Christianity Etc › Re: "errors" I Hear On The Sunday Morning Pulpit by mamagee3(f): 12:53am On Apr 22, 2010 |
davidylan: God selected David to be king even though Jonathan should have been the rightful heir to the throne. God selected Jeremiah to be prophet even from his mother's womb . . . and on and on and on . . .
read your bibles. [color=deeppink] you're talking of a totally different issue, God selects people to to rule a nation based on their Clean heart not wealth. . . He doesn't select people who would acquire material wealth, that's what the poster is referring at. . . Rather he wants us to be Spiritually wealthy to acquire the Kingdom of God. Quote from the Bible "Store up your wealth for the Kingdom of God, where no robbers would steal it nor insects would eat it".[/color]  |
Christianity Etc › Re: "errors" I Hear On The Sunday Morning Pulpit by mamagee3(f): 6:44pm On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]Damn, that quote is the most incorrect quote ever coming from a Pastor. . .  God doesn't select people who get wealthy, it's just that everyone's destiny differs from others.[/color] |
Family › Re: What Will U Do If Ur Husband's Mistress Calls U With His Line? by mamagee3(f): 6:41pm On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]I would pretend I'm my husband and then try to get info about their constant meeting place. . . And then when I find out, I'll follow my husband anywhere he goes until I see her. The rest is history. . .  [/color] |
Dating And Meet-up Zone › Re: New York Baybay Nigerian Reunion ******UPDATE***** by mamagee3(f): 6:36pm On Apr 21, 2010 |
[quote author=na2day? link=topic=425668.msg5927360#msg5927360 date=1271824032]so where am i suppose to sleep?  i thought u and I had an understanding that we both we sleep aren't u the same person that belittled the reunion when the thread was first made? u really have issues, get help or your bipolar self will destroy u, no joke!  [/quote][color=deeppink]Crazy boy,  When did I ever criticize the reunion? I swear, you need help from your constant daydreaming.  I can see the fat in your body has moved over to your brain.  Sort for help as soon as possible before it gets late. [/color]  platinumnk: happy birthday mama gee  [color=deeppink]Thanks honey, it was yesterday though.[/color]  Abekeade08: Lol na2day I knew you would comment about the bed arrangements lol, Triple sin ko, quadruple sin ni.
On another note thanks for calling out mamagee on her hypocrisy, the girl needs Prozac for real. [color=deeppink]What hypocrisy?. . .I stated I favoured the reunion but I'm not living in New York though. . . I didn't Criticize the reunion, Please don't pay attention to Na2Day, he's got lots of emotional, psychiatric and physical problems. [/color]  |
Family › Re: Is It Ok To Repeat Same Meal In A Day? by mamagee3(f): 1:24am On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]It's not that bad but I just don't feel okay eating the same food twice or more in a day.[/color] |
Celebrities › Re: Patience Ozokwor's Daughter's Wedding: Pictures by mamagee3(f): 1:11am On Apr 21, 2010 |
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Dating And Meet-up Zone › Re: New York Baybay Nigerian Reunion ******UPDATE***** by mamagee3(f): 1:09am On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]I Love New York City, When is the reunion taking place?[/color]  |
Jokes Etc › Re: What A Boy Can Do A Girl Can Do Better by mamagee3(f): 1:06am On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]Well, the picture is funny!
But in a real situation, I condemn the act of Children drinking alcohol, though.[/color] |
Computers › Re: Man Loses Part Of Finger In Ipad Theft by mamagee3(f): 1:04am On Apr 21, 2010 |
[quote author=N95-2 8GB link=topic=434113.msg5926645#msg5926645 date=1271808115]dont blame the old man now lol! the man must ve been shocked[/quote][color=deeppink]I just realized I misunderstood the whole thing. . .thought it was the thief who lost part of his finger.
