Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the wordpress-seo domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/bcm/src/dev/www/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121
series | Zikoko!
  • Rings of Power: Realms Explained

    Rivendell

    Rivendell, also known as Imladris in Sindarin, a peaceful, sheltered Elven town and the house of Elrond located in Middle-earth near the edge of a narrow canyon of the river Bruinen, but well hidden among the moorlands and foothills of the Misty Mountains. In reference to Valinor, which was located in Aman west of the Great Sea, it is referred to as “The Last Homely House East of the Sea.”

    Throughout the First and Second Ages, Rivendell was a hub of knowledge and prosperity. The story of the Second Age revolves around the city of Rivendell, and The Rings of Power’s portrayal of Elrond taking stewardship of the city during the horrors of the struggle against Sauron is probably one of the series’ most important plot points. Rivendell’s existence after the Last Alliance’s triumph also enables Elrond to increase its population in order to once again serve as “The Last Homely House East of the Sea,” where Frodo seeks refuge during The Fellowship of the Ring.

    Tirion

    Tirion, known fully as Tirion upon Túna, was the city of the Ñoldor in Aman. The Quenya term “Tirion” means “Watch-tower.” Tirion was where Finwë ruled and where his sons Fëanor, Fingolfin, and Finarfin resided. The people of Tiron are known as the Ñoldor, also known as the Deep-elves; they were the second clan of Elves to join the Great March and travel to the West.

    In the First and Second Age stories of Middle Earth, Tirion plays a crucial role as a doorway to the Two Trees of Valinor. Melkor and the Ungoliant siphon the life from the trees in the First Age, ushering in the first great wars of Middle Earth, while Ar-Pharazôn raids the shores of Aman in an attempt to besiege Tirion in the Second Age. Tirion will therefore presumably play a significant role in The Rings of Power’s most key plot developments, giving viewers their first glimpse of the Undying Lands that Frodo and company sail off to at the end of The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.

    Númenor

    Númenor was a kingdom of Men that the Valar first raised out of the sea as a gift to the Fathers of Men at the dawn of the First Age, following the utter annihilation of Beleriand. The realm of the Númenóreans, the Dúnedain, located on an island in the Great Sea between Middle-earth and Aman. Initially named Elenna or the Isle of Elenna (“Starwards”) because the Dúnedain were led to it by the star of Eärendil and because the island was shaped like a five-pointed star. The Dúnedain built a temple for Ilúvatar atop the mountain Meneltarma in the island’s center. Armenelos was the largest city and capitol of Númenor.

    The Númenorians who lived on the isles lived long lives—three times as long as Men did in Middle Earth—and forged a powerful coastal kingdom along the shores of the central realm, yet many of them still coveted the Elves’ immortality above all else. This envy was exploited by Sauron to urge the Númenorian king Ar-Pharazôn to attack the Valar, this led to Númenor sinking to the bottom of the ocean and being condemned as “the drowned kingdom.” Númenor is the birthplace of Isildur and his father, Elendil, who fled Númenor’s destruction and lived on Middle Earth with their loyal men.

    Khazad-dûm

    Khazad-dûm, also referred to as Moria or the Dwarrowdelf, was a realm that existed below the Misty Mountains. The most renowned of all dwarven lands, it was known for being the ancient home of the Dwarves of Durin’s Folk. Founded in the far distant past by Durin “the Deathless,” long before the Sun and Moon were made in the Years of the Trees. Early in the Second Age, Khazad-dûm’s realm of Longbeards was enriched in culture, talents, and people by enormous numbers of refugees from Belegost and Nogrod, cities ruined at the end of the First Age along with most of Beleriand in the cataclysmic final battle against Morgoth.

