Author: Nzula Nzyoka

  • Commonwealth-winning short story faces allegations of being written by AI

    Commonwealth-winning short story faces allegations of being written by AI

    One of the winners of this year’s prestigious Commonwealth Short Story Prize has been accused of using artificial intelligence to write his entry, “Serpent in the Grove”.

    The Commonwealth Foundation announced the winners of its prestigious Short Story Prize on May 13. The foundation announced five winning stories from Africa, Asia, the USA and Canada, and the Caribbean and Pacific regions before the announcement of an overall winner.

    Aside from a small cash award, each winning writer’s story is published on the Granta website, a famed London-based literary magazine.

    Granta has a long and storied history of publishing the early works of authors who eventually make their way into the literary canon. Sylvia Plath, EM Forster and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie feature among a long list of acclaimed writers who were “launched” by the magazine.

    However, Granta is not involved in the selection process for the Commonwealth Short Story Prize, but publication in its pages lays the path for the winning writers to find their audience.

    This year’s winner from the Caribbean region, a Trinidadian man, Jamir Nazir, was one of the five selected from 7,806 entries this year.

    Just days after the Short story was published on Granta, readers noticed something odd about Nazir’s writing.

    Many readers pointed out that he wrote lines that at best were vague, for example: “Her hair is midnight rain; her laugh is bright as zinc”, “Wilfred’s rum-shop leaned into the road like a rotten tooth”, and at worst, completely incomprehensible “The girl smiled like sunrise over a sink”.

    Sharma Taylor, the judge for the Caribbean region, said the story was selected for Nazir’s “sublime” language, “precise yet richly evocative, conjuring vivid, lush imagery with remarkable economy”.

    But Granta’s readers disagreed.

    One researcher on X wrote, “Well, this is a first: a ChatGPT-generated story won a prestigious literary prize”, adding that the sentence construction and language were obvious markers of AI writing.”

    Another reader said, “the Granta AI thing reads like a literal parody of MFA lit”, as another lamented that the “Commonwealth Prize has lost its credibility.”

    Wading into the controversial conversation, Pangram, a company offering artificial intelligence detection tools, ultimately ran “Serpent in the Grove” through its systems, along with all the other winners. According to their results, 100 per cent of the text was authored by AI.

    That wasn’t all: Pangram also said two other stories, Malta writer John Edward DeMicoli’s “The Bastion’s Shadow” and Indian writer Sharon Aruparayil’s “Mehendi Nights”, were also deemed likely to have been written by AI.

    Aruparayil denied the allegations, while Nazir and DeMicoli have not responded at the time of publication. It is worth noting that Pangram and other AI detection tools are not considered entirely accurate.

    Facing the controversial allegations, the Commonwealth Foundation released a statement saying the judging process was “robust” and that the writers “personally stated that no AI was used”.

    In contrast, Granta’s publisher Sigrid Rausing made the irony-laden decision to pass the story through Claude.ai, which concluded that “Serpent in the Grove” was “almost certainly not produced unaided by a human”. (All generative AI – AI that creates new content based on patterns in data – requires human prompts.)

    Despite the Commonwealth’s statement, online critics believe the prize’s prestige has been sullied.

  • Award-winning play ‘Free Me’ returns to the stage in June

    Award-winning play ‘Free Me’ returns to the stage in June

    After winning a number of awards at this year’s Kenya Theatre Awards, the critically acclaimed Kenyan play, ‘Free Me’, will return to the stage from June 5 to June 7 at the Jain Bhavan auditorium.

    Directed by Mugambi Nthiga and produced by Taji & Co. Production Limited, ‘Free Me’ follows the life of a woman navigating abuse, trauma and healing from her teenage years into adulthood.

    Based on the true story of producer Gathoni Kimuyu, known for her work with Too Early For Birds’ Tom Mboya play and Nyashinski’s The Showman Residency, the play is an emotional portrayal of gender-based violence and survival.

    The play was also inspired in part by the ‘End Femicide’ movement in 2024 and is itself a form of protest.

    Speaking about domestic violence and abuse, the key themes of the play, during its initial run, Gathoni said: “Me being alive is part of the empowerment. Walking away is winning, and the next step is learning to love yourself and starting to heal. It is a happily ever after type of story.”

