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Sie hat sooooo viele Bücher geschrieben, die Kinder lieben: Seeräuber Moses, Sommerby, Ritter Trenk, King-Kong, Thabo, Wir Kinder aus dem Möwenweg ... Eine bunte Welt voller Geschichten hat Kinderbuchautorin Kirsten Boie geschaffen. Am 19. März 2025 ist sie 75 Jahre alt geworden. Und die größte Kinder-Party für Kirsten Boie - die gab es vor knapp zwei Wochen im Ernst Deutsch-Theater. Ausschnitte aus der Kirsten Boie-Geburtstag-Gala - die hört ihr bei Mikado am Ostermontag!
JOBURG ANELE HAS A STORY TIME FOR YOU, SHE SAYS: “My friend was at the farm, and it’s very fancy. They are usually only there for a few days. This last time they were there for 2 weeks, people kept coming asking for Thabo, turns out Thabo who runs the farm was selling the wifi password to the village.” So, we want to ask you how you caught someone using something that you own without your permission?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Talk Show is in conversation with Tumelo and Thabo about the work they do in the media space
Hot Topic Topic: The 2025 Budget Speech fails to address South Africa's deepening energy and climate crises Guest: Thabo Sibeko: Programme Manager, Earthlife Africa
'De Paradijsvogel is een prachtige, veelkleurige zangvogel' - zo vermeld de encyclopedie. Niet verwonderlijk dat deze vogel de naamgever is voor een festival waar een zeer diverse, bonte, zingende stoet artiesten hun opwachting maakt: vanaf dinsdag 18 maart barst Birds of Paradise los in Tivoli Vredenburg! We horen in deze uitzending een voorproefje van dat festival, maar we staan ook vast even stil bij het recente overlijden van Sofia Gubaidulina, we brengen een bezoekje aan de Children's Corner met Thabo van 11 jaar en we luisteren naar sopraan Elisabeth Hetherington. Festival Birds of Paradise begint op dinsdag 18 maart: https://birds-of-paradise.nl Ook getipt in deze uitzending: Elisabeth Hetherington & ADAM kwartet: https://www.amare.nl/nl/agenda/3194/elisabeth-hetherington-adam-quartet/arcadiana-verhalen-van-liefde-en-vergankelijkheid
Comrades! Consider this a peace offering! The 2 Broke Twimbos were part of a panel celebrating Africa Podcast Day this week courtesy of Afripods, together with Thabo & Sena of 6 Ft Weights & King Kandoro of Black & Forth. So after a brief intro and some noise, enjoy the discussion and shots thrown at YOU the listener. Subscribe and listen to 2 Broke Twimbos everywhere podcasts are available and keep up with all things 2BT via this link:2BT LinkPlease rate and review, and support us on Patreon!
Aubrey speaks to Dr Thabo Mashongoane, CEO of the Mining Qualification Authority (Skills Council) about his journey to getting where he is and how he managed challenges and obstacles that he encountered.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
- Mufasa: the Lion King - Fox Sports lawsuit - Apple lawsuit - Thabo's Christmas story Song credits - Dr. Duda - Anthem *Congrats to our producer!!
The Evolution of the African Merchant. Nosipho Radebe is in conversation with the Chairman of the Board at African Bank, Thabo Dloti to expand on the importance of tonight's event.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of Farmers Inside Track, Dr Josef van Wyngaard, Technical Manager at Voermol Feeds, joins North West's young livestock farmer Thabo Dithakgwe. Farming 790 hectares near the Kalahari Desert, Thabo shares his journey toward becoming one of South Africa's youngest black stud breeders, raising high-value Bonsmara bulls. Discover how Voermol Maxiwol and Phosphate Block help keep his herd healthy and productive. Dr Josef also explains Voermol's extensive farmer support and offers insights into product benefits, best practices, and the future of livestock nutrition.
