
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts
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Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best NKATA: Dots of Thoughts episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to NKATA: Dots of Thoughts for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite NKATA: Dots of Thoughts episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

EP03: Morrison's Black Book, Chimurenga's Festac '77 – "Unwritable Stories" in a Book Form
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts
04/29/20 • 36 min
In Episode 3 of Dots of Thoughts (DoT), Emeka Okereke reflects on a book which preoccupied him of late: Festac ‘77. This book, “decomposed, an-arranged and reproduced” by Chimurenga the Cape-Town based Pan African art space/publishers, is a compilation of the 2nd World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture which took place in Nigeria, in 1977. It was an epic event that Ntone Edjabe, founder of Chimurenga, placed on the same historical pedestal as the Great Pyramid. The Festival brought together some 30,000 black artists and scholars from 56 different countries of Africa and the Diaspora to present, converse and debate African/black art and ideologies.
Emeka Okereke (in Berlin) connected with Ntone Edjabe (in Cape Town) via a phone call to discuss the intentions, thought processes and conceptual positions which necessitated the book. Okereke suggested a descriptive premise as “anti-book” evidenced in the book’s unconventional form-content relation. Edjabe expanded on the analogy by referencing Toni Morrison’s Black Book as a significant source of inspiration. Like Morrison’s Black Book, Festac ‘77 set out with the audacious goal to put in book form an “unwritable history and story”. The foremost aim was to “experiment with new forms of writing that can capture the complexity, the epic scale of an event such as Festac ‘77.” A book that would account for the opacity, incomprehensibility, inconsistencies that are the crossroads of any foreseeable (African) unity.
“The experiment was not to write a book about Festac. The experiment was to write a book through Festac”, Edjabe inferred.
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Listen on: nkatapodcast.com, Apple Podcast, Spotify, TuneIn and more.
Want to become one of the foundational supporters of Nkata Podcast Station, see our Patreon page: nkatapodcast/patreon
Hi, amazing listeners! Emeka Okereke here. I am the founder and host of this show. If you’ve enjoyed the stories, insights, and creativity we bring to this podcast series, I invite you to join my Patreon community at patreon.com/EmekaOkereke. 🎉
By becoming a patron, you’ll gain exclusive access to my artistic world, including:
• Behind-the-scenes content from my photography projects.
• Sneak peeks of upcoming films, vlogs, and video podcasts.
• Exclusive DJ playlists curated just for you.
• Bonus podcast episodes and a chance to contribute to future topics.
Whether you’re a fan of the podcast, my visual storytelling, or simply love art and creativity, there’s a tier for you. Your support helps me continue creating high-quality content, and it truly means the world to me.
Thank you for listening. Follow Nkata Podcast Station on Instagram @nkatapodcast and Twitter.
See the website for extensive materials: nkatapodcast.com

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EP09: Time does not pass. We, on the other hand, pass through it – and make forms of it (Part 2) with Jude Anogwih
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts
12/28/20 • 53 min
"I am looking at Time as an element of art, an element of expression not as a clock or calendar. I am looking at the capacity you have as an individual to define a progression of your existence and your event."
In this episode, which continues our reflection on Time, Emeka Okereke is in conversation with Jude Anogwih. It opens with Anogwih's proposition to think of Time as an element, an interactive material for expression and agency. From here on, the conversation takes the form of open-ended questions serving to broaden horizons, while acting as mirrors that do not only reflect ourselves to us but calls for the inclusion of the reflection of others into our views of the future.
While the aim is to discuss Time beyond its quantifiable entrapping, there are few pointers in the conversation which serve as support structures for thoughts explored:
"The concept of difference, of becoming of multiplicity, of diversity, of equity – these are things that are resonating today. How do we create a society that reflects all and not one?"
"I am always reluctant [to align with] the idea of "the future". But I am interested in the idea of "future generations" because these are more of minds. How do we shape minds that will understand and accept the dynamics and changes of Time?"
"Sometimes, we look at the future from our individual myopic reflection; we are not asking ourselves: how do we bring in the reflection of others into that future?"
"To understand and comment on Time is like trying to embrace the sea or trying to give a full hug to the ocean."
"There is a lot we are rethinking: the concept of difference, but also the whole idea of becoming".
"This different interactive concept of Time is what I, as an
artist, look at. The dynamics of it all; how it defines today, and now and, possibly, the future we are trying to shape."
How do we accept what we are not familiar with?"
"How do we live and thrive in the unprecedented?"
"How do we create this amazing flower of sadness that will help others to be hopeful, and remind me of where I was and what I want myself to experience next?
Listen to the full episode on: https://nkatapodcast.com/show/dot
Also available on Apple Podcast, Spotify, Google Podcast, Deezer, Overcast, and more.
Hi, amazing listeners! Emeka Okereke here. I am the founder and host of this show. If you’ve enjoyed the stories, insights, and creativity we bring to this podcast series, I invite you to join my Patreon community at patreon.com/EmekaOkereke. 🎉
By becoming a patron, you’ll gain exclusive access to my artistic world, including:
• Behind-the-scenes content from my photography projects.
• Sneak peeks of upcoming films, vlogs, and video podcasts.
• Exclusive DJ playlists curated just for you.
• Bonus podcast episodes and a chance to contribute to future topics.
Whether you’re a fan of the podcast, my visual storytelling, or simply love art and creativity, there’s a tier for you. Your support helps me continue creating high-quality content, and it truly means the world to me.
Thank you for listening. Follow Nkata Podcast Station on Instagram @nkatapodcast and Twitter.
See the website for extensive materials: nkatapodcast.com

