Magazines
Story time: Turning grief into purpose – Newspaper
The last three years have been very challenging for me, as I faced the biggest loss of my life. The things I used to love, the dreams I had and the confidence I had in myself, all seemed to end. I used to think that I would not be able to survive this loss and that sooner or later I would give up.
But I was wrong. Not only did I survive, but I also turned that loss into my biggest strength. I learnt how to live with the loss, and today I am proud that I did not give up on myself. Instead, I made myself stronger and capable of making my family happy and proud of me.
My name is Raiha. Three years ago, I lost my father in a car accident. That day was the darkest day of my life, and I don’t think any other day will ever be worse than that. The moment I heard the news of my father’s death, I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. It felt like a cruel joke.
How could my father leave me alone? What about the plans we had? What about the dreams he had for me?
Then all the time we had spent together started flashing before my eyes, like an infinite number of stars scattered across the sky. That was the day I almost gave up on my dreams. Why should I keep chasing dreams when the person who had always chased them with me was no longer there? So, I let them go.
My father’s dream for me was to become a doctor. I was only a few steps away from achieving that dream when he left me. So what was the point of continuing? That year, I not only gave up my dream but also lost hope, love and my smile. I isolated myself in my room. I stopped talking to my family and friends because I was completely broken by that loss — until my teacher came to meet me at our house.
Miss Hina was one of my college teachers. She was very dear to me and she loved me like a mother because she was also an old friend of my mother. When all my hopes were lost, she came like a ray of light.
She told me that although my father had left this world too early, his hopes were still alive, breathing within me. At that moment, I realised that my family still needed me, my mother and my siblings. I also realised that I still had to fulfil my father’s wish of me becoming a doctor. He would see me in a white coat through my eyes.
I made up my mind to work hard and now I am officially a doctor. I still feel the void of losing my father, but I am grateful that I did not give up, even though I almost squandered one precious year. The realisation dawned on me just in time. Now I feel relieved that I have lived up to my father’s dream and that I can see my family happy and proud of me.
This world is full of ups and downs, happiness and sadness, loss and gain. But the one who can withstand difficulties with strength is the one who truly grows, because after every hardship there is ease. We must believe in these words and transform our difficulties into strength and motivation.
Published in Dawn, Young World, March 19th, 2026
Magazines
Story time: The woman in the red dress – Newspaper
It was early one Saturday morning, and my mother had forced me to go to school to take part in the upcoming mathematics competition. I lazily stepped out of bed and unwillingly got ready for school.
“The school bus doesn’t come on Saturdays, dear, and your father has already gone to work, so you will have to walk to school,” my mum said, almost shouting from the kitchen.
“Great news! Now I have to leave for school 30 minutes early!” I grumbled.
After getting ready, I left for school reluctantly. I yawned as I walked along the footpath. It was a chilly, misty morning. I didn’t realise how long I had been walking because my eyes were so heavy. I had stayed up very late the night before, doom-scrolling.
I didn’t even notice when I tripped over a rock and almost fell. That was when I realised I had been walking in the wrong direction! I had never been there before. The footpath was unpaved, the bushes were untrimmed and there were bugs, and I guess all kinds of insects, everywhere. I looked around and realised I wasn’t the only one on the path.
There was a woman some distance away from me. She was wearing a long, grungy red dress and walking strangely. She seemed to be limping and her hair was messy. I tried not to think much of it, but inside, it terrified me. Something felt wrong.
She suddenly turned and looked at me. She had an ugly, evil smile that made my blood run cold. I tried to take a different path, but there wasn’t one. There was just me and the woman, no one else. Besides, this was not the road to my school!
I ran back. While running, my heart was pounding so fast that I felt it would burst out of my chest. I looked back and saw that she was running after me with the same eerie smile.
I ran faster. In the distance, I saw a signal and a few people standing there. I ran even faster. Then I looked back again and saw that there was no one following me. As I breathed a sigh of relief and turned towards the signal, she was suddenly right there in front of me. I screamed and fainted!
A few minutes later, someone woke me up. I was lying on the footpath and a kind old lady was asking me questions which I couldn’t understand at first.
After a few moments of trying to gather myself, I looked around, but there was no trace of the woman in the red dress.
I thanked the old lady and the people around me, and sprinted to school.
A lot had happened that day. I tried to convince myself that it had all been just a bad dream. I couldn’t focus on the maths quiz or anything, to be honest.
The horror stayed inside me.
I wanted to share it with someone — but who would have believed me?
Published in Dawn, Young World, March 19th, 2026
Magazines
VIRAL: UNDERSTANDING LEVERAGE – Newspaper
When Snoop Dogg swaggered into Swansea wearing a Swansea City hoodie and a beanie, it felt surreal. The American rapper took his seat at the Swansea.com Stadium and, for a moment, Welsh football tilted slightly off its axis.
Far from being incidental, it was a calculated public relations strategy — and a smart one. His arrival offers a revealing lesson in sports branding, celebrity capital and the globalisation of lower-league football.
