Editorial cartoons on this page appear four days a week on the back page of THISDAY

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Monday, 1 September 2014

"Original" Copycats

Here’s a cartoon I made five years ago in reaction to what I actually experienced. Since then, the imposture bit has occurred a few more times, the last time being a few days ago. It prompted me to change the faceless profile image in my facebook timeline to one of my portrait, with the hope that the move will discourage impostors from turning up at events claiming to be me. And I added in my timeline, “or maybe it will help my political adversaries to easily identify me or perhaps it may fuel another kind of racket. I don’t know. You can’t win, can you?”

Tuesday, 19 August 2014

Ex-Governor: "I'll Gladly Make The Same Mistakes Again!"

“I’d gladly offend again!”

I’ve been on the case of ex-governors lately. There are just too many of them out there who have been indicted or having allegations of corruption hanging over them that are behaving badly and getting away with it. They seem to be saying: “If I had to do it all over again, I wouldn’t change a thing!”

Tuesday, 12 August 2014

Obey-The-Wind TV

Obey-the-wind-TV

Those who grew up in Lagos in the 50s and 60s should remember a type of inferior fabric for trousers called “Obey the wind”  or “ota Marina “ (i.e, not Marina Quayside friendly).  As a young man, if you wore trousers that were not made of quality fabric like Terylene (Dacron) or pure 100% wool that could stand the test of time, you were challenged by your mates to show up in them in Marina Quayside “catwalk “. If your trousers billowed and fluttered excessively in the Marina breeze, then they were declared inferior and you along with it.

In the same 50s and 60s, you could count on the fingers of one hand how many families owned TV sets. In those days, the ceremony of sparking the TV to life every night is akin to igniting the Olympic torch several months before the event and relaying it over thousands of miles to hundreds of places around the world before ending up on the day of the ceremony at the cauldron where the final bearer uses the torch to start the flame in the arena. Yes, that was about how long you had to wait for the TV to warm up. That was the best technology could offer then.

Nowadays, with advanced technology, nobody has to go through that tortuous route to switch on the TV, …errr….except in Nigeria!  For instance, if you switch on the DSTV, you can go and make a cup of tea and come back and still wait a few minutes before the scanning comes to an end and you are allowed to watch TV. And if it rains or it is windy, you can go and do something else because DSTV is bound to hold services in abeyance until the rainstorm subsides. That’s what you get with obsolete technology. That’s what we are getting now. You make monthly payments for services that should be pay-as-you-go. Shame!