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Wahaala Boys

Wahaala Boys
Author: Nana Kwame
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© Nana Kwame
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Two West Africans stuck in London mumbling and moaning about life abroad and back home. If you want to hear relevant and irrelevant conversations about life from the perspective of these two weirdos then subscribe.
154 Episodes
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Several Ghanaian celebrities such as Kwaku Manu, Medikal, Fella, Nana Chedda, Ken Agyapong and Asamoah Gyan have made donations towards COVID-19 Fight. Some of them donated food while others donated sanitiser, face mask and buckets to help people stay safe and fight the coronavirus pandemic.
The Wahaala Boys looks at the significance of the donations and what can be done to help others during the lock down.
#Ghanacelebrities #KenAgyapong #FellaandMedikal
It has become a common notion that Ghanaian, Nigerian, Kenyan and as a matter of fact all African/black men cheat and the women are the victims all the time. Even when women cheat a man is blamed for it. The other notion touted around is that African men are not romantic or in West Africa, Ghanaian men are not romantic when compared to Nigerian men.
The Wahaala Boys in conjunction with Ghanacelebrities.com looks at the idea of how African men love and women who have side husbands. They ask the question, "is love defined by the culture you come from?".
#ghanacelebrities.com #love #Africa #Ghana #Nigeria #blackmendon'tcheat
Soldiers in Nigeria are arresting people with dreadlock and beating them up in Abia State. The victims who were given no reason by the soldiers for their arrest and physical abuse also had their locks cut. According to the Nigerian army, they are aware of these brutalities and are looking into it.
According to Punchng.com the soldiers are blindfolding these people and taking them to an unknwon locations where they are given severe beatings and their dreads or locks cut before returning them to where they picked them from without giving them a reason for their acts.
The spokesperson for the Lagos police force stated that a man with dreadlocks or tattoos is most likely to be arrested. The prejudice against people with dreadlocks and tattoos is prevalent in the Nigerian Society with most people percieving people with locks as criminals, weed smokers and dirty people. This perception is changing but at a snails pace therefore it is easier to abuse someone with dreads or locks.
Ghanacelebrities.com with the Wahaala boys tackle this nonsense and looks at ways to improve the image of people with dreads.
Here is a link to the article.
https://punchng.com/soldiers-brutalise-men-wearing-dreadlocks-in-abia/
Nigerian musician and afrobeat artist Burna Boy in an interview on the Breakfast Club in New York admitted to never speaking with pop start Beyoncé even though he is featured on her current album "The Lion King: The Gift". The artist who also launched his own album this week "African Giant" said Beyoncé never called him or had any form of communications with him. He speculated at most Queen Bee spoke to his mother but still showed his excitement and honour on being featured on the album. He also talked about being robbed at most award shows and also not paying his mum a percentage of his earnings for being his manager.
It was surprising that for someone who moaned about the size of his name by Coachella, we would have expected Burna Boy to be a bit more proud of his achievements but that was not the case.
Ghanacelebrities.com with the Wahaala boys dissect and analyse his interview and its effect on other afrobeat artists.
This month saw the unfortunate incident of three canadian girls getting abducted/kidnapped in Ghana West Africa. The case which was swiftly dealt with resulting in the girls being found within a week has lead to a lot of people praising the security agencies in the country. Kidnapping is becoming a thing in Ghana although other countries such as Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa and almost the entire African continent has reports in local media about kidnapping cases.
Although the security agencies did what they needed to do, the question still has to be asked about how they deal with local matters.
Prior to the kidnapping and rescueing of these girls from Canada, some Ghanaian girls below the age of 17 have been kidnapped/missing for more than a month and the security agencies haven't being able to present anything that shows they are actually trying to find them. As a matter of fact, they kept lying to the general public with the head of CID claiming at one point that they knew where the girls were and the girls will be returned to their families soon. This woman is still in office and recently had to apologise for that.
Ghanacelebrities.com with the Wahaala boys look at the situation and asks "are African's second class citizens withinh their own countries?"
As today is father's father, the Wahaala boys in conjuction with Ghanacelebrities.com wonder how father's are perceived in our societies be it in Ghana, Nigeria, Uganda, Kenya, South Africa or anywhere in Africa. Although fathers sacrife a lot for their children and the overall wellbeing of their families. A lot of African men left their families both extented and nuclear to travel to cities or abroad in search of greener pastures and to provide a better future for their offsprings. They work long hours endure terrible situations just to ensure that their families have food and shelter. The pressures of being a man and especialy a father has caused many men to lose their lives but still men and fathers are it seem are not appreciated /valued in our society. They are regarded as second class citizens within the family and usually not given room to even get things wrong. Most children/families do not consider the father beyond his monetary contributions and most times will not involve them in other aspects of things unless it has to do with money.
