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'I Am Not A Witch' to open 2017 Africa International Film Festival, see Final Selection

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I AM NOT A WITCH stillOrganisers of Africa International Film Festival (AFRIFF) have announced the final section of movies for the festival for 2017. The festival will open with Rungano Nyoni’s ‘I Am Not A Witch’, and ‘Waiting for Hassana’ a short film by Ifunanya Maduka. Scheduled to run from October 29 to November 4, 2017, the annual event marks AFRIFF’s 7th season of celebrating African cinema. Below is the full selection list which includes films from Ghana, the rest of Africa, America, France and the UK. OPENING FILM I AM NOT A WITCH – Rungano Nyoni (UK/France/Zambia) WAITING FOR HASSANA (Short) – Ifunanya ‘funa’ Maduka (Nigeria/US) CLOSING FILM FELICITÉ – Alain Gomis (France/Senegal) SHORTS SELECTION 1. 1745 – Gordon Napier (UK)1. 1745 – Gordon Napier (UK) 2. As Long As I Can Hold My Breath – Mohamed Thara (France) 3. Faulty – Nathan Rice (South Africa) 4. Zilizala – Daudi O Anguka (Kenya) 5. Inner Me – Antonio Spanò (Italy/Congo DRC) 6. Die kaal kraal – Vusi’Africa Sindane (South Africa) 7. We Are Just Fine Like This (Khallina Hakka Khir) – Sofian El Fani (Tunisia) 8. Yemoja Rise of the Orisha – Nosa Igbinedion (UK) 9. Zawaja Gali (Marriage Is Expensive) – Cont de Monk (South Sudan) 10. Antananarivo (Antananarivo tiako ianao) – Haminiaina Ratovoarivony (Madagascar)
11. Chicha – Darnoc Ist (Cameroon) 12. The Dummy Team – George Stanley Nsamba (Uganda) 13. Time Irreversible – George Stanley Nsamba (Uganda) 14. Oreva – Richard Odilu (Nigeria) 15. Enemy Of Time – Muhindo Barakomerwa Abraham (Congo DRC) 16. Super Mama – Christina Pande (Tanzania) 17. Visions – Abba T. Makama/C.J. Obasi/Michael Gouken Omonua (Nigeria) 18. First Born – Ndum Stanisla (Cameroon) 19. Gbera – Seyi Oluyole (Nigeria) 20. Aunty Rebecca – Ellen Banda-Aaku (Zambia) 21. Las Gidi Vice – Udoka Oyeka (Nigeria) 22. Kafou – Bruno Mourral (Haiti) 23. Armstrong – Omoruyi Irabor9 (Nigeria) 24. The Story of the Little Girl Who Loved Butterflies – Paula du Gelly (United States) 25. L’Or Blanc – Adama Sallé (Burkina Faso) 26. Vers la Tendresse – Alice Diop (France) 27. Off The Streets – Utibe Charles (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 28. South Pole – Emin Akpinar (Turkey) | Out Of Competition 29. If Only – OtoObong Ekpenyong (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 30. Umbrella – Nickolay Osadchiy (Belarus) | Out Of Competition 31. Mustapha – Umanu elijah (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 32. Kaali – Nathanial Antony J.C (India) | Out Of Competition 33. The Ideal Son in Law (De Ideale Schoonzoon) – Bodhi Le Belle (Netherlands) | Out Of Competition 34. Cliche’ – Sikemi Williams (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 35. The Checkpoint – Lydia Idakula Sobogun (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 36. Eve’s addiction – Roberto Comida (Italy) | Out Of Competition 37. The Secret of Colour (Rang Raaz) – Hamza Bangash (Pakistan) | Out Of Competition 38. Quantum Leap – Nosa Osagie Walters (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 39. Mind Games – Wole Ajetomobi (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition
40. The Visitor – David Bliss (United States) | Out Of Competition 41. So tired – Assel Aushakimova (Kazakhstan) | Out Of Competition 42. Nero – Rubin Stein (Spain) | Out Of Competition 43. Numbness – Milad jarmooz (Iran) | Out Of Competition 44. Little Big George – Priyanka Tanwar (India) | Out Of Competition 45. Out Of The Street – Benjamin Mensah (Ghana) | Out Of Competition 46. Phalure Inc – Doug Rollins (Nigeria/UK) | Out Of Competition 47. A Matter of Prejudice – Sandra Lince (United States) | Out Of Competition 48. Yesterday – Immanuel Udochukwu (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 49. 2 by 2 – Mark Playne (Turkey) | Out Of Competition 50. Lami – Samuel Erhahon (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 51. Sisa – Joewackle J Kusi (Ghana) | Out Of Competition 52. Slip – Joshua Enakarhire (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 53. We Are Fine – Luke Oyovbaire (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 54. What Goes Around – Kang’ethe Mungai (Kenya) | Out Of Competition 55. Cracks – L.T Njeck (Cameroon) | Out Of Competition 56. Parting Gift – Ife Olujuyigbe/Osemegbe (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 57. Salama – Michael Osheku/Christian Idio (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 58. Damaged – Julia Chinazor Mbaebie (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 59. In Denial – Adeolu Adeniyi (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 60. Sleeved – Adeolu Adeniyi (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition 61. Numb – Shalom Chiki Enabulele (Nigeria) | Out Of Competition STUDENT SHORTS SELECTION 1. Still Water Runs Deep – Abbesi Akhamie (US/Nigeria) 2. The Voice – Fred Murithi (Kenya) 3. Yes But No (Qui Mais Non) – Inès Arsi (Tunisia) 4. One Night – Abdl Rahman Maged (Egypt) 5. Sicela Amanzi (Water, Please) – Mlu Godola (South Africa) 6. Sawubona – Lungelo Kuzwayo (South Africa/US) 7. Eve – Nobuhle Ngwane/Marian de Pontes/Vanishia Kisten (South Africa)
8. The Mob – Gamel Apalayine (Ghana) 9. Person of Interest – Akuya Ekorot (Kenya) 10. Refuge – Arthur Musah (US) 11. Eldos – Kyllian Roux (South Africa) 12. The Fall – Ethan Storm (South Africa) 13. Renaissance – Kishan Baijnath (South Africa) 14. Grey Matter – Julian Evans (South Africa) 15. Homecoming – Barbara Karuana (South Africa) 16. Final Border – David Wayne Smith (South Africa) 17. Sticks. – Bolaji Hassan (Nigeria) 18. Society – Chiemela M. Peter (Nigeria) 19. The Fallen One – Teejay Idogho (Nigeria) 20. Huzuni – Ataansuyi Michael (Nigeria) 21. Lalibela – Hlumela Matika (South Africa/US) 22. Darkroom – David Schell (United States) | Out Of Competition 23. The Last Word – Alexander Moore (United Kingdom) | Out Of Competition 24. First Snow – Evgeniy Schegolev (Russia) | Out Of Competition 25. The Blind of the Cathedral (L’aveugle de la Cathédrale) – Nadine Asmar (Lebanon) | Out Of Competition ANIMATION SELECTION 1. An Equal Chance To Play – Christina Bwana (Tanzania) 2. Chamwande’s Chronicle – Kudra Abdulalziz (Tanzania) 3. Gyrow – Abiola tayo-Afolabi (Nigeria) 4. Town Crier – Somto Ajuluchukwu (Nigeria) 5. Aje & Kpako – Eguvwe Yugbovwre (Nigeria) 6. Husse Met Lang Ore – Alme Swart (South Africa) 7. Freak The Fxxk Out – Kanso Ogbolu (Nigeria) 8. Untitled – Comfort Arthur (Ghana) 9. “Crush” – Stephen Shima Iosun (Nigeria)
10. Dawn Of Thunder – Kolawole Olarewaju (Nigeria) 11. A wonderful World – Eli Bastiaens (Belgium) 12. Kapkappi – Keyur Dekate (India) 13. Light Sight – Seyed M. Tabatabaei (Iran) 14. Le Constructeur de Malheur – Philipp Gratzer/Kristin Müller/Manuel Preuß/Peter Affenzeller (Austria) 15. Finito – Mauricio Bartok/Gabriel Dorazio (Brazil/Brazil/Indonesia) 16. Afterwork – Luis Uson (Ecuador/Peru/Spain) DOCUMENTARY COMPETITION 1. Les Sauteurs (Those who Jump) – Abou Bakar Sidibé (Senegal/Denmark) 2. Maman Colonelle – Dieudo Hamadi (Congo DRC) 3. Atlal – Djamel Kerkar (Algeria) 4. The Two Faces Of A Bamiléké Woman (Les deux visages d’une femme Bamiléké) – Rosine Mbakam (Cameroon) 5. The Revolution Will Not be Televised – Rama Thiaw (Senegal) 6. Strike A Rock – Aliki Saragas (South Africa) 7. We Have Never Been Kids (Abadan Lam Nakon Atfalan) – Mahmood Soliman (Egypt) 8. L’Etranger – Kenneth Michiels (Belgium/Senegal) 9. White Potion – Ashraf Said Mswaki/Oguzhan Cineli (Turkey/Tanzania/UK) 10. Gilberte’s World – David A. Masterwille (Ghana/Mauritius) 11. We Are The Nation – Håvard Holme (Norway/Kemya) 12. Afia Attack: Trading Behind Enemy Line – Ujuaku Akukwe (Nigeria) 13. BOLINGO. Forest Of Love – Alejandro G. Salgado (Spain/Congo/Morocco) FEATURE FILM COMPETITION 1. Stranger In Paradise – Guido Hendrikx (Netherlands) 2. Wùlu – Daouda Coulibaly (France/Senegal) 3. Felicité – Alain Gomis (France/Senegal) 4. Hedi – Mohamed Ben Attia (Tunisia) 5. The Whale Caller – Zola Maseko (South Africa)
6. The Last Of Us – Ala Eddine Slim (Tunisia) 7. Hakkunde – Asurf Oluseyi (Nigeria) 8. Roti – Kunle Afolayan (Nigeria) 9. The Train Of Salt – Licinio Azevedo (Mozambique) 10. The Wound – John Trengove (South Africa) 11. Life Is Too Short – Antoine Allen (United States) 12. I Won’t Bear No More – Abraham Gezahegne (Ethiopia) 13. Keteke – Peter Kofi Sedufia W (Ghana) 14. I Am Not A Witch – Rungano Nyoni (Uk/France/Zambia 15. The Lost Cafe – Kenneth Gyang (Nigeria/Norway) | Out of Competition 16. Potato Potahto – Shirley Frimpong Manso (Ghana/Nigeria/Sweden) | Out of Competition 17. Tatu – Don omope (Nigeria) | Out of Competition 18. Idemuza – Aloaye Omoake (US/Nigeria) | Out of Competition 19. In my Country – Frank Rajah Arase (Ghana/Nigeria) | Out of Competition 20. Dinner – Franklyn Jituboh (Nigeria) | Out of Competition INTERNATIONAL PANORAMA 1. The Dog – Lam Can-zhao (China) | Feature 2. Light In The Dark (Nour Fi Dalal – le clair obscur) – Khaoula Assebab (Morocco) | Feature 3. Release From Heaven – Ali Noori Oskouei (Iran) | Feature 4. A Father’s Will – Bakyt Mukul, Dastan Zhapar uulu(Kyrgyzstan) | Feature 5. Laugh Or Die – Dmytro Tomashpolskiy (Ukraine) | Feature 6. Along The Shore, Under The Dying Sun – Natchanon Vana (Thailand) | Feature 7. My Father’s Name was Garbage (Kachru Mazha Bapa) – Mukesh Jadhav (India) | Feature 8. Colours Of The Alphabet – Alastair Cole (UK/Zambia) | Documentary BRITISH COUNCIL FILM CONNECTIONS PROGRAMME 1. Whitney! Can I Be Me – Nick Broomfield & Rudi Dolezal (UK) 2. A Moving Image – Shola Amoo (UK) 3. Hard Stop – George Amponsah (UK)
4. Under The Shadow – Babak Anvari (UK)
FILM CONNECTIONS SHORTS PROGRAMME (Curated by Nadia Denton) 5. Robot & Scarecrow – Kibwe Tavares (UK & South Africa) 6. Tower XYZ – Ayo Akingbade (UK) 7. Over – Jörn Threlfall (UK) 8. Brixton Rock – Ethosheia Hylton (UK) 9. A Viable Candidate – Orson Nava (UK) 10. 1745 – Gordon Napier (UK) 11. Prologue: The Lizard of Unmarriedness (It’s All About How You Tell It) – Phoebe Boswell (UK) 12. Mrs Bolanle Benson – Sade Adeniran (UK) 13. I Believe in Pink – Victoria Thomas (UK FRENCH SHOWCASE – Presented by the Embassy of France 1. Valerian – Luc Besson 2. Patients – Grand Corps Malade Mehdi ldir 3. Il a Déjá Tes Yeux (He even has your eyes) – Lucien Jean-Baptiste 4. Frontieres – Apoline Traore AMERICAN SHOWCASE – Presented by the United States Embassy 1. Dream, Girl – Erin Bagwell 2. Aall The Difference – Tod Lending 3. She Started It – Insiyah Saeed, Nora Poggi 4. Class Divide – Marc Levin
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Air pollution in slums sickening children; harming brain development- experts 