    Adding that art is important in building a socially conscious society.

    “This story doesn’t just contain the gender-based violence part. It also contains parts of my teenagehood, my 20s, and my current life,” Gathoni said. “Art needs to be a little bolder. We need stories where art becomes activism, because we need them more than we admit.”

    The June return is expected to attract both first-time viewers and theatre lovers eager to experience the award-winning production once again. Tickets are on sale.

    In February, the play won four major awards at the Kenya Theatre Awards 2026, including Best Director for Mugambi Nthiga, Best Supporting Male Actor in a Play for Tobit Tom, Best Breakthrough Female Performer for Renee Gichuki and Best Production for Taji & Co.

  • Opinion: Reducing food waste starts with how we buy meat

    Opinion: Reducing food waste starts with how we buy meat

    In many Kenyan homes, food waste shows up at the end of the day- the leftover ugali that nobody went back to, or the chicken that got pushed to the back of the fridge and quietly forgotten. We notice it then. But the decision that caused it was made much earlier.

    It was made at the butchery. Or the supermarket. Or wherever we last bought meat.

    Meat is central to how most of us eat, and it’s also one of the most expensive things in the shopping basket, which makes it all the more frustrating when it goes to waste; bought with good intentions, stashed in the freezer, and eventually thrown out.

    It happens more than we’d like to admit, and usually for simple reasons: we bought too much, we weren’t sure what we needed, or we just bought the same amount we always do.

    Small changes at the point of purchase make the biggest difference here, and the Mtaani Butchery is actually one of the better tools we have for this.

    Unlike pre-packed supermarket trays, where you take what’s there, your neighbourhood butchery lets you buy exactly what you need. Half a kilo. A specific cut. Just enough for tonight. That flexibility is the point, and it directly reduces the amount that ends up wasted.

    This is something the newer generation of structured butcheries, like Kenchic Mtaani, is building on.

    The neighbourhood convenience is still there, but layered with consistent quality, proper hygiene, and staff who can actually advise you on portions or recommend a cut for a specific meal.

    That kind of guidance matters more than people realise. Knowing that 400 grams is genuinely enough for a family of four, not just feeling like it should be, is what stops the overbuying.

    There’s also the habit of bulk-buying worth reconsidering. Many of us stock up and freeze, telling ourselves it’s more practical. Sometimes it is. But more often, meat bought in bulk gets forgotten, hidden behind other things in the freezer, then discovered months later in a state nobody wants to cook.

    Buying smaller quantities more regularly, from a butchery that’s close by and easy to visit, is often a more honest approach.

    There’s a financial case for all of this, which is obvious. But there’s also something beyond money. Every piece of meat that goes to waste represents feed, water, labour, and farming effort.

    Wasting it isn’t just a household budget problem; it’s a real cost that runs further back up the chain than most people think about at the moment of shopping.

    None of this requires complicated behaviour change. It starts at the butchery, asking for the right amount, understanding your portions, and buying with a clear meal in mind rather than a vague sense of plenty.

    That’s a habit worth building. And your neighbourhood butchery is a good place to start.


    Philip Maina is the Chief Commercial Officer at Kenchic PLC.

  • International jazz legend Sonny Rollins dead at 95

    International jazz legend Sonny Rollins dead at 95

    Sonny Rollins, the fiercely inventive tenor saxophonist whose decades-spanning career helped define modern jazz and earned him the nickname ‘Saxophone Colossus,’ died Monday at his home in upstate New York, according to a statement posted to his social media accounts. He was 95.

    “It is with deep sorrow and profound love that we announce the passing of Sonny Rollins,” a post to his social media page said, adding that he “died this afternoon at his home in Woodstock, NY.”

    A constantly evolving creative force, Rollins found in jazz a means of social and spiritual commentary, with his tenor sax expressing the hopes of African Americans in the civil rights movement, the grief of the United States after the September 11 attacks, and the mystical path he found on extended retreats in India and Japan.

    The Harlem-born Rollins, recognisable in his later years for a shock of white hair, was one of a handful of saxophone players who defined the instrument, a pantheon that includes Charlie Parker, Coleman Hawkins and John Coltrane, with whom he had an affectionate but complicated relationship.

