Satirical street art mural depicting political figures on a brick wall.

Satire Already Brewed, Pull Up A Chair

About The Brewed Satire

I have been watching Ghana for a long time.
Not from a distance — not from a think tank or a newsroom or an office with a view of somewhere important. From inside it. From the trotro, from the compound house, from the living room where the family assembles on a settled evening and the television is on and nobody is surprised by what is about to happen because what is about to happen has always been the same thing.
I have been watching the gap.
The gap between the official version of Ghana and the Ghana that actually exists. Between the announcement and the reality. Between what is said from the podium and what is felt at the fuel pump, at the hospital counter, at the government office where someone tells you to come back tomorrow for the fourteenth consecutive tomorrow. Between the prophecy and the bill that arrives anyway. Between the formula and the audience that quietly stopped watching.
That gap has been there my entire conscious life. It did not close. It did not even narrow. It simply kept producing material.
At some point I stopped waiting for someone else to say it and started saying it myself.

THE BREWED SATIRE

I watch the gap between how Ghana is announced and how Ghana is lived. Then I write about it. That is the whole job.

Samuel klu, Founder

What This Site Covers

Everything that lives inside the gap.

The politicians who announce things. The prophets who promise things. The film industry that has been telling the same story for thirty years and calling it a different film. The global powers that make decisions and send Ghana the invoice. The democracy that is beautiful from a sufficient distance and peeling at close range. The ordinary Ghanaian — overworked, underpaid, silently anonymous, running on a fuel called resilience that nobody has ever bothered to price correctly because it has always been available for free.

Politics. Society. Entertainment. Sport. Geopolitics. The full texture of what it means to be Ghanaian in the 21st century — in Ghana and in the diaspora — examined through the only lens that has ever done it full justice.

Satire sharp enough to cut through every absurdity.

Brewed sharp. Served hot.


At The Brewed Satire, we engage with serious topics by laughing at them.

family laughing

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