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Baby Hawa peers sleepily from the lappa strapping her to her mother’s back. Her mother, Mariama Issahaque, fries yams that she sells to residents and workers here.  

 

One-year-old Hawa looks sickly. Her faint cry is broken up by a weak cough. Mucus drips from her nose.  

 

The smoke from Mariama’s traditional three stone fire mixes with the filthy air – a mixture of tiny particles of sawdust from a wood market, emissions from animals traded here, and airborne chemicals in the smoke from the big dumpsite that has enveloped their neighborhood. Every breath Hawa takes is filled with toxins.  

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Agbogbloshie is one of the biggest slums and e-waste dumps in Ghana. The large site, on the Korle Lagoon near the centre of Accra, provides the Ghana’s vulnerable with a place to live and trade food, commodities, and electronic waste for income. But oversight by authorities is minimal and experts warn the toxic air is a time bomb, sickening the people here.  

 

Children are among those most vulnerable to air pollution and baby Hawa is paying the price. Mariama, Hawa’s worried single mother, complains of frequent visits to drug shops to buy cold medicines and, when things are bad, to the clinic. Mariama struggles to find the money.   

 

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 “My child does not fall sick regularly like this when we go to Walewale, capital of North East. We just returned to Accra from holidays, and this has started again,” Mariama says. She knows she should leave for her child’s sake.

 

“I remember asking the doctor at the clinic why my child frequently is getting sick. But his suggestion for us to leave the area is not within my means. If Allah permits and I get money, I will move. But for now, we have no choice.” 

 

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Alex Jagri, an attendant at Servant Drug store, near the makeshift wooden structure where Mariama and Hawa live in an area called Timber Market, sees the impact of the pollution on his neighbours. Flu and cold medications move fast here. He says he sells 35 bottles of cough mixture a week. 

 “Adults too come here reporting of chest pains,” Jagri says. “I feel bad about the situation, especially when as many as 20 children are brought here coughing and in terrible conditions. I refer the serious ones to the Children’s Hospital. The smoke is too bad and unbearable.”    

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As Ghana’s economy struggles and the population of Accra grows rapidly, Hawa is one of a growing number of children forced to live in slums and on Ghana’s streets. The slums are on the frontline of air pollution worldwide, according to Cities4Children, a global alliance of organisations working to protect child rights. 

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The source   

 

One of the biggest sources of air pollution in informal settlements such as Agbogbloshie is solid waste burning. Ghana is fighting to deal with its solid waste. The country generates approximately 7.2 million metric tonnes of municipal solid waste a year, according to data from the Ministry of Sanitation.   

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For context, that much waste would fill 40-foot shipping containers lined up from Paga, the northernmost town in Ghana’s Upper East, to the southernmost town of Aflao, in the Volta region, more than four times.  

 

Across the nation more than 20 per cent is burnt openly, while 37 per cent is disposed at dump sites. Poor waste management by authorities has compelled informal waste collectors to turn part of the Agbogbloshie slum into a general waste dumpsite that is permanently ablaze spewing smoke across the community day and night.  

 

In the last six months hotspots in Accra have recorded concentrations of the most dangerous air pollution particles several times higher than the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) guidelines recommend.  

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Agbogbloshie leads the pack with air pollution more than ten times higher than that recommended by the WHO, according to data sourced from Breath Accra, a community driven initiative that provides real-time air quality information. 

 

Health experts in the area are disturbed by what they’re seeing.  

“On a daily basis, parents from Agbogbloshie bring their children with cases linked to air pollution,” says Dr Maame Yaa Nyarko, Medical Superintendent at the Children’s Hospital, the only child referral facility in the Central Business District of Accra.  

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“These include pneumonia as well as allergic respiratory conditions. They often present early but do not have money to pay for services such as admission, x-rays and laboratory investigations.” 

 

 Dr Nyarko says respiratory cases are in the top three cases at the out-patient department. They are strongly linked to air pollution, poor ventilation and overcrowding in these communities. 

