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PHOTOS: Simi And Adekunle Gold Welcome Their Second Child

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Nigerian singer Simi has announced the birth of her second child with her husband, Adekunle Gold.

The singer shared the news on Instagram, posting a simple message that read: “+1 3.10.26 God bless my little family #mommyof2.”

The announcement was accompanied by congratulations from fans and fellow celebrities.

Simi and Adekunle Gold got married in 2019 and are already parents to a daughter, Adejare, who was born in 2020.

The couple had earlier revealed they were expecting a child through Adekunle Gold’s music video for My Love is the Same.

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The video, released on Wednesday, December 24, served as a visual for one of the tracks on his sixth studio album, Fuji.

Over the years, Simi and Adekunle Gold have maintained a relatively private but admired relationship, occasionally sharing moments from their family life with the public.

Their bond has also extended into their music, with both artistes collaborating on several songs.

The arrival of their second child marks a new chapter for the couple, who are regarded as one of the most prominent pairs in Nigeria’s music industry.

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Although the singer did not disclose further details about the baby, including the name or gender, her announcement has been met with congratulatory messages online.

Although there were earlier rumours that the couple had welcomed twins this year, Simi’s latest post appears to clarify that they only had their child on March 10, 2026.

For now, the couple has not released any additional information, but the news of the birth has already become one of the most talked-about moments among fans and within the Nigerian entertainment scene.

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Seun Kuti narrates how father contracted HIV from one of his wives

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Afrobeat musician Seun Kuti has revealed that his late father, legendary musician Fela Kuti, contracted HIV from one of his wives. Speaking during a recent Instagram livestream, Seun Kuti dismissed claims suggesting that Fela transmitted the virus to his partners.

Seun Kuti explained that Fela, known for his unconventional lifestyle, did not restrict his wives from having relationships with other men.

He described this as one of his father’s major mistakes, highlighting the personal consequences of Fela’s openness. “I saw a video of a woman online questioning why people continue to praise Fela’s legacy despite claims that he infected women with HIV,” Kuti said.

“If Fela had adhered to traditional norms, he might still be alive. Fela allowed his wives freedom in their relationships as he exercised his own freedom, but he expected they not bring other men into his home.”

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Kuti further emphasized that his father remained a figure aligned with human values, noting that mistakes were part of being human. “Nobody is perfect. Everybody makes mistakes, but Fela was a man who stood on the side of humanity,” he concluded.

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Popular Actress Dies At 66 After Battling Cancer

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Dee Freeman, an actress best known for starring in The Young and the Restless and Sistas, has died.

She was 66.

The actress died following a stage 4 lung cancer diagnosis, her publicist Desirae L. Benson said in a statement.

Freeman’s family confirmed her death in a post on her Instagram.

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“On behalf of her family, it is with deepest sadness that we share this update with you. Dee passed away peacefully on April 2, after a brave fight with cancer,” the family captioned a photo of the actress.

“Thank you to everyone who supported Dee during her battle. It blew her away to know how many people cared about her and were pulling for her,” the caption continued.

“ We know Dee is up there in heaven, being the force of nature she always was. Now she’s doing it with her angel wings on. Rest in peace, Dee.”

Benson described Freeman as “someone I truly respected and admired” in her statement, while praising the actress’s “strength” amid her cancer battle.

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“Even in the face of stage 4 lung cancer, she showed up with courage and dignity,” Benson wrote. “Dee had a quiet power that commanded respect without ever needing to demand it.

“Her legacy is not just in her work, but in how she made people feel — and that will stay with us forever,” she concluded.

Freeman served six years in the United States Marine Corps before starting a career in acting, appearing in her debut onscreen role in a 1995 episode of the ABC sitcom, Coach, Deadline reported.

The Louisiana-born actress also starred in three episodes of the soap opera,

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The Young and the Restless, in 1997 and 2009, and led the satirical parody show Pretty the Series from 2010 to 2015.

She starred in several other TV shows, including Seinfeld, Rude Awakening, ER, The Hughleys, The X-Files, Dexter, 3rd Rock from the Sun, Do Us Part, Shameless, and NCIS: Los Angeles.

Freeman most recently appeared in the Tyler Perry-directed show Sistas in January.

Her previous onscreen appearance was in a 2022 episode of the TV series Reasonable Doubt.

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Freeman is survived by her two children, Amber and Shane.

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SAD! Popular Actor And Comedian Dies At 42 + Photo

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Alex Duong, a Vietnamese comedian and actor, is dead after he was diagnosed with a rare, aggressive cancer early last year.

His wife confirmed on social media.

“Alex was an incredible husband and father until his very last moment. He fought so hard for a year and never once complained about the pain he was in. The pain I feel now is nothing compared to what he endured,” Christina Duong, the mother of their 5-year-old daughter, Everest, wrote on Facebook.

Born the youngest of six children on March 20, 1984, in Dallas, Duong wound up leaving school to pursue a feature development deal for his screenplay “Enchanted Melody,” but that fell through because of financing. The story was ultimately turned into a stage play and showcased by the East West Players, L.A.’s top theater company for authentic Asian American stories.

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Before his diagnosis, Duong had been set to open on tour for Ronny Chieng — “a big thing in our world,” according to “The Vietnamese” podcast host Kenneth Nguyen — and, after trying his hand at acting since the mid-2000s, had done a three-episode, three-season guest star arc on “Blue Bloods,” playing Sonny Le opposite Donnie Wahlberg’s lead character Danny Reagan. Wahlberg told him he might see work on the “Blue Bloods” spinoff, “Boston Blue.”

