
'Iyanu' television show immerses audiences in Nigerian mythology
LOS ANGELES, April 3 (Reuters) - Before Nigerian filmmaker Roye Okupe's daughter was born, he decided that he wanted to create a character that would be a positive role model for her and people all over the world with first the graphic novel and then with the animated television series, 'Iyanu: Child of Wonder.'
''Iyanu' is a love letter to my daughter, who is four years old now,' Okupe told Reuters.
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'Before she was born, I had the thought in my head that if I eventually had a baby girl, 'what is a show that I would want to watch on TV, that she could both be entertained by, but at the same time, inspired by her heritage and her culture?' and that was one of the things that pushed me to create this,' he added.
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The show, an original production by Black-owned studio Lion Forge Animation, will arrive on Cartoon Network on Saturday, followed by Max on Sunday with an all-Nigerian voice cast.
'Iyanu' is a children's superhero animated series based on Okupe and artist Godwin Akpan's graphic novel of the same name that takes place in a world inspired by the Yoruba tribe in Nigeria, Africa.
The show introduces Iyanu, a teenage orphaned girl who discovers that she has special powers that will eventually enable her to defeat the evil forces in her homeland.
For Lion Forge CEO and founder Dave Steward II, the series based on Nigerian mythology is a sign that African content is becoming more popular in global streaming.
'This is kind of one of the first times you're seeing content coming out with African mythology,' Steward II said.
He added that it's common for shows and movies to be based on Roman, Norse, and Greek mythologies, while seeing this level of African 'cultural specificity' is less common.
'We've had Black representation in different ways, in entertainment, in cartoons as well,' Sam Kugbiyi, who voices the character Toye, said.
'But to have it so specific, it's amazing. It's a beautiful thing to see. This is historic, in my opinion,' he added.
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Scottish Sun
17 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Diddy can still come out of trial a ‘winner' even if found guilty & despite damning trial abuse allegations, lawyer says
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Daily Mirror
a day ago
- Daily Mirror
Actor and footy legend among celebs in plea over 'largest humanitarian crisis'
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The letter to Starmer says: 'Following over two years of violent conflict, Sudan is now the world's largest humanitarian crisis, with half of the country's population – a staggering 24.6 million people – already facing high levels of acute food insecurity. Together with a coalition of Sudanese civil-society and UK aid organisations, we are calling for rapid and scaled-up action from the UK Government to help save lives before it is too late. 'The conflict has had a horrifying impact on children's lives, with a staggering 16 million children now in dire need of support. These children have witnessed and been subject to brutal violence, have lost loved ones, have fled their homes and been forced to say goodbye to their schools and communities.' The letter, organised by charity Plan International UK, is due to be handed in at Downing Street on Monday. In April, at a conference in London, Foreign Secretary David Lammy – who visited the border of Sudan earlier this year – announced an extra £120 million of support for the stricken country. But the letter urges the government to 'step up its efforts by… Announcing additional emergency funding for the Sudan crisis to help save lives, providing funding that has been promised so it reaches people who need it in the coming weeks, and urging other governments to scale-up their humanitarian efforts'. The letter also calls on the government to increase 'international pressure and effective mediation to secure an immediate ceasefire to end the violence'. Signatories also include actor and comedian Ben Bailey-Smith, author Candice Carty-Williams, musician Peter Gabriel, as well as actor Alex Macqueen. The chiefs of War Child UK, Action Against Hunger and CAFOD, as well as the founder of Sudan's Doctors for Human Rights, have signed the letter too. 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In parts of the country where food supplies are lowest, thousands of children are already dying due to extreme hunger. The situation is quickly escalating into one of the worst famines ever recorded. With such an extreme shortage of food, immediate action is needed now to save lives and prevent further suffering. We can't let children and their families in Sudan starve to death.' And Bronze, part of the Three Lions side which triumphed at Euro 2022, said: 'Millions of children are caught up in this devastating crisis and girls are especially vulnerable. It's harrowing to hear about girls as young as one experiencing rape and sexual violence. And girls are more likely to eat last and least when food runs out. No child should experience what the children in Sudan are going through right now. For their sake we all need to speak out and call for urgent action on Sudan now.' 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Daily Mirror
a day ago
- Daily Mirror
Coronation Street star's health battle and unexpected job away from the soap
