Tuesday, 4 September 2012
LIFE AFTER BIG BROTHER
The three months of booze, crazy wildness, verbal cross fires and infatuation are now gone with South African Keagan pocketing a whooping U$300, 000, humbling the rest of the participants in the Big Brother Star from across Africa.
Of course the rest of the young ladies and gentlemen who sniffed the smell of the much hunted dollar included Malawi’s own Wati, whose accomplice, Nafe bowed down to the heat before the boiling finale.
So far so good, Wati lived the maximum days in the house. If there were only six winners, surely Wati should have been coughing, smiling, laughing and stinking dollars. But alas, the opposite is true save alone for the fact that he came back with consolation packages (some disclosed, some best reserved for the Big Brother traditional secret).
Welcome back to the real world Wati where booze is a casual past time activity and not necessarily a dosage to get rid of stress. Malawi has had a fair share in Big Brother representation but sadly the life of these fellows eclipses with their exit on the screen.
By being in the limelight and with an influential a continental trade mark, graduates of the Big Brother house could better be leading role models of young people in various spheres. Young people in the country need motivation, inspiration, guidance, hope and so much more.
Imagine if the local participants of the Big Brother house formed a club and collectively come up with proposals of initiatives that centre of addressing a cross section of social, economical and indeed political issues that affect youth today. This could be amazingly massive!
For instance, Wati be advocating against alcohol abuse; Code an advocate of talent use; Hazel for girls’ adolescence sanity and power; Mzamo for anti-smoking campaign; Lomwe for clean and peaceful content of urban music; Zein for entrepreneurship.
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