Father's day is trivialised and most father's recieve barely anything and if they do recieve something, it is a nonsense of a gift in most occasions.
The wahaala boys ask the question "do we value fathers?".
The plight affecting Ghana, Nigeria and Africa as a whole seem to be caused in majority of the time by ourselves. Although the continent has suffered from a lot of injustice and it could be argued that we as Africans are still suffering from the effects of these injustices, we are more aware of these situations and clearly should be doing better. Recently a video surfaced of two Ghanaian women throwing rubbish into the streets while it was raining in the country's capital Accra. This is the same place where drainage is an issue and cholera, malaria and flooding is a yearly plight but these two still decided to compound it with their actions. The Chinese ambassador to Ghana said it perfectly when people tried to placed the problem of illegal mini aka galamsey sorely at the doorsteps of the Chinese by asking how did the Chinese find out about the gold? Ghanaians and most Africans abroad prevents each other from prgressing and some women are ready to lie to send their partners to prison or prevent them from being part of the lives of their chldren even though the importance of having both parents in your life is well documented.
Ghanacelbrities.com in conjuction with the Wahaala boys talk about this situation and ask the question "are we our won worse enemy?"
When relationships end, it can be very hard on both parties with the one betrayed feeling agrieved the most. This can lead a lot of people down the path of anger making them become nasty towards each other. Some people are noted to have destroyed the property of their ex lovers while others have done more terrible things including lying to get them arrested. The wahaala Boys look at who does it worse when relationships end.
There has been a huge rise in the number of men in Africa who choose to end their lives and the majority of them are men between the ages of 25 years and 35 years. The reasons for suicide is wide and a study in Ghana revealed that the three major causes of suicide in the country are Poverty, Shame and struggles with masculinity. Male suicide is not just prevalent in Africa but the world as a whole. The Wahaala Boys take a crack at understanding the reasons behind the increase in young men commiting suicide in Ghana, Nigeria and Africa as a whole.
A lot of Ghanaian, Nigerian and African women in general claim most men demand sex before doing anything for them. Some claim that even at a job interview, the interviewer will want to sleep with you before offering you the job while university lecturers are known for exchanging grades for sex. The Wahaala Boys then ask the question, "Who stands to gain more? the people demanding sex for favours or the ones offering sex for favours?".
https://www.facebook.com/Wahaala/
https://www.instagram.com/wahaalaboyspodcast/?hl=en
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqogtMq5LUvmTVAwyIzLVFw
A lot of Ghanaians find it easy to attack homosexuals in Ghana and Africa as a whole. The argument most people make is that, homsexuality is against our culture and religion meanwhile there are numerous things that are against our culture and religion that happens day in day out but no one gets attacked for. We can have opinions about what someone does but to ahead an attack or be violent towards them is unacceptable. The Wahaala Boys talk to their facebook fans about homosexuals after watching a video of a woman proposing to her partner at the airport.
https://www.facebook.com/Wahaala/
https://www.instagram.com/wahaalaboyspodcast/?hl=en
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqogtMq5LUvmTVAwyIzLVFw
A lot African women/girls claims that when they tell a man they are pregnant, their response is usually "abort the baby". This is the same situation Ghanaian actress Rosemond Brown aka Akuapem Poloo found herself years ago. The Wahaala Boys ask their Facebook audience "would/can you forgive a guy that asked you to abort your baby?".
https://www.facebook.com/Wahaala/
https://www.instagram.com/wahaalaboyspodcast/?hl=en
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqogtMq5LUvmTVAwyIzLVFw
Ghanaian actress Rosemond Brown aka Akuapem Poloo has responded to the man claiming to be the father of her son that he should look for someone else such as prostitutes to impregnate if he is looking for a child. According to the guy, he told the actress to abort the baby when she first told him about it. He claims he left her to go to another to work and does admit he did not contact the girl in four years. Whiles away, he did impregnate another woman but the woman has travelled outside the country. The guy insists he wants to be part of the kids life but Akuapem Poloo is refusing to make him play his role as a father.