    But unlike so many artists from jazz’s defining post-World War II period, Rollins lived a long life, remastering his work well into his 80s even as respiratory issues limited his performances.

    In an interview with AFP, Rollins credited his longevity to yoga, which helped him to concentrate and stay off drugs and alcohol, but mostly to his creative thirst.

    “I’m still alive because I’m still learning,” Rollins said in the 2016 interview.

    Among major saxophonists, Rollins’ style was among the most biting, a heavy delivery that often struck rather than soothed the listener, yet he paradoxically was intricate and holistic about composing, describing music as a path to find universal truths.

    He was dubbed the “Saxophone Colossus” after the title of his seminal 1956 album, in which he brought a new power to the instrument as he came to define hard bop, a jazz that was intense and stripped back the genre’s structural confines.

    The most enduring image of Rollins comes from the early 1960s when, needing a break from his rising fame, he would practice on the Williamsburg Bridge that connects Brooklyn and Manhattan’s bustling Lower East Side, playing for nearly every waking hour over three years, even in the cold.

    The very public sabbatical produced one of his best-known albums, 1962’s “The Bridge,” and has led to proposals to rename the Williamsburg Bridge in Rollins’ honour.

    Rollins also crossed over to a non-jazz audience with occasional forays into rock, most notably his appearances on The Rolling Stones’ 1981 album “Tattoo You.”

    Childhood of discovery

    Born to parents who moved to New York from the US Virgin Islands, Rollins incorporated some of the inflexions of his heritage into his jazz.

    “St. Thomas,” which appeared on “Saxophone Colossus” and became his best-known song, incorporated Caribbean calypso that he had heard as a child.

    Raised in Harlem, the epicentre of African American culture, Rollins recalled that his early musical education came from the Apollo Theatre, where he would watch its celebrated amateur nights.

    By his 20s, Rollins had already managed to play with jazz legends including Parker, Miles Davis and especially Thelonious Monk.

    The young Rollins would hang out at Monk’s apartment and play on the pianist’s classic 1957 album “Brilliant Corners.”

    Coltrane’s relationship with Rollins has often been described as one of rivalry. Both explored new directions in jazz and became fascinated with Indian spirituality.

    Whereas Coltrane brought grace and a gentle texture, Rollins arguably delivered a firmer sense of music’s ebbs and flows, crafting jazz in the manner of a classical composer.

    Coltrane, who died of cancer in 1967, is only known to have recorded once with his contemporary, on the title track of Rollins’ 1956 album “Tenor Madness.”

    Rollins, reflecting on his nearly seven-decade career in the 2016 interview with AFP, said he had perhaps been too brash with the legends around him.

    “I look back on my relationship with Coltrane, and my relationship with Monk, a lot of stupid things I did with those people that I would not have done if I were more mature,” said Rollins, who called Coltrane “a beautiful, beautiful human being.”

    Rollins’ manager and wife of nearly 40 years, Lucille, died in 2004.

    Sax ‘from subconscious’

    Rollins followed “Saxophone Colossus” with 1957’s “Way Out West,” in which he introduced his technique of “strolling”, saxophone solos that would flow over drum and bass, without the piano chords that traditionally kept jazz ensembles in key.

    “When I play and I improvise, I don’t think, because music comes from the subconscious, someplace else,” Rollins told news site The Root.

    “I’m just a human, so when I play my horn, I get into a state where the music plays me. I’m just standing up there and fingering my horn and blowing,” he said.

    Rollins embraced yoga, finding that the breathing techniques and especially the concentration gave him a new fluency with his instrument.

    In a sequel to his Williamsburg Bridge years, Rollins took a second sabbatical starting in 1966, learning Zen meditation in Japan before spending several years in an ashram in India, where he arrived with just a bag and his saxophone.

    Under the guidance of Swami Chinmayananda on the outskirts of Mumbai, Rollins devoted his days to reading and discussing sacred Vedic texts. He rarely performed, although he later brought his spiritual quest into his music in compositions such as “Patanjali,” named for the great yoga master.