Channique Sterling-Brown, who plays lawyer Dee-Dee Bailey in Coronation Street, has opened up about her mental health battle and role away from the soap as she becomes an ambassador for charity Laughing with locals, Channique Sterling-Brown looks completely at home as she admires the livestock and learns to shell nuts in a remote African village. Better known as lawyer Dee-Dee Bailey in Coronation Street, she is in a remote rural community in Malawi, where more than 70% of the population live below the national poverty line, surviving on less than £1.60 a day. A 5,000 mile trip from her home in Manchester, she is working with the international development charity Tearfund, promoting its work to eradicate period poverty - a subject this paper is also campaigning to stamp out here in the UK through our End Period Poverty campaign. 'I'm very grateful for my job at Coronation Street, but it's a strange thing having a platform when it's come out of nowhere. Suddenly you get a role on TV and it changes your life,' says Channique, 28. 'I'm not a perfect person, I'm just a girl from Manchester, but I think it's my responsibility to use this profile I've got through Coronation Street to help and care for others. 'I feel grateful to be able to do that. These people might be on the other side of the world, but it's about spreading the love.' Fans of Dee Dee, the big-hearted lawyer, who came to the cobbles in 2022 as part of the Bailey clan – the first black family on the street - may feel these words have come straight from her mouth. Like Dee-Dee, off-screen Channique is a committed Christian and was approached by Tearfund, a Christian charity that partners with churches in 50 of the world's poorest countries, last year and invited to be an ambassador. She says: 'I loved the sound of a charity that was focussed on reaching people, teaching them, equipping them and empowering them. I loved the fact that it was through the church too.' Channique, who has visited life-changing water and sanitation projects to witness Teardrop's work in eradicating period poverty, says this has long been a subject close to her heart. 'Period poverty is an international problem and there are girls right here in the UK that miss out on education because of it,' she says. 'My church's community centre is in one of the poorest areas in Manchester. We run a foodbank and my donation is regularly menstrual hygiene products. 'Obviously people need to eat, but it's nice for women to know that these products will always be stocked on the foodbank shelves.' During her trip, Channique meets local teenage girls to learn how the charity has helped them break down myths and taboos around menstruation and provide safe and clean toilets at school - meaning they do not have to miss out on education. Period poverty, which refers to the inability to afford or access menstrual products, means that 30% of young girls in Malawi stay out of school for up to a week every month during their period. But Tearfund is working to change that. 'We went to a school near Salima where they have a changing block for the adolescent girls who have their periods,' Channique says. 'It's somewhere they have access to clean water and to clean themselves, so they can then get straight back into lessons. 'They are also learning to sew reusable sanitary pads. The boys are helping do that too and learning about periods and the menstrual cycle. I would never have expected that, because I don't even see it in the UK.' Channique has also seen first-hand the community groups established by Tearfund, which have given villagers valuable lessons in agriculture and business. 'I met Joyce and she taught me how to shell groundnuts. I wasn't very good at it, but I did my best,' Channique smiles. 'She also showed me her animals. The charity had taught her how to take the manure from the livestock and turn it into organic fertiliser so, whereas previously she'd been getting five bags of groundnuts, she was now getting 20. That's amazing, life-changing multiplication, just from that titbit of knowledge.' Christianity and work done through the church are both massively important to Channique, who credits her faith with transforming her life. Growing up in London and then Yorkshire in a church-going family, her turning point came in 2020 when she signed up for an Alpha Course - an evangelistic Christian course - to learn more about faith. 'It changed my life and I don't say that lightly,' she says. 'It gave me a new understanding of what Christianity is. As a young adult I'd thought it meant I couldn't have any fun and that there were lots of rules. But that hasn't been the reality for me. The reality has been that it's given me so much hope and joy. 'Before this I had lots of personal struggles with mental health, in terms of anxiety and self-esteem and lots of different things, if I'm honest about it,' she says candidly. 'Finding my faith has empowered me – it's like the world is in colour now. 'Before, when I looked at the situations in the world, I felt really hopeless and heartbroken. Now I look at the good that is out there and how many people want to make a change.' Again, hearing Channique speak, there are echoes of her non-nonsense, yet massively compassionate Corrie character Dee-Dee, who has featured in a host of dramatic storylines, including, most recently, becoming pregnant by her abusive fiancé Joel Deering. After first considering a termination, Dee-Dee decided to keep the baby and the plan is that she will be raised abroad by her brother James and his partner Danny. But, as Dee-Dee spends more time with her daughter, it's clear she is wondering if she has made the right decision. 'She's having doubts,' Channique says. 'She is becoming attached to the baby. It's such a complicated situation – there's a constant battle between head and heart. Logically she thinks it's best that James takes Leyla, but that's not the reality of what she feels, so we'll definitely see the repercussions of that for her.' The actress, who works as a Sunday School teacher at her local church, adds: 'It wasn't my plan to be on television. I would have been just as happy treading the boards and I always say that the timing of me getting Coronation Street was really special. It was after Covid, I'd really found my faith and I was a bit older and a bit wiser and that's equipped me with better priorities.' Starting a family is not at the top of that priority list at the moment for single Channique, despite loving her storylines with the baby who plays Laila. She laughs: 'Working with animals and children isn't as bad as people say! I love the baby; she's so cute and chilled out. I was actually quite annoyed at first. Because Dee-Dee didn't want to bond with her, it meant everyone on set was holding her except me! I was like 'why are Alan Halsall (Tyrone Dobbs) and Mike Le Vell (Kevin Webster) holding the baby and I'm not?' Having just bought her first house in Manchester, which she shares with her best friend, Channique would like to settle down and be a mum one day. 'I'm still young so it's not on the cards at the minute, however I would definitely love that in my future,' she enthuses. 'But I'm really blessed. I've got lots of amazing nieces and nephews, so I'm not short for cuddles.'