Check her out on her website.
Recent Posts
- Amadou & Miriam – Masiteladi
- 90 million litres of petroleum products disappear?
- Dominique Strauss-Kahn on his trip to Africa
- A Matter of Life and Death: LGBTI Rights in Uganda
- Friday links #40
- Nigeria: Who needs a president, again
- Farafina Trust Creative Writing Workshop Sponsored by Nigerian Breweries
- Intra-African trade and development
- European governments block Wall Street from selling government bonds?
- Anthropology and Economics
- Oumou Sangare – Dugu Kamalemba
- The Turai Yar’Adua distraction
- Swiss animals may get state-funded lawyers
- Friday links #39
- Afternoon music break – Cheikh Lô
Blogroll
- A Bombastic Element
- AAA Blog
- Aid Watch
- Akin
- Anthropologi.info
- Anthropologyworks
- ASA Globalog
- Blood and Milk
- Chris Blattman's Blog
- Don's Life Cycle Analysis
- Ishtar News
- Iyan and Egusi Soup
- Jeremy's Naijablog
- Keith Hart's Memory Bank
- Ktravula
- Kwame's Thoughts of a Ghetto Intellectual
- Nigerian Curiosity
- NigeriansTalk
- Nneoma's Pyoo Wata
- NPR's A Blog Supreme
- Oz's Mootbox
- Roving Bandit
- Ruben Eberlein's blog
- Sahel Blog
- Savage Minds
- Sci-Cultura
- Square One
- Szavanna
- The Prism
Categories
- Africa (58)
- Announcemenet (11)
- Anthropology (22)
- Asia (2)
- India (2)
- CFP (6)
- Children (1)
- China (4)
- Commodity (2)
- Decisions (2)
- Development (19)
- Doing Anthropology (16)
- economics (29)
- Economy (6)
- Europe (7)
- Germany (1)
- Experiences (54)
- Fieldwork (9)
- Finance (12)
- General (4)
- Health (1)
- Humour (14)
- Idea (3)
- Ideas (3)
- Interview (2)
- Links (112)
- Methodology (1)
- Movies (2)
- Music (48)
- News (101)
- Nigeria (27)
- Opinion (35)
- Philosophy (1)
- Photos (1)
- Psychology (1)
- Reviews (40)
- Short Story (3)
- Theories (2)
- Thoughts (13)
- Trade (14)
- Uncategorized (34)
- Video (1)
- Writing UP (1)

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales License.

I tried to join you to enjoy Ayo's music, but was forbidden to do so. I got a message, “We are sorry, this content is not available for your country.”
Why do people do this? BBC won't make cricket, rugby and football feeds available outside UK. Now music is restricted? Don't people realize that in deprived countries (like the USA) we need access to civilization from other continents?
Maybe, someday, I'll be able to taste Ayo's music.