When you’re done taking a journey to your childhood, don’t forget to buy your Burning Ram tickets and take a journey to the meat festival of a lifetime.
It’s time to get your Burning Ram tickets.

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It’s 9 a.m. on a Saturday morning. If the world made sense, you’d be in front of a TV screen watching cartoons while waiting for breakfast to be ready. But adulting has taken that away too.
That’s why you should watch these 13 cartoon intros to relive your childhood Saturday mornings.
NEXT READ: 10 Best Feel-good Anime for Beginners

Imagine your favourite shows and all the food you’ll never get to eat. I’ve compiled some amazing foods from seven shows I bet you were obsessed with at some point.
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory was a legendary movie and if you haven’t watched it, then at least you must have heard the cool millennials talk about it. Yeah, I’m one of the cool kids and the Willy Wonka Chocolate factory is the Heaven I once wanted to go to when I die. A part of me still hopes that there’s a chance.
Scooby-Doo and Shaggy were the OG foodies of all time. They ate a bunch of food, but the one thing I wished I could jump into the TV to taste was the Scooby snack. Didn’t you also want to know why Shaggy was so crazy about dog treats?
RELATED: 7 Childhood Snacks You’ll Miss if You Grew Up in Northern Nigeria
Seeing a talking lion from a mystical closet play a father figure was one of the high points of my childhood. I really want to know what made Edmund Pevensie ready to sell his birthright for white-coated sweets from a white witch.
There wasn’t much to see about Hot Pie, the baker at the inn. But that bread? How did it make it look so perfect when I can barely draw straight lines with a ruler?

RELATED: What’s the Best Thing to Eat Bread With? We Ranked Them All
You can’t tell me you watched SpongeBob without wondering what a krabby patty tasted like. It should be everyone’s dream to live in a pineapple under the sea eating burgers made by a cranky crab.
Imagine a talking donkey making you fluffy waffles when you’re having a bad day.
Beyond wanting to hitch a ride to any world where I’m definitely not Nigerian, I’d like to get a taste of the pizza balls America Chavez ate while she was trying to escape impending doom. Clearly, she had misplaced priorities but I would too if I saw tiny cheesy pepperoni pizza balls.
Eggos are basically frozen waffles from the 1980s. And for someone who knew very little about the real world before escaping her psycho father, El has been obsessed with eggos since season one of Stranger Things and I need to understand why.
Now that we’ve gone through foods you’ll probably never get to eat, read: All the Exciting Ways You Can Eat and Drink Your Eggs

If you grew up in Nigeria, you’ve probably heard about the series of crises in Jos. But before the crisis, what do the people who lived in Jos remember about growing up there?
Below, six Nigerians: Plangkat, aged 25, Chung, aged 35, Simi, aged 43, Tsusulo, aged 23, Zhamani, aged 28 and Chukwak, aged 21, share their nostalgic memories of growing up in J-town.
Plangkat: I was born in Dogon Dutse in Jos Central. Our compound had missionaries who planted a lot of trees. There were mangoes, cashew, tangerines, grapes, and avocados all lined up the compound. Fresh fruits and vegetables were never an issue.
Before my family had to leave, Jos was everything. I miss eating fluffy masa and suya, fried or boiled awara (tofu) and drinking kunu.
Chung: Ah yes, the serenity in Jos was unmatched before 2006. I grew up in a town called Bukuru. What I found most beautiful was how multiple tribes coexisted as a community. Even though our religions were different, there was no division. Everyone looked out for each other. One of my favourite memories is walking down to church with my friends every Sunday.
Simi: Do you remember Nzem Berom?
Chung: Nzem Berom is usually before or after Easter to welcome the rainy season in Jos. Then there’s Pusdung (Chala Day). People in the communities would dance and perform acrobatics while masquerades called Nwang roamed the streets. Every ethnic group had their own way of celebrating, but one common thing with the festivals were the flute dancers.
ALSO READ: 5 Cultural Festivals in Nigeria That Are Always Lit
Simi: I don’t think you can talk about Nzem Berom and not mention food though. I tasted dog meat for the first time during one of the festivals.
Chung: There’d be pork and chicken too. And to add to Plangkat’s love for masa, I’d say tere (a dish that looks like maize porridge) did it for me — the garden egg, pepper and fresh hibiscus leaves. Nah, tere was delicious.
Sines [green caterpillars] is a snack I remember too. Once the rain starts and maize is planted, we’d wait for sines to latch on the leaves. Then they’re fried and doused in pepper — yum, tasty and medicinal.
Zhamani: Jos was definitely the place to be in the late 1990s. People came from all parts of the world to benefit from the tin and columbite mined in Jos then. I grew up with Yoruba, Igbo, Ijaw, Urhobo and Ibibio friends. I even had friends all the way from Sierra Leone and Europe.
Tsusulo: If we don’t talk about ice blocks, someone can fight us. LOL.
Zhamani: LOL. I totally agree. I remember moving to Jos as a kid, and the cold was shocking. Taking a bath was an extreme sport because, in less than five minutes, the water became ice-cold. So we’d have to bathe as quickly as possible.
Plangkat: Sometimes ice shards came with the cold rain. You could hear them hitting the rooftops. Oh, and the strawberries. How did I skip those? It was so cold that we could grow strawberries and grapes. I miss running around and eating strawberries with my friends.
ALSO READ: 13 Exotic Fruits And Vegetables That Grow Only In Jos
I haven’t been able to connect with people like I did in Jos. As an introvert, making new friends has been difficult since the crisis. I’ve been struggling with the trauma of watching people in my community killed.
Zhamani: What I miss the most is football with my guys from the barracks. I remember playing for Bassa Local Government during the under-13 leagues at Rwang Pam stadium. I can still remember footballers from Mighty Jets and El-Kanemi — our local team — watching me play.
Chuhwak: Well, I grew up in Jos South and I remember braiding the grass around my house. That’s how I learnt to braid my hair. I miss the peace.
Chung: Me too. I wish I could eat bubal right now. Bubal is like the jollof rice of Jos — it’s for special occasions like weddings or Chala Day.
Tsusulo: You’ve talked about food like five times Chung.
Chung: Even though —
Chuhwak: LOL. I can’t deny that enjoying free food during Christmas and Sallah made sense. No one cared about the religious difference. I still live here but Christians are a lot more guarded these days.
Simi: I’d love to experience one more Nzem Berom festival. I really miss J-town.
Plangkat: Me too. But I’ll always cherish what we had before we had to leave everything behind.
RELATED: Of the Best Things We Have Heard About Living in Jos