Curator Tessa Giblin deconstructs El Anatsui's monumental, sculptural textiles, unravelling the ties that still bind post-colonial Ghana, Nigeria, and Scotland in the 21st century., via Scottish Mission Book Depot Keta (2024). El Anatsui: Scottish Mission Book Depot Keta runs at Talbot Rice Gallery in Edinburgh until 29 September 2024. For more about Otobong Nkanga and The Recent at Talbot Rice Gallery, read this article about Edinburgh's Environmental Exhibitions in gowithYamo: gowithyamo.com/blog/edinburghs-environmental-exhibitions-the-global Hear artist Ibrahim Mahama on Sekondi Locomotive Workshop (2024) at Fruitmarket in Edinburgh: pod.link/1533637675/episode/ed0be49d016ce665c1663202091ce224 And Serge Attukwei Clottey on his family's internal migration from Jamestown/Usshertown in British Accra, Ghana, to coastal La (Labadi), Afrogallonism, and his collaborative practice, uplifting his community with upcycled plastic waste, through Noko Y3 Dzen (There's Something in the World) (2018–Now) at the Eden Project in Cornwall: pod.link/1533637675/episode/8093f81c6a2eaaf7589bb73768e2a20c Listen to curator Osei Bonsu, curator of the Hyundai Commission: El Anatsui: Behind the Red Moon and A World in Common: Contemporary African Photography, at Tate Modern in London: pod.link/1533637675/episode/386dbf4fcb2704a632270e0471be8410 And hear Chris Spring, former curator of the British Museum's collections from eastern and southern Africa, on ‘African' textiles and Thabo, Thabiso and Blackx by Araminta de Clermont (2010) at the British Museum in London. pod.link/1533637675/episode/a32298611ba95c955aba254a4ef996dd PRODUCER: Jelena Sofronijevic. Follow EMPIRE LINES on Instagram: instagram.com/empirelinespodcast And Twitter: twitter.com/jelsofron/status/1306563558063271936 Support EMPIRE LINES on Patreon: patreon.com/empirelines
- Thabo's vacation - Bible stories - Endrick's favorite players - An interesting breakup aftermath Black Coffee - Trip to Lyon
Our profile interview, this evening is Thabo Moloto. He's the Chairman of Rootz Investments – an umbrella corporation that houses several interests within the Local, Continental and Global Mining sector Ecosystem. Moloto has acquired diverse mining experience, having worked in Coal, Diamond and Metalliferous mines. He spent a decade in the Shaft Sinking business, after having begun his career with DeBeers Diamond Mines (Venetia) as a learner official. He acquired a rare and diverse experience in commodity- based operations like Coal, Manganese, Gold, Platinum and Shaft-Sinking Operations and today he joins to tell us more about his journey and love for the mining sector.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
- Thabo's birthday surprise - Graduation ceremonies - Ranking Zim foods - Olympics Song credits - DJ Cleo - wena ng'hamba nawe
Join Alex for his debut show on TTR as he talks to special guest Thabo Miles-Matli about the current teacher recruitment crisis and how it might be resolved. Thabo is a Senior Lecturer of Computer Science Education at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Social Professions, London Metropolitan University.
Is there an unfair stigma with Fathers in South Africa? How does an absent Dad affect our mental health in the family unity? Should our dads also get paternity leave? Why is our father's presence at home so important? In this week's episode, we are joined by veteran broadcaster, and now author, Thabo 'T-Bose' Mokwele, who shares his personal story as a #father. How do we overcome generational stigmas? And what to do when parents are not around - or when our parents don't know how to express their love & affection with us? Thabo's book "Pause: Are you making the right choices?" is out now & available online and at all bookstores countrywide. Brought to you by Epi-max Baby & Junior – our family, for your family. Also supported by Jacaranda 94.2.
