• EGYPT AND SAUDI ARABIA SEAL DEAL ON $4B MOSES BRIDGE

    Africa and Asia are about to get a major connection boost! Egypt and Saudi Arabia have officially greenlit the $4 billion Moses Bridge, linking Sharm El-Sheikh to Ras Hamid across the Red Sea via the Strait of Tiran .

    The mega project is expected to serve over 1 million travelers annually once complete — with construction now set to begin!
    EGYPT 🇪🇬 AND SAUDI ARABIA 🇸🇦 SEAL DEAL ON $4B MOSES BRIDGE 🌉 Africa and Asia are about to get a major connection boost! 🌍✈️ Egypt and Saudi Arabia have officially greenlit the $4 billion Moses Bridge, linking Sharm El-Sheikh 🇪🇬 to Ras Hamid 🇸🇦 across the Red Sea via the Strait of Tiran 🌊. The mega project is expected to serve over 1 million travelers annually once complete — with construction now set to begin! 🚧🚀
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  • Ex NBA Star, Lamar Odom is now homeless, Lamar Odom told to vacate LA home after 'failing to pay rent' despite earning over $114MILLION in NBA career

    Khloe’s Kardashian ex husband and Former NBA star and reality TV personality Lamar Odom has been evicted from his renting home for unpaid rent. He owes more than $45,000 in rent, according to documents The landlord, Executive Recovery Group.

    The landlord has filed a lawsuit since March, alleging Odom has not made any payments on his $15,000-month lease since signing a month-long agreement in December 2024.

    Lamar who had success and money before couldn’t handle, stay stable and sober.
    Ex NBA Star, Lamar Odom is now homeless, Lamar Odom told to vacate LA home after 'failing to pay rent' despite earning over $114MILLION in NBA career Khloe’s Kardashian ex husband and Former NBA star and reality TV personality Lamar Odom has been evicted from his renting home for unpaid rent. He owes more than $45,000 in rent, according to documents The landlord, Executive Recovery Group. The landlord has filed a lawsuit since March, alleging Odom has not made any payments on his $15,000-month lease since signing a month-long agreement in December 2024. Lamar who had success and money before couldn’t handle, stay stable and sober.
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  • “The $100 million we invested in Iroko TV was a mistake. If I had another opportunity, I would not do it again.”

    Jason Njoku shares his terrible, brutal experience running Iroko TV.

    Let's read him:

    STREAMING IN NIGERIA. DID THE MARKET WIN?

    Iroko’s first funding was in August 2011; our mandate was to build a large streaming business in Nigeria.

    Tiger Global believed that one of the largest growth areas would be online entertainment, and like most content, the winners would be local content in large domestic markets.

    They invested $200 million in Netflix back in 2010 and then invested in IVI in Russia, YY in China, Netmovies in Brazil, and us in Nigeria.

    With super-expensive data bundles and inelegant payment options (I remember waiting for Interswitch to enable us to integrate), our market took a while to mature. In most opportunities, you can be too early or too late; only in hindsight can you gauge when the best time to strike would be. iROKOtv was very early when we launched in 2011, but we were fortunate that there was a ready-made international market in the diaspora who were willing to pay and able to overcome any technical hurdles (payment/bandwidth/devices) to enable us to at least generate a sizable income.

    We actually waited until 2015 (four years post-launch), building the product, securing a sizable content library, and assembling a team to attempt to take on Nigeria and Africa. Between the revenues we generated and the venture capital we raised ($35 million) over the first ten years, we easily spent $100 million trying to win.

    But we weren’t winning; we weren’t really losing either. We were just there, in full survival mode, operating in the toughest conditions possible. Streaming, even domestically, is a scale game.

    Africa wasn’t immune to those costs. It’s incredibly expensive across marketing, content, delivery, and product platforms. Our largest, most serious competitors were Showmax, Netflix, Amazon, and Iflix. Collectively, they easily invested $1 billion or more from 2015 to 2023.

    During that period, we often had tense board meetings about why iROKOtv wasn’t succeeding; it was challenging to feel that all my hard work and dedication were constantly reduced to “you’re not doing enough”.

