funke osaebrown

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funke osaebrown

funke osaebrown

@funkeadetutu

Journalist| digital media strategist| screenwriter| web content creator|documentary filmmaker.

Edinburgh, Scotland Katılım Mart 2009
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Cian McCarthy
Cian McCarthy@arealmofwonder·
Rest in peace, Patricia Routledge 🙏🏻 In memory of her, I encourage everyone to read these words of hers from February last year. Whether young or old, you're bound to get something out of it. ***** "I’ll be turning 95 this coming Monday. In my younger years, I was often filled with worry — worry that I wasn’t quite good enough, that no one would cast me again, that I wouldn’t live up to my mother’s hopes. But these days begin in peace, and end in gratitude. My life didn’t quite take shape until my forties. I had worked steadily — on provincial stages, in radio plays, in West End productions — but I often felt adrift, as though I was searching for a home within myself that I hadn’t quite found. At 50, I accepted a television role that many would later associate me with — Hyacinth Bucket, of Keeping Up Appearances. I thought it would be a small part in a little series. I never imagined that it would take me into people’s living rooms and hearts around the world. And truthfully, that role taught me to accept my own quirks. It healed something in me. At 60, I began learning Italian — not for work, but so I could sing opera in its native language. I also learned how to live alone without feeling lonely. I read poetry aloud each evening, not to perfect my diction, but to quiet my soul. At 70, I returned to the Shakespearean stage — something I once believed I had aged out of. But this time, I had nothing to prove. I stood on those boards with stillness, and audiences felt that. I was no longer performing. I was simply being. At 80, I took up watercolour painting. I painted flowers from my garden, old hats from my youth, and faces I remembered from the London Underground. Each painting was a quiet memory made visible. Now, at 95, I write letters by hand. I’m learning to bake rye bread. I still breathe deeply every morning. I still adore laughter — though I no longer try to make anyone laugh. I love the quiet more than ever. I’m writing this to tell you something simple: Growing older is not the closing act. It can be the most exquisite chapter — if you let yourself bloom again. Let these years ahead be your TREASURE YEARS. You don’t need to be famous. You don’t need to be flawless. You only need to show up — fully — for the life that is still yours. With love and gentleness, Patricia Routledge ***** Once more, rest in peace. 🤍
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funke osaebrown
funke osaebrown@funkeadetutu·
@Yemisiolufemi Dr. Yemisi, thanks for sharing. Please I have a few questions to ask. Could you please follow me back so I could send you a direct message. Thank you!
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Yemisi Adedeji (Nee Olufemi)
Yemisi Adedeji (Nee Olufemi)@Yemisiolufemi·
🚨 Just dropped a new video on 6 Common Mistakes to AVOID in Your UK Global Talent Visa Application! 🚫 Please subscribe! Whether you're in Research, Arts, or Tech, don't let these errors hold you back! 💼 Watch now & make your application stand out 👉 youtu.be/-WM83HV98tY?si…
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Femi Ote$
Femi Ote$@realFemiOtedola·
This whole issue on Dangote is shocking and creating bad waves for Nigeria globally. - Akinwunmi Adesina Monopoly often exists where there are high barriers to entry or high capital costs. How many individuals or companies can do railways? How many can do refineries of the scale of Dangote Refineries? In a nation that has been importing refined petroleum products for several decades, the abnormal simply became very normal. No smart investor would make a $19.5 billion investment and want it to be undermined by importers. To manufacture is extremely expensive and risky. This is even more so in Nigeria, given the very challenging business and economic environment, fraught with policy uncertainties and policy reversals, and where the self-defeating default mode of “simply import it” is always so easily rationalized and chorused to solve any problem. Competition is good for everyone. But is Dangote refineries anti-competitive? What is the evidence? Has Dangote refineries prevented any other company from setting up refineries? Why have others not done so? How come they have not done so for several decades? Was it Dangote that held them back? But Dangote refineries surely cannot be asked to ‘compete’ with importers of petroleum products. That is not competition. Let the importers set up local refineries and compete by refining in Nigeria. That is fair and justified competition. We cannot and must not undermine, disparage or kill local industries, talk less of one that is of this scale — a jewel of industrialisation in Nigeria. It is more than simply delivering the cheapest product to the market. It is about domestic supply security, driving (and yes, protecting) globally competitive industries, maximizing forward and backward linkages in the local economy, job creation, reducing forex expenses and shoring up the Naira. We must not be myopic. This whole disparaging of Dangote is uncalled for. It is self-defeating. And it is very bad for Nigeria. Who will want to come and invest in a country that disparages and undermines its own largest investor? Investing is tough. Pettiness is easy. It sadly sends a signal that the price for sacrificing for Nigeria is to get sacrificed. Akinwunmi Adesina
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funke osaebrown@funkeadetutu·
It is interesting that those who opposed subsidy removal years ago by staging the famous protest at Ojota are the ones now implementing subsidy removal! C’est la vie! This life!
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Oby Ezekwesili
Oby Ezekwesili@obyezeks·
I have had my fair share of reading books of all genre and listened to all manner of experts in diverse fields of knowledge. But nothing compares to the Word of God. The Word of God is powerful! Get academic knowledge....plenty... but in all thy getting, get the Word of God!✍🏾
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Dr Ola Brown
Dr Ola Brown@NaijaFlyingDr·
5 regrets of people that are dying according to a palliative care nurse. Live intentionally.
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Maya Brown
Maya Brown@taffyadventures·
Hi there, welcome to my world! Follow me on this page as I share content from my new book, 'Adventures of Taffy the Dinosaurs and Other Stories'. Also, I will share where you can purchase a copy of this interesting book for children. Thank you. #Taffy #adventure #newauthor
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Theatre&filmcourseQMU
Theatre&filmcourseQMU@TFilmcourseqmu·
Prof. Wole Soyinka is well known for his play, 'Death and The King's Horseman'. He is a Nigerian playwright, novelist, poet, and essayist who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1986. This quote sums up his love for theatre as a playwright. #theatre&filmQMU #QMU #Edinburgh
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