Hear what Tampa Bay Buccaneers general manager Jason Licht had to say about drafting Graham Barton in the first round
When Isaac Anthony Lumori launched South Sudan's first weekly comedy show at the height of a civil war in 2014, his performers' quips about different ethnic groups were not always well received. A decade on, with South Sudan officially at peace and audiences accustomed to the comedians' equal-opportunity digs, the reception has grown considerably warmer. They make wisecracks about everything from the 2013-2018 war that cost hundreds of thousands of lives to South Sudan's economic woes and everyday quarrels between husbands and wives.
An exhibition showcasing many of its finds is opening in Peterborough, close to where it was found.