    Durin IV and Disa, two of the main protagonists in The Rings of Power, are members of the Khazad-dûm royal family, and Durin III, Durin IV’s grandfather, is the bearer of one of the seven Dwarven Rings of Power. Khazad-dûm also plays a significant role in Sauron’s conflicts with the Free Peoples of Middle Earth during the Second Age, with Durin III’s surprise attack on Sauron saving Rivendell’s Elven armies and enabling the Last Alliance to defeat the Dark Lord in battle. Long after Khazad-dûm was destroyed by armies of goblins and the balrog Durin’s Bane in the Third Age, it reappears in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring under the darker name Moria.

    Gondor

    Gondor (meaning “Land of Stone”) was the most powerful kingdom of Men in Middle-earth. The brothers Isildur and Anárion, who were exiles from Númenor, founded Gondor. Gondor was the sister kingdom of Arnor. Due to the ships and military prowess that its forces possessed, Gondor was at the height of its power in its early years. However, ongoing invasions from Sauron’s allies, civil war, and a terrible plague led to a steady fall throughout the length of the Third Age, which ended with Sauron’s ultimate demise and the crowning of Aragorn II Elessar. After then, Gondor’s authority grew once more, and the former Arnorian kingdoms were merged with it under the name of the Reunited Kingdom.

    The realm of Gondor is certain to feature due to the inclusion of Isildur and Elendil Númenor tales, even though it isn’t explicitly shown in The Rings of Power trailer. After Númenor is destroyed, Elendil and his son travel to Middle Earth, where they found the kingdoms of Gondor and Arnor in The Lord of the Rings with the help of their few surviving faithful followers (known as The Faithful). Gondor may appear in The Rings of Power’s later confirmed seasons because Isildur is specifically tasked with overseeing a growing Gondor, cultivating the White Tree, and fortifying the city’s fortifications.

    Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power starts on Prime Video on September 2nd, 2022.

  • These 7 Medical K-Dramas Will Wreck You Emotionally

    As a Nigerian, I believe we should watch more medical dramas. Maybe then, we’d understand how stressful their job is and why they go on strike when they don’t get paid.  These seven medical K-dramas will entertain you if you appreciate doctors’ romance, watching people being sewn up, and hospital politics. 

    Dr Romantic

    Dr Romantic follows the life of Boo Yong-Joo, a famous surgeon nicknamed “Hand of God”, who disappeared one day and randomly came back to a small hospital called Doldam. Now he’s now known as teacher Kim but calls himself the romantic doctor. As Boo Yong-Joo is the best surgeon in Korea, he teaches Dong Jo and Seo Jung, two new doctors sent to the hospital, everything he knows. 

    Although his unconventional approach to medicine leaves his proteges conflicted about everything they learned in medical school, he’s mostly right in the end. This K-drama has its soft, funny and comforting moments.  But there’s also all that blood, the rushing to the ER, the almost-too=real-looking surgery. Fall in love with Dr Romantic in 36 emotionally wrecking episodes.

    RELATED: The Ultimate Nigerian K-drama Fan Starter Pack

    Doctor John

    Doctor John is a medical drama about doctors that specialise in pain management. As a person with chronic back pain in my twenties, there’s a relief from watching doctors search for the cause of their patient’s seemingly mysterious pain and trying to cure them. 

    Like in every medical drama, there’s a young genius doctor(anesthesiologist) Cha Yo Han whose nickname is “Ten Seconds” because he has this weird ability of diagnosing any patient’s illness in ten seconds. Years later, another genius, Kang Shi Young meets our ten seconds guy who changes her life. This drama has all the feels and is a good watch — with a box of tissue papers beside you. 

    Hospital Playlist

    There’s no medical K-drama as soft as Hospital Playlist. Five doctors entered the same medical university in 1999 and are now friends working in the same hospital. They’re also in a band together. This K-drama is a relaxing slice of life take on the medical drama sub-genre that shows the bond the five doctor friends have with their patients, co-workers, and one another. Get ready to fall in love with every patient, laugh at the banter and be jealous of the friendships. There are many easter eggs of characters from different shows for K-drama lovers.

