Friday, June 8, 2012

PHILL LEWIS (Mr. MOSEBY OF DISNEY'S ZACH & CODY SERIES) IS UGANDAN!

 
Today’s international television audiences identify with numerous characters, but hardly ever take the time to find out their backgrounds. If you are a fan of the Disney Channel, then you might love the comedy series, The Suite Life of Zach and Cody, and its spin-off, The Life on Deck. You might relate to the uptight, strict but caring Mr. Moseby, played by Phill Lewis. Here is the bomb. He hails from Uganda. Yes. In Africa!

Lewis is the son of former Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone executive and former U.S. Ambassador Delano Lewis. He was born in Uganda, East Africa during his father's stint as Peace Corps' associate director and country director for Nigeria and Uganda.

Lewis co-starred in the Disney Channel original series The Suite Life of Zack & Cody as Mr. Moseby. Since 2008, he has reprised the role on a sequel: The Suite Life on Deck, where he plays the manager of The S.S. Tipton. He has appeared as a guest star on Disney Channel's That's So Raven and Phineas and Ferb and also in one of the channel's original films, Dadnapped. On the children's show Special Agent Oso he has a recurring role as the voice of Agent Wolfie.

As a television director, he directed several episodes of The Suite Life on Deck, first making his directorial debut in The Suite Life of Zack & Cody episode "I Want My Mummy" (2007). He has since gone on to direct episodes of the Disney Channel sitcoms A.N.T. Farm, Austin & Ally, Good Luck Charlie and Jessie starring his former Suite Life on Deck co-star Debby Ryan.

In addition to his television work, Lewis has appeared in several films. He made his film debut as Dennis in the 1989 dark comedy Heathers. He has appeared in smaller roles in more than a dozen films, including City Slickers (1991), Bowfinger (1999), I Spy (2002), Surviving Christmas (2004), Kicking & Screaming (2005), and Beverly Hills Chihuahua 2 (2011).
 







Tuesday, June 5, 2012

FUNNY HANSEL QUOTES (part 2)

                                      

   1)      My girlfriend and I always lie to each other. She tells me she loves me, and I tell her I am rich.  

     2)      Some people say robots will take over the world someday. I can’t wait to see an unemployed robot! 

     3)      Sorry I don’t smoke. I’m a vegetarian.

     4)      If you try and don’t succeed, try again. Then quit.

     5)      Yesterday, I played a prank on 3 police officers. They played a prank on me too. Sorry, I can’t write   anything funny here. My butt’s still sore.

Monday, June 4, 2012

CAMEROON ENTERTAINMENT: THE LINGUISTIC DICHOTOMY.




                                     
I would first of all love to thank you personally for taking some time off to read this enlightening article, one which reveals the very nature of ALL entertainment in Cameroon. As we know, Cameroon is a bilingual country. Granted; but is it, really? Are we as Anglophones really proud of the bottom position we hold in the ladder of Cameroon Entertainment? 

Let’s talk about Cameroon as a bilingual country for a moment. How bilingual are we when the media is “frenchified”, when all the celebrities are French, when all major awards go to French artists...and so on. Name two top musicians from Cameron. Francophones. Name two major TV stations in Cameroon. French. Yes, French. French, French, French!

You might be thinking I am blaming the Francophones for putting us at the periphery of the entertainment circle. No. I am not and I will never. I blame us, the ANGLOPHONES, for letting others decide for us where we will fit in the entertainment milieu. We as a people, a race and people of the same cultural heritage let others dictate for us whether we will succeed or not in the world of Cameroon Entertainment.

Now, let’s see how language affects entertainment. I am a well renowned English stand-up comedian and entertainer. Read carefully: ENGLISH COMEDIAN= ENGLISH COMEDY. Now, what business will I have performing in front of French-speaking Cameroonians? Anything you do in a language ends where that particular language is being understood. This also goes with movies.  A good English movie cannot be screened in front of a French audience.

That being said, it is a little different with other entertainment acts like music, modelling and dancing. Some people may think music is language. Well...it’s really not about what the artist is saying. It’s about the melody, the harmony, and the ‘beats’. That explains why 50 Cent is loved by people of all sorts of linguistic background, and why Michel Telo’s song “Ai Se Eu Tu Pego” which is in Spanish, is loved by all Cameroonians today. Dancing really has no language. Play a great song and let the dancers thrill the crowd. You have a show. Same with modelling and fashion designing. 

Now to the main event. We, as Anglophones, have to STOP trying to fit in the Francophone agenda. They have made a considerable step towards writing their names in Entertainment history. We should stop running after them, like they hold the key to our success. We must stand up and fight as a people. With regards to entertainment in Cameroon, we should stop viewing it as general Cameroon Entertainment, but rather as two separate forms of entertainment in Cameroon: English Entertainment and French Entertainment.

Take the case of the blacks in America. For centuries, they were molested, discriminated upon, derailed, but they now outrival in ALL areas in the American Entertainment industry. In music, we got 50 Cent. In movies, we have Samuel L. Jackson. In stand-up comedy, there’s the great Chris Rock. They top the charts in a country that made them slaves and took away their dignity.

We are in Cameroon, and though the oppression still persists, it should serve as fuel for our burning desires to become great entertainers in the future. Rather than either resigning to our fate or trying to be French, we should unite as one people of the same linguistic domination, one solid force in Cameroon determined to put an end to the French oppression in the entertainment industry.

We might be the minority, but that is in the mind. We can achieve, but this starts when we realise who we are. We are a marginalised people. We are looked upon as second class citizens in our own country. That will change. It begins with you. We write about the X-Maleya’s and the Tony Nobody’s. No disrespect. They have achieved...and helping the French community. Not us. Let us look within ourselves and find out those who can make us proud. Let us promote them. Jovi has made us proud. If you hate him, fine. He made me believe Anglophones can go as far as other people of different languages. I tip my hat to you man. Keep up.  

Enough said. Now that you have been patient to read this article, I would beseech you to believe in the Anglophone dream. We can change the face of English Entertainment in Cameroon. We can overcome. The dream lies in those who have the hope in their hearts. It’s time to cut off from the French disease and do something on our own, something we will be proud of. If you believe, then you can achieve. Keep the faith alive. Do it now.


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