    We have been, and remain, the most aggressive in trying to distribute content across Nigeria—deploying hundreds of manned kiosks, teams of outbound contact centre agents, creating agency networks, adjusting our product to prioritise Android downloads, and pioneering peer-to-peer file sharing.

    At one point, it dawned on me, and I finally shot back in a board meeting: if iROKOtv was losing, could they point to someone who was beating us? In the startup world, that’s usually the outcome of underperformance.

    You are simply being out-executed by a better-capitalised or higher-performing startup. In this case, there simply wasn’t anything anyone could point to to establish that.

    So my simple assertion was that the market was winning. In 2019, we went out to fundraise; for the first time, we used a bank, Stanbic IBTP, to support that.

    We were looking for $10-20 million to keep pushing into and across Africa with our outbound, agency, and kiosk models.

    I believed my tales of survival would inspire the (primarily) PE investors that we were going to be the eventual winners in a brutal, long-fought civil streaming war. Instead, they all largely concluded that perhaps there was no market there, that the unit economics were simply not viable at any reasonable scale.

    What they were all interested in was the ROK content, TV channels, and distribution business. It was straightforward (fewer than 30 employees), had clear revenue recognition (billion-dollar paid TV platforms – DStv, Multichoice, SKY, etc., with 3-5 year contracts in non-local currencies), and was amassing a sizable IP library funded by the same paid TV platforms. Once we separated out ROK, it was clear where the value lay in Iroko. It represented 80% of revenues and 25% of costs. EBITA margins of 35-40% were achieved without even realising it.

    The outcome of that fundraise was the $25 million partial exit (Iroko sold her shares; Mrs Njoku remains a significant shareholder in the studio) to Vivendi/Canal+.

    We closed in July 2019.

    Before the end of 2019, we had distributed $5 million as a special dividend and were primed to take on the world.

    Then COVID-19 happened. Streaming temporarily boomed in the West (our North American business tripled in subscriber growth), while Nigeria closed borders and grappled with peculiar economic principles (devaluations, FX windows, etc.).

    The local market in Nigeria simply collapsed. We saw it and stubbornly decided to keep investing and doubling down until we were all tapped out, having burnt through most of the post-exit capital. To save iROKOtv, we considered crowdfunding, an AIM LSE listing (you could raise $10-30 million easily back then) with relatively little revenue but a strong narrative.

    In the end, we raised $1.1 million in convertible notes, then recapped the company a year later and paid it back.

    In 2023, we finally accepted there was no market for paid premium services and exited Nigeria. We haven’t processed any Naira payments there in almost two years.

    As I humbly survey the wreckage of the last 15 years of streaming in Nigeria and Africa, it’s clear our (then $2k GDP per capita) was too small to support even a $5/mo product. It’s clear this wasn’t even a question of capital.

    Showmax alone continues to pour tens, if not hundreds, of millions to make it work. But the global giants tapped out last year; their costs (content and marketing) were clearly unsustainably high, and their product needed to be localised to make sense and actually work; it’s just not how platforms sustainably scale.

    So I wasn’t surprised when either Amazon or Netflix rolled back their considerable investments in Nigeria. $5/mo is a luxury I doubt even 250k can reliably afford in Nigeria.

    You can see the impact of what GOtv and DStv are suffering at the hands of the market. It’s okay that we tried and failed. It’s okay that we accept the limitations in the domestic market we find ourselves in. Did it need $1B+ to figure this out?

    Absolutely not. I believe, with my newfound knowledge, that iROKOtv could have reached the same conclusions with $5-10 million versus the $100 million+ we ended up investing.

    In hindsight, streaming wasn’t the winning model for Nollywood in Nigeria. Content, channels, and distribution were.

    With the economics that business had in 2018, we could have shut down iROKOtv and her $5 million/year in losses and either listed it or just had a fantastically profitable business.

    But I was a believer and walked away from millions of dollars in personal liquidity to put it all in to build streaming in Africa.

    My lessons were expensive, and that’s why I am so consistent in telling founders not to over-raise.

    I am not surprised by the story of Obi from Kobo360; I lobbied him pre-$30m raise not to raise too much capital or later on to seek a merger with his nearest competitor whilst they were engaged in a brutal price war.

