For the Love of the Game

My favorite show on ESPN is ESPN FC. Of course, the show is relatively unpopular and has a mediocre time slot. The show airs at 3PM PST and talks about everything related to football (soccer) for thirty minutes. JOY Sports has its own version called Touchline: Transfer Express with Geroge Addo Junior. Addo, myself, Eddie Read More …

Sexual Harassment – layered and complex

I’ve spent the past four weeks at my internship in a bit of shock as I examined and absorbed the flirtatious, sexually charged office culture. Men and women frequently pet each other, hold hands, and joke about their sex lives. It’s in good humor, but It’s a culture that wouldn’t fly in professional spaces in Read More …

Ghana Garden and Flower Movement

Driving down the highway to StratComm in a cramped trotro, all I can see on either side of me as I peer out the window are buildings crowded on top of each other, many left unfinished from abandoned construction projects. Village homes are inches apart from each other. I can see people bumping and pushing Read More …

The Kindness in Ghana

One of the most common questions I get from local Uber drivers here in Accra is, “What is your favorite thing about Ghana?”   The first few times I had to think and scramble for answers – the mangos, the laid-back culture etc.  After a few weeks, however, it dawned on me – without question Read More …

A Different Kind of Advertising

We have just a little over a week left at our media internships, and it amazes me how fast the time has gone by! I’ve heard so many interesting stories from all the other students on this trip about some of the experiences they have had so far, and I think it is safe to Read More …

Ghana and Recycling Culture

One of the hardest obstacles I’ve faced during my internship with SSNIT is the lack of understanding when it comes to recycling.  I know that Ghana has serious waste disposal issues, but it amazes me that despite a ‘clean initiative’ newspaper article here and there or a tagged wall claiming “#KeepGhanaClean” there is still a Read More …

Doing Laundry: Ghana Style

First and foremost, it’s essential that you emotionally, mentally and physically prepare yourself for what’s to come. Doing laundry in this country is a workout in itself; so skip your exercise regiment for the day (if you’re brave enough to work out in 100% humidity). For emotional and mental preparation, sit down and read a Read More …

False Perceptions

We’re told “bring shoes you don’t really care about, pack clothes you don’t mind getting dirty and ladies don’t even bother bringing makeup…” etc. We all started off in an outdoor store like REI or something similar, nervously filling carts with bug spray, hand sanitizer, mosquito nets and so forth. We had that terrifying travel Read More …

English in Ghana

Almost all people in Ghana speak English well. It is due to its colony history. Hundreds of years ago, Europeans came to this land and started their predatory and ruthless consumption. With the development of globalization, English-speaking ability is definitely a plus for communication and cooperation with the developed world, but wouldn’t it remind Ghanaians Read More …