theMFpod

The MuFrame Podcast

Unbox your creativity on theMFpod! Dive deep into a world where imagination knows no bounds. Break free from norms, challenge old ideas, and unleash your imagination. Let's think outside the frame and innovate! www.themfpod.com

  1. At the Fireplace - Gilbert Byamugisha

    14 апр.

    At the Fireplace - Gilbert Byamugisha

    On the 18 and 19 of April at the Uganda National Theatre, this story comes to life. Tickets are available for fifty thousand shillings for VIP seating, thirty thousand for ordinary seating, and twenty thousand for students and children. They can be purchased at the National Theatre, at New Life Church Kireka, or online through KariTickets. Follow Ngoma Za’Africa Creatives on all social platforms for more information and to connect with anyone involved in the production who can help you secure your seat. There is something we are not paying attention to. Not because it is hidden, not because it has been taken from us, but because we are moving too fast to see it anymore. Everything today is speed. Fast content that disappears the moment it is consumed. Fast decisions made without the weight of reflection. Fast lives lived in a perpetual state of urgency that no one ever questions because questioning would require slowing down, and slowing down feels like falling behind. And somewhere in that relentless rush, buried beneath the notifications and the scrolling and the endless pressure to keep up with a world that never stops moving, we are losing something essential. We are losing the ability to sit still and listen. We are losing the space where wisdom is passed not in bullet points but in stories. We are losing the fireplace. In a powerful and deeply personal conversation on The MuFrame Podcast, Gilbert Byamugisha steps forward not just as an actor preparing for a role but as a young man wrestling with what it means to embody wisdom in a generation that has forgotten how to receive it. In *Ku Kyooto*, the production that brings this ancient storytelling ritual back to the stage, Gilbert takes on the role of Father. It is a part that carries weight, responsibility, and memory, and he does not approach it lightly. He knows that Father is not just a character in a play. He is a symbol of something we are in danger of losing entirely. “The father represents the need to slow down,” Gilbert says, and the words land with a gravity that feels almost startling in a conversation otherwise filled with warmth and laughter. “To just slow down and look back.” That single line contains the entire thesis of what Ku Kyooto is trying to accomplish. This is not about nostalgia for a past that can never be recovered. It is not about romanticizing a time before technology or pretending that progress is the enemy. It is about awareness. It is about recognizing that in our haste to move forward, we have stopped looking back, and when you stop looking back, you slowly forget who you are. You forget where you come from. You forget the stories that made you, the values that shaped you, the wisdom that was handed down not through lectures but through presence, through gathering, through the simple act of sitting together and letting the words of an elder settle into the spaces between the flames. We live in a world that rewards speed. Everything is instant now. You want information, it is there in a search result before you have even finished typing the question. You want entertainment, it is endless and algorithmically tailored to keep you watching, scrolling, consuming. You want validation, it is one post away, measured in likes and shares and comments that disappear into the ether as quickly as they arrived. But what happens when everything becomes fast? You stop reflecting because reflection requires stillness. You stop questioning because questions slow down the scroll. You stop remembering because memory is an act of preservation, and preservation feels irrelevant when the next thing is always more urgent than the last thing. And that is the danger Gilbert is pointing toward. That is the loss that sits at the heart of his concern. Because when you stop looking back, when you sever yourself from the lineage of stories and wisdom that came before you, you become unmoored. You float through a present that has no anchor in the past, and you drift toward a future that has no foundation. At the centre of Ku Kyooto is a simple but powerful idea: the fireplace. Not just as a physical location but as a practice, a ritual, a way of being together. It is the space where people gathered not because they were summoned by a notification but because they knew that was where the stories lived. It is where wisdom was passed down not in formal lessons but in the cadence of a grandfather’s voice, in the pause between a father’s words, in the silence that allowed meaning to settle before the next thought arrived. Today, that space looks different. Phones have replaced conversation. Screens have replaced presence. Noise has replaced meaning. And while Gilbert is careful not to suggest that we can or should physically return to a literal fireplace, the question he poses is far more urgent than nostalgia. Have we replaced what that space gave us? Have we found new ways to gather and listen and receive, or have we simply allowed the speed of modern life to convince us that we no longer need those things? Gilbert does not see performance as a hobby. He never has. Even as a child, dancing on stage with older performers, mimicking the movements and absorbing the energy of theatre without fully understanding what it meant, there was something pulling him toward a deeper understanding of what this craft could do. He remembers being thirteen years old, young and unformed but already sensing that the art he loved could be more than entertainment. He was part of a community project that challenged young creatives to identify issues in their own neighbourhoods and respond through their gifts. For Gilbert, that meant returning to the village during school breaks and working with the children there, nurturing whatever talent he could find. It was in that season that he encountered a young girl, just fourteen years old, who was being forced into marriage by her own father. She was an incredible performer, gifted in ways that even his untrained eye could recognize, but her future was being decided for her without her consent. Gilbert could not approach the elders directly. He was a child. He had no status, no authority, no platform. But he had art. And so he wrote a small skit and performed it under the village tree, a gathering space that served as that community’s own version of the fireplace. The skit spoke about the protection of young girls. It did not accuse. It did not confront. It simply showed. And the elders listened. “We may not be able to approach the elders directly and say, hey, this is wrong,” Gilbert reflects now. “But we could do a skit about it and they would hear us.” That is the power of theatre. It says what cannot be said in ordinary conversation. It reaches where direct speech cannot go. It bypasses defensiveness and opens hearts in ways that argument never could. And that realization, that moment of understanding that performance carries weight and responsibility and the potential for real transformation, has never left him. It shaped the artist he became. It shapes the Father he is now trying to embody. But this path is not easy, and Gilbert is honest about the costs. Behind the passion and the purpose and the deep sense of calling, there are sacrifices that most audiences never see. Financial instability is a constant companion. The need to split yourself between your craft and your survival is exhausting. Gilbert runs an events business. He bakes cakes. He operates a small cafeteria near the UCU law school campus. He does all of this not because he wants to be a businessman but because he has to be, because the ecosystem for artists in Uganda does not yet support the kind of full-time creative life that he dreams of and that he believes should be possible. He imagines a future where artists can be artists every day, where shows run consistently at the National Theatre and ticket sales actually sustain the people who make the work, where the craft is not something you squeeze into the margins of a life built around other obligations. Until that future arrives, the tension remains. One part of him survives. The other part creates. And he prays that the gap between the two will narrow. One of the most powerful and vulnerable moments in the conversation comes when Gilbert speaks about his own relationship to fatherhood. His biological father is not present in his life. The man he is supposed to embody on stage, the well of wisdom and patience and grounded presence that defines the character of Father in *Ku Kyooto*, is not a figure he grew up observing in his own home. And yet here he is, tasked with becoming that very thing. So how do you embody something you have not fully experienced? How do you build a character from fragments when the whole picture has never been available to you? Gilbert’s answer is a study in intentionality. He observes. He listens. He has become more present and more intentional in his interactions with the men that God has placed in his life, the father figures who have stepped into the gaps and offered guidance and wisdom without being asked. He watches how they respond to conversations with young people. He notices how they carry themselves, how they pause before speaking, how they allow silence to exist without rushing to fill it. He studies their rhythms and their restraint. And slowly, painstakingly, he builds the character from these fragments of truth. It is not just performance. It is pursuit. It is the act of reaching for something you know you need, something you may not have received in the way you hoped, but something you are determined to understand and to offer to others through the work you do on stage. There is a quiet heroism in that approach, a refusal to let absence define what is possible. Gilbert admits something that many creatives struggle with but few articulate so clearly. He is naturally fast. Energetic. Expressive. Quick to speak and quick to move and quick to fil