    The unit economics and payment cycles were brutal, and capital wasn’t going to dramatically change the market dynamics, and it appeared that no one was really going to win that market. It’s only with deep, lived, and expensive experience that I can glance at unit economics coldly and get a feel for whether, with the usual macro turbulence, a startup has a better chance at long-term success.

    Nigeria is currently a massive drag on the entire operating business of Multichoice. Their most recent H1 reports indicate.

    Reminder that this is the largest pay platform in Africa, which is currently being acquired in a $2.8B deal.
    “The $100 million we invested in Iroko TV was a mistake. If I had another opportunity, I would not do it again.” Jason Njoku shares his terrible, brutal experience running Iroko TV. Let's read him: STREAMING IN NIGERIA. DID THE MARKET WIN? Iroko’s first funding was in August 2011; our mandate was to build a large streaming business in Nigeria. Tiger Global believed that one of the largest growth areas would be online entertainment, and like most content, the winners would be local content in large domestic markets. They invested $200 million in Netflix back in 2010 and then invested in IVI in Russia, YY in China, Netmovies in Brazil, and us in Nigeria. With super-expensive data bundles and inelegant payment options (I remember waiting for Interswitch to enable us to integrate), our market took a while to mature. In most opportunities, you can be too early or too late; only in hindsight can you gauge when the best time to strike would be. iROKOtv was very early when we launched in 2011, but we were fortunate that there was a ready-made international market in the diaspora who were willing to pay and able to overcome any technical hurdles (payment/bandwidth/devices) to enable us to at least generate a sizable income. We actually waited until 2015 (four years post-launch), building the product, securing a sizable content library, and assembling a team to attempt to take on Nigeria and Africa. Between the revenues we generated and the venture capital we raised ($35 million) over the first ten years, we easily spent $100 million trying to win. But we weren’t winning; we weren’t really losing either. We were just there, in full survival mode, operating in the toughest conditions possible. Streaming, even domestically, is a scale game. Africa wasn’t immune to those costs. It’s incredibly expensive across marketing, content, delivery, and product platforms. Our largest, most serious competitors were Showmax, Netflix, Amazon, and Iflix. Collectively, they easily invested $1 billion or more from 2015 to 2023. During that period, we often had tense board meetings about why iROKOtv wasn’t succeeding; it was challenging to feel that all my hard work and dedication were constantly reduced to “you’re not doing enough”. We have been, and remain, the most aggressive in trying to distribute content across Nigeria—deploying hundreds of manned kiosks, teams of outbound contact centre agents, creating agency networks, adjusting our product to prioritise Android downloads, and pioneering peer-to-peer file sharing. At one point, it dawned on me, and I finally shot back in a board meeting: if iROKOtv was losing, could they point to someone who was beating us? In the startup world, that’s usually the outcome of underperformance. You are simply being out-executed by a better-capitalised or higher-performing startup. In this case, there simply wasn’t anything anyone could point to to establish that. So my simple assertion was that the market was winning. In 2019, we went out to fundraise; for the first time, we used a bank, Stanbic IBTP, to support that. We were looking for $10-20 million to keep pushing into and across Africa with our outbound, agency, and kiosk models. I believed my tales of survival would inspire the (primarily) PE investors that we were going to be the eventual winners in a brutal, long-fought civil streaming war. Instead, they all largely concluded that perhaps there was no market there, that the unit economics were simply not viable at any reasonable scale. What they were all interested in was the ROK content, TV channels, and distribution business. It was straightforward (fewer than 30 employees), had clear revenue recognition (billion-dollar paid TV platforms – DStv, Multichoice, SKY, etc., with 3-5 year contracts in non-local currencies), and was amassing a sizable IP library funded by the same paid TV platforms. Once we separated out ROK, it was clear where the value lay in Iroko. It represented 80% of revenues and 25% of costs. EBITA margins of 35-40% were achieved without even realising it. The outcome of that fundraise was the $25 million partial exit (Iroko sold her shares; Mrs Njoku remains a significant shareholder in the studio) to Vivendi/Canal+. We closed in July 2019. Before the end of 2019, we had distributed $5 million as a special dividend and were primed to take on the world. Then COVID-19 happened. Streaming temporarily boomed in the West (our North American business tripled in subscriber growth), while Nigeria closed borders and grappled with peculiar economic principles (devaluations, FX windows, etc.). The local market in Nigeria simply collapsed. We saw it and stubbornly decided to keep investing and doubling down until we were all tapped out, having burnt through most of the post-exit capital. To save iROKOtv, we considered crowdfunding, an AIM LSE listing (you could raise $10-30 million easily back then) with relatively little revenue but a strong narrative. In the end, we raised $1.1 million in convertible notes, then recapped the company a year later and paid it back. In 2023, we finally accepted there was no market for paid premium services and exited Nigeria. We haven’t processed any Naira payments there in almost two years. As I humbly survey the wreckage of the last 15 years of streaming in Nigeria and Africa, it’s clear our (then $2k GDP per capita) was too small to support even a $5/mo product. It’s clear this wasn’t even a question of capital. Showmax alone continues to pour tens, if not hundreds, of millions to make it work. But the global giants tapped out last year; their costs (content and marketing) were clearly unsustainably high, and their product needed to be localised to make sense and actually work; it’s just not how platforms sustainably scale. So I wasn’t surprised when either Amazon or Netflix rolled back their considerable investments in Nigeria. $5/mo is a luxury I doubt even 250k can reliably afford in Nigeria. You can see the impact of what GOtv and DStv are suffering at the hands of the market. It’s okay that we tried and failed. It’s okay that we accept the limitations in the domestic market we find ourselves in. Did it need $1B+ to figure this out? Absolutely not. I believe, with my newfound knowledge, that iROKOtv could have reached the same conclusions with $5-10 million versus the $100 million+ we ended up investing. In hindsight, streaming wasn’t the winning model for Nollywood in Nigeria. Content, channels, and distribution were. With the economics that business had in 2018, we could have shut down iROKOtv and her $5 million/year in losses and either listed it or just had a fantastically profitable business. But I was a believer and walked away from millions of dollars in personal liquidity to put it all in to build streaming in Africa. My lessons were expensive, and that’s why I am so consistent in telling founders not to over-raise. I am not surprised by the story of Obi from Kobo360; I lobbied him pre-$30m raise not to raise too much capital or later on to seek a merger with his nearest competitor whilst they were engaged in a brutal price war. The unit economics and payment cycles were brutal, and capital wasn’t going to dramatically change the market dynamics, and it appeared that no one was really going to win that market. It’s only with deep, lived, and expensive experience that I can glance at unit economics coldly and get a feel for whether, with the usual macro turbulence, a startup has a better chance at long-term success. Nigeria is currently a massive drag on the entire operating business of Multichoice. Their most recent H1 reports indicate. Reminder that this is the largest pay platform in Africa, which is currently being acquired in a $2.8B deal.
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  • Omo I tire for this place . My first week in the UK as a student in 2011 - thinking on how to pay my balance fees .

