La troupe du Soleil Levant, Ndèye Gueye et bien d’autres stars se sont réunis hier pour le tournage à Médina d’un clip sur Bercy.
💡 Bon à savoir
Cette interface de recherche vous permet d'explorer toutes les archives d'actualités du Sénégal, de 2006 jusqu'à aujourd'hui. Profitez de notre base de données complète pour retrouver les événements marquants de ces dernières années.
La troupe du Soleil Levant, Ndèye Gueye et bien d’autres stars se sont réunis hier pour le tournage à Médina d’un clip sur Bercy.
Video - AIDA SAMB s'essaie au Sabar lors du Tournage de son clip "Sunu Sangue"
WALLY BALLAGO SECK ( MAKING OFF BEGLEN )
Dinama Nekh Making Off : Daro Tassoucate
Ils ne sont plus à présenter . Sur la toile comme sur la vie réelle, ils font le buzz. Xuman et Keyti, les deux artistes et animateurs du célèbre JT Rappé viennent de prouver au monde musicale que tout est possible. Il suffit simplement d'être un vrai artiste, avoir de l'imagination. Ce savoir-faire grandit facilement à force d'augmenter la réflexion . Au début ce n'était qu'une tentation.
VIDEO Chez Karim - Making Off : Disputes, Insultes......No Comment
Nouvelle video - Making off - Viviane, Movado Busta rythmes
KOD PIN - MAKING OFF MBAYE AM STRONG
VIDEO EXCLUSIVE : Making off " Soldier the girl " Viviane, Busta Rhymes et Movado
Dans son album, dont la parution est prévue le 7 juin prochain, dans moins d’un mois, et dont les premiers singles, clipés, sont déjà au top des charts dakarois, Queen Biz y rend hommage à la force et au courage de nos gladiateurs de l’arène. Interpellée sur ce choix pour quelqu’un dont les textes sont très engagés, dans le pur esprit hip-hop, Queen assume ce choix : « les lutteurs sont, aujourd’hui, le symbole d’une jeunesse sénégalaise qui en veut, qui a de l’ambition et qui veut réussir par le travail, à la sueur de son front ». Selon elle, ces lutteurs sont l’exemple de self-made men, partis de rien et aujourd’hui sous les feux de la rampe de par leur réussite. Et, qui plus, ces jeunes, qui cristallisent toute l’attention à la force de leur bras_ c’est le cas de le dire à propos de ces lutteurs à force herculéenne _, viennent tous quasiment de la banlieue, dont elle est, elle aussi, originaire. « Bakkoulène », cet hommage aux champions de l’arène, est aussi une incitation et un appel à l’émulation à l’adresse de la jeunesse de son pays, en particulier, de la celle de la banlieue, sa banlieue. Seneweb News a pu se procurer des photos de son making off et le son de ce nouveau clip. Regardez et écoutez !
La saison 1 d'«Un café avec ... » vivra ses dernières heures le dimanche 27 novembre 2011 avec comme épilogue beaucoup de croustillantes surprises pour les téléspectateurs. Dans cet entretien, Boubacar Diallo alias Dj Boub's, acteur principal de l'émission, revient sur les moments forts de la série, le budget et les anecdotes qui ont escorté la fiction.
Le dernier clip de Pape Diouf promet bien des surprises. Dans le making off, on voit de belles et jolies nymphes dakaroises qui y jouent les video-girls.
WITH its spotless new white-tile floors and gleaming stainless-steel ovens, the basement kitchen of Patisserie des Ambassades, a French cafe in Harlem on Frederick Douglass Boulevard, has the fit and finish of a laboratory. On a recent weekday morning, its two resident scientists — bakers in starched white coats — glazed mixed-berry tartlets and spread crème Chantilly over thin sheets of millefeuille pastry on a long steel table. But at the table’s opposite end was the kitchen’s resident artist, Ken Alice N’doye, preparing thiebu djen (cheb-oo JEN), Senegal’s national dish of rice cooked in a tomato-based fish stew. Although Ms. N’doye, 31, an owner of the cafe, also wore a crisp chef’s coat, her every move sprung from sensual, rather than technical, cues.
Senegal has made headlines as a departure point for people desperate to emigrate to Europe and the United States. But for many West Africans, Senegal, and particularly its capital, Dakar, is a destination in itself. The small gravel courtyard in front of Muhammed Serif Diallo's house is full of friends watching the Chelsea-Barcelona soccer match on TV. He, like his uncle sitting in the back of the crowd, and several others there, is from Guinea. But Senegal, not Guinea, is the location of the quiet road in which these men sit and cheer. They have all moved to Senegal's capital, Dakar, in the hopes of making a better living.
He may not be able to leap tall buildings in a single bound, but Akon is making huge, record-breaking strides on the charts these days. The singer/producer's latest single "Smack That" rose from No. 95 to No. 7 on last week's Billboard Hot 100 singles chart--the largest surge in Billboard's 48-year history. "My [challenge] was never getting a hit record. Now that I got one, it's easy. I know exactly what the crowd wants to hear," Akon told AllHipHop.com. "If anything, I'm going to have pressure off this one. How I'm going to top that is the next question at the end of the day. I just feel like as long as I'm working hard, and putting out good music, it shouldn't be a problem."
New York, September 12, 2006—The Committee to Protect Journalists today condemned the secret detention of a television reporter in the Gambia who was covering an opposition candidate running in the September 22 presidential election. Dodou Sanneh of state-owned Gambia Radio and Television Services (GRTS) was detained September 8, according to sources who did not wish to be identified for fear of retribution by the authorities. He is the third journalist believed to be held by the National Intelligence Agency (NIA), the sources said. Sanneh is thought to be at the headquarters of the NIA in the capital Banjul. A NIA official contacted by CPJ could not provide any information.
DAKAR, 6 September (IRIN) - A record number of illegal migrants reached the shores of the Spanish Canary Islands last weekend. Authorities reported that between Saturday and Sunday, 1,400 migrants, mainly from West Africa, arrived in eight canoe-style fishing boats that they believe left from Mauritania. The longer and riskier maritime route to the Canaries became increasingly popular this year after the shorter route through Morocco was cut off by increased patrols. Another route from North Africa into Sicily was stymied by Italian navy patrols. The journey from Senegal to the Canaries is approximately 1,500 km and can take anywhere from five to 20 days. Upon arrival, dehydrated and exhausted, those who have made the crossing face the possibility of repatriation to their respective countries.
MBOUR, 31 May 2006 (IRIN) - In this busy fishing port south of the Senegalese capital, the talk is all about the lack of fish and cash and the fortunes waiting to be made in the murky waters of illegal migration. Mbour, a bustling smelly town 80 kilometres south of Dakar, lies a bare 1,500 kilometres – just a few days’ boat-ride away - from Spain’s Canary Islands, believed to be the Atlantic ocean gateway to a life of plenty in Europe, for those who make it across the seas.The long wooden boats painted in bright blues and yellows and reds that ferry growing numbers of would-be migrants from Senegal’s beaches to the high seas, are called “Mbeukk-mi”, or wave-crashers in Woloff, and are crafted here and elsewhere along the Senegalese shoreline.
DAKAR, 31 May 2006 (IRIN) - As more and more young men from Senegal climb into fishing boats in the hopes of making it to Europe, efforts are growing to keep the legions of would-be migrants safe at home on dry land. “We can’t just stand here and let these people leave to drown in the Atlantic,” said Amadou Mountaga Sarr.“We must warn them about the danger and tell them what’s really out there,” added Sarr, news editor of a community radio station called Oxyjeunes that operates from a shantytown outside Dakar.