Anyway, I take my comments back, the Old man was helpless but it's a damn shame a man would cut someone's finger just for an iPad.[/color] |
Computers › Re: Man Loses Part Of Finger In Ipad Theft by mamagee3(f): 12:59am On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]^^Oh yeah, it cost him one of his fingers for an iPad, How dumb can one be?[/color]  |
Romance › Re: What Can Make You Slap Your Husband In Public? by mamagee3(f): 12:57am On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]^^Believe me most men are annoying and often times their actions just want to provoke one into slapping them.[/color] |
Celebrities › Eucharia Anunobi: Men Are No Longer Men by mamagee3(op): 12:56am On Apr 21, 2010 |
It's a hell of a life. It's demanding and quite expensive to manage. In some cases victims and parents manage to scale through in one piece and for some it has been entirely tragic. Victims of sickle cell anaemia go through a lot. It can happen to anybody , status not withstanding. Here Eucharia Anunobi shares her experience of treating and managing her son all alone …without his father. There are lessons to learn from her experience. What's your view on single parenthood and Nollywood? First of all, I want to say single parenthood has nothing to do with Nigeria, it has nothing to do with actresses or any particular country. As a matter of fact, it is a worldwide thing. It has always been, even in the bible. I am sure Haggai the mother of Ishmael, was a single mother. You know about her heritage and if I'm not mistaken Barrack Obama was brought up by a single mother. I have given examples from the bible and real life. It means that single parenthood is not a Nigerian thing; it a worldwide thing. Why is it so? It's because irresponsible men abandon their wives and children, they don't have the spirit of God dwelling inside them. If a man is responsible in the real sense of the word; I mean responsible in terms of finance, responsible in terms of religion and spirituality, responsible in terms of sex, responsible in the sense of emotional stability, he would not abandon his family, his wife and children. But when you find out that a man is spiritually low, financially low, emotionally low, they feel incapable and before you know it they abandon their family. So I want you to understand that it is not a Nollywood thing. Have you ever gone into the banking industry or the hospitality business or the insurance business and there are no single mothers there? It has nothing to do with Nollywood, it is a worldwide thing. There are thousands or millions of people outside there in other sectors of the economy who are single parents and I can only add that men are no longer men and they've never been men. Any man who has never taken care of his family, who runs away from his responsibilities, abandons a pregnant woman, abandons the children is not responsible. Especially those who are not filled with the spirit of God, those that don't fear God. You can ask anyone who has ever had a husband who never lived up to his responsibilities and you will discover that most of these things that I have mentioned are lacking in them. So what we will do is to pray that our men including the aged ones and those about to come, would have their heads immersed in Christ, living and working according to his will. When men derail, when they do not do the will of God , they will live according to the world and how is the world operating? The world is ruled by Satan and Satan has been condemned and as long as he has been condemned he will not go to hell alone; he will take as many people as possible. You should know that marriage is an institution ordained by God to replenish the earth. Satan knows that the will and joy of God is that people should be happy, married and be blessed. What did he do? He attacked this first, that is why you see homosexuals everywhere. Instead of a man marrying a woman the way God designed it, a man will go and marry another man. A man will open his mouth and say I am born with dysfunctional hormone that is why I am gay. That is a lie from the pit of hell. You know God is not an author of confusion. I don't know if you can understand me. He won't create a man and put the hormone of a female inside him and he won't create a woman and put the hormone of a man inside her and say okay you have a female body but start thinking like a man. These are all twisted ideas of the devil including lesbianism. So when Satan sees people that are already married, he looks for loopholes through which he tries to penetrate, but while one partner might be spiritually high, unfortunately the other partner might just be low. He looks for a lukewarm partner and then he enters, that is why the Bible says the devil is roaring to and fro looking for whom to devour. He will come in by all means that are possible. He would come in by making the man incapable. I want to say that even if a man is incapable financially, he can as well be strong spiritually, by attending church and reading everything that has to do with God and following his ways. There is no one who has ever followed the ways of God, that will not be rewarded for following God at the end of the day. The Bible says “…I never told you that you will not walk through fire, I never told you that life will be easy but as long as you walk through that fire, I will always be with you”. So life has never been a bed of roses, we were meant to have challenges, we were meant to have ups and downs but if you hang unto God, he will make the journey easy. Anyone who abandons his home and turns women like us into single mothers is not responsible. I