    Doctor Stranger

    If watching all the conflict that happens in a hospital where the doctors are more focused on hospital politics than the patients is your cup of tea, you’ll enjoy this one. The main lead, Park Hoon and his father were kidnapped by North Korea when he was a child. In North Korea, he becomes a surgeon and somehow manages to escape back to South Korea after his father was killed, where he takes on many odd jobs until he is employed South Korea’s top hospital Myungwoo University Hospital. All the doctors mistreat him, but his primary concern is finding a way to bring the girl he loved from North Korea, only for him to meet a doctor in the hospital who looks exactly like her.  

    The Doctors

    Hye Jung is a reckless and troubled student that lives with her grandmother after her parents abandoned her. She meets Ji Hong, a doctor who decided to become a secondary school teacher. He also happens to be the new tenant her grandmother adopts. They form a deep bond. He helps her study for school, and they quickly get too close. After Hye Jung’s grandmother dies, a jealous student accuses Ji Hong of being in a romantic student-teacher relationship with Hye Jung and breaks her spirit. 13 years later, Hye Jung and Ji Hon  bump into each other under neurosurgery in the same hospital. Hye Jung’s main goal for becoming a doctor was to have the power to avenge her grandmother’s death due to medical malpractice. Insert romance, hospital politics, doctors rivalry and annoying patients, and you have the perfect binge-watch for the weekend.

    Blood

    What’s better than a doctor that has to deal with blood? One that’s also a vampire! In this K-drama, Park Ji Sang is a doctor specialising in hepato-pancreato-biliary surgery in Korea’s best cancer research hospital. He’s portrayed as cold and unfeeling, but we later realise that he wants to form bonds with people but hides it. He manages to be a doctor who deals with blood while being a vampire by suppressing his thirst for it. Of course, he meets a female colleague Yoo Ri Ta, a physician who is also the niece of the chaebol group chairman who owns the hospital. This babe is arrogant and annoying, yet he falls for her. Medical dramas can already be a handful. But when you add fantasy, you get a recipe for tears and heartbreak. Inject it, literally. 

    Ghost doctor

    In Ghost Doctor Cha Young Min is an arrogant and selfish, yet gifted surgeon. He lives in isolation and only cares about his career. His polar opposite is a resident surgeon named Go Seun,g who isn’t great at his job, but at least people like him. 

    The day Cha Young Min has an accident and slips into a coma ,his spirit somehow possesses Go Seung’s body — suddenly gifting the latter with all his medical skills. If you like humour, I highly recommend Ghost Doctor. 

    READ ALSO: Romantic K-dramas That Will Make You Shout, “God When?”

  • 6 Unmistakable  Things You Can Relate to if You Enjoy Watching Series

    Sorry, but if you don’t watch series, then maybe you need to wash your head because you are missing outttt!

    So, what’s the big deal about series anyway?

    1. The maddening suspense

    Asides the suspense from unexpected scenes, there’s also the maddening feeling of having to wait in suspense for months or even years before a new season is released.

    2. The plot twists

    Series lovers live for the numerous plot twists. Just when you think James will finally tell Janet about the crush he’s had on her since Season One, a trick will appear from nowhere and clear him off the road. What next??

    3. There’s no room for boredom

    Can boredom compete with five Seasons and thirty-two episodes of your favourite show? Didn’t think so.

    4. You have something to look forward to

    Especially after one of those long days when your tired is completely tired. There’s just something about knowing at the end of it all, you have five episodes of awesomeness waiting for you to see.

    5. There’s no pressure

    Unlike movies which are mostly viewed at a go, series provide witj the choice of going at your own pace. If you like, you can watch all the seasons over a period of one year, nobody will beat you.

    6. The dopamine thrills

    That is the height of series-stanism! There’s just so much excitement and addictive way it keeps you glued to your screen. There should probably be a shirt that says “Beware: series addict“.

    Looking for a new series to binge on?