Artist LR (Lisa) Vandy shows EMPIRE LINES the ropes in a studio visit to Chatham's Royal Navy Dockyard in Kent, unravelling entangled imperial and industrial relationships, dance in the African diaspora, and women's work in abstract sculpture. In 2022, sculptor LR (Lisa) Vandy relocated her studio from the city of London to Chatham Ropery which, with original machinery from the 19th century, has preserved traditional practices and knowledges. Rope became essential to Britain's burgeoning maritime industry during the Georgian and Victorian eras, tied to the construction of empires, colonial hierarchies, and sites of slavery. Building in collaboration with the resident Master Ropemakers, her sculptures allude to and playfully subvert the media's historic associations and legacy now. From her five-metre-high figure for Liverpool's Canning Dock, to her new, smaller body of works, Lisa walks through her collection and archive on Kent's waterfront. Born in Coventry in the Midlands, she shares her experiences of growing up ‘by the sea' in Sussex as a young person of Nigerian and Irish heritages, and the racialised exclusion some face from leisurely pursuits in natural environments. Inspired by Barbara Ehrenreich's 2006 book, Dancing In The Streets, Lisa unravels ‘collective joy' and the central role of Black women. We see how dance has been used to resist oppression across continents, with spirit dances, raves, festivals, and carnival masquerades, interests shared by contemporaries like Theaster Gates, Hew Locke, Romuald Hazoumè, Zak Ové, and Hassan Hajjaj. Straw-fibre figures recall Grain Mother deities, corn dollies, and Kumpo, spinning dances from the Casamance (Senegal) and Gambia. With her ongoing series of Hulls, comprised of found objects, boats, and fishing floats ‘plundered' from DIY stores, we discuss her interest in the ‘underbelly of empire', knotty relationships between rail, sail, and transport, and ‘migrant crises' in the Mediterranean Sea today. Drawing on her research in museum collections, ancient silverwares, and indigo trade routes, Lisa moves on the discussion about globalised 'African masks' as symbols of ‘aggressive protection'. We discuss gender and identity, and how her curvilinear copper sculptures challenge conventional representations of the ‘female form'. Dynamic drawings of tornados tell of her designs for statues in the landscape - role models for those subject to the male gaze - exposing the empowering potential of contemporary art. Plus, Lisa shares why her tactile public artworks are designed to be destroyed. LR Vandy: Twist runs at the October Gallery in London until 25 May 2024. Dancing In Time: The Ties That Bind Us, commissioned by Liverpool Museums for the International Slavery Museum's Martin Luther King celebrations in 2023, stands at the Historic Dockyard Chatham in Kent until 17 November 2024. On harvest rituals, hear episodes about Ashanti Hare's performances at Against Apartheid at KARST in Plymouth (2023) and Invasion Ecology on Dartmoor (2024), and Learning from Artemisia (2019-2020), by Uriel Orlow and Orchestre Jeunes Étoiles des Astres, at the Eden Project in Cornwall. For more photographs of Black experiences in English coastal towns, and about the transatlantic ‘Triangular Trade' between Europe, Africa, and the Americas, hear Ingrid Pollard on Carbon Slowly Turning (2022) at Turner Contemporary in Margate. For more women working in port cities, read into: Lisetta Carmi: Identities, at the Estorick Collection in London. Magdalena Abakanowicz: Every Tangle of Thread and Rope, at Tate Modern in London. And hear Chris Spring on ‘African' textiles and Thabo, Thabiso and Blackx by Araminta de Clermont (2010) at the British Museum in London. PRODUCER: Jelena Sofronijevic. Editor: Alex Rees. Follow EMPIRE LINES on Instagram: instagram.com/empirelinespodcast And Twitter: twitter.com/jelsofron/status/1306563558063271936 Support EMPIRE LINES on Patreon: patreon.com/empirelines
Artist Yinka Shonibare CBE RA, and Hans Ulrich Obrist and Tamsin Hong of The Serpentine Galleries, coat London's historic statues and public monuments with fresh layers of history. For over 30 years, Yinka Shonibare CBE RA has used Western European art history to explore contemporary culture and national identities. With his iconic use of Dutch wax print fabric - inspired by Indonesian batik designs, mass-produced in the Netherlands (and now China) and sold to British colonies in West Africa - he troubles ideas of ‘authentic' ‘African prints'. Painting these colourful patterns on his smaller-scale replicas of sculptures of British figures like Winston Churchill, Robert Clive, and Robert Milligan, he engages with contemporary debates raised in Black Lives Matter (#BLM) and the toppling of slave trader Edward Colston's statue in Bristol. Suspended States, the artist's first London solo exhibition in over 20 years, puts these questions of cultural identity and whiteness, within the modern contexts of globalisation, economics, and art markets. Wind Sculptures speak to movements across borders, other works how architectures of power affect refuge, migration, and the legacies of