have two relatives who have sickle cell anaemia . In fact we lost one of them. Can you shed more light on challenges of raising your son alone ? I like the fact that you know what it means to have a sickle cell gene. You know sometimes when I talk to people and I tell them my son is sick, they tell me to pray that it will soon go away. I just look at it and laugh. I call it ignorance because I think they don't know about it. Imagine somebody saying don't worry, he'll outgrow it, Maybe they think it is asthma. Sickle cell is not an asthmatic condition. You can't outgrow it when the weather changes or when the person takes further care of it. It is a condition that can only be changed miraculously by God or if you want to try to play God, be doing what we call bone marrow transplant but even with bone marrow transplant the person's cell will not be any better, the person will still end up having low blood count and a lot of inabilities. Bone marrow transplant means trying to inject the bone marrow of a donor which may never adapt because it is foreign. It might never produce enough blood that the original sickle cell patient had. That might lead to low blood count. A sickle cell gene is not something any patient can outgrow, unfortunately it is a life time condition. With sickle cell, all we can do is pray to God and get better medication and then eat as much healthy food as possible and the rest is in the hands of God. What's the experience like? I'm sure you know that it is a very traumatic experience. People cannot imagine the tears I shed, you cannot imagine the agony that I go through. I'm always in the hospital with my son. Sometimes, it will be three times in two weeks or four times in two weeks, I'll be in the hospital with my son when he's down with crisis. Nobody can understand what I am going through. Most times people see me looking gorgeous, they don't see beyond the clothes. I've got to hang in there, I am not going to kill myself or go down because the devil wants me to go down. In the night people don't know the tears I shed but I am only shedding tears because I know my God will do something and he will carry me through. It is traumatic…I go through excruciating pain. Sometimes I wonder why my heart has not collapsed, sometimes I wonder why I am still carrying on, sometimes I wonder why I can't even die myself because sometimes when my son is going through this crisis, I cry to God and I'm like, why can't I just suffer the pain myself… why can't I heal the pain. We are talking about a situation where you see your child begging for sleep or sometimes whilst sleeping he screams out loud in excruciating pain that might have affected one of his joints. Sometimes, I feel like killing myself because it pains me that I brought a beautiful child into the world to go through so much pain. I ask God to please let the love of his mercy be with me and my child, and take a little bit of the pain away, nobody can understand it. It's worse than toothache. Most times it means that blood vessels have been blocked and oxygen and blood are not passing through which will cause excruciating pain . I don't even know how to go about it or explain it. It has not been easy but God has been my only strength. No one can understand unless you live with me in the house. I remember sometime ago there was this pastor , who only came to visit once in a while maybe when my son is having crisis and he's on the bed for four days, he will pray and say don't worry he will be fine, God will do a miracle. I would say yes, I know God will do a miracle, at least God is doing a miracle in providing me with the finance to buy my son's drugs and being able to take him to the hospital whenever he has a crisis. That is beyond me to take care of. I've spent a fortune buying his medication. So he is practically taking drugs on a daily basis.I am sure you understand? So this particular period we spent a little time in his place …on holidays. Unfortunately one night, my son broke down into crisis. http://www.modernghana.com/movie/6840/3/men-are-no-longer-men-eucharia-anunobi.html |
Celebrities › Re: Clarion Chukwura: My Bitter Experience When Shina Peters Impregnanted Me by mamagee3(op): 12:53am On Apr 21, 2010 |
FL Gators: I think all these jobless Nollywood stars have just recently discovered Yinka Ayefele's song - Bitter Experience  |
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Celebrities › Clarion Chukwura: My Bitter Experience When Shina Peters Impregnanted Me by mamagee3(op): 12:49am On Apr 21, 2010 |
For over 30 years, Clarion Chukwura has been doing what gives her joy and gladness. She’s been exhibiting her acting prowess on the stage and screen, and this has brought her fame and fortune. But for the Nollywood diva, life is not all bed of roses. Clarion has been rejected, betrayed and cast out as a slot. She has also swum in the river of failed marriages. At the end of the day, however, the delectable actress triumphed and came out stronger. Clarion says her driving force is her unshakable faith in God, and more importantly, her never-say-die spirit.
Hear her: “My driving force is first and foremost my faith in God. My faith in God is a very important aspect of me. I believe that whatever I set out to do if I commit it into the hands of God, it may take time to manifest, delay is not denial, I’m sure I will get there. I just need to be patient and persevere. Another thing is my never-say-die spirit. I am not a quitter because the alternative is not for me. I cannot live a life of nobody.”
In this exclusive interview with Saturday Sun, Clarion bares it all, as she has never done before.