    Jazz artists “were trying to find a way to express life through our improvisations. The music has got to mean something,” Rollins later told National Public Radio.

    Bold civil rights statement

    Rollins found a new purpose to music with “Freedom Suite,” his 1958 work that spoke to the rising struggle of African Americans for equal rights.

    If musically the 20-minute instrumental piece reflected Rollins’ artistic freedom in the abstract, he made no secret of its political bent, penning a message in the liner notes that was strikingly bold for an artist of the era.

    “America is deeply rooted in Negro culture: its colloquialisms, its humor; its music. How ironic that the Negro, who more than any other people can claim America’s culture as his own, is being persecuted and repressed; that the Negro, who has exemplified the humanities in his very existence, is being rewarded with inhumanity,” he wrote.

    “Freedom Suite,” led by Rollins’ confident sax and also notable for Max Roach’s drumming, proved controversial enough that a reissue chose another title for the album. Rollins recalled that he was confronted about the piece when he performed in the US South.

    Rollins similarly championed Black pride on “Airegin,” another of his best-known pieces which is rigorously quick-paced, and whose title is an anagram for Nigeria.

    Rollins found another purpose to his art after the September 11, 2001, attacks, when he was living just six blocks from the doomed World Trade Centre. He had to walk down 40 flights of stairs to evacuate his building and felt ill from the fumes.

    Nonetheless, Rollins played four days later in Boston, driving there as flights were grounded, for a concert that became a live album of remembrance to victims of the attack.

    Rollins recalled feeling a sort of serenity as he returned to New York, finding a new empathy in the metropolis.

    But Rollins, who later moved to a farm in upstate New York where he had space to meditate, would grow pessimistic at humanity’s prospects.

    Rollins said that, in the 1960s, he and other artists felt that music could bring peace to the world.

    “But then I learned, and I lived a little longer,” he told AFP.

    “I realised that this world will never change. This world is meant to be a place of war, killing, everything, sickness, illness, death. That’s this world.”

  • Domestic violence film wins top prize at Cannes Film Festival

    Domestic violence film wins top prize at Cannes Film Festival

    “Fjord”, a thought-provoking drama about domestic violence and left-wing prejudices by Romanian auteur Cristian Mungiu, won the best film prize at the Cannes Film Festival on Saturday at a star-packed closing ceremony.

    In his second Palme d’Or-winning film, Mungiu explored the contradictions of Scandinavia’s supposed tolerance in a drama featuring Norwegian star Renate Reinsve (“Sentimental Value”) and Sebastian Stan (“The Apprentice”).

    It follows a devoutly Christian Norwegian-Romanian couple and their five children who move to a remote village.

    “This is a message about tolerance, inclusion and empathy. These are wonderful values that we all cherish, but we need to put them into practice more often,” Mungiu told the audience.

    The movie is based on true events and is notable for how it questions the supposedly progressive values of Norwegian society, as well as religious bias in the country’s child welfare system.

    Russian drama “Minotaur” by Andrey Zvyagintsev, which depicts a callous businessman caught up in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, won the Grand Prix second prize.

    Zvyagintsev’s films offer bleak portraits of modern Russia under Vladimir Putin, whose forces invaded Ukraine in 2022.

    “Put an end to the carnage, the whole world is waiting for it,” Zvyagintsev, who now lives in exile in France, told the audience in a message addressed to Putin.

    The director nearly died during the Covid 19 pandemic, spending more than a month in a coma during treatment in Europe.

    Double winners 

    Among the other prizes, Belgium’s Virginie Efira and Japanese actor Tao Okamoto shared the best female performance award for their roles in the nursing home drama “All of a Sudden” by Japan’s Ryusuke Hamaguchi.

    Belgian duo Emmanuel Macchia and Valentin Campagne from gay World War I drama “Coward” also shared the male best actor award for their roles in the Lukas Dhont-directed movie.

    Rwandan filmmaker Marie-Clementine Dusabejambo won the Camera d’Or for best first film for her genocide drama “Ben’Imana” which she dedicated to “the women of my country”.

    Other critics’ favourites in Cannes included arty black-and-white historical drama “Fatherland” and “La Bola Negra”, a big-budget Spanish drama about multiple gay lives.