    30 мин.
  2. 14 апр.

    At the Fireplace - Alisanyukirwa Joy Matovu

    Ku Kyooto runs April 18th and 19th at the Uganda National Theatre. Tickets available at the National Theatre, New Life Church Kireka or online at KariTickets.com. Follow Ngoma z’Africa Creatives on all social platforms for more information.Joy Alisanyukira Matovu grew up in rehearsal spaces. Not as a performer but as the child who had to come along because no one could leave him home alone. He watched. He absorbed. And somewhere along the way, he developed an instinct for what makes a story work—a gut feeling he can not always explain but has learned to trust. In this episode of The MuFrame Podcast, Joy shares what it was like to adapt *Ku Kyooto* from a single poem into a full stage play. Most adaptations begin with novels or prose. This one began with verse. His challenge was to keep every line intact while somehow transforming poetry into dialogue, stanza into scene, and rhythm into relationships. He and the team removed only one line because it did not quite fit. The rest of the poet’s words remain. What emerged is a story about something Joy says we rarely see portrayed: love between fathers and sons. Not estrangement. Not distance. But presence and guidance and the kind of healthy relationship that feels almost radical in its simplicity. That is the emotional core he hopes audiences will find for themselves. He also offers a gentle critique of contemporary Ugandan storytelling. The stories themselves are rich, he says. What is missing is plot—the careful architecture that makes a twist feel earned and a moment feel inevitable. Depth is not about shocking the audience. It is about building something they can trace back and say, *now that makes sense*. This is not a sad production, he promises. It is fun. It is joyful. And it carries the essence of the fireplace—not the literal flames but the gathering, the passing on, the quiet transmission of wisdom from one generation to the next. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.themfpod.com

    26 мин.
  3. At the Fireplace - Alina Camila

    9 апр.

    At the Fireplace - Alina Camila

    Ku Kyooto runs April 18th and 19th at the Uganda National Theatre. Tickets available at the National Theatre, New Life Church Kireka or online at KariTickets.com. Alina Camilla was dancing before she was born. Her mother performed while carrying her in the womb and theatre was never a choice she made—it was simply the air she breathed. Growing up around rehearsal spaces and recreating entire productions at home with bedsheets for curtains, she absorbed storytelling long before she understood she was being shaped by it. But when the producer of Ku Kyooto asked her to direct, she thought it was a joke. She was terrified. In this industry, she knew, your last performance is what people remember and there are no credentials that protect you from failure. In this episode of The MuFrame Podcast, Camilla opens up about her transition from performer to first-time director—the 2:00 AM voice notes to her team, the challenge of leading a cast full of men who are also her friends, and the moment she realized Ku Kyooto was not a lost tradition but something still alive in her own family’s daily rituals. She also pushes back on the idea that African stories must be told in local languages to be authentic, asking a provocative question: what happens to the children for whom English is now their mother tongue? This is not just a conversation about a production. It is about stepping into a role you are not sure you are ready for and discovering who you become in the process. It is about holding a vision together when everyone is looking to you for answers you are still figuring out. And it is about the quiet realization that the fireplace—the Ku Kyooto—has never really disappeared. It has only taken new forms. 🎧 Listen to the full conversation on The MuFrame Podcast to hear Camilla’s unfiltered reflections on directing, faith, friendship and the beautiful terror of doing something for the first time. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.themfpod.com

    50 мин.
  4. At the Fireplace - Blair Koono

    9 апр.