 

 “The danger is that the damage caused to children in slums through air pollution and malnutrition cannot be repaired because, malnutrition leads to impaired immunity as well as irreversible brain damage,” Dr Nyarko says. 

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“This means they cannot reach their potential in life. They may become adults who are not productive or may have chronic health problems.”  

 

Alarmingly, tests conducted on children living in and around slum areas reveal high blood lead levels, a leading cause of delayed brain development, according to Dr Emmanuel Kyeremateng-Amoah, a health specialist with UNICEF. More than 1.7 million Ghanaian children are estimated to have high blood lead levels. 

 

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 “Children are not supposed to be at slums because it is dangerous, conditions are unhealthy and unsafe,” Dr Kyeremateng-Amoah says.  

 

He is one of many experts urging the government to tackle the problem urgently. “We have shared our findings with the Ministry of Health, and the Environmental Protection Agency, and are working with the Ministry of Health to manage the children with high blood lead levels.  

As a development partner we are committed to supporting the efforts of government to provide the necessary structures and regulations to make the environment healthier and safer for children.”  

 

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The impacts of early exposure to air pollution are clearly documented in studies around the world. A new study by the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health found it increases the risk of developing asthma by early or middle childhood.

 

A Cities4Children study corroborated Harvard’s findings, adding that children’s exposure to high levels of air pollution can stunt lung growth, and lead to heart disease and increased rates of diabetes in children who would not normally develop these diseases so young. 

  “With every breath, children take in more air per unit of body weight than adults,” says a 2017 UNICEF report. “By extension, when air is toxic, they take in more toxic air per unit of body weight than adults.”  

Awareness is also a problem. While Hawa’s mother, Mariama, is well informed about the dangers of air pollution many more parents are unaware or refuse to believe what the doctors tell them. 

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 At an area called Cable and Wireless, another informal settlement in the heart of Bubuashie and Darkuman communities in Accra’s Okaikwei South, Wendy Adams holds her sickly three-year-old son Nicholas.  

Since he was born Nicholas has been suffering a running nose and cough. He is pale, underweight and small for his age. Wendy has taken him to health clinics but she prefers to treat him with traditional medicines given by a local healer. 

 “I do not believe what the doctors and nurses are saying,” Wendy says. “These are the works of the devil, and we are praying towards his total healing.”  

 

Experts warn that the number of children exposed to dangerous levels of air pollution is growing fast with worrying implications for Ghana’s future.

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Ghana’s population has grown, and the slum population has nearly doubled in the three years to 2020, according to Ghana’s 2022 Report on its progress on the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals.  

 

Government and local entrepreneurs act  

 

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Government and local community members have made efforts to clean up Agbobloshie and more actions are planned.  

 

Two years ago, under the “Let’s Make Accra Work” initiative led by Mr Henry Quartey, then-Greater Accra regional minister, part of Agbobloshie was demolished and fenced. However, it had limited success. The demolition has not stopped activities at Agbobloshie and open burning of e-waste has just spread to other slums. 

More than twenty local entrepreneurs have begun initiatives that are recycling the waste, particularly e-waste.  

 

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Government plans to run public awareness campaigns, to set up a drop-off point where people can drop off old electronics, and also a program where people can separate plastics to facilitate recycling.  

The state also plans to crack down on companies that buy valuable metals from informal scrap dealers. 

 

 That will go some way to fixing the problem according to Mr Larry Kotoe, Deputy Director at the Environmental Protection Agency.  

 While acknowledging weak enforcement and failures in waste management have contributed to the problem, Deputy Director Kotoe says the government is committed to regulation and actions that will slowly transition to a system where importers of electronic appliances will be accountable through an online registry system. 

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“Our motivation is to get waste disposed properly and reduce air pollution,” says Mr Kotoe. 

 Experts say there is no time to waste. Until major progress is made in cleaning up the air in slum communities more and more children like Hawa, and Nicolas will pay a major price.  

By Albert Oppong-Ansah/GNA 

This story was a collaboration with New Narratives. Funding was provided by the Clean Air Fund. The funder had no say in the story’s content. 

