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No laughing matter: Eric Omondi, the activist

Comedian Eric Omondi (in maroon hair ) and muscle men demonstrate on the high cost of living outside Parliament buildings before they were dispersed by Police. February 21, 2023 (Elvis Ogina, Standard)

Omondi has an impressive following of over four million on Instagram, and 2.3 million on Facebook.

He has grown through the ranks as a well-known comedian from his days in the early 2000s where he was a fan favourite on Churchill Live comedy show.

"He left Churchill to do his own show dubbed Hawayuni that aired in KTN, but it was short lived. He also did 'Somewhere in Africa' and 'Untamed'," a biography of the comedian reads in part.

The report says that Omondi has over the past few years shifted his focus to YouTube and social media, where he airs his comical skits, shows and adventures.

In 2020, the comedian launched a show called Wife Material, which showed women battling it out for his affection- and it quickly turned controversial.

The funnyman went back and forth with then Kenya Film and Classification Board CEO Ezekiel Mutua, who ultimately stopped the show from running.

Omondi was arrested over the show's content, which Mutua termed as not morally right.

In 2021, the comedian apologized to KFCB for the content on Wife Material.

Since then, it has been a shift for Omondi, who has not stopped being funny, but has begun to talk about much more serious things on his platforms.

When his fiance, Lynn suffered a miscarriage late last year, the comedian spoke out about what women go through, and the support that they need.
"I posted that video very intentionally and cautiously," he said in an interview, explaining why he had publicized the loss they suffered on social media.

"Sometimes in life, people are supposed to be given perspective. Wasikuwe wanaskia tu. Because there are times when we don't appreciate each other, mostly our mothers and women.

He added: never joke about a woman or a mother losing their child.

The comedian then began 2023 on a seemingly re-energized note, speaking about social issues and setting up the demonstrations we have seen so far.

In February, he tagged along a group of men and the group took to the CBD, carrying a banner labelled "Unga Juu! Mafuta Juu".

The group called out the rising cost of essential goods.

Soon after, he posted a symbolic image, one of hands breaking free from a chain.

"There is an old system that binds the youth of Nation in poverty. There is a pattern of oppression that enslaves generation after generation of Kenyans," Omondi wrote that month.

"This is the vicious cycle that we intend to break. This is the Pattern that we must and we will break! Kenyans have continually been resilient in the face of adversity and economic oppression government after government, leader after leader but anything that has a start must have an end."