Could you tell us about your childhood? I was born in Lagos and remained there till when I was 11 years old. From the age of 11 to 14, I stayed in Aba and Onitsha. I came to Ibadan when I was 14 and lived there till the age of 19. However, I lost my father at the age of 11. This incident completely shattered me. My father was the centre of my life and when he died, everything just fell apart. That was the beginning of a different chapter of my life. How did I cope? I coped by the special mercy of Almighty God. I coped by taking decisions. I coped by being driven by determination to succeed and I had my focus very early that I wanted to be an actress. I was five years old and my father was still alive when I decided that I wanted to be an actress. My father had a driver that used to take us to the cinemas. So, I was seeing all those 20th Century Fox movies and other legendary Hollywood movies that inspired me. I was also inspired by Michael Jackson and all those stuffs I used to watch on TV, when I was a kid.
Some people say you are fond of Michael Jackson. Is this true? I was highly inspired by Michael Jackson. No, it isn’t necessary I go into music because Michael Jackson inspired me. When someone inspired you, it doesn’t mean that you must do what the person is doing. Michael was a kid but his showmanship was great. That’s what struck me. As an actress, it’s music that inspires me. I remember the movie, “Egg of Life;” it was music that gave me the inspiration for the character I played. The death of Michael Jackson was a personal loss to me. I took time to mourn him; that’s why I didn’t attend all the events that were held in his honour. I felt like I had lost a part of me.
So, it wasn’t something I felt like going out to celebrate. Michael deserved everything that was done to mourn him because he was a great artiste. What I am saying is that it was a personal loss for me. His death was something emotional. In fact, it was a private matter for me. Michael was my idol. I was in love with Michael Jackson. People who knew me when I was a teenager knew I was in love with Michael. If I had met Michael Jackson, I would tell him…oh it’s not something I can comment about. Sure, he was my idol and he still is. Would I have married Michael Jackson if I had the opportunity? Well, I don’t know because you don’t always get married to the person you love.
How did you venture into acting? I started with both the stage and television in Ibadan. I started with all the three tiers that are relevant today, including the Yoruba and English theatre, and then the television. My first time on stage was fun. Actually, I did not experience any stage fright. What I experienced was excitement. I did not exactly see the audience. I was outside my own body. I was this 14-year-old girl on the stage of Department of Theatre Arts, University of Ibadan. My first time on stage was in 1979 when I played house girl in Bode Sowande’s play. I can’t remember the title of the play now. For me, that first time on stage was a surreal experience.
As I said earlier, I started on three platforms at the same time: the English dramatic stage, Yoruba dramatic stage and television. Between September and October 1979, I was shuttling between the stage and television. I would leave Bode Sowande’s play to join Victor Ashaolu’s theatre and then to Jumoke Payne’s rehearsals at NTV Ibadan. With all these I was getting my training and experience on the three platforms, at the same time.
Did you get your parent’s approval? All this while I was in school, and don’t forget that I lost my dad; so it was my mom and I. The experience was crazy. Each time I finished on stage with Victor Ashaolu, he would drop me personally at home after dropping others their bus-stops. He would knock on our door and start begging my mother to open the door for me. My mom was educated; so she wasn’t the type to start screaming in the street for other people to hear. She never even caned me. After the producer or director had brought me home and explained where I had been and what I had been doing, my mom would let me in. But few days later, if I make any little mistake she would get angry and vent her anger on me. Within two years of my acting, I made such rapid progress. I moved from University of Ibadan to University of Ife. By the time I got to University of Ife I had justified myself before my mother. I remember when I was in the University of Ibadan Performing Company. Professor Bayo Odunneye would come to my mother and tell her that what I was doing was not wrong, and that I had a bright future; that I would turn out a good artiste.
You started in ‘Money power’. How did it come about? I didn’t go looking for a role in “Money Power.” While I was a student at University of Ife, Cam wood on the Leaves, a play directed by Professor Wole Soyinka, was brought to the National Arts Theatre in Lagos. Ola Balogun and his wife, Francois, were among the guests at the Command Performance. Indeed, the role of Yemi that I later played in Money Power had already been cast for a lady called Maureen. But when Ola Balogun and his wife watched me in Cam wood on the Leaves, they were thrilled. At the backstage, after the play, I was told that some people wanted to see me and they turned out to be Ola Balogun and his wife. Even then Fred Agbeyegbe and his wife, including Professor Soyinka’s mother came to greet me at the backstage. It was right there at the backstage that Ola Balogun told me about his new film, Money Power. He said even though the role of Yemi had been cast, when he watched me perform the role of Moji in Cam wood on the Leaves he changed his mind and decided to give me the role. That’s how I got a role in Money Power. Also, at the backstage, Agbeyegbe told me he was working on a play and that he would be getting in touch with me.