Snoop Dogg’s minority investment in Swansea City, announced in July 2025, triggered an immediate surge of interest in a Championship club that has struggled for visibility since relegation from the Premier League in 2018. Swansea have spent years trying to stabilise themselves financially and culturally outside the glare of the top flight.
The club’s chief executive, Tom Gorringe, has been candid about these constraints. Swansea needed fresh revenue streams and renewed attention. Snoop’s social media reach — more than 100 million followers across platforms, including more than 88.5 million on Instagram — offered exactly that.
Rapper Snoop Dogg’s minority investment in Swansea City triggered an immediate surge of interest in the Welsh football club that has struggled for visibility. This is why it matters
That kind of reach acts as a multiplier. Every post, every appearance, exposes the club to audiences traditional marketing budgets could never reach. Nowhere is that more valuable than in the US, a market long targeted by British clubs but notoriously difficult for smaller sides to penetrate in any meaningful way.
The effect was almost immediate. Ticket demand spiked ahead of Swansea’s match against Preston on February 24, the first widely publicised fixture attended by Snoop. The club opened additional sections of the ground to accommodate a crowd of 20,233. This was an unprecedented move in recent years. What would normally have been a modest second-tier fixture, sold out. It became one of the largest attendances in recent Swansea history.
Celebrity endorsements in sport are nothing new. Yet, the pairing of a West Coast rapper with a West Wales Championship club is less random than it first appears. Snoop’s public persona dovetails neatly with Swansea’s self-image. He has described the city as “proud”, “working class” and “an underdog that bites back, just like me.”
That underdog identity carries weight in Welsh sport. Whether in football or rugby, Wales often frames itself as resilient, defiant and collectively driven when competing against wealthier or more populous opponents. The emotional logic fits. And in modern sporting PR, emotional authenticity matters more than cynical brand alignment.
There is another advantage. Snoop’s presence humanises the club’s ownership structure. Since November 2024, following a takeover, Swansea’s central decision-makers have been two American businessmen. For many supporters, overseas ownership can feel distant and abstract. A globally recognised cultural figure who turns up at games, posts enthusiastically and participates in club promotions offers something more tangible.
No magic bullet
Still, this is no magic bullet. Snoop Dogg’s investment is relatively modest. Swansea remain bound by financial regulations and the economic realities of the Championship. Celebrity attention can amplify a brand, but it cannot increase recruitment budgets or guarantee promotion. If results falter, media interest will cool.
Within those limits, however, Swansea appear to be maximising what celebrity PR can offer. The club is not claiming that Snoop will transform its fortunes overnight. Instead, it is treating his global cultural capital as a strategic asset in an unequal league ecosystem where visibility itself has value.
His involvement also reflects a broader shift in how football clubs operate. Increasingly, they exist at the intersection of sport, entertainment and global media. Ownership is no longer just about balance sheets. It shapes narrative, perception and the way fandom itself is constructed.
In that sense, Swansea are doing more than enjoying a surreal headline. They are experimenting with identity. They are attempting to reposition themselves within a crowded, rapidly evolving football mediascape.
It is also telling that the club’s other celebrity co-owners, American lifestyle personality Martha Stewart and Croatian footballer Luka Modrić, have not generated similar column inches. Clearly, not all celebrities are equal.
Swansea City, to their credit, seem to understand where the real leverage lies. By directing the PR spotlight squarely at Snoop Dogg, they have recognised that brand alignment works best when it feels culturally coherent. In football, as on the pitch, timing and positioning matter. Get them right, and even a Championship club can land a global headline.
The writer is Senior Lecturer in Sports Communication and Public Relations at Swansea University in the UK
Republished from The Conversation
Published in Dawn, ICON, March 19th, 2026
Magazines
THE WATCHLIST: FROM BAKER STREET TO BALLROOMS – Newspaper
With Eid holidays and March 23 joining up to provide a long weekend, these are some of the trending shows to catch up on after the guests leave…
Young Sherlock (Amazon Prime, 2026)
At the time of writing this review, Young Sherlock was trending at #2 on Amazon Prime in Pakistan. This limited series is a stylish origin story that imagines the legendary detective Sherlock Holmes long before he becomes the cool, calculating mastermind of Baker Street we all know.
Set in 1870s Oxford, the series follows a rebellious 19-year-old Sherlock (Hero Fiennes Tiffin), who finds himself entangled in a murder mystery that threatens his freedom. As he investigates it further, his raw instincts and budding deductive skills slowly begin to resemble the genius investigator readers know from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s original Sherlock Holmes books.
Produced by Guy Ritchie, the eight-episode series mixes Victorian intrigue with fast-paced action and a lot of beautifully filmed drama. We see how Holmes forms an uneasy friendship with a young James Moriarty, who we know is later to become a rival — and villain — who will define his future. It is a trope borrowed from other stories adapted for the big screen, such as the friendship and rivalry between Albus Dumbledore and Gellert Grindelwald in the Fantastic Beasts series.