    At the Fireplace - Blair Koono

    KuKyooto Show Details The production runs on April 18th and 19th at the Uganda National Theatre, with two shows each day at 3:00 PM and 6:00 PM. Tickets are available at UGX 50,000 for VIP, UGX 30,000 for ordinary seating and UGX 20,000 for students and children. They can be purchased at the National Theatre, New Life Church Kireka or online through KariTickets.com. There was a time when stories did not need stages. No lights. No microphones. No tickets. Just a fire and people gathered around it. That is where KuKyooto begins not in the polished corridors of contemporary theatre, not in the glow of professional lighting rigs, but in the ancient, sacred space where a father speaks, a grandfather remembers and a community leans in to listen. Before theatre became formal, before it was packaged into auditoriums and ticketed experiences, before we started measuring its legitimacy against imported standards and external frameworks, storytelling lived in spaces like this. Intimate. Raw. Necessary. And it is precisely this space that KuKyooto is trying to reclaim, not as nostalgia, but as a living, breathing assertion that the way we once told stories still holds power, still holds truth and still holds us. Through a deliberate and thoughtful collaboration with The MuFrame Podcast, this is not simply about documenting a production or promoting a show. It is about stepping inside the minds of the creatives who are rebuilding that fire from the ground up, one log of memory and one spark of intention at a time. It is about understanding what drives a generation of Ugandan artists to look backward in order to move forward, to excavate the old ways not as relics but as foundations. And one of the most compelling voices in that excavation belongs to Blair Koono Mathias, an actor, voice artist, music director and performer whose journey through dance, music and theatre has been anything but linear, yet somehow always pointing toward the same centre. Before the titles arrived, before the credits rolled, before the recognition began to crystallise around his name, Blair was simply someone who needed to be on stage. The way he describes it carries none of the vanity one might associate with a hunger for the spotlight. “I always told myself I was born for the spotlight,” he explains, “not because I wanted attention, but because that is where I felt alive.” That distinction matters enormously because it separates the performer who seeks validation from the performer who seeks expression. For many creatives, the journey does not begin with strategy or career mapping. It begins with instinct, a pull so deep and so persistent that ignoring it feels like a small death every single day. Blair’s early life was saturated with performance in its most organic forms. Music was in the house. Drama was in the air. Movement was in the body. His parents, each gifted in their own right, carried elements of that artistry and somehow, almost mysteriously, it found its way into him, not as a learned skill but as an inheritance, something already written into his bones before he ever took a formal class or stepped into a rehearsal room. But instinct alone is not enough to sustain a life in the arts. There comes a point, sometimes gradual, sometimes abrupt when passion must confront reality, when the romantic notion of being an artist collides with the grinding demands of being a working creative in a space that does not always value what you bring. Blair is refreshingly unsentimental about this collision. He has seen too many people confuse passion with purpose and he has watched too many talented individuals burn out because they could not tell the difference. “People are passionate about things that are not their purpose,” he says and there is a weight in that observation that only comes from having walked through the fire himself. For Blair, the shift happened when he began to understand that loving something and being called to something are not always the same thing. Purpose came first - that deep, almost spiritual alignment with a path that feels inevitable. Then passion, the fuel that keeps you walking that path even when it gets dark and lonely. And finally, professionalism, the discipline that turns raw gift into reliable craft. Training at institutions like the Mariam Ndagire Film and Performing Arts School did not give Blair his talent. He was already carrying that. What the training gave him was clarity. Clarity in how to approach the craft, how to handle a script, how to treat art as work rather than whimsy. Because theatre, as he puts it plainly and without romance, is not a hobby. “It requires work. Long hours. And sometimes going places within yourself you would not normally go.” That last part - the interior journey - is what separates the committed artist from the casual performer. You cannot fake the kind of excavation that real performance demands. You cannot pretend to go into the dark corners of human experience and come back with something true. That takes training, yes, but more than that, it takes a willingness to be uncomfortable, to be vulnerable, to be seen in ways that are not always flattering. And that willingness, Blair suggests, is not something you can teach. It is something you either have or you do not and the only way to find out is to stand in the fire and see what remains. Blair is not an artist who fits neatly into any single category and one gets the sense that he prefers it that way. Actor. Music director. Performer. Storyteller. Voice artist. Choreographer. The list of what he does is long and varied and to an outsider, it might seem scattered or unfocused. But there is a coherence beneath the surface, a thread that runs through all of it and that thread is the act of making meaning through performance, regardless of the medium. When asked where he feels most honest, however, his answer is unexpected and revealing. “In my music,” he says, not because it is the most polished or the most technically accomplished of his pursuits, but because it is already processed internally before it ever reaches an audience. “By the time I sing something, I have already said it in my heart.” There is something profoundly powerful in that confession. It suggests that performance, for all its public-facing glory, is not always the most honest space. Sometimes honesty lives in what is processed quietly, privately, in the chambers of the heart long before the microphone is turned on or the stage lights come up. The music becomes a translation of something already real, already felt, already lived. And perhaps that is why it resonates differently because it is not being manufactured in the moment but simply released. The conversation takes a turn toward the practical when Blair begins to speak about how he navigates different creative spaces and what emerges is a kind of survival manual for the working artist. How do you enter a room full of strangers, each with their own energy, their own expectations, their own unspoken rules? For Blair, the answer is simple in theory but difficult in consistent practice. “I read the room.” Different spaces demand different versions of yourself. Some rooms welcome vibrancy and volume; others require restraint and quiet observation. Some environments encourage physical warmth and easy familiarity; others maintain boundaries that must be respected. Learning to discern which is which and adapting accordingly without losing yourself in the process, is a skill that no acting class explicitly teaches but that every working creative must eventually master. And within all of that adaptation, all of that careful calibration of presence, there is one thing Blair refuses to compromise: himself. “What I protect most is myself,” he explains, “because if I lose that, I cannot give anything real.” This is the quiet, often invisible battle that many creatives fight daily, balancing adaptability with authenticity, knowing when to adjust and when to stand firm and sometimes, perhaps most painfully, knowing when to walk away from a room that asks too much of your soul for too little in return. At one particularly striking moment in the conversation, the dialogue shifts into uncomfortable territory, the kind of honest reckoning that rarely makes it into polished interviews. “Actors are liars,” Blair says and the words land not as an accusation but as an acknowledgment of something fundamental about the craft. Actors are trained to create emotion, to simulate truth, to make people believe in realities that do not exist. They can cry on cue, rage on command, fall in love with strangers for the duration of a scene and then walk away unchanged. And sometimes, Blair admits, that ability bleeds into real life in ways that are not entirely comfortable to examine. He has lied to people and been believed because he is good at what he does. He has performed sincerity so convincingly that even he, in the moment, might have been unsure where the performance ended and the truth began. The question that lingers, unspoken but unavoidable, is this: where does the actor end and the person begin? Is there a clean boundary or is the line perpetually blurred, shifting with each role, each room, each version of self that is summoned into being? Blair does not offer a tidy answer and perhaps that is the point. Perhaps the work of the artist is not to resolve these tensions but to live honestly within them, to acknowledge the complexity without pretending it can be simplified. When the conversation finally lands on KuKyooto itself, Blair’s energy shifts. He is no longer speaking in abstract terms about art and identity and professionalism. He is speaking about something concrete, something that belongs to him and to the collective of young artists who have poured themselves into this production. In KuKyooto, Blair plays SON1, a role that places him at the heart of the narrative, but h