    They both took home prizes for best director.

    – Talking points –

    The Cannes Film Festival is the world’s biggest, providing a crucial platform for independent cinema, as well as a showcase for fashion and celebrities to rival the Academy Awards or the Met Gala.

    The 79th edition of the festival was packed with its usual stable of A-listers, from John Travolta to Cate Blanchett and Vin Diesel, but Hollywood was under-represented.

    No major US studio agreed to launch a blockbuster at Cannes this year, or at the Berlin International Film Festival in February, raising questions about why giants such as Universal, Disney or Warner are dodging European events.

    Other big talking points included the use of artificial intelligence in filmmaking, as well as the continued under-representation of women in the industry.

    Only five of the 22 films in the main competition this year were directed by women.

    Geena Davis, star of “Thelma & Louise” which features on the Cannes Festival poster this year, reflected on how the 1991 movie was meant to be a breakthrough for women as she presented a prize.

    “All these years later, we have to acknowledge that the change is happening slowly,” she said.

    Other prizes in Cannes include best documentary for “Rehearsals for a Revolution”, a highly personal account of political repression in Iran by exiled actress and director Pegah Ahangarani.

    “Elephants in the Fog” — Nepal’s first-ever film in competition at Cannes — won the jury prize of the official Certain Regard section Friday for its story about the country’s traditional transgender community.

    And the best actor prize in the Certain Regard section went to 18-year-old Bradley Fiomona Dembeasset, who was discovered in a street audition in the Central African capital Bangui for the crowd-pleasing “Congo Boy”, a refugee rap drama.

  • Lupita says it is an “honour” to play Helen of Troy

    Lupita says it is an “honour” to play Helen of Troy

    Oscar-winning actress Lupita Nyong’o is “honoured” to have been given the opportunity to portray the beloved character Helen of Troy from Homer’s ‘The Iliad’ in Christopher Nolan’s upcoming film, ‘The Odyssey’.

    Nyong’o was speaking to Elle Magazine in an exclusive featuring her fellow female co-stars Anne Hathaway, Charlize Theron and Zendaya.

    “I was so deeply honoured to be entrusted with the role,” Nyong’o said. “I mean, she is iconic. What more can I say?”

    Lupita will play not one but two characters in the film: Helen and her half-sister Clytemnestra.

    The character Helen plays a pivotal role in the events of the Trojan War as told in ‘The Iliad’ and not so much in ‘The Odyssey’, but with descriptions such as “the face that launched a thousand ships” often attributed to her, Nyong’o’s casting provoked racist outrage. But Lupita would much rather focus on the character.

    “You can’t perform beauty,” she said to Elle Magazine. “I want to know who a character is. What is beyond beauty? What is beyond looks? That’s the thing about doing such a well-known text, which has been studied and interpreted and derived from. The research could be endless. The good thing about working with a writer like Chris is that it’s on the page. The investigation starts with the pages you’re given. That’s what I based it on.”

    Beyond doing a character study for her role, Lupita is not concerned with defending herself.

    Melinda Sue Gordon/Universal Pictures/ Lupita Nyong’o as Clytemnestra in The Odyssey.

    “I’m very supportive of Chris’s (Nolan) intention with it and with the version of this story that he is telling. Our cast is representative of the world. I’m not spending my time thinking of a defence. The criticism will exist whether I engage with it or not.”

    ‘The Odyssey’ is a mythological story that not only includes fantastical characters such as Sirens and a Cyclops, but also includes a journey through the underworld; a story of a man determined to get home that “spans worlds.”

    “It’s quite something to be a part of ‘The Odyssey’, because it is so grand. It spans worlds. So that’s why the cast is what it is. We’re occupying the epic narrative of our time.”

    Speaking about her career in general, Lupita added, “I can’t spend my time thinking about all the people who still don’t love me. You’ll find the representatives who believe in you, and you’ll get on with it. I want to believe I’m built to last.”

    The Odyssey will premiere globally on July 17.

  • Nameless, Okello Max, Femi, Mejja more to headline UEFA final viewing event

    Nameless, Okello Max, Femi, Mejja more to headline UEFA final viewing event

    Football fans are in for a treat this Madaraka weekend as a number of Kenyan artists are set to perform at the UEFA Champions League Finals viewing parties across major cities in the country on May 30.

