HQ.
The series which first season was premiered on Sunday, March 7, 2021, is now showing exclusively on the Nevada Bridge TV app.
subscription to Nevada Bridge TV app is available on Google Play-store and Apple Store platforms,which enables audiences see the hilarious comedy series.
The Police HQ cast some of the greatest Nollywood and comedy stars such as Seyilaw, Eniola Badmus, Whale Mouth, Belinda Effah, Omini Aho, Phronesis, Efe Warri Boy, MC Shaggi, Odogwu, Short Family, Sokoh Stanley to mention but a few. It was directed by Patrick Odjegba.
AGN launches appeal fund for ailing actors
The appeal fund is aimed at providing urgent medical intervention to ailing Nollywood actors and assisting families of late actors.
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The Actors Guild of Nigeria (AGN) has launched an internal appeal fund aimed at providing urgent medical intervention to sick members and assisting families of deceased actors.
Over time, several deaths have been recorded within the industry, and the AGN President, Emeka Rollas, has said he is saddened by this and has taken proactive steps to face the issue.
Mr Rollas, on Monday, said he had been making a passionate appeal to members and Nollywood at large, to lend support to their colleagues through the Trust Fund which is chaired by a thorough veteran, Joke Silva.
Vignettes from Abanobi’s dad-and-daughter relationship-guidebook
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By Moses Ogu
Chika Abanobi’s “What’s-Up Message From ‘Best Dad’ To Dearest Daughter: Secret Worries Of A Doting Dad” is a hands-on book that time has come. In many homes where the falcon can no longer hear the falconer; where things have fallen apart between the father and the daughter, and the centre can no longer hold, this is a book that has come not only to fill the ever-widening void but to also act as a roadmap to the much-needed restoration and reconciliation between dad and daughter.
In it, the author aptly captured the anxieties that perhaps every father who has a girl-child goes through before she is able to become something in life. It’s a book that many fathers and, perhaps, mothers are going to find handy in handling some of the complexes that could arise as their teenage or adolescent daughters march their way into adulthood.