Childhood, we all miss those moments away from this scam called adulthood. Yours probably had the good times with Baba Dudu, early morning cartoons on NTA and rolling tyres down the street. But what are the moments from the late ’80s and early ’90s to reminisce on as a child? These eight Nigerian parents and baby boomers share moments they miss about their childhood.
Felicia, 53
I miss being by the water side with my mum and siblings.

I loved visiting the pool at Federal Palace and Sheraton Hotel almost every Sunday. When we didn’t have money, we would go to the beach. My mum wanted so much for us to experience life outside of Mushin. We weren’t rich, but she never wanted us to feel like we couldn’t afford to enjoy life just because we didn’t belong to the upper class. The only thing I hated about being by the pool or beach was having to wear a skirt over my swimsuit. As much as my mum wanted us to live life, she was strictly against us ever showing our bodies.
Kunle, 48
My fondest memories are at Bar Beach with my dad, mum and sister.
The beaches in Lagos were different when I was 10. I wish I could go back to the drive up to Victoria Island on sunny days and the walk up to the sandy beach, while holding my dad’s hands as I struggled to get sand out of my shoes. I loved to ride the horses along the shore and feel the jolt of each gallop each time the rider holding me jerked the reins. If I could, I’d totally go back to those sunny days at Bar beach, but I’d probably skip one of the last few times we visited. I was casually chilling in the ocean with my dad when an under current almost carried me away. Luckily, my dad was a powerful swimmer so he managed to pull me out before I got too far.
Onyeche, 52
The best thing about my childhood was spending time with my grandmother at Boji-Boji, Agbor in Delta State.
It was back in the 1980s, and I can still remember spending nights at her quaint house during my holidays from secondary school. She never stressed me with chores like my mum. All she did was ask, “Che, what would you like to eat?” My answer was always roasted corn and pear/coconut. My siblings always found it annoying to request the same thing all the time, but I really didn’t care and grandma never complained either. On the few days she ignored my request, she’d give me money to buy delicious rice or beans with plantain from Mama Ogugua’s canteen behind the house. Right now, I’m looking for who can feed me like this because adulthood has tired me.
Aisha, 60
I miss the peace I experienced in Kaduna before the religious crises.

I haven’t been back since my mum and I left for Ibadan in 1983. I’d love to relive the moments sleeping underneath the mango tree when it got too hot inside the house. There was no fear of being robbed or killed in the middle of the night and we could sleep outside our home. It was so good that I could pack up my things from school in Ibadan and get a bus going to Kaduna State as late as 7 p.m. without any fear. I don’t have any reason to go back now, but I wish I could.
Adeyemi, 57
I can still remember the Afro-Brazilian festivals during Christmas and New Year on Lagos Island as a young boy.

I miss hiding to watch the different masquerades — Egungun, Oiko, Abey, and Eyo — from Campos Square. I enjoyed the drumming and dancing as the colourful outfits of the masquerades moved along the streets. I miss walking from house to house to wish the elders Merry Christmas, collecting pennies in return, and later sitting on the floor with my friends as we ate from trays of rice and stew.
Imaobong, 63
I miss the days of being friends with my siblings.

It’s one thing to be bonded by blood, but we actually loved to spend time gisting with one another late into the night at our family home in Calabar. Everything changed when we entered secondary school and made other friends. We weren’t as close and some of my siblings ended up in gangs that made them different. I’d give anything to just be able to sit with them again and talk like we once did.
Tunde, 55
A lovely memory I would like to relive of my mornings as a child in Obalende.

I come from a polygamous home, so nobody really bothered about what I spent my time doing. I would wake up and go to Dodan Barracks to watch young privates/soldiers on their morning parades. I loved joining them from behind and marching along as the commander led the parade round the barracks. After that, I would walk through the European Quarters like Rumens Road, Gerald Road, Alexander Street, Bourdillon, and Queen’s Drive (now Kofo Abayomi street), plucking mangoes. My strolls would usually end with me swimming at the lagoon or fishing.
Emeka, 65
There were many interesting moments as a young boy but watching football with my boys in Teslim Balogun Stadium and National Stadium tops the bunch.

If a match was 4 p.m., we would arrive at 11 a.m. to enjoy the music and fun activities before a game. On the days we didn’t have the money to make it into the stadium, we would scale the fence or wait for the gates to be opened during half time. Sometimes it would get so rowdy that the guards would have to throw tear gas at the people gathering around the gate after a match. I’ve stopped watching football now, but I wouldn’t mind one more moment of cheering at a Nigerian FA Cup or Principal Cup match at the stadium.




