    38 мин.
  5. 01.The Architecture of Reinvention

    20.07.2025

    01.The Architecture of Reinvention

    How a quantity surveyor's precision met a carpenter's soul to build something extraordinary. Prologue: The Geometry of Failure In the sterile corridors of Makerere University's architecture department, Charles Ronald Iragaba confronted a truth that would reshape his entire trajectory: sometimes our greatest failures are the most precise instruments of our becoming. The portfolio course that defeated him wasn't just an academic stumble, it was the first crack in a foundation that needed to crumble before something more authentic could rise. This is not another entrepreneur's origin story. This is a meditation on the mathematics of reinvention, where precision meets passion, and where the tools of one trade become the unexpected foundation for mastery in another. The Surveyor's Eye, The Maker's Heart The Precision of Purpose Charles's journey from architecture to quantity surveying wasn't retreat. It was reconnaissance. In the world of QS, he learned the language of materials, the grammar of costs, and the syntax of project management. These weren't just professional skills; they were the building blocks of a different kind of architecture, one that would later manifest in wood grain and joinery. The irony wasn't lost on him: while studying to quantify other people's creations, he was unconsciously mapping the territory of his own creative rebellion. Every cost estimate, every material specification, every timeline calculation was preparing him for a future he couldn't yet envision. The Lockdown Laboratory When COVID-19 suspended the world in March 2020, Charles found himself in an unexpected laboratory of possibility. The postponed exams weren't just a delay, they were a pause that became a portal. In the enforced stillness, he asked himself a question that would echo through everything that followed: "What can I do today that matters tomorrow?" The answer came not in a flash of inspiration, but in the disciplined accumulation of small actions. He began writing on LinkedIn not about his weekend or his lunch, but about the intersection of construction, design, and possibility. Each post was a small act of faith, a signal sent into the digital void that said: I have something to offer. 3,300 followers. Not massive by today's standards, but each one represented a person who had chosen to pay attention to his thoughts. When a friend challenged him to monetize that attention, Charles faced a moment of profound choice: Would he treat this audience as a resource to be extracted from, or as a community to be served? The Carpenter's Paradox Beyond the Brokerage Dream The initial idea was clean, digital, scalable, a brokerage app connecting architects, quantity surveyors, and designers. It had all the hallmarks of contemporary entrepreneurship: low overhead, high margins, network effects. But Charles possessed something more valuable than a good business idea: he had integrity. The pivot to furniture wasn't strategic in the traditional sense. It was gravitational, a natural pull toward work that engaged his hands as much as his mind. In choosing carpentry, he chose the harder path: physical materials, skilled labor, quality control, customer education. He chose substance over scale. The Alchemy of Skills What emerged was something unprecedented in Uganda's carpentry landscape: a furniture maker who could read architectural drawings, calculate material costs to the shilling, and manage projects with the precision of a construction professional. Charles didn't just change careers, he created a new category. His mother's loan wasn't just seed capital; it was a vote of confidence from the person who knew him best. The client's 50% prepayment wasn't just cash flow it was validation that the market was ready for what he was offering. By summer 2020, Details Africa had moved from concept to commission, from idea to income. The Laboratory of Trust Curating Craftsmen In an industry where "anyone with a saw calls themselves a carpenter," Charles faced his first real test of leadership. How do you build a team when the talent pool is polluted with what he diplomatically calls "jokers" people who mistake enthusiasm for expertise? The answer lay in his quantity surveyor's training: rigorous evaluation, clear standards, and systematic quality control. He didn't just hire carpenters; he curated craftsmen. The result is a core team of five skilled artisans backed by three trusted subcontractors a small army of makers who share his commitment to excellence. The Trust Economy Uganda's carpentry market presents a fascinating paradox: it's simultaneously mature and virgin. Mature in that furniture-making is an ancient craft with established players. Virgin in that reliability and transparency remain rare commodities. Charles saw this not as a problem to complain about, but as an opportunity to differentiate. His approach to trust-building is architectural in its systematicity: Foundation Layer: Source well-seasoned local timber, never cutting corners on materials Framework Layer: Execute precise joinery with attention to detail that borders on obsessionFinishing Layer: Maintain transparent communication, especially when problems arise Maintenance Layer: Leverage social media to showcase process, not just product Each project becomes a case study in how business should be conducted. Each satisfied client becomes a walking advertisement for a new standard of professionalism. The Economics of Meaning Beyond Profit Maximization Charles operates from a fundamentally different economic philosophy than most entrepreneurs. For him, profit is not the point. It's a byproduct of doing meaningful work well. This isn't naive idealism; it's sophisticated capitalism that recognizes the long-term value of stakeholder alignment. His approach to employee relations reads like a case study in enlightened management: * Equity sharing: Making key craftspeople company directors with ownership stakes * Fair wages: Paying above market rates to attract and retain top talent * Shared ownership: Creating a culture where everyone benefits from collective success * Skills development: Investing in continuous learning and professional growth The Regenerative Model Details Africa's environmental philosophy reflects Charles's QS training: everything must be measured, planned, and accounted for. The commitment to plant replacement trees isn't just environmental theater. It's a systematic approach to resource stewardship that ensures the business can operate sustainably for decades. The planned training school represents the logical extension of this philosophy: if you're going to extract value from an industry, you have an obligation to invest in its future. By training the next generation of carpenters, Charles is building not just a business, but an ecosystem. The Pedagogy of Craft Teaching Through Making The vision for a carpentry training school isn't just about skills transfer. It's about cultural transformation. Charles has observed that technical competence without business ethics creates skilled incompetence. His curriculum will address both dimensions: how to cut a perfect joint and how to build a trustworthy enterprise. The community workshops teaching basic home repairs represent something even more profound: the democratization of making. In a culture increasingly dependent on specialists, Charles wants to return fundamental skills to ordinary people. It's a small revolution disguised as a community service. The Ripple Architecture Charles's long-term vision reveals the true sophistication of his thinking. Health insurance for all employees, performance-based year-end bonuses, and profit-sharing partnerships aren't just benefits—they're investments in human capital that compound over time. When employees own equity, they think like owners. When craftspeople share in success, they invest in excellence. When community members learn basic skills, they become more self-reliant and more appreciative of advanced craftsmanship. The Creative Survival Manual Lessons from the Workshop Floor Charles's journey offers a masterclass in creative entrepreneurship that transcends carpentry: The Pivot Principle: Sometimes your dream role comes on the other side of apparent failure. The architecture portfolio course that defeated him became the catalyst for finding his true calling. The Capital Equation: In a knowledge economy, your skills are your most valuable asset. Charles leveraged his QS training to create competitive advantages that pure carpenters couldn't match. The Foundation Fundamentals: Creative work without business discipline is expensive self-expression. Costing, project management, and clear communication are the unsexy skills that enable creative freedom. The Transparency Dividend: Trust is the ultimate competitive advantage. Under-promise and over-deliver, especially when problems arise. The Stakeholder Strategy: Shared ownership creates shared commitment. When success is collective, excellence becomes inevitable. The Portfolio Course Question Charles's story poses a profound question for every creative professional: What "portfolio course" have you failed at or resisted that might actually be your personal gateway to a new creative path? The failures that sting most often contain the seeds of our greatest breakthroughs. The skills that feel irrelevant often become the foundation for innovation. The paths that appear to be detours often lead to destinations we never could have imagined. Epilogue: The Unfinished Project Details Africa is not a completed work—it's a living project that continues to evolve. Charles's vision of a carpentry training school, a reforestation program, and a community of skilled makers represents something larger than a business plan. It's a blueprint for how creative entrepreneurs can build enterprises that serve not just their own ambitions, but the broader community's needs. In the end, Charles Ronald Iragaba's story is not ju

