 So, Mary, what did you find for us today? Honorable Abdo Sabo Olayuola Olawale, a member of Lagos State House of Assembly, has passed away after he slumped at APC's presidential campaign in Joss Plateau State on Tuesday, November 15th. Popularly known as Omititi, the deceased was the member of the presenting motion constituency at the Lagos State House of Assembly. The lawmaker among the politicians and members of the ruling APC who stormed Joss for the kick-off of Tini Booth's presidential campaign ahead of the 2023 general elections. That is very sad. I mean, I guess the pressure is a lot for them as well, you know, but they so rest in peace. Absolutely. I feel like you're sad because you went to look for sad stories. For sad stories, I mean. Before we take your story, Elsie, let's talk about today. So, the International Day of Tolerance is an annual observance day declared by UNESCO in 1995 to generate public awareness of the dangers of intolerance. So, it's observed today on November 16th. I think everything is just aligning with the conversation today because I think tolerance and the opposite, the tolerance of it is also a key driver for today's conversation. So, I think it just really fits that some of the challenges that we're facing today, whether it's, I won't say racially, but it's not racially, tribally, even across political divides, right? It's still something that we need to be able to focus on tolerance. Everybody needs to have a voice and be heard and be allowed to be heard because I think today, one of the tragedies of social media is that if you have a dissenting voice. Or if you're not part of a minority, you can't speak up. Exactly. Minority can be from any. From any, exactly, any of these factors. Or if you're not part of the minority, don't speak up. I like the idea, I mean, how you put it, but tolerance as well needs to be, which we need to try to spread it across because, and also have a balance. There are some things we shouldn't tolerate, which is why we've gotten here. Maybe the word toleration will not be what we would have used, but because we just look at this thing and let it slide, let's tolerate this, now a person, bring it, cover it, how they speak that proverb, something is true, something. You know, we just keep doing it. So, there needs to be a balance in this tolerance as well. But absolutely, I get where the whole collaboration is coming from and I just know we need to find the balance globally, not just in Nigeria. Absolutely. And on that note, what did you fight for? Oh, I forgot something there. Okay, so appeal costs others police to pay 50 million and tender an apology to Charlie Boy. So Charlie Boy had obtained the 50 million judgments over the violation of his rights by the police doing the resume or resign protests he led in August 2017 against President Muhammad Bawari. So they went to cut off appeal to right and the judgements held the award and also then added a 100,000 as cost of persecuting the legal ocean. So they need to pay him down one as well. Apologize and I'm just really wondering how the police is going to pay the 50 million on a day that reached. I thought you said they are broke. So where would they get the money from? How is it going to work? They'll find money. This feels like that debt you know that you have and you're not going to get it forever and ever. Would they really pay this 50 million? The person they are owing the money is vocal enough and big enough for the fight. I feel like his great-grandchildren would just say, oh, the government is on my dad. I'm going to get some form. Okay, let's move on. Let's hope that he gets paid. So I tried to take a very lighthearted story today. The 2023 Grammy nominations are out and one of the things, even if Nigerians can't be proud of Nigeria, one of the things we can be proud of is our music. It's really Nigeria to the world, right? And we're really seeing our stars doing great, great, great. So of course, the African giant, Damini, Burnaboy. So his latest album Love Damini has been nominated for a best global music album and the hit song, Last Last, has also been nominated for best global music performance. Good motivation. But that's how it works, right? That's Adele and Cole. Well, it's true. The best music comes from pain. Yes, right. But I think what shocked me the most was just the fact that I just googled him and he had been on all the top talk shows and performed Last Last. Like, so he's been on, I think, is it Tonight's Tribunal? He's been on that show a few times. So you're kind of, you know, expecting to see that. But then I saw him on Jules Holland in the UK performing Last Last. And I was like, man, forget it. We've arrived. This is it. So I mean, it's just, for me, it's so exciting to see that we're giving something that the world truly appreciates, that's putting our stars out there. I think Tenz is also coming out. She's part of it, nominated some, I think. Yeah, she is. So we're doing great things. And, you know, I just want to applaud our artist and say it's a great thing. Yeah, I think it's even beyond music. Our entertainment industry, I think, is just amazing. So nollywood. Just look at what happened with Wakanda and how the stars, not like Wakapas in the movie, like the main cast of that movie had to come to Nigeria to premiere it. And I was just, wow, then look at the album that was released for it. We had, I think, about 40% of Nigeria on the album. So I just looked at the whole thing after watching the movie. And I was so proud of my people beyond the whole drama, the whole Putanako's Bad Leadership, negativity. You know, we're still fridging ahead. And when we have the opportunity to take the center stage, not any other way, we take it and we own it. So I'm really proud of every Nigerian, every young Nigerian doing us proud, the one we are the other. We love you. And I think that's the only reason we can see we are ahead of eye, wherever we go to. You travel out of the shores of this country, especially within Africa, and you see how they are really proud of. You forget about the German media and social media. Once you know you are from Nigeria, oh my God, I mean, I just came back from Uganda and everybody was just so happy to know that in Nigerian came in. I went to the rejuvenation in Nigerian is here. So it's, I'm just proud of us. That's what I'm really trying to say. It's just great to have those opportunities. Like I said, it feels like it doesn't come around often, but where we're giving the opportunity, I think for me, it just shows how far we can go and what the realities could be. A different side of the coin to that. So very excited for that. I think on that note, we shall take a break and when we come back, we'll bring in our guests.