
Merry Christmas Project Fame , "Happily go to Hell" Thereafter ...
"We can't sell our music to anyone if we can't sell it at home ... Kenyan music is beautiful," said Valerie Wairimu Kimani, 22. This is the last time we hear her blabber on the airwaves. Goodbye girl and may God bless you for the sake of those you are dear to and those who are dear to you.
Tusker Project Fame was neither history nor did it make history, but after seven weeks, it ended with this message: "Merry Christmas" and "Happy go to hell ... We have achieved what we wanted -- selling our booze."
But it ended hopelessly, just as it started, leaving behind a trail of blood-soaked casualities, including a young girl who will remain just what she was before the Academy, but further deluded in expectations of tales of Tinseltown success, music industry and urban romance, truckloads of new friends and the ultimate lie of success: a Mercedeze Benz that was funded by blood-money of ruined teenagers, traffic smashes, broken families and shattered careers, forget a trail of booze-related ailements.
Aware that Dr. Khadija Abdalla, the medical supretendant of Garissa District Hospital is still in need of vitamin tablets, I wonder what motivated the giant beer-maker to sponsor such a project while it has ignored, the genuine concept of "corporate responsibility." Children have died and in real world ... devoid of real heroes, we have real deaths ... and this is one of them.
The nearest equivalent of the Project is an imputated lad, ambitious that he/she will one day, with help of some unseen forces, play football like Ronaldino and Gary Lineker. I am not sure any of Project Fame's boys and girls even dream to be like Michael Jackson or even John Legend leave alone the motivation of Sukuma Bin Ongalo.
With nothing to talk about in terms of history. It only succeded in playing the tune of crafty brewing behemoth that is blamed for under-age drinking, drunk-driving and other social ills, only covered by a fat pay-cheque to Kenya's chief taxman -- Kenya Revenue Authority.
I am not sure if Joy Mboya, David Muriithi or, and moreso, Ian Mbugua can standup to the test of music ... they judged on the principle of "live and lets live." Then was the voting through SMS .... Or what it democracy.
Then there is Resolution Health, a scruffy insurance outfit that pledged a 10-million health cover to Valerie Kimani. This group has a shady a reputation of not refunding client ... now it is only seeking limelight.
"We cant afford to start talking about one person ... name," said Kimani, another sacrificial lamb of EABL insatiable need to hawk beer. She spoke of "break the walls" that separate us as east Africans. Wait a minute
"I believe it will easy to worl around my last semester, but I could not overlook such a once-in-a-lifetime .... I am a winner and very proud being an east African ... That is what matters now," she said, snidely with a dash of ignorance of the dog-eat-dog society she is happily tossing herself into.
"And one day our friendship will break, and that will just prove (the) theory that relationships (and success) are conditional, and you don't need human connection or deserve it or whatever goes on in that rat-maze of your brain."

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