    1 ч. 1 мин.
  6. 01.03.2025

    00.When a Spark Ignites a Movement

    Welcome to a behind‐the-scenes look at the evolution of the MuFrame Podcast—a story that started as a spark of inspiration in a quiet room and transformed into a vibrant, community-driven movement. This journey is one of passion, technical challenges, relentless innovation, and the unwavering commitment to amplifying Uganda’s creative voices. The Spark of Inspiration It all began on a late night when I found myself alone with a notepad and a mind brimming with ideas. I was struck by the urgent need to create a platform for early career creatives—a space where authentic stories, raw emotions, and innovative ideas could intersect. I envisioned the MuFrame Podcast as more than just an audio series; it was to be a revolution that would challenge the status quo, showcase behind-the-scenes struggles, and celebrate the victories that often go unnoticed in our creative journeys. Even before securing a tangible project, I asked myself, “How can I amplify these unheard voices?” That question led to the birth of the concept, a fusion of passion and practicality, ready to give creative individuals the stage they deserved. From Concept to Creation: The Early Days The early days were marked by a blend of excitement and chaos. With no elaborate plan in place, the initial episodes were raw and unfiltered—recorded on nothing more than a smartphone and an Infinix phone set on a cup. I vividly remember the “Rumblings of a Beginning” session, where every technical hiccup and improvised moment became a valuable lesson in resilience. It wasn’t just about the equipment; it was about finding the right system. I started jotting down ideas, building frameworks, and later, with a late-night PowerPoint presentation that stretched into the early hours, I solidified the vision. That sleepless night was a turning point, when every scribble and diagram on paper turned into a mission: to put people in my creative frame. Securing the Grant and Embracing Residency A crucial milestone in our journey was securing a grant through the Media Challenge Initiative, powered by UNESCO’s International Program for the Development of Communication. This grant wasn’t just financial support—it was a resounding validation of our vision. With the grant, we transitioned from makeshift recordings to a dedicated studio space, complete with new equipment like professional microphones, a Zoom PodTrack P4, and even our own domain at themfpod.com. The eight-month residency that accompanied the grant was a transformative period. It provided not only the technical support we desperately needed but also a community of mentors and fellow creatives. Here, theory met practice: I learned how to streamline production workflows, implement robust systems for pre-production, production, and post-production, and most importantly, how to balance creative spontaneity with structured planning. Building the Team: Strength in Collaboration No creative journey is complete without a solid team behind it. Initially, it was just me and a few friends—like Asha Taban, who helped kickstart the project—but as the podcast grew, so did the team. I was intentional about selecting people who shared the passion for authentic storytelling and were ready to embrace the unpredictable nature of creative work. Over time, we brought on board dynamic individuals such as Fassie Tawu, who became our co-host, programs lead and the voice behind our intros, and Ubia, our steadfast administrator who keeps everything running smoothly. Each team member, with their unique skills—from technical support to social media strategy—played a critical role in shaping the podcast’s success. Even when some members moved on, those transitions taught us the importance of resilience, clear communication, and the need to constantly evolve our collaborative processes. The Rollercoaster of Technical Hurdles Like every creative venture, our journey was riddled with technical challenges. I recall the nerve-wracking moments when equipment would fail mid-recording—a microphone suddenly cutting out or the chaotic scramble to set up backup gear. But these setbacks didn’t dampen our spirits. Instead, they pushed us to innovate and refine our approach. Each technical glitch became a stepping stone toward higher production quality, and over time, investments in better gear and improved studio setups transformed our recordings into professional-grade productions. The evolution from a single smartphone recording to a full-fledged studio setup symbolizes our commitment to quality over quantity. As we navigated these challenges, the technical learnings also became a core part of our narrative—an honest reflection of the struggles and triumphs behind every episode. Merging with Brave Kafunda and Looking Ahead A significant chapter in our story is the recent merge with Brave Kafunda. This collaboration marked a new era for the MuFrame Podcast. Brave Kafunda brought a level of professionalism and resources that allowed us to scale our operations, refine our systems, and expand our network. The merge wasn’t just a business decision; it was a merging of visions—a commitment to elevating Uganda’s creative scene through innovation and strategic partnerships. As we look to Season 2, the future is filled with promise. We plan to explore new themes, introduce dual interviews, and engage with industry giants alongside emerging talents. The goal is to build a resilient team, expand our creative horizons, and continue to serve as a beacon of inspiration for early career creatives across Uganda. Celebrating the Journey and Inviting New Voices Throughout this journey, one thing has remained constant: the unyielding belief in the power of storytelling. The MuFrame Podcast is not just about broadcasting episodes—it’s about sparking conversations, building a community, and transforming challenges into creative triumphs. As we close this chapter and gear up for Season 2, I invite every creative out there with a story to share. Whether you’ve faced setbacks, experienced unexpected breakthroughs, or simply have a passion that burns bright, we want to hear from you. Your story could be the next spark that ignites change in our creative community. Before we wrap up, I’d like to leave you with a few super dope, funny closing remarks:“Thanks for riding this crazy wave with us on the MuFrame Podcast. We’ve laughed, we’ve cried (okay, maybe just a few tears over a failed mic), and we’ve learned that every glitch is just another chance to shine. If you’ve got a story that’s as off-the-wall as a misfired microphone or as inspiring as a midnight brainstorm turning into gold, drop us a line. We’re all ears for the next creative revolution. Stay dope, keep laughing, and never stop creating!” The journey of the MuFrame Podcast is a testament to what happens when passion meets perseverance. From late-night brainstorming sessions to securing grants and building a vibrant team, every step has been an adventure—a rollercoaster ride filled with challenges, growth, and endless creativity. Join us as we continue to push boundaries, celebrate our community, and redefine what it means to be a creative in Uganda. The future is bright, and the best is yet to come. Welcome to the revolution—welcome to theMuFramePodcast. Link to Music1. For the Tired - Nimz, Kyle Simbwa2. Baby (Is it a crime) - Rema3. Oluusi Nebowa - Maurice Kirya4. Another Man - Denesi, Yannique, Mike Mungu5. Ola Mummy - Soundlykbb This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.themfpod.com