    Nameless, P-unit, Okello Max, Iyaani, Femi One, Mejja, Jua Cali, and MR Lenny are some of the artists expected to perform at these events hosted by Heineken and KWAL.

    “We want to celebrate football fans across Kenya with unforgettable match viewing experiences in leading entertainment spots in Nairobi, Mombasa, Nakuru, Kisumu, and Eldoret as we wrap up the ‘Fans Have More Friends’ campaign we launched in April,” said Alice Mwalimo, Commercial Director, KWAL.

    She further added that these events will be themed as vibrant, fun-filled lifestyle events where fans can also sample their favourite delicacies.

    “We are calling on all football fans to turn up in large numbers for the exciting events we have lined up for them on 30th May. This is not just about watching the finals but also connecting with other fans and making new friends. We also encourage fans to enjoy responsibly and not drink and drive,” said Ms Mwalimo.

    The events are about encouraging fans to make new friends and connect when watching a game of football.

    “The fandom campaign has helped redefine the UEFA Champions League experience in Kenya by transforming match watching into moments of real connection, moving from just being fans into being friends,” said Heineken® Senior Brand Manager at KWAL, Prudence Mutembei.

    The events will be held at several venues:

    Nairobi

    •  Capital Noir (Main UCL Viewing experience Venue)
    • Covo Thika Road
    • Quiver Kilimani

    Kisumu – Berlin Lounge

    Nakuru – Space Next Door

    Mombasa – Alcapone Nyali.

    Eldoret – Baniya

  • Fans create AI-generated team songs ahead of World Cup

    Fans create AI-generated team songs ahead of World Cup

    World Cup fans are wielding artificial intelligence to mass-produce viral songs supporting their teams ahead of next month’s tournament.

    As the fan-made football anthems are raking in millions of plays across YouTube, TikTok and Instagram, experts say that the viral tunes raise questions about song ownership, artist compensation and the valuation of human creativity.

    But many users do not appear to mind, with some even showing a preference for the AI-generated songs over an official anthem that football’s world governing body FIFA, commissioned from musicians Jelly Roll and Carin Leon.

    A highly anticipated World Cup track from Shakira was also released last week, but the fad of AI fan songs was still drumming up excitement on social media for the tournament taking place in cities across the United States, Canada and Mexico in June and July.

    The trend appears to have started with a song dedicated to the French team, “Imbattables,” released in February by artist Crystalo, who is listed on Spotify as France’s “premier AI musical creator.” The song begins with a call-and-response listing the names of Kylian Mbappe and other star French national players.

    A Brazilian anthem followed with a similar name-chanting format and a trending phonk melody that producer Guilherme Maia, who goes by the artist name M4IA, said he created by layering together different elements he had put together with the help of AI.

    Tracks for top sides Portugal, Argentina and Germany, as well as many others, soon sprang up across platforms, garnering more praise from fans.

    But while the Brazilian version closely resembled the French prototype, the later songs copied Maia’s format exactly. Each recycled the phonk beat and listed players’ names before calling for respect for the squad’s “king”, a feature reserved for the likes of Cristiano Ronaldo in the Portugal tune or Lionel Messi in Argentina’s version.

    “What I see happening now is more about people following a trend or trying to recreate a feeling,” Maia told AFP, saying that artistic emulation has always existed in music.

    While he was enthusiastic about the possibilities AI opened up for production, he acknowledged that the technology raises new questions about authorship and copyright.

    “In music, there are clear rules. You can’t just copy someone else’s work or use samples without permission, even if AI is involved.”

    Lack of credit

    Maia stressed that he built the track on his own and used AI as an assistant when creating certain elements, rather than asking a music generation tool like Suno to create a song with one prompt.

    But, Jason Palamara, an assistant professor of music technology at Indiana University, said that with the way the models exist, there is a lack of clarity over how artists are credited if their copyrighted work is used to train them.

    “It had to come from somewhere,” he said.

    The inconsistencies that can appear in the AI-generated images can also pop up in music created with the technology.