imperialism in wars, conflict, and peace today. With his Library series, we read into Wole Soyinka, Bisi Silva, and canonised 17th, 18th, and 19th century artists like Diego Velázquez, focussing on Yinka's engagement with Pablo Picasso, modernism, and ‘primitivism'. Hans Ulrich Obrist and Tamsin Hong highlight the connection between the Serpentine's ecological work, and Yinka's new woodcuts and drawings which consider the impact of colonisation on the environment. As a self-described ‘post-colonial hybrid', Yinka details his diasporic social practices, including his Guest Project experimental space in Hackney, and G.A.S. Foundation in Nigeria, and collaborations with young artists and researchers like Leo Robinson, Péjú Oshin, and Alayo Akinkubye. Yinka Shonibare: Suspended States runs at the Serpentine Galleries in London until 1 September 2024. Yinka is also an Invited Artist, and participant in Nigeria Imaginary, the official Nigerian Pavilion, at the 60th Venice Biennale, which runs until 24 November 2024. Part of EMPIRE LINES at Venice, a series of episodes leading to Foreigners Everywhere (Stranieri Ovunque), the 60th Venice Biennale or International Art Exhibition in Italy, in April 2024. For more about Dutch wax fabric and ‘African' textiles, listen to Lubaina Himid on Lost Threads (2021, 2023) at the Holburne Museum in Bath and British Textile Biennial 2021, and the British Museum's Dr. Chris Spring on Thabo, Thabiso and Blackx by Araminta de Clermont (2010). For more about Nelson's Ship in a Bottle (2010), listen to historicity London, a podcast series of audio walking tours, exploring how cities got to be the way they are. On bronze as the ‘media of history', hear artist Pio Abad on Giolo's Lament (2023) at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford. And on the globalisation of ‘African' masks, listen to Tate curator Osei Bonsu in the episode about Ndidi Dike's A History of A City in a Box (2019). For more about the Blk Art Group, hear curator Dorothy Price on Claudette Johnson's And I Have My Own Business in This Skin (1982) at the Courtauld Gallery in London. Hear curator Folakunle Oshun, and more about Yinka Shonibare's Diary of a Victorian Dandy (1998), in the episode on Lagos Soundscapes by Emeka Ogboh (2023), at the South London Gallery. Read about Nengi Omuku in this article about Soulscapes at the Dulwich Picture Gallery in London. And for other artists inspired by the port city of Venice, hear John Akomfrah of the British Pavilion (2024) on Arcadia (2023) at The Box in Plymouth. WITH: Yinka Shonibare CBE RA, British-Nigerian artist. Hans Ulrich Obrist, Artistic Director, and Tamsin Hong, Exhibitions Curator, at the Serpentine Galleries in London. PRODUCER: Jelena Sofronijevic. Follow EMPIRE LINES on Instagram: instagram.com/empirelinespodcast
Sara-Jayne Makwala King speaks to 15-year-old music prodigy Thabo Da Po, tipped to become the continent's next ‘Black Coffee'. Song: Sumah - https://open.spotify.com/track/4ymWFnY8tlhomvAGS2OkVu See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Artist and curator Lubaina Himid unravels entangled histories of transatlantic slavery and textile production, across continents, and Britain's museum collections, via Lost Threads (2021, 2023). Lubaina Himid considers herself ‘fundamentally a painter', but textiles have long been part of her life and practice. Had she stayed in Zanzibar, the country of her birth in East Africa, she may have become a kanga designer, following a pattern set by her mother's interest in fashion, and childhood spent around department stores in London. First commissioned by the British Textile Biennial in 2021, and installed in Gawthorpe Hall's Great Barn, her 400m-long work Lost Threads' flows in a manner reflective of the movement of the oceans, seas, and waterways which historically carried raw cotton, spun yarn, and woven textiles between continents, as well as enslaved people from Africa to pick raw cotton in the southern states of America, and workers who migrated from South Asia to operate looms in East Lancashire. Now on display in Bath, the rich Dutch wax fabrics resonate with the portraits on display in the Holburne Museum's collection of 17th and 18th century paintings - symbols of how much of the wealth and prosperity of south-west England has been derived from plantations in the West Indies. Lubaina talks about how the meaning of her work changes as it travels to different contexts, with works interpreted with respect to Indian Ocean histories in the port city of Sharjah, to accessible, participatory works in Cardiff, and across Wales. We consider her ‘creative interventions' in object museums and historic collections, ‘obliterating the beauty' of domestic items like ceramics, and her work with risk-taking curators in ‘regional' and ‘non-conventional' exhibition spaces. We discuss her formative work within the Blk Art group in the 1980s, collaboration with other women, and being the first Black artist to win the Turner Prize in 2017. And drawing on her interests in theatre, Lubaina hints at other collections and seemingly ‘resolved' histories that she'd like to unsettle next. Lubaina