    1 ч. 10 мин.
  7. From Clouds to Content

    30.12.2024

    From Clouds to Content

    In the latest episode of theMFpod, powered by Brave Kafunda, we sat down with the dynamic Gray Alupo. A playlist curator, media publicist, and aspiring pilot, Gray shared her journey through Uganda’s creative landscape with humor, passion, and practical insights. Her unique story intertwines the disciplines of aviation, media, and music, offering a fascinating glimpse into the multifaceted lives of today’s creatives. Here are some key takeaways from our conversation: Gray’s journey started in the skies as she pursued her dream of becoming a pilot. This ambition took root early, inspired by family influences and the allure of flight. However, unforeseen circumstances prompted her to explore new horizons. She pivoted to pursuing a degree in mass communication, a decision driven by both practicality and a desire to find creative expression in a new field. Gray credits this shift with teaching her resilience, adaptability, and the importance of embracing change. These lessons have proven invaluable in shaping her current creative roles and influencing her approach to challenges. Crafting Musical Experiences: The Art of Playlist Curation Gray’s love for Ugandan music fueled her foray into playlist curation, a relatively niche role in the local creative scene. Frustrated by disorganized playlists that lacked flow, she took matters into her own hands, creating collections like Kidandali Ku Bandali and Lovingos. These playlists, celebrated for their thoughtful structure and cohesion, have gained a loyal following on social media and beyond. * Kidandali Ku Bandali highlights upbeat club bangers, making it perfect for parties and high-energy events. * Lovingos explores Ugandan love songs, offering two versions: one for soulful, slow melodies and another for more upbeat romantic tunes. Gray’s process involves meticulous research and a deep understanding of her audience’s preferences. By curating playlists that resonate emotionally, she bridges gaps in Uganda’s music scene and provides a platform for both mainstream and emerging artists. Additionally, Gray’s interaction with her growing community on platforms like Twitter has amplified her impact. Engaging directly with music lovers and incorporating their feedback has allowed her to refine her work and maintain relevance in a dynamic industry. Amplifying Artists: The Role of a Media Publicist As a media publicist, Gray bridges the gap between artists and audiences by crafting holistic promotional strategies. She emphasized the importance of authenticity and consistency in branding, noting that these are critical for artists looking to stand out in Uganda’s competitive music industry. * Branding: Artists must develop a distinct and consistent identity that resonates with their target audience. This includes everything from their music to their fashion choices and public interactions. * Holistic Representation: A publicist’s job extends beyond promoting music. They must ensure that the artist’s story and personality are woven into their public image, making them relatable and memorable. Gray cited Azawi and Joshua Baraka as examples of artists who have successfully carved distinct identities. Azawi’s unique fashion sense and Joshua’s innovative music style illustrate how strategic branding can propel an artist to prominence. Navigating Social Media Pressure Gray also addressed the pressures of social media, which can be both a blessing and a challenge for creatives. While platforms like Instagram and Twitter offer unparalleled opportunities for exposure, they can also lead to burnout and self-doubt. Gray’s advice for navigating this digital landscape is to focus on building genuine connections rather than chasing validation. “It’s about showcasing your work authentically and engaging with your audience meaningfully,” she explained. She also emphasized the importance of setting boundaries and taking breaks to maintain mental well-being. Inspiration for Uganda’s Creatives Gray’s journey offers several valuable lessons for Uganda’s budding creatives: * Adaptability: Embrace change and find ways to pivot when faced with challenges. Gray’s transition from aviation to media exemplifies the power of reinvention. * Community Building: Engage with audiences and fellow creatives to grow your impact. Collaboration and feedback are key to staying relevant. * Consistency: Stay true to your brand while continually refining your craft. Consistency builds trust and recognition. Gray’s approach to her work underscores the importance of passion, resilience, and a commitment to growth. Her ability to juggle multiple roles while staying true to her creative vision serves as an inspiration to anyone navigating the complexities of the creative industry. A Podcast Powered by Brave Kafunda This inspiring conversation was brought to you by Brave Kafunda, a hub dedicated to empowering Uganda’s creatives. Through platforms like theMFpod, Brave Kafunda provides spaces for collaboration, learning, and celebrating the richness of Uganda’s creative community. Whether you’re an aspiring artist, a storyteller, or simply someone passionate about creativity, Brave Kafunda offers a supportive environment to help you thrive. Listen Now Catch the full episode on theMFpod to hear Gray’s stories, insights, and her thoughts on what makes a creative truly stand out. From her playlist curation process to her work as a publicist, Gray’s journey is packed with inspiration and practical advice. Whether you’re a music enthusiast, a budding publicist, or someone exploring your creative path, this episode offers something for everyone. Don’t miss it! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.themfpod.com

