Sunset over Kingston


Sunset over Kingston.

“Official Bob Marley”


There is much “official” Bob Marley merchandise here.

Kingston rooftops


Some Kingston rooftops on a rainy day. The “Christmas breeze” is here, so it is “cold”. Enjoy your day.

“The new Jamrock”


Beyond the obvious beauty of the beaches and the mountains, there is so much pleasure for the eyes here in Jamaica. I am always wary of how the international media portrays this island (it is usually one-dimensional and focuses on the cliches and stereotypes of crime and gangsters and the poor and Rastas) but this photojournalist casts a respectful eye in this series of pictures. He is Francesco Giusti and this series is in the Washington Post. Check it out.

“Accomplish what you will”


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Entrepreneurship was celebrated in Jamaica last week, with the entire week dedicated it. I attended a panel discussion hosted by 18 Degrees North host and former Bloomberg journalist Zahra Burton. The panellists included EduFocal’s Gordon Swaby, Miss Yaneek Page, Melanie Subratie and a fellow from the Musson Group (I didn’t get his name). It was an enlightening and practical discussion about how to succeed as an entrepreneur, how to deal with the emotional highs and lows, how to seek and secure funding and how to attract and retain the right staff. This is a key challenge, apparently, and people must be vetted carefully. It also takes much passion and dedication, for there will be many more rejections than successes. It was one of the best panel discussions I have attended, and as a business journalist, this is saying a lot. It almost inspired me to start a business! Not quite, but it did confirm for me that being a freelance journalist is running your own business in itself, with the marketing and branding aspects, budgeting, pitching, delivering a quality product on deadline and maintaining relationships with clients. I enjoyed these quotes, which are mounted on the walls of JN’s Start-Up Jamaica space. Enjoy your Monday!

Parts Unknown


Here is the full episode, enjoy!

Furniture delivery, JA style


I saw this in downtown Kingston today. Someone is getting a couch at some point today.

“Who will rescue us from ChikV?”


My hands feel like useless claws in the mornings. So too do my feet as I stumble and hobble out of bed first thing. My left side feels seized up at times and my right shoulder has lost mobility. My flexibility and general fitness are slowly coming back but I’m fighting fatigue, although my joints seem to be getting worse. This is almost two months after contracting the Chikungunya virus, which has apparently hit close to one million people in the Caribbean now. Also, Britons are now being warned and it has spread to the mainland in North America (Mexico and Florida.)

I am doing some research on this virus and it is clear that there is little knowledge about its effects, let alone a cure. I keep hearing of ChikV-related deaths, but this is informally. We are hearing little from the government about the virus anymore- people seem to have moved on to Ebola- yet it is still spreading rapidly. Check out this column today in the Observer, it is worth a read. I am grateful that I am recovering and do not have any other major complications. But questions plague me: Why are we not hearing from the government? Are they tracking cases anymore? Are they tracking related deaths? (Which is rumoured to be at about 200 people!) What is the government’s responsibility in this anyway? I have more questions than answers.

The Brown/White Jamaican and the Right to take Offence


Must read.

keimiller's avatarUnder the Saltire Flag

  1. But some of my best friends are Brown

It is always hard for Caribbean people to talk about that most unspeakable topic: race. But then, perhaps it is hard to talk about it anywhere. We live, each one of us, in bodies that we cannot change, neither can we change the histories that those bodies inherit. Discussions on race can feel divisive and it can feel as if we are called into some silly kind of historical re-enactment. In Jamaica, therefore, whenever the discussions veer dangerously into that most unspeakable topic, and when the discomfort sets in which is usually very soon, you can count on someone to invoke the national motto. ‘Out of many, one people!’ We shout it as a kind of censorship. We insist on it. ‘We are out of many, but we are one people!’

outofmany

I have this friend – like me, he is relatively young…

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Anthony Bourdain Parts Unknown Jamaica


Anthony Bourdain’s show featured Jamaica on CNN last night. Check it out! Enjoy your Monday!