The Wahaala boys take a look at this situation and give their opinions on the matter.
https://www.facebook.com/Wahaala/
https://www.instagram.com/wahaalaboyspodcast/?hl=en
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqogtMq5LUvmTVAwyIzLVFw
The Wahaala Boys sit down with Jaimee "Ann Cindy" Perrett a teacher from New Zealand who went to teach in Ghana and is currently raising money for her school in Tetrem a suburb of Kumasi in Ghana West Africa. Jaimee Perrett who has been featured in the EveningStandard news paper in London shared her reeasons and motivation for starting this journey and why Ghana is her new home.
Please do like their Facebook page and support the Kickstart for the school.
https://www.facebook.com/GFSTetrem/
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/317856981/building-a-good-foundation?fbclid=IwAR0mdi46xp0mdAxDpZaJoM7s0YZY73xWYrG_4aqJ93H3K3A-pdXCK_9D0YY
The Wahaala Boys sit down with Jaimee "Ann Cindy" Perrett a teacher from New Zealand who went to teach in Ghana and is currently raising money for her school in Tetrem a suburb of Kumasi in Ghana West Africa. Jaimee Perrett who has been featured in the EveningStandard news paper in London shared her reeasons and motivation for starting this journey and why Ghana is her new home
Please do like their Facebook page and support the Kickstart for the school.
https://www.facebook.com/GFSTetrem/
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/317856981/building-a-good-foundation?fbclid=IwAR0mdi46xp0mdAxDpZaJoM7s0YZY73xWYrG_4aqJ93H3K3A-pdXCK_9D0YY
The host of ACCtoLDN podcast visits the Wahaala boys to have a conversation about everything and nothing. They share their opinions on the hot issue of "Are Ghanaian men romantic?".
We also talk about their childhood memories in Ghana in terms of of their experiences in schools compared to the London in the UK. The conversation turns into how bad the country and Africa is doing as whole considering all the resources and knowledge in the world currently. The ladies share their opinions on the state of Ghana and why it is wrong to condemn the country even though it is struggle at the moment.
Vheck out their podcast by clicking the link below and don't forget to like us on facebook, instagram and subscribe on youtube.
https://anchor.fm/acc-to-ldn-podcast
https://www.facebook.com/Wahaala/
https://www.instagram.com/wahaalaboyspodcast/?hl=en
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqogtMq5LUvmTVAwyIzLVFw
The host of ACCtoLDN podcast visits the Wahaala boys to have a conversation about their childhood memories in Ghana in terms of of their experiences in schools compared to the London in the UK. The conversation turns into how bad the country and Africa is doing as whole considering all the resources and knowledge in the world currently. The ladies share their opinions on the state of Ghana and why it is wrong to condemn the country even though it is struggle at the moment.
Vheck out their podcast by clicking the link below and don't forget to like us on facebook, instagram and subscribe on youtube.
https://anchor.fm/acc-to-ldn-podcast
https://www.facebook.com/Wahaala/
https://www.instagram.com/wahaalaboyspodcast/?hl=en
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqogtMq5LUvmTVAwyIzLVFw
We have a conversation with Janelle Edusei a final year PhD student in nanotechnology in medicine. She talks about getting over 7 A and A* in GSCEs and getting As in A Levels. Growing up with a Jamaican mother and a Ghanaian father in London and how she actually ended up in University of London (UCL) to pursue a PhD in Nanotechnology. She talks about her dreams and aspirations. She does open up about the strugglers of dating when you are an ambitious and overachieving woman. The conversation also covered her journey to Ghana and her experience of racism and discrimination in the UK. Finally she advises others especially parents about how to help their daughters in the pursuit of science.
We have a conversation with Janelle Edusei a final year PhD student in nanotechnology in medicine. She talks about getting over 7 A and A* in GSCEs and getting As in A Levels. Growing up with a Jamaican mother and a Ghanaian father in London and how she actually ended up in University of London (UCL) to pursue a PhD in Nanotechnology. She talks about her dreams and aspirations. She does open up about the strugglers of dating when you are an ambitious and overachieving woman. The conversation also covered her journey to Ghana and her experience of racism and discrimination in the UK. Finally she advises others especially parents about how to help their daughters in the pursuit of science.
We have a conversation with Janelle Edusei a final year PhD student in nanotechnology in medicine. She talks about getting over 7 A and A* in GSCEs and getting As in A Levels. Growing up with a Jamaican mother and a Ghanaian father in London and how she actually ended up in University of London (UCL) to pursue a PhD in Nanotechnology. She talks about her dreams and aspirations. She does open up about the strugglers of dating when you are an ambitious and overachieving woman. The conversation also covered her journey to Ghana and her experience of racism and discrimination in the UK. Finally she advises others especially parents about how to help their daughters in the pursuit of science.