👨🏾⚕️ Medical Doctor | Public Health & Women's Health Advocate
✝️ Christian | Proud Yoruba Husband
🏎️ Ferrari F1 fan—still waiting for the masterplan to work
Ebola disease is a severe, often fatal illness transmitting from animals to humans and between humans.
Here’s what you need to know about how it spreads, the symptoms, and how to prevent infection.
When Americans caught sight of Jim Carrey at the awards ceremony, a visible unease rippled through the crowd, and across social media shortly after. The questions came fast and unsettled: What has Hollywood done to him? I was in a Space on 𝕏 when someone lamented, “The world is coming to an end, they took Jim Carrey for Goodness sake!” For decades, Carrey had been a fixture of joy, a rubber-faced virtuoso who seemed to exist purely to coax laughter from the world. His films didn’t merely entertain; they became artifacts of childhood, adolescence, and shared cultural memory, lodged permanently in the emotional archives of an entire generation.
This was not, to be fair, his first dramatic transformation. There was an earlier chapter, a deliberate retreat from the spotlight in pursuit of something deeper. He returned bearded, quieter, speaking in the cadences of a man who had sat with silence long enough to be changed by it. That version of Carrey surprised people, yes, but it also earned a quiet admiration. He looked like a man who had lived, who had traded spectacle for substance. It was unconventional, but it was dignified.
The recent sighting, however, struck a different nerve entirely. Fans found themselves unable to reconcile the image before them with the one they had so carefully preserved. This is the particular cruelty of public memory: we do not merely remember our icons, we fossilize them. We keep them young, vibrant, and exactly as we need them to be. When reality dares to contradict that preservation, we experience something that sits between grief and betrayal.
This same emotional architecture explains the storm that greeted Frank Edoho’s appearance in a sports betting advertisement, a moment that, to many Nigerians, felt less like a career decision and more like a small cultural rupture.
For thirteen uninterrupted years, @frankedoho presided over Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? with a rare and effortless authority. He was more than a host; he was an institution, polished, cerebral, and commanding. The show itself was a feat of sustained excellence, holding its audience’s attention across more than a decade without losing its integrity, until it was suspended for years, before making a brief and warmly received return in 2022, only to be quietly shelved again when sponsorship dried up. In the minds of those who grew up watching him, Edoho occupied a particular pedestal: the composed, intellectual custodian of a programme that celebrated knowledge and aspiration.
To see him step into the world of sports betting felt, to many, like a demotion, not merely of career, but of character. The reactions that trailed the advertisement were telling. They were not simply about a commercial choice; they were about the gap between the man his audience had constructed in their imaginations and the man navigating the realities of a media landscape that does not always honour legacy.
In both cases, Carrey and Edoho, (as applicable in other related cases) what we are truly witnessing is the fragility of the pedestals we build for others. We romanticize our icons, assign them permanence, and then hold them accountable to versions of themselves that exist only in our memories. The disappointment, when it comes, says less about them than it does about us, and our deep, very human reluctance to let beloved things change. 🪴
There are about 900 days to thr next presidential election...
Do with that information what you you deem fit.
Ire o
#Fuel Arrested Sam Larry Iyabo Ojo Abuja Akpabio Asherkine #JusticeForChristianah
@Euphoric_Levi@enodamade@MDCNOfficial Interestingly, quite a number prefer the male gynaecologists in many settings...pls correct me with data if you have any
As we continue with our vision of making life better by innovating, improving and building better products and systems. We are installing the CNG skids on the chassis of our vehicles.
This will ensure you still have your valuable cargo space, your boot is still aesthetically appealing, and you feel safe as your drive.
We noticed that most of the CNG skids in some vehicle are in the boots of the vehicles; this takes cargo space and isn’t aesthetically appealing.
Frame 1: Where others Install CNG skid.
Frame 2: Where we install CNG skid, same as the fuel tank.
As we continue with our vision of making life better by innovating, improving and building better products and systems. We are installing the CNG skids on the chassis of our vehicles.
This will ensure you still have your valuable cargo space, your boot is still aesthetically appealing, and you feel safe as your drive.
We noticed that most of the CNG skids in some vehicle are in the boots of the vehicles; this takes cargo space and isn’t aesthetically appealing.
Frame 1: Where others Install CNG skid.
Frame 2: Where we install CNG skid, same as the fuel tank.