    1 ч. 11 мин.
  8. Angel Kabera

    02.12.2024

    Angel Kabera

    In today’s episode of theMFpod, we delve into the extraordinary journey of Angel Kabera — a poet, singer, digital creator, and advocate of SOETRY, a unique fusion of song and poetry. Angel’s story is a testament to the power of authenticity, resilience, and self-discovery. With her magnetic personality and profound insights, Angel captivates audiences by transforming personal experiences into art. The Genesis of Angel’s Creativity Angel’s creative journey is deeply rooted in her childhood, where the church became her sanctuary and stage. Growing up, Angel transitioned through various roles in the church, from serving in church to leading Praise and Worship. This environment wasn’t just a spiritual haven—it was where her love for music and storytelling flourished. “Church was my escape and my ministry,” Angel recalls. Through music, she found a way to express herself, connect with others, and explore her creative talents. From cleaning chairs early in the morning to singing during services, these moments instilled in her a sense of purpose and discipline. For Angel, music wasn’t merely a hobby—it was a profound form of prayer. “Even today, I pray while singing,” she shares. These early experiences laid the foundation for her later work in poetry and song, where her spiritual connection remains a central theme. The Winding Path to SOETRY Angel’s journey to becoming a creative trailblazer wasn’t without its detours. Before embracing SOETRY as her life’s calling, Angel worked various jobs—selling luxury saucepans, mentoring youth, handling communications, baking, and even working as a receptionist. These roles taught her invaluable lessons about resilience, branding, and storytelling. One defining moment occurred during her days as a salesperson. Angel cold-called a potential client to pitch saucepans but was met with an unexpected response: “Call me when you’re ready to talk about poetry.” This statement struck a chord, forcing Angel to confront her true calling. Reflecting on that moment, she says, “If selling saucepans could make me $300 a week, how much more could my gift of poetry and song offer—not just financially but in fulfillment?” This epiphany led her to take a leap of faith, fully dedicating herself to her creative endeavors. Introducing SOETRY: A Fusion of Song and Poetry At the heart of Angel’s artistry is SOETRY, a genre she describes as the purposeful fusion of song and poetry. Unlike traditional spoken word performances set to background music, SOETRY involves composing melodies that harmonize with poetic verses, creating an immersive experience for the audience. “SOETRY is more than an art form—it’s a lifestyle that celebrates heritage, culture, and storytelling,” Angel explains. Through SOETRY, she has graced stages shared by Nobel laureates, world leaders, and cultural icons, proving that poetry can transcend boundaries and amplify voices on a global scale. The Lessons Behind the Spotlight Angel’s unorthodox career path has been a masterclass in resilience and adaptability. From cold sales calls to commanding a minimum performance fee of one million Ugandan shillings, Angel has learned the value of her work and the importance of setting boundaries. Her approach to branding stems from her storytelling skills, a lesson she mastered during her time as a salesperson. “You sell not just a product but its story. Whether it’s a saucepan or SOETRY, the story you tell determines its value,” she emphasizes. Angel’s authenticity is another hallmark of her success. She identifies three guiding principles in her work: * Introspection: Encouraging self-reflection to uncover identity and purpose. * Empathy: Building connections through shared experiences and understanding. * Africanicity: Celebrating her roots while redefining what it means to be an African artist. These values are evident in her performances, where she challenges societal norms and encourages audiences to embrace their heritage. Navigating Challenges as a Creative Angel is candid about the struggles of being a creative in Uganda, from financial instability to societal expectations. She highlights the need for side hustles to fund creative pursuits and the importance of leveraging modern tools like AI and social media to stay relevant. “Resilience isn’t just surviving—it’s thriving despite the odds,” Angel says. Her ability to adapt, innovate, and maintain authenticity has allowed her to break barriers and inspire a new generation of Ugandan creatives. A Pioneer in the Poetry Scene Angel’s work with SOETRY isn’t just about her personal journey—it’s about paving the way for others. She sees her artistry as a tool for empowerment, particularly for women and young creatives in Uganda. Through her performances, Angel encourages others to embrace their unique voices and take ownership of their narratives. Her advice is simple yet profound: “Leverage networks, embrace criticism, and read the room.” The Future of SOETRY and Ugandan Creativity Angel envisions a bright future for Ugandan creatives, one where SOETRY and other art forms are celebrated on global stages. She’s passionate about challenging traditional systems and creating spaces for authentic storytelling. Her message to budding creatives is clear: “The greatest investment you can make in a relationship or craft is yourself. Work on being the best version of you.” Final Thoughts Angel Kabera’s story is more than a tale of artistic success—it’s a lesson in resilience, authenticity, and the transformative power of creativity. From her humble beginnings in church to her rise as a SOETRY pioneer, Angel exemplifies what it means to stay true to oneself while embracing change. themfpod This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.themfpod.com

    1 ч. 12 мин.

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Unbox your creativity on theMFpod! Dive deep into a world where imagination knows no bounds. Break free from norms, challenge old ideas, and unleash your imagination. Let's think outside the frame and innovate! www.themfpod.com