Himid: Lost Threads runs at the Holburne Museum in Bath until 21 April 2024. For more about Dutch wax fabric and ‘African' textiles, hear the British Museum's Dr. Chris Spring on Thabo, Thabiso and Blackx, Araminta de Clermont (2010). For more about Claudette Johnson, hear curator Dorothy Price on And I Have My Own Business in This Skin (1982) at the Courtauld Gallery in London. Hear artist Ingrid Pollard on Carbon Slowly Turning (2022) at the Turner Contemporary in Margate. Hear curator Griselda Pollock from Medium and Memory (2023) at HackelBury Fine Art in London. And for more about the wealth of colonial, Caribbean sugar plantations which founded the Holburne Museum, hear Dr. Lou Roper on Philip Lea and John Seller's A New Map of the Island of Barbados (1686), an object in its collection. Recommended reading: On Lubaina Himid: gowithyamo.com/blog/the-revolutionary-act-of-walking-in-the-city On Maud Sulter: gowithyamo.com/blog/reclaiming-visual-culture-black-venus-at-somerset-house On Sonia Boyce: gowithyamo.com/blog/feeling-her-way-sonia-boyces-noisy-exhibition On Life Between Islands at Tate Britain: artmag.co.uk/the-caribbean-condensed-life-between-islands-at-the-tate-britain WITH: Lubaina Himid, British artist and curator, and professor of contemporary art at the University of Central Lancashire. Himid was one of the first artists involved in the UK's Black Art movement in the 1980s, and appointed MBE and later CBE for services to Black Women's/Art. She won the Turner Prize in 2017, and continues to produce work globally. ART: ‘Lost Threads, Lubaina Himid (2021, 2023)'. SOUNDS: Super Slow Way, British Textile Biennial (2021). PRODUCER: Jelena Sofronijevic. Follow EMPIRE LINES on Instagram: instagram.com/empirelinespodcast And Twitter: twitter.com/jelsofron/status/1306563558063271936 Support EMPIRE LINES on Patreon: patreon.com/empirelines
Artist Serge Attukwei Clottey joins EMPIRE LINES live at the Eden Project in Cornwall, to discuss Afrogallonism, uplifting communities with upcycled plastic waste, and how the traditional Ghanaian harvest festival of Homowo challenges colonial hierarchies of gender. Accra-based artist Serge Attukwei Clottey works across installation, performance, photography, painting, and sculpture, exploring personal and political narratives rooted in histories of trade and migration. He refers to his practice with yellow plastic, Kufuor-era, cooking oil cans as ‘Afrogallonism', using found and recycled materials to create a dialogue with the city's cultural history and identity, whilst exploring the meanings that are invested in everyday objects, and how they circulate in local and global economies. Referencing Ghana's historic wealth, a region known as the Gold Coast during British colonial rule during 19th and 20th century, Serge's installations like Follow the Yellow Brick Road (2015-2020) also serve a practical function, in creating wealth and employment for the local community. On display alongside his existing work at the Eden Project is a new audio piece, a remembrance of famine that once befell pre-colonial Ghana, and is once again impacting farmers as a consequence of climate change. Serge talks about his family's migration from city of Jamestown/Usshertown, in British Accra, to La (Labadi), on the coast, and how water has long infiltrated his practice. We discuss the realities of resource extraction and consumption captured by his work, connecting with the likes of Romauld Hazoumè, El Anatsui, Zina Saro-Wiwa, and Wura-Natasha Ogunji. Serge shares his interest in political performance art, and collaborating with young people. We open My Mother's Wardrobe (2015-2016), in which Serge invited men to wear women's clothes and make-up to perform everyday and ritual tasks, disrupting conventions of gender and sexuality imposed upon and appropriated by many African countries during colonial rule. And Serge talks about his commissions across the world, from Desert X, to Kew Gardens, and the National Portrait Gallery in London, where his Windrush Portrait of Mr. Laceta Reid proudly stands. This episode was recorded live at Reclaim - a weekend of talks and events at the Eden Project in Cornwall, curated to support mental and planetary wellbeing - in January 2024: edenproject.com/visit/whats-on/reclaim Acts of Gathering runs at the Eden Project in Cornwall until 14 April 2024. For more, hear curators Misha Curson and Hannah Hooks in the episode on Learning from Artemisia, Uriel Orlow and Orchestre Jeunes Étoiles des Astres (2019-2020): pod.link/1533637675/episode/0e8ab778b4ce1ad24bc15df3fec5a386 For more about African masks and performance, listen to Osei Bonsu, curator of A World in Common: Contemporary African Photography at Tate Modern in London: pod.link/1533637675/episode/386dbf4fcb2704a632270e0471be8410 About Ashanti Hare, and the south-west arts ecology, hear curator Ashish Ghadiali on Radical Ecology's recent exhibition at KARST in Plymouth: pod.link/1533637675/episode/146d4463adf0990219f1bf0480b816d3 For more ‘African' textiles, hear Dr. Chris Spring on Thabo, Thabiso and Blackx, Araminta de Clermont (2010): pod.link/1533637675/episode/a32298611ba95c955aba254a4ef996dd And on sea/water as a historical archive, listen to these episodes on: John Akomfrah's Arcadia (2023), at The Box in Plymouth: pod.link/1533637675/episode/31cdf80a5d524e4f369140ef3283a6cd Julianknxx's Chorus in Rememory of Flight (2023), at the Barbican in London: pod.link/1533637675/episode/1792f53fa27b8e2ece289b53dd62b2b7 WITH: Dr. Serge Attukwei Clottey, Accra-based visual artist. ART: ‘Noko Y3 Dzen (There's Something in the World) (2018–Now)'. PRODUCER: Jelena Sofronijevic. Follow EMPIRE LINES on Instagram: instagram.com/empirelinespodcast And Twitter: twitter.com/jelsofron/status/1306563558063271936 Support EMPIRE LINES on Patreon: patreon.com/empirelines