    For example, a fan-made World Cup song for Portugal was sung with a Brazilian accent, while a Colombian version read James Rodriguez’s first name with an English rather than Spanish pronunciation.

    Music created with AI can also lack complexity, Palamara said.

    “It’s one compact product, rather than a product where there’s multiple tracks that have gone into it, where it has more texture.”

    Still, Morgan Hayduk, co-CEO of music rights software company Beatdapp, said that listeners enjoying the World Cup fan songs may not be seeking artistic complexity.

    “There seems to be a cohort of people who actually don’t care,” Hayduk observed. “They like the music, and they like the back story that it came from a large language model and not a songwriter or a group.”

    He said that despite concerns over how the industry will adapt to AI, quick-fix songs that can be chanted by fans or featured in advertisements are a clear use case for AI-generated music in its current stage.

    “Knowing what goes into a generative output, like a World Cup fan song, is the thorny Rubicon that the music industry has to cross now.”

  • Researchers use Anime in trial to treat depression

    Researchers use Anime in trial to treat depression

    As a teenager struggling to fit into life in rural Sicily, psychiatrist Francesco Panto found refuge in anime, where he discovered characters that resembled the kind of man he wanted to be.

    Now living in Japan, Panto thinks anime can benefit others and is trialling whether it could be used as a method of therapy, particularly for people who would otherwise struggle to ask for help.

    “The use of manga and anime supported me so much… they were very important emotional support kind of tools,” Panto told AFP.

    “Being raised in Italy, in Sicily, there were very strong stereotypes around gender or self-expression. But when I was 12 or 13 years old I started to play this game called ‘Final Fantasy’… and the male protagonists resonated with me.

    “They were so masculine and cool, but in their own way.”

    Panto’s six-month pilot study into “character-based counselling” at Yokohama City University ended in March.

    As part of the trial, he and his team recruited 20 people aged 18-29 who had symptoms of depression and gave them online counselling delivered by a psychologist who appeared on the screen as an anime avatar with a digitally altered voice.

    He believes that the “filter of fantasy” can help put people at ease and aid recognition of their problems, and he’s hoping that the trial results will confirm this theory.

    From a steady and trustworthy “maternal energy” figure who brandishes an assault rifle, to an emotionally perceptive “prince-like” male who wears a cape, six different characters were created specifically for the study.

    Each is based on a particular archetype in Japanese manga, with trial participants given freedom to choose among them.

    “I tried to infuse each character with a specific mental struggle. One character is called Kuroto Nagi. She’s affected by bipolar personality traits,” Panto said.

    Others struggle with post-traumatic stress disorder or anxiety disorders, or experience problems related to alcohol use.

    But the idea is for the avatars to be “fun”, Panto explained, and although the psychologist tells the story of their character at the start of the session, they were instructed not to make mental health issues too obvious.

    One 24-year-old trial participant explained how they had been drawn to the study by a description of one of the characters, who was said to be “searching for true strength”.

    That “made me feel like it might help me get closer to the answer to my own problems,” said the participant, an anime fan and game developer who could not be identified by name under the rules of the trial.

    Kenya has seen a growing love for anime, with fans flocking to cinemas in 2025 to watch Demon Slayer: Infinity Castle.

    ‘Will to live’

    The phase-one trial — which tracked participants’ heart rates and sleep, is primarily to test whether anime therapy is feasible and if this kind of treatment can reduce symptoms of depression.

    Panto is also considering whether the therapy could be delivered using artificial intelligence, without the medium of a real psychologist.

    The research project is one of many trying to find solutions to mental health challenges in Japan, including “ikizurasa”, a term for people who find it “difficult to live, difficult to survive in society”, said Mio Ishii, an assistant professor helping lead the project.

    “There are many young people who cannot go to school or continue working. So, our scope is to give them… new choices to recover from their difficulties,” she said, adding that there was still huge stigma in Japan attached to seeking help.

    As of 2022, only six per cent of people in Japan had used psychological counselling for mental health problems, according to data cited on the World Economic Forum website. The rate was much higher in Europe and the United States.

    Jesus Maya, who specialises in family therapy at the University of Seville and is not involved in the trial, said the use of anime during sessions can be “really useful”.