All I would say is that Cam wood on the Leaves got me a role in Money Power and also a role in Agbeyegbe’s The King Must Dance unclothed.
You worked with Soyinka. How would you assess him? Cam wood on the Leaves brought out the best in me. A character, like Moji, gives me the greatest challenge and greater joy because it brings out the best in me. I missed the early years when I had scripts that brought out the best in me. I can’t believe when people say that Professor Soyinka is a difficult man to work with. What I saw in him is a man who’s disciplined to the core. If rehearsals were 9a.m, Professor Soyinka would walk into the hall on the dot of nine. So, if as an actor you walk in at five minutes past nine and he sends you out in disgrace people would say that Soyinka is a difficult man. If you miss your cue and destroy the momentum of the play, Soyinka will burst out on you. Before I came to University of Ife, I held Soyinka in high esteem. In fact, I came to University of Ife just because I wanted to be taught by him. I saw in Soyinka a theatre of my dream, a theatre of solid discipline. I saw in him a theatre of casting the best for a role and not mixing personal relationship with his work. I am who I am today because I worked with a number of people, like Professors Wole Soyinka and Bayo Odunneye. I give kudos to these people for my foundational years as an actress. From both of them, I took away discipline and training. I took from Odunneye the awareness of my inner body being extremely synonymous with what I project as an actor. That is to say I have to be fit, both inside and outside. From Soyinka, I took discipline and ability to research. As an actor, you must do research for your characterization. You must go out there and find out about the person you want to play. Beside this, you must determine the method you want to use and how you want to project the character.
How would you describe your experience with Shina Peters? I have no regret for coming across Shina Peters in life. In fact, if I have to play the role of Yemi in Money Power I’ll play it again. And if again I have to meet Shina Peters in the film, I’ll want to meet him again. In life, there is no gain without pain. The maturity process that I had to go through with my son, Clarence, after Money Power was a process of great pain. It was a process that brought out people in their real colours. It showed me how fickle people can be; how pretentious and mean people can be. It was a process of condemnation. Just because I had Clarence I was labeled a slot. I was written off. The only thing they couldn’t do was write me off in my career because I was damn good. I was a good actress, so you couldn’t just help but work with me. People said all sorts of things about me; they did not give me a chance. It was a journey that taught me that life itself is a journey. But, as I said, there is no gain without pain. And it had to be like that because Clarence is a child of destiny. If it wasn’t like that then the purpose of God for his life wouldn’t have been actualized. Clarence’s life would have been cut short somewhere along the line during the days of struggle. So, asking me if I would do it all over again, my answer is that I would follow the will of God for my life.
Could you tell us about your experience with your mom when you were pregnant with Clarence? My mother threw me out when I was pregnant with Clarence. The only way I coped was through the help of people, like Professor Wole Soyinka, who suggested I should go for pregnancy test. When it was confirmed and I told him I wanted to keep it he said fine. Soyinka was my Head of Department and he took me away from hard and physical tasks in my class. Even Chief Olu Aboderin, publisher of Punch Newspapers, went to my mother and tried to make her see reason; yet, my mother remained adamant. He then found me a place to stay in Ibadan. However, at the point of having Clarence, my mom’s anger subsided. As a mother, she rallied round me because she didn’t want to lose me. That time the whole world seemed against me and I was always crying. Not even Shina Peters, father of the child, was there for me. He abandoned me, but that’s not important for now. That’s the past. I was sad and angry because I felt lonely. People thought that once you’re pregnant your life has ended. But there was this fighting spirit inside of me. And when I had my son, I said ‘eh, we’ve started a journey’.
How did it feel to be a young mother? My mother took over by the time Clarence was two months old. At this time, I was back fully on stage at the University of Ibadan Performing Company. And by the time he was four I was in Badagry for the rehearsals of The King Must Dance unclothed. I didn’t see Clarence again from when he was two to when he was nine months old. Clarence is not angry with his father. You see, Clarence is a highly mature person. His understanding is above the mundane. My life with Clarence does not revolve around telling him that your father did this or that. We grew up together. My life actually started with him. By the time I was 22 and he was three and a half years old, Clarence was already seeing and relating with what our lives were like. You don’t need to start telling Clarence anything because it was a life he lived. He was a part of the experiences. Most of the artistes of my generation that Clarence calls uncles and aunties he didn’t just start calling them that and running to them; he has known them way back. What he is doing now in entertainment is not about me playing a role in it, that’s him.