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Thabo speaks to Christopher Gevers, a lecturer in international law at the University of KwaZulu-Natal about the legal arguments presented by South Africa in its case against Israel before the International Court of Justice.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo speaks to Linda Yende, a relationship coach and author about the importance of setting goals with your partner and how this can contribute to the overall success and longevity of a relationship.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo in for Clement speaks to Dr Phetiwe Matutu, the Chief Executive Officer at Universities South Africa about the proposed increases in tuition and residence fees at South Africa's universities .See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo speaks to Mmusi Maimane, Build One SA Leader about the highly anticipated judgement on election laws which is set to have a massive impact on the 2024 national elections.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
23.11.23 Pt 2 - Gareth and Phumi are joined in studio by GroundUp duo, Marecia Damons and Daniel Steyn - the journalists who first broke the Thabo Bester's fake death story. Together they have released a book about the real-life crime drama that has South Africans glued to the news. Plus, some valuable information about who funds South African political parties. www.cliffcentral.com
Guest: EWN Journalist Kgomotoso Modise joins Amy to discuss the call by the lawyers of disgraced Dr Nandipha for accountability of the officials that forced her to make an appearance at the Bloemfontein Magistrates Court despite being unwell.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Katlego finally found his way back to his family. He was identified by his fingerprints and returned to his parents in April 2023.But this wild story isn't over yet, the investigation into the escape continues, and a trial is pending. How do you think this case is going to end? Get all the crime in half the time! Watch True Crime Recaps on Facebook, TikTok, YouTube or Snapchat! Follow us on Instagram and Twitter. New episodes weekly!
Curator Eleanor Nairne traces the migrations of contemporary artist Julianknxx, as he travels between European port cities, and back to the Barbican in London, collaborating with Black choirs and musicians. Sierra Leonian artist Julianknxx challenges stereotypes around African art, history, and culture through the lens of his personal experiences. Crossing the boundaries between poetry and music, audio and visual art, his new multichannel installation at the Barbican is born out of a year of travelling over four thousand kilometres across Europe, from Berlin to Barcelona, in a process of collaboration and ‘active listening' with Black choirs and collectives. Curator Eleanor Nairne shares her experience of working with the artist, and how their interdisciplinary practice challenges the singular ‘Black experience'. We discuss the importance of water and migration, ‘shipwrecked' cities like Amsterdam, and how the language of historical reckonings is rooted in transatlantic slavery and colonialism. Drawing on academics like Édouard Glissant and Lorna McDaniel, we consider the role of songs as non-conventional sources, sites of community and the intergenerational transfer of knowledge. Plus, Eleanor details the importance of immersion in unsettling narratives - including online. Julianknxx: Chorus in Rememory of Flight runs at the Barbican in London until 11 February 2024. The exhibition is also accessible online via WePresent, the global arts platform of WeTransfer. For more, you can read my article. For more about A World in Common: Contemporary African Photography at Tate Modern, listen to curators Osei Bonsu, Jess Baxter, and Genevieve Barton on EMPIRE LINES: pod.link/1533637675/episode/386dbf4fcb2704a632270e0471be8410 For more about Johny Pitts, hear the artist on Home is Not A Place (2021-Now) at The Photographers' Gallery on EMPIRE LINES: pod.link/1533637675/episode/70fd7f9adfd2e5e30b91dc77ee811613 Part of EMPIRE LINES at 90, exploring the legacies of the transatlantic slave trade through contemporary art. WITH: Eleanor Nairne, Senior Curator at Barbican Art Gallery, London. She is the curator of Chorus in Rememory of Flight. ART: ‘Chorus in Rememory of Flight, Julianknxx (2023) (EMPIRE LINES x Barbican)'. SOUNDS: Aron Kyne; THABO; Boras Choir. PRODUCER: Jelena Sofronijevic.