From the rebellious origins of Sherlock Holmes to prehistoric creatures brought back to life and the latest heartbreak in the Regency era universe, this week’s streaming Eid watchlist offers spectacle, intrigue and romance…
This version of Sherlock is inspired by the Young Sherlock Holmes novels by Andrew Lane, although viewers of the show have complained that the portrayal of Holmes strays too far from the character portrayed in Doyle’s books. However, the show’s blend of mystery, adventure and character-building makes it an entertaining look at how a brilliant but reckless teenager begins his transformation into the world’s greatest detective.
Young Sherlock is an entertaining watch, especially with the family. We are in the age of action-heavy adaptations and, in that department, Young Sherlock does not disappoint.
The Dinosaurs (Netflix, 2026)
From the director of the iconic Jurassic Park (1993), Steven Spielberg, The Dinosaurs on Netflix is a visually spectacular four-part docuseries that brings the prehistoric world roaring back to life.
Narrated in the unmistakable voice of Morgan Freeman and executive-produced by Spielberg, the series traces the rise and fall of dinosaurs across roughly 170 million years — from their small beginnings in the Triassic era to their dramatic extinction 66 million years ago.
Using cutting-edge CGI, the show recreates ancient ecosystems populated by creatures both iconic and obscure, from the towering Tyrannosaurus rex and armoured Ankylosaurus to early proto-dinosaurs like Marasuchus. I was completely taken aback by how Spielberg and his team managed to weave together an engaging narrative, making us sympathise with the dinosaurs, beings that existed millions of years ago.
Each episode unfolds like a prehistoric drama: predators stalk through dense jungles, herds migrate across volcanic plains and fragile species evolve in a rapidly changing world.
What makes the series engaging is its storytelling: rather than simply listing facts, it follows dramatic moments of migration, hunting and survival, almost like a wildlife film set in deep time. Dinosaurs ruled Earth for over 165 million years, far longer than humans have existed. Had it not been for the asteroid that hit the Earth, wiping them out, they would still be here today. The Earth was their planet.
The Dinosaurs is an epic, cinematic reminder of how strange, violent and awe-inspiring our planet once was.
Bridgerton, Season 4 (Netflix, 2026)
The latest season of Bridgerton on Netflix is dripping with scandal, secrets and swoon-worthy romance — exactly the kind Lady Whistledown would approve of — and also heartbreak.
Season Four finally shines the spotlight on free-spirited artist Benedict Bridgerton (Luke Thompson), whose world turns upside down when he meets the mysterious “Lady in Silver” at a dazzling masquerade ball. The woman behind the mask is Sophie Baek, played by breakout newcomer Yerin Ha, whose Cinderella-like story quickly becomes the talk of the “ton”.
But the real gossip surrounds one of the season’s deliciously formidable newcomers: Katie Leung. Fans of the Harry Potter films will recognise her as Cho Chang — Potter’s love interest, at least for a bit. (It’s hard to believe so much time has passed since the Harry Potter films came out!) In Bridgerton, Leung plays the icy and calculating Lady Araminta Gun and fans online have been buzzing about her scene-stealing performance. According to Leung’s interviews, she absolutely loved playing the villain and that “it came surprisingly naturally.”
One of the most devastating moments in Season Four is spoiler alert the sudden loss of John Stirling (Victor Alli), although readers of the Bridgerton books would not be surprised by this. John’s storyline and, in particular, his loving relationship with Francesca Bridgerton (Hannah Dodd), had become a fan favourite for its tenderness and sincerity. How the series shows the loss is through muted scenes of grief and lingering silences. Francesca’s heartbreak is especially moving, as the loss reshapes her journey and leaves one reflecting on how fragile happiness can be, even in a story built around love.
One of the critiques that the show has received online is that, while the season has cameo appearances by Anthony Bridgerton (Johnathon Bailey) and his wife Kate Sharma (Simone Ashely) at Anthony’s wedding and John’s funeral, we haven’t seen the eldest daughter Daphne (Phoebe Dynevor) or her husband, the Duke of Hastings (Regé-Jean Page), since they appeared in the first season (although there was a brief appearance of Dynevor in Season Two). Dynevor has given interviews in which they have said they won’t just return for a quick cameo, but rather only when they are offered meatier roles.
Still, it’s just so unrealistic that Daphne wouldn’t attend the wedding of at least three of her siblings and the death of her brother-in-law (Seasons Three and Four). That’s a glaring hole in the filmed Bridgerton universe that is hard to overlook.
The series, nevertheless, remains an entertaining watch, with the internet already gifting us memes and reels from this season. Early reactions praised the chemistry between Thompson and Ha, while social media was abuzz with Leung’s deliciously villainous turn.
The writer is a former member of staff. She can be reached atsyed.madeeha@gmail.com
Published in Dawn, ICON, March 19th, 2026
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