I just wouldn’t recommend it. At some point you’re explaining every joke. Every bit of sarcasm. Even when you bring pop culture references they still don’t get it. It’s going to get to a point they think you’re being condescending. Nope
I’m glad I chose to wear African and diaspora brands throughout this tour. If I’m going to take Africa to the world, I want to take our brands with me too. WHICH IS ONE YOUR FAV LOOK? A thread
I will forever give credit to Sweet Adjeley! She is the OG of food content creation and I respect her so much! I truly appreciate her constant advice and support to me as well❤️.
Chef Abbys is making a strong cultural impact in the United Kingdom through her ongoing “Chef Abbys UK Food Tour,” a culinary and cultural exchange initiative designed to spotlight Ghanaian food, African creativity and global collaboration.
Read: https://t.co/wdzerXEzqn
One thing nobody tells you about adulthood is how fun it is to become your own person. One day you randomly start liking jazz, olive green, expensive dark chocolate, documentaries about volcanoes, weird lamps, sparkling water, books about loneliness in Tokyo, silver jewelry and quiet cafés. Your personality keeps unfolding forever if you let it.
Think of a documentary, but this time? A Ghanaian Food Documentary !! That's exactly what I am doing on Monday, at Cineworld !!!! My ghana month tour documentary is going to be shown on the Biggest Screen at Cineworld, London ! I've got Free tickets from Pesa for my London family🌟❤️! I'd share soon at 3pm!!!
Here is my expanded post on how to cook Ghanaian meals with less salt without sacrificing flavour.
Share with someone & save a life. 😊
https://t.co/l1HzuL2G7s
The day I went round for inspection, I stopped drink sachet water.
They're killing us.
Most forge the FDA license numbers, some even do illegal connections and barely use filters as well.
Some mostly produce in very unhygienic environments.
I am Nigerian, and right now my dream is bigger than me.
Only about 4.5% of medical literature globally are represented on Black skin.
That means millions of Black patients are learning from systems that barely look like them. Medical students study diseases on skin tones that are not their own. Doctors are trained with visual references that often fail Black bodies.
That gap has consequences.
So I am deciding to build towards changing it.
I’m starting with a book.
But the larger vision is far beyond that. I want to help build software and medical visualization tools that make Black medical representation impossible to ignore.
This is not just about diversity aesthetics, this is about accuracy, education, visibility and better healthcare outcomes.
One day, I want a Black child studying medicine anywhere on earth to see themselves fully represented in what they learn.
And I believe we can build that future.