Thabo in for Clement speaks to Elijah Mhlanga, the spokesperson for the Department of Basic Education; Matakanye Matakanya, the General Secretary of The National Association of School Governing Bodies and Baxolile Nodada, the DA Spokesperson for Education about the proposals contained in the Basic Education Laws Amendment (BELA) Bill.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo speaks to Tebogo Khaas, the chair of Public Interest SA about the kind of leadership needed in the country.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo speaks to Teboho Maruping, the Commissioner for the Unemployment Insurance Fund about various avenues for employees if their employers are not making UIF contributions.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo in for Clement speaks to Dr Charles Sinkala, an International Relations Consultant as he reflects on the killing of an estimated 200,000 members of the Isaaq tribe, the largest clan group in the northwest part of Somalia.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo speaks to Dr. Andrew Lawson, a diagnostic and interventional Radiologist at Fibroids care about what causes fibroids and how they can be treated.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo speaks Advaita Naidoo, a leadership expert and the Africa Managing Director at Jack Hammer Global about the dramatic increase in stress and burnout in the workplace and how employers can combat it.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo speaks to Justice Edwin Cameron, the Inspecting Judge for the Judicial Inspector of Correctional Services aboutSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
C'est une affaire qui a agité tout un pays, à l'automne dernier. Le 7 avril, la paisible cavale de Thabo Bester, un criminel sud-africain de 37 ans, prend fin. Cet homme, condamné en 2012 à la prison à perpétuité pour le meurtre de sa petite amie, avait réussi à s'échapper un an plus tôt d'une des prisons les plus sécurisées d'Afrique du Sud.Aidé de sa complice, une médecin qui joue les starlettes sur les réseaux sociaux, le criminel avait fait croire aux autorités qu'il s'était suicidé en mettant le feu à sa cellule. Alors que tout le monde le croyait mort, Thabo Bester menait la grande vie dans un quartier cossu de Johannesburg, dans une villa à deux pas de la résidence du chef de l'Etat. Cette incroyable évasion n'aurait pas été possible sans le niveau de corruption très élevé dans le pays.Ariane Riou, journaliste à la cellule récits du Parisien, a consacré cet été une série d'articles à cette affaire. Elle s'est rendue sur place et a rencontré la plupart des protagonistes. Elle raconte dans Code source. Ecoutez Code source sur toutes les plateformes audio : Apple Podcast (iPhone, iPad), Google Podcast (Android), Amazon Music, Podcast Addict ou Castbox, Deezer, Spotify.Crédits. Direction de la rédaction : Pierre Chausse - Rédacteur en chef : Jules Lavie - Production : Julia Paret, Thibault Lambert - Réalisation et mixage : Julien Montcouquiol - Musiques : François Clos, Audio Network - Archives : eNCA, WION. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
At 2am, on the 3rd of May last year – inmates at Mangaung prison in Bloemfontein, South Africa, were woken up by an explosion. Word spread that Thabo Bester, the infamous “Facebook Rapist”, had set himself and his cell on fire. And all that remained after the dramatic blaze were a lighter, and a body, burnt beyond recognition. But that's far from the end of the story. With daily revelations from the trial still hitting headlines, expect a farcical morgue-robbing scheme, a massive-scale web of fraud conducted from inside a prison cell, and a glamorous celebrity doctor who's not quite what she seems.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Thabo speaks to Wendy Kaizer-Philander from the Democratic Alliance Women's Network and Dr Fikile Vilakazi, the Director of the Gender Equity Unit and political analyst at the University of the Western Cape about whether women's leagues in politics still promote the interest of women or merely serve their party agenda.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo in for Clement speaks to Masibulele Xaso, the Secretary to the National Assembly about how Parliament's public participation process works and whether it is a genuine consultative process or merely a tick-box exercise.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo in for Clement speaks to Gogo Dineo Ndlanzi, a traditional healer and spiritual teacher about whether spiritual cleansing exists and when it would be needed.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