 

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Funeral arrangements announced for late Nollywood actor Junior Pope

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The family of the late Nollywood actor, John Odonwodo, known as Junior Pope, has announced the details of his funeral arrangements following his tragic passing in a boat accident on the River Niger during a movie shoot. (more…)

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King Promise thrills fans at sold-out show in Singapore

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Ghanaian singer King Promise has made history by being the first Afrobeats star to headline a concert in Singapore. (more…)

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Ice Spice remix stamps Cash Cobain’s “Fisherrr” as the Song of the Summer

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Ice Spice

Billboard Rookie of the Month, and multi-hyphenate NYC star, Cash Cobain has just linked up with Ice Spice for the long-awaited video remix for “Fisherrr”(feat. BaySwag) [18m+ Streams]. After bubbling the past few years with R-rated anthems over his own ethereal production – creating the playful “sexy drill” sound that he’s pioneered and taken to mainstream heights, Cash Cobain is stamping himself as a serious song of the summer contender with this remix.

Following up his two smash singles “Dunk Contest” (8m+) and “Fisherrr” (pronounced, ‘for sure), Cash is primed for his moment in the spotlight ––  hitting 1M Monthly Listeners on Spotify, Top 3 NYC Shazam Charts, having occupied the #1 + #3 slots of the NYC Apple Music Charts, hitting #45 on the Urban Radio Charts and counting, and now landing Ice Spice’s third feature ever  –– in the words of COMPLEX, “the summer of 2024 is looking very slizzy”. On the highly-anticipated remix, Ice Spice is simply in top-tier shape.

Adding her signature magnetic ‘it-girl’ flair, charming cadence, and instantly-coinable one-liners, she bolsters the lightning-hot single into astronomical territory with the opening lines –– “Got an attitude but I’m feelingless, so I ain’t mad at you, And I’m tatted too on this fatty-tude, I’m the baddest boo”.

The long-overdue collab from the two Bronx natives is seamless, with her being a tailor-fit alongside the ethereal, dreamy production and silky smooth verses from Bay Swag and Cash. With the recent releases of “Dunk Contest” (watch Genius ‘Open Mic’)  and now the Ice Spice-assisted remix for “Fisherrr” (feat. BaySwag), Cash Cobain is using his collaborative momentum from last year to continue elevating his signature sound, showcasing its influential and ever-growing widespread appeal in the process. In the words of Cash:“It’s a beautiful record. It feels amazing, it feels like NYC is back stronger than ever with me and Spice -– two Bronx legends. Get ready for the song of the summer.” 

Last month, Cash took over NYC with his birthday show, ‘Slizzyfest’ at Irving Plaza –– a night that was slated as a stacked lineup of NY’s finest, with rumors of an A-list superstar surprise set. After chatter spread online and the hype reached a fever pitch, the crowd became too much to handle and the show was ultimately canceled –– but Cash wanted to give the fans their money’s worth so he ventured into Union Square and threw a makeshift show with his crew, a Bluetooth speaker, and hundreds of adoring fans (read ‘I Went to Cash Cobain’s Slizzyfest and All I Got Was That Classic NYC Feeling’ via Rolling Stone + statement in Billboard).

Also in Billboard, Cash recently teased potential collaborations with Frank Ocean, Travis Scott, Don Toliver (seen filming a music video here), Lil Yachty and more –– a surefire sign of the worldwide stardom soon to come. These recent releases arrive on the heels of a career-defining year in 2023 that closed with the production of PinkPantheress“Nice To Meet You” (feat. Central Cee), which debuted at #20 on Billboard Hot 100 (he also starred alongside her in a nationally-syndicated Apple commercial for the new MacBook).

This was preceded by producing Drake’s “Calling For You” (feat. 21 Savage), which debuted at #5 on the Billboard Hot 100, DJ’ing at Travis Scott‘s Cactus Jack x Audemars Piguet event, and releasing his critically-acclaimed debut solo album Pretty Girls Love Slizzy with Giant Music.

Please find links to stream the new “Fisherrr” Remix (feat. Ice Spice) below, and stay tuned for more announcements:

“FISHERRR” REMIX (FEAT. ICE SPICE) – OUT NOW
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Tobinco Pharmaceuticals LTD donates drugs worth GHc 155k to Lekma Hospital in celebration of World Malaria Day.

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In commemoration of World Malaria Day, Tobinco Pharmaceuticals Limited exemplified its commitment to healthcare by donating an anti-malaria drug worth GH155,000 to the LEKMA Hospital in Teshie. (more…)

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Celestine Donkor Sets the Record Straight on Weight Loss Surgery Speculation

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Award-winning Ghanaian artist, Celestine Donkor has addressed speculations regarding her potential pursuit of weight loss surgery, clarifying that she hasn’t made any decisions in that regard. (more…)

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