    “It can facilitate the expression of emotions… (and) identification and communication between the patient and the therapist,” he said.

    Under the rules of the study, the 24-year-old trial participant — whose current favourite anime series include “The End of Evangelion” and “Girls Band Cry” — could not comment on the trial itself.

    But they said anime had given them the “will to live, seeing characters who are full of life as they work hard toward their dreams”.

    Ishii hopes the therapy could help people of all ages across the world.

    “Because usually people have stigmas and psychological barriers to ask for help about their mental health,” she said. “But anime or technology can decrease them.”

  • Colbert hosts ‘Late Night’ for the last time on Thursday

    Colbert hosts ‘Late Night’ for the last time on Thursday

    “The Late Show” frontman Stephen Colbert will host the final edition of the 33-year-old US cultural institution on Thursday night, after it was cancelled by CBS as the network courted President Donald Trump.

    The show, which Colbert has hosted since 2015, was axed after he mocked the broadcaster for a $16 million settlement with Trump for allegedly “maliciously” editing an interview with his Democratic election rival Kamala Harris.

    Colbert called it a “big fat bribe.”

    CBS has insisted the decision to cancel “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” the ratings leader in the time slot, was purely financial, and that it was a coincidence the move came as CBS parent company Paramount lobbied for government approval of its $8.4 billion merger with Skydance Media.

    Around that time, CBS brought in Bari Weiss, a right-wing journalist without significant TV experience, to run its news division.

    In the weeks leading to Thursday’s curtain call, 62-year-old Colbert has at times cut a subdued figure, lacking some of his usual cheerful flair.

    “Sometimes you only truly know how much you love something when you get a sense you might be losing it,” Colbert said while accepting an Emmy award last year.

    Colbert was clearly moved when he was joined in his studio by fellow late-night hosts Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, Seth Meyers and John Oliver, who paid tribute in the penultimate week.

    Kimmel was briefly taken off the air in September 2025 by his network, ABC, after complaints about a remark he made over the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

    Trump has repeatedly attacked the media and press freedom since returning to office, using lawsuits and regulatory threats to retaliate for unflattering news coverage and jokes.

    The US president has long been a fierce critic of late-night talk show hosts and their jabs at him. Trump has called Colbert a “pathetic trainwreck” who should be “put to sleep.”

    One late-night host who did not join the gathering of funnymen who pillory the US president night after night was Greg Gutfeld, host of “Gutfeld!” on Fox News, the network popular with conservatives.

    Asked in November about both the cancellation and Kimmel’s suspension, Gutfeld said, “Why did it take so long?”

    ‘Can’t take a man’s voice’

    Colbert made his name playing a fictitious version of himself, embodying the type of conservative blowhard beloved by Fox News viewers, and derided by the left.

    He first played the sharp-suited but dim-witted character on “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” before getting a spin-off, “The Colbert Report.”

    Colbert ascended to the pinnacle of US late-night TV when he was named host of the CBS flagship, shedding the character and employing his own voice.

    In the weeks leading to Thursday, Colbert auctioned off a raft of props and costumes featured on the show, as well as pieces of the set, including a giant illuminated sign. Proceeds will go to World Central Kitchen.

    Colbert has been coy about his next steps but announced he will be a writer on a forthcoming “Lord of the Rings” movie, as well as lying down and taking a breather.

    Details of the last broadcast were scant, with show insiders tight-lipped when contacted by AFP.

    One guest has eluded Colbert: the pope. The host, a devout Catholic, has called the pontiff his “white whale.”

    While an impromptu trip to New York seems unlikely, Pope Leo XIV’s public schedule is clear on May 21.

    Colbert’s fellow late-night hosts were all due to air reruns on Thursday out of respect for Colbert’s swansong.

    And the theme of the after-party? “Fired and festive!”

    Ahead of the final show, Colbert brought back former “Late Show” host David Letterman who steered the ship from 1993 until 2015.

    The pair ascended to the roof of the show’s Ed Sullivan Theatre to throw furniture at a giant logo of CBS, describing it as “wanton destruction of CBS property.”

    “You can take a man’s show,” said Letterman. “You can’t take a man’s voice.”