Today in #TheLagosReview

Professor Braide, Foluke Daramola, Bukky Williams join Funmi Iyanda on Public Eye Live.

President-elect of the Nigerian Academy of Science, Professor Ekanem Braide, will on Friday, June 5 be a guest of Funmi Iyanda on Public Eye Live.

A professor of parasitology and epidemiology, Braide is the first female president in the Academy’s 43 years of existence.

She will be speaking with Ms Iyanda on the theme ‘Combating Nigeria’s Viruses and Violence Pandemic.’

Nollywood actress and the founder of Action against Rape in Africa, Foluke Daramola, will also feature on the programme.
The award-winning actress and sexual violence survivor will share her experience of gender-based violence and discuss how to better protect women.

Executive Director, ‘Education as a Vaccine’, Bukky Williams, is the third guest for the seventh edition of Public Eye Live.
She will share insight on how government and organisations can work with young people to advance their right to health and protection from all forms of violence.

Supported by MacArthur Foundation, Public Eye Live airs on Instagram Live every Friday at 8pm.

Yvonne Orji Unpacks Nigerian Slangs on Vanity Fair’s Slang School

Insecure‘s Yvonne Orji stops by Vanity Fair’s Slang School and teaches us Nigerian slang. From “baddo” to “fine boi,” Yvonne takes you through some “wawu” Nigerian slang.

Watch the video below:

‘Your Lives Matter’: Obama’s Speech Offers Hope in Contrast to Trump’s Threat.

Former president’s optimistic remarks come as Trump threatens to crack down on George Floyd protests

Barack Obama has told young people of colour “your lives matter” in public remarks that supporters welcomed as an antidote to Donald Trump’s racially charged and divisive threats to crack down on civil dissent.

America’s first black president on Wednesday expressed faith in young people in the US and said he remained “optimistic” about the future despite the police killing of George Floyd and mounting crises that Trump’s critics say leave the country crying out for leadership.

Obama spoke at an event by the My Brother’s Keeper alliance, a program of the Obama Foundation, that was called “Reimagining Policing in the Wake of Continued Police Violence”. It was the first public appearance by the 44th president since Floyd was killed by a white Minneapolis police officer kneeling on his neck, sparking nine days of nationwide protests that have been mostly peaceful but marred by some incidents of violence.

Read more:

https://amp.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/jun/03/obama-george-floyd-remarks-protests-trump

Source: The Guardian

Celebrities and Politicians Gather to Honor George Floyd.

Hundreds of people, including prominent celebrities and politicians, gathered Thursday in Minneapolis to honor George Floyd, the man whose death sparked nationwide protests against police brutality.

In his eulogy, Rev. Al Sharpton analogized Floyd’s death — pinned under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer — to the experience of Black people in America.

“The reason we could never be who we wanted and dreamed of being is you kept your knee on our neck,” Sharpton said. “We don’t want no favors. Just get up off of us and we can be and do whatever we can be.”

The memorial was held at North Central University in downtown Minneapolis, a few miles from the scene of Floyd’s death. Several family members shared memories of his upbringing.

“Everybody wants justice for George,” said his brother, Philones. “He’s gonna get it.”

Ben Crump, the family attorney, said that he is working to help America live up to its self-image.

“What we are doing is helping America be America for all Americans,” he said. “George Floyd is the moment that gives us the best opportunity that I have seen in a long time of reaching that high ideal that this country was founded upon.”

Crump also spoke about the family’s conversation with Tyler Perry. He said the family told Perry, “We are the big extended Black family… that you portray on your movie screens. You can tell this family always needed George, so it’s awfully difficult for them.”

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Netflix, Youtube, Hulu Join Black Lives Matter Movement
Kevin Hart, Tiffany Haddish, T.I., Tyrese Gibson, and Ludacris were among the Black artists and entertainers in the audience. Many Minnesota leaders were also on hand, including Gov. Tim Walz, Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, as was Rev. Jesse Jackson and Martin Luther King III.

Sharpton flew to the service on Perry’s private plane, along with other family members. Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo knelt as Floyd’s hearse passed on the way to the service.

Floyd died after he was handcuffed and held to the ground by the neck for nearly nine minutes. He complained that he could not breathe, and bystanders urged the officers to render aid. The coroner’s office has ruled his death a homicide.

Former Officer Derek Chauvin was charged on Wednesday with second-degree murder, and three other officers were charged with aiding and abetting the crime.

Perry said earlier in the week that he had spoken with Floyd’s immediate family, and offered comfort. He said the family was “adamant in their call for peaceful protest.”

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