    2011, i paid 60 % of my UK school fees with N1 million naira when I was processing my masters to the UK ( imagine that) and all I had was just N1.5m naira . So here in this pics , I was left with just N200k about 1, 500k pounds then . Life don really changed . Imagine that 200k naira now is 99 pounds. How i for do am , even when i was still tired about life .....? I really pity the young ones now....they have it about 15 times harder now ...Chai.

    #Tinosbullet
    Omo I tire for this place . My first week in the UK as a student in 2011 - thinking on how to pay my balance fees . 2011, i paid 60 % of my UK school fees with N1 million naira when I was processing my masters to the UK ( imagine that) and all I had was just N1.5m naira . So here in this pics , I was left with just N200k about 1, 500k pounds then . Life don really changed . Imagine that 200k naira now is 99 pounds. How i for do am , even when i was still tired about life .....? I really pity the young ones now....they have it about 15 times harder now ...Chai. #Tinosbullet
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  • Prophet Jeremiah Heals Woman, Raises N6.1 Million After Husband Rejects Her

    A miraculous healing turned into an emotional drama after a woman, once afflicted with sickness, was rejected by her husband despite her recovery.

    The woman, whose identity remains undisclosed, was reportedly healed by Prophet Jeremiah Omoto Fufeyin during a service at Mercy City in Effurun, Delta State

    However, upon returning home, her husband shockingly rejected her, expressing regret that she survived. He went as far as calling her sister to take her away, insisting he would not live under the same roof with her. He also drove her and their children out of the house.