“Blue Bloods” writer Van B. Nguyen drew a complex leadership life-arc for Duong’s gang member with a heart of gold. The “Jeff Ross Presents Roast Battle” veteran had decided to turn down one-line roles and roles in which he was playing an Asian stereotype.

His career was taking off after the better part of a decade doing sets at the Comedy Store, where he was the first Vietnamese American person to work as a door guy.

Duong was diagnosed with alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, a rare soft tissue cancer, shortly after the Palisades fire rained ash on his family’s West L.A. apartment in 2025.

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He had a “mental breakdown” over the fires and the destruction they wrought, he said on “The Vietnamese” in February 2025, and had to stop wearing his contacts because a pressure headache was building behind his eyes. It finally localized behind his left eye.

His manager at the Comedy Store pulled him aside and said, “Your left eye looks like it’s about to fall out. You should go home,” Duong told The Times last April. His wife urged him to sign up for medical coverage and go to the emergency room to get checked.

He had been healthy, was nine years sober, and the family hadn’t been able to afford health insurance. “It was easier to pay the fine when you pay your taxes than to pay $12K a year,” he said.

Duong made sure his health coverage had kicked in before getting care. After a week getting steroids and pain medicine at Providence St. John’s Medical Center in Santa Monica, he received the biopsy results: an extremely aggressive malignant mass was blocking blood flow to Duong’s optic nerve.

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Removal of the tumor was scheduled for two months later, so Duong went home to his family for the weekend. By Monday, he was blind in his left eye. He returned to St. John’s and had urgent surgery to remove the mass, but without a promised neuro-ophthalmologist in the room, the comic said on “The Vietnamese,” they didn’t get the entire thing, leaving cancer behind his eye.

Duong said that “out of pure frustration” after 2½ weeks of hospitalization — during which he was “getting fat and missing [his] family” and wasn’t satisfied with his care — he signed himself out of St. John’s and took an Uber to UCLA Medical Center in the middle of the night in search of a specialist. UCLA Health had neuro-ophthalmologists on staff who focus on neurological diseases and other diseases, like Duong’s, that affect the optic nerve. It also had orbital surgeons.

He started chemotherapy soon after the February podcast was recorded and was getting white blood cell injections to help boost his immune system.

A couple of months later, he told The Times, he was $400,000 in medical debt and grateful for the support he and his family were getting from his comedy colleagues. A co-worker of his wife had launched a GoFundMe in February 2025, with donors including businessman, producer, and comic Byron Allen.

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The effort, which is approaching $125,000 in pledges, was originally aimed at helping pay for his care; now it will “help provide stability for Christina and begin building a college fund for Everest — something Alex would have wanted more than anything.”

“I can’t even drive myself to auditions. … Everything I worked for, it’s like, two weeks. Two f— weeks, man. It’s all gone,” he told Nguyen on “The Vietnamese.”

“It was gonna be a good year,” Duong continued as he broke down in tears. “ I knew it was a rough one, because superstition, I’m a Rat, this is the Year of the Snake, it was gonna be a rough one, but … can I just have a cool year where I work? I just want a cool year where I work and I earn a little money and I can take care of my family.”

Being a road comic moves “so fast,” he said, and it’s something a person does solo. “What do I do now?” From the nose down, Duong said, his whole body was fine. But he felt helpless.

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“The doctors — you know, we’re in 2025. Hopefully they’re going to take some swings,” he said. “I’ve been taking swings my whole frigging life.”

The mass behind his eyeball grew into his nasal cavity and the side of his neck, he told The Times. Extremely risky orbital reconstruction surgery was a possibility, along with a donor nerve, or a full donor eye. He didn’t know if he would ever recover his sight.

Doctors told him that for the first time in his life, he had to stop helping others and focus on helping himself. “It’s the most maddening thing,” he told Nguyen.

An accident with a cup of coffee in February 2025 morning had him feeling like he should check into a psych facility. “I’m not safe around anybody. I can’t even pass a cup of scalding hot coffee to my wife without spilling it on the dog. … I don’t trust myself around anybody anymore.”

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But Duong still had his sense of humor, he told Nguyen, and the support of his friends and family.

“Comedians always have each other’s backs when times are s—,” he told The Times last year. “We know how hard it is to pine and struggle and scrape by in this lifestyle, just so we can do these jokes and keep improving. It’s a beautiful thing to see in this world; it really is.”

He added: “I don’t want to be strong! I just want to go tell my d— jokes, make people laugh and hang out with my family.”

After her husband’s death, Christina Duong wrote on Facebook, “Through it all, he kept a smile on his face and always reassured us that he would be okay. He loved Everest so deeply. Even in moments of delirium, he remembered her and stayed calm for her.

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He was such a strong fighter, but this past week was simply too much for his body to bear. I find comfort in knowing he is no longer in pain. He passed peacefully with us by his side. I will never forget that moment.”

He was alert enough the night before his death to say goodbye to his daughter.

A memorial service will be held at noon on April 17 at Hollywood Forever Cemetery, according to an update on his GoFundMe, with “all who knew and loved Alex … welcome to come together to celebrate his life, his light, and the incredible impact he had on so many.”

“Thank you for the outpouring of love and support during this difficult time,” Christina Duong wrote on Facebook.

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“Please keep our family in your prayers. I love you so much, Alex. Until we meet again.”

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