As I said earlier, Clarence is a child of destiny. He is a child of a musician and actor. Everything in me, as an artiste, went into him and the best of his father also went into him. Clarence has taken talents from the best of two worlds. He is not made to be doing what he’s doing; he’s born to do it. By the time Clarence was five years old he started playing with musicians that used to perform at my restaurant on Adeniyi Jones, Ikeja, Lagos. By the time he was seven, he was in movies. He was in Dudu’s movie, Amin Orun, Sola Shobowale’s film, Jokotade and also in Family Circles.
Clarence is not far away from his dad. Anybody who thinks so is a fool. There is no three days that both Clarence and his father don’t talk on phone. Time heals all wounds. If you are a progressive person you will not dwell on the past. I am a progressive person and I don’t dwell on the past. The past is important as long as it’s relevant. The moment the past stops being relevant it loses its importance to me. From the moment Clarence graduated in South Africa, the past became inconsequential.
How do you think about Shina Peters’ legacy? I am not bothered by Shina Peters’ legacy or the issue of his will because I am not his wife. It will also not bother Clarence in any way. The greatest legacy Shina Peters can give to Clarence is the right to his musical works. Shina Peters told me, about three years ago, that he would will all his property to charity and I told him that decision is fantastic. The rights to his works would enable his children to reproduce his music as tomorrow’s sound. The return on his works is perpetual, unlike his house that may not conform to modern architecture tomorrow. If Shina Peters wills his house to charity he would be remembered by that. But he will be remembered longer by the rights to his musical works willed to his children, who will put them to good use.
You have experienced many failed marriages. What’s the problem? It’s only in Nigeria that when you get married and it doesn’t work it is held against you that something is wrong. The fault is always with the woman. People don’t ask if the man is doing something wrong even when they know that the man has got a problem. People still want to castigate the woman, most especially if she is famous. If the woman is famous, the man would find a way to have something against her. He would have something to pull her down. He would have something to make the famous woman look useless.
The crash of my marriages cannot be blamed on stardom. The crash of my marriage to Tunde Abiola is due to other reasons. I don’t like talking about my failed marriages because my son is in school. Whatever happens between his father and I is our business. We cannot use that to embarrass him in any way. Concerning Femi Oduneye, I am not interested in talking about that also because it’s my private life. http://www.sunnewsonline.com/webpages/news/national/2010/apr/17/national-17-04-2010-005.htm |
Politics › Re: Biography - Ikedi Ohakim by mamagee3(f): 12:46am On Apr 21, 2010 |
Jarus: Is it that thug governor that descends so low as to beating citizens or another person?  |
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Nairaland General › Re: Nairalands Ridiculous Censorship by mamagee3(f): 12:38am On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]It's Called getting used to it.  You can't change it.[/color]  |
Forum Games › Re: Pls Join The Ongoing Phone Conversation Continued by mamagee3(f): 12:35am On Apr 21, 2010 |
OgidiBoy: ^^^ I even heard rumors you and na2day was an item, come on girl na2day of all people, that boy is a woman wrapper.  [color=deeppink]He's not only a woman wrapper, he needs to workout in the gym. . .He's sooo Fat.[/color]  |
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Nairaland General › Re: Nairaland Among 1st 200 Forums In The World! by mamagee3(f): 12:29am On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]Who Conducted this survey/Statistics?[/color] |
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Food › Re: I Ate Fufu For The First Time! by mamagee3(f): 12:21am On Apr 21, 2010 |
EzeUche: Banku is nasty as helllll!!!! Disgusting!
If it wasn't for what that Ghanaian woman with the voluptuous body did when we finished eating that disgusting meal, I would never have called back   |
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Music/Radio › Re: Rapper Gangstarr Dies At 43 by mamagee3(f): 12:10am On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]May his soul rest in Peace.[/color] |
Family › Re: Senator Sanni Yerima's 13 -year Old Wife Cries:your Excellency, It Is Paining Me by mamagee3(f): 12:06am On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]This is some serious stuff.[/color]  [color=deeppink]But, I think this topic was copied from Naijarules.[/color] |
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Celebrities › Re: Ufoma Marries Oyinbo by mamagee3(f): 12:01am On Apr 21, 2010 |
[color=deeppink]^^Dang, bunch of racist gays. . .Black People stink. Looks like there are too many ignorant students in your school.[/color] |