    Determined to help, Prophet Jeremiah intervened again during the Cash Inflow Programme at Mercy City on February 28, 2025.

    Moved by her plight, he not only prayed for her but also raised N6.1 million to support her. The prophet assured the woman that her husband would eventually come back to beg for forgiveness.

    True to his words, during the Sunday service on March 2, 2025, when the money was officially presented to the woman, her husband unexpectedly showed up at the church to plead for reconciliation.

    His sudden change of heart sparked outrage among church members, who nearly harassed him for his previous actions. In his defense, the man claimed he did not know what had come over him and promised never to mistreat his wife again.

    However, the woman revealed that her husband had shown no concern for her or their children, nor did he even know where they had been staying since he sent them away.

    Despite the tension, Prophet Jeremiah urged the woman to forgive her husband and give him another chance.He then presented the N6.1 million to her, securing her financial independence regardless of her decision.

    The dramatic turn of events has left many in awe of Prophet Jeremiah’s prophetic declaration and the power of faith
    Prophet Jeremiah Heals Woman, Raises N6.1 Million After Husband Rejects Her A miraculous healing turned into an emotional drama after a woman, once afflicted with sickness, was rejected by her husband despite her recovery. The woman, whose identity remains undisclosed, was reportedly healed by Prophet Jeremiah Omoto Fufeyin during a service at Mercy City in Effurun, Delta State However, upon returning home, her husband shockingly rejected her, expressing regret that she survived. He went as far as calling her sister to take her away, insisting he would not live under the same roof with her. He also drove her and their children out of the house. Determined to help, Prophet Jeremiah intervened again during the Cash Inflow Programme at Mercy City on February 28, 2025. Moved by her plight, he not only prayed for her but also raised N6.1 million to support her. The prophet assured the woman that her husband would eventually come back to beg for forgiveness. True to his words, during the Sunday service on March 2, 2025, when the money was officially presented to the woman, her husband unexpectedly showed up at the church to plead for reconciliation. His sudden change of heart sparked outrage among church members, who nearly harassed him for his previous actions. In his defense, the man claimed he did not know what had come over him and promised never to mistreat his wife again. However, the woman revealed that her husband had shown no concern for her or their children, nor did he even know where they had been staying since he sent them away. Despite the tension, Prophet Jeremiah urged the woman to forgive her husband and give him another chance.He then presented the N6.1 million to her, securing her financial independence regardless of her decision. The dramatic turn of events has left many in awe of Prophet Jeremiah’s prophetic declaration and the power of faith
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  • GHANA MUST GO

    On 17th January, 1983, exactly 42 years ago today, President of Nigeria, Shehu Shagari issued an executive order to expel two million undocumented West African migrants, half of whom were from Ghana.

    After the expulsion, the over 1 million Ghanaians headed westwards, passing through Benin and Togo. Because of an attempted coup the previous year, the President of Ghana, Jerry Rawlings, had closed the main land crossing with Togo, and to avoid a sudden influx of returnees, Togo then also shut its borders with Benin.

    Therefore, once the migrants reached Benin, the way out was restricted and they were forced to remain in the port of Cotonou, the country's seat of government, attempting to find a boat to Ghana. After they had been stranded for more than a week, Ghana reopened its borders, causing Togo to do likewise so that the Ghanaians could return home. Thousands of Ghanaians died at the border.

    #iLoveGhana
    GHANA MUST GO On 17th January, 1983, exactly 42 years ago today, President of Nigeria, Shehu Shagari issued an executive order to expel two million undocumented West African migrants, half of whom were from Ghana. After the expulsion, the over 1 million Ghanaians headed westwards, passing through Benin and Togo. Because of an attempted coup the previous year, the President of Ghana, Jerry Rawlings, had closed the main land crossing with Togo, and to avoid a sudden influx of returnees, Togo then also shut its borders with Benin. Therefore, once the migrants reached Benin, the way out was restricted and they were forced to remain in the port of Cotonou, the country's seat of government, attempting to find a boat to Ghana. After they had been stranded for more than a week, Ghana reopened its borders, causing Togo to do likewise so that the Ghanaians could return home. Thousands of Ghanaians died at the border. #iLoveGhana 🇬🇭
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