SEASON: 2 EPISODE: 29Episode Overview:My guest today has had to overcome big challenges in order to achieve big dreams. She uses her story of loss, struggle and perseverance to inspire and empower others to make an impact in the world by turning pain into purpose. Through her work, she has helped countless people overcome obstacles and achieve their goals by embracing their unique strengths and identities. Her approach is grounded in empathy, compassion, and a deep understanding of the complexity of the human experience. Join me now for my conversation with Dr. Nothabo Ncube. Guest Bio: Dr. Nothabo Ncube “Dr.Thabo” is a Medical Doctor, International TEDx Speaker, A Coach to Women and A Millennial Mentor to Young-Girls. Having overcome her own personal and professional obstacles, her powerful story encourages this generation to face their challenges and conquer them. Her story led her to meet the media mogul, Oprah Winfrey for a life class on the theme “You Become What You Believe”. Just recently she shared her life journey on the TEDx platform. Through a whirlwind of inspirational lectures, round table discussions and media appearances on stages such as Global News TV, she positively influences, challenges and reconnects youth with their passions. She uses incredible wit and candor to empower women. Dr.Thabo envisions a world where all people are given the opportunity to become the best versions of themselves, not only to dream bigger dreams, but to create and shape the world they have always desired.Having lost her mother at the tender age of 14 in Zimbabwe, at her mother's deathbed, she made a promise to her to be a doctor. Destiny led her to Canada where she and her family found themselves living in Community Housing in Toronto, subjected to social ills that could have deterred her from her path, despite these circumstances she rose from the ashes.Her journey leading to the fulfillment of the promise has been one filled with loss, pain, failures, mistakes, resilience, courage, faith, hope, grace and overcoming adversity. Through her dedication to make global impact, she was nominated by Women of Influence and Royal Bank of Canada for the 28th Annual RBC Canadian Women Entrepreneur Awards/Inspiring Group for the 2nd year in a row, selected as Top 4 Immigrant Women of Inspiration/Influencers in Canada by Canadian Immigrant Magazine and is the recipient of the Universal Women's Network, Black Women Leader – Woman of Inspiration 2020 Award. She was selected by the CBC News Network as a Black Leading Voice, 2022.In 2023 She was the recipient of the Woman Changing The World Awards in the category of (Woman In Medicine, Rising Star, Thought Leader of the Year) – awards presented by By Oprah Winfrey All Time Favorite Guest, Dr. Tererai Trent. Dr. Thabo is now on a mission to heal through raising consciousness, to empower, to encourage, to enlighten, to inspire, to uplift and to motivate this generation to use pain as a pedestal toward the pinnacle of purpose.Resource Links:Website: https://drthabo.com/Insight Gold Timestamps:01:50 It is true that out of pain and tragedy, something beautiful can emerge03:21 A program called Pathways to Education07:51 There is power in having a dream and holding onto the dream and totally surrendering to it10:53 Our stories matter13:57 Keep on asking yourself the big question, Why do I want this? 15:34 There's power in asking19:14 It's actually very important to have a why21:05 Failure reintroduced me to myself23:22 Life has been gracious enough to throw at me the right circumstances26:12 What's the healing power of storytelling?27:56 That is the...
Thabo in for Clement is hanging out with Jay Naidoo, a social activist, former cabinet minister and founding General Secretary of COSATU as they reflect on his activism and leadership and the importance of servant leadership.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Thabo speaks to a variety of businesses across various sectors from tourism to manufacturing, to get their state of trade in these tough economic times.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Clement hosts EWN Reporter, Kgomotso Modise as she explains the intricate details involved in the Senzo Meyiwa and Thabo Bester cases. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Streaming simply doesn't pay the bills! The discussion about streaming payouts has been going on for years. And now Snoop Dogg joined the debate: “That sh*t don't add up!” Kikelomo speaks to Darren Hemmings of Motive Unknown about what needs to change and about what we as fans can do to support our favorite artists. Plus: a rapping pro footballer keeping his identity secret, a new SoundCloud feature that may change fan to artist interaction, reactions to Beyoncé's tour start, a decisive ruling in the Ed vs Ed copyright trial – and this week's recommendation comes from Nils Gelfort aka Thabo calling in from Berlin.