    Showmax recently launched its first original comedy series, Ghana Jollof. The show follows the story of 2 friends, Romanus (Akah Nnah) and Jasper (Funnybone) who leave Nigeria for Ghana in search of greener pastures. They get to figure out if the grass is really green on the other side or not.

    The show has 13 episodes and you can see it exclusively on Showmax.

    Stars include: Akah Nnani, Funnybone, Buchi, Basketmouth, Mawuli Gavor, Joselyn Dumas, and more.

    A new episode drops every Friday. Tell your series buddies!

  • QUIZ: Which Squid Game Player Are You?

    Would you be a smart Squid Game player or would you be a weak one? Take this quiz and we’ll tell you:

  • Everything We Know About Netflix’s First Nigerian Series

    In 2018, Genevieve Nnaji’s directorial debut, Lionheart became Netflix’s first original film from Nigeria. Now, after unveiling the Netflix Naija Twitter account, the streaming giant has announced its first Nigerian series.

    The untitled six-part drama will be helmed by acclaimed director, Akin Omotoso (Vaya). Daniel Oriahi (Sylvia) and C.J. Obasi (Ojuju) will direct alongside Omotoso, while Dami Elebe (Skinny Girl In Transit) will co-write.

    The Lagos-set series will follow the story of Kemi, a goddess reincarnated as a human to avenge her sister’s death. But first, she must learn how to harness her superpowers to defeat her enemies and save her family.

    Ade Laoye and Kate Henshaw are the series leads, and they are joined by an impressive supporting cast that includes: Richard Mofe-Damijo, Joke Silva, Ireti Doyle, Tope Tedala, Bimbo Akintola, Kehinde Bankole and more.

    (Photo: Ade Laoye in Knock Out Blessing)

    About making more Nigerian content, Netflix’s chief content officer, Ted Sarandos said:

    “Movies like King of BoysMerry Men and The Bling Lagosian have shown how much our members love Nigerian movies. 

    So, we’re incredibly excited to be investing in [more Nigerian] stories — bringing them to audiences all around the world.”

    Netflix’s first African original series, Queen Sono from South Africa just premiered to acclaim from critics. Hopefully, Nigeria’s first series, which currently has no release date, will enjoy a similar fate when it drops.

  • First, you hear about the series but you’re like:

    It’s not interesting. Boring characters. Bland storyline.

    But then, you catch a preview of some scenes and you’re like:

    I gotta have this!

    You, running to buy data.

    Then you start to download it and wait for it to finish like:

    Any day now…

    But the network is slow.

    And then your data finishes on top of it.

    So you start to look for episodes from everyone:

    Please…abeg…biko…epp me.

    You when you finally get the episodes:

    Victory is mine!

    Then you start watching it and you’re like, “after this last episode I’ll go to bed”

    This is the last one. I swear this is the last one. But it isn’t.

    You in the morning:

    How you wait for the next episode to come out:

    I go stay here dey wait for una.

    When the season finale ends with a cliffhanger…

    NOOO!!!

    …and the next season is a whole year away.

    I’m just gonna lie here and wait.

    You for the rest of the day:

    When you think of all the money spent on buying data:

    Then someone tries to tell you about another series:

    No thank you! Keep your series to yourself.

    But really, in the end you know you won’t be able to stay away for too long.

    In the meantime, if you need ideas for a new TV series to binge on, this list on the 10 Nigerian shows you should be watching can help.
  • The Trailer For This Series About Nigerian Immigrants Is The Funniest Thing You’ll See All Week

    The comedy series titled ‘African Booty Scratcher’ is about how Nigerian immigrant parents, Tunde and Ann, try to teach their son, Ayo, Nigerian values.

    It was created by filmmaker and screenwriter, Damilare Sonoiki, one of the writers of Emmy nominated series, Blackish.

    Damilare chose the slur “African Booty Scratcher” commonly used by African Americans to describe African immigrants.

    Ayo’s parents remind us of our Jollof rice-loving, prayer warrior parents who scolded us for getting anything that wasn’t an A.

    You can watch the hilarious trailer here.