EP02: Neukölln to Bariga from a Bird's View
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts
04/17/20 • 61 min
Features: Innocent Ekejiuba /Oladimeji Olasoju /Ade Bantu (Lagos, Nigeria)
Host: Emeka Okereke (Berlin, Germany).
Episode two of DoT is an extension of thoughts explored in episode one. This time, Emeka Okereke connects with Innocent Ekejiuba and Oladimeji Olasoju, in Bariga Lagos – Nigeria. They conversed about the state of things with regards to the present situation. They offered remarkable views, garnished with pointed anecdotes (contradictions, grey areas, “politricks”), of how the everyday person of Lagos, and specifically, Bariga are dealing with the realities imposed on them by the lockdown.
“Many people consider themselves as part of the “Essential Services” category because, essentially, that’s what they are to their family and loved ones”, Innocent inferred. While Oladimeji pointed out that no one has yet received any welfare benefits from the government, he was quick to note that the situation has encouraged acts of sharing, kindness, generosity and togetherness amongst neighbours. The masses, churches, and the private sector – not the government – are the real mitigators of this crisis.
The entire episode is backdropped by “Disrupt the Program”, the new single from the Nigerian band, Bantu, led by the Nigerian-German musician, Ade Bantu. The song is a vehement rebuke of the government – calling out its ineptitude and abject disregard for the plight of the masses while imploring the people to do more than be social media protesters.
Ade would further expand on the motivation behind the realisation of the song; why he chose to make its video in Bariga; the urgency from which this song, brimming with a Fela-Kuti intensity, emanated.
What do you make of the different points raised in the conversation?
Leave a comment on the episode in your preferred platform of listening. Selected comments will be addressed in subsequent episodes.
Hi, amazing listeners! Emeka Okereke here. I am the founder and host of this show. If you’ve enjoyed the stories, insights, and creativity we bring to this podcast series, I invite you to join my Patreon community at patreon.com/EmekaOkereke. 🎉
By becoming a patron, you’ll gain exclusive access to my artistic world, including:
• Behind-the-scenes content from my photography projects.
• Sneak peeks of upcoming films, vlogs, and video podcasts.
• Exclusive DJ playlists curated just for you.
• Bonus podcast episodes and a chance to contribute to future topics.
Whether you’re a fan of the podcast, my visual storytelling, or simply love art and creativity, there’s a tier for you. Your support helps me continue creating high-quality content, and it truly means the world to me.
Thank you for listening. Follow Nkata Podcast Station on Instagram @nkatapodcast and Twitter.
See the website for extensive materials: nkatapodcast.com

EP01: Social Distancing and Its Sides of The Coin
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts
04/07/20 • 31 min
This debut episode of Dots of Thoughts takes as a prompt an essay I wrote in reference to the notion of social distancing and its many undertones especially in the context of Berlin, Europe where I am currently observing the lockdown. Invited to join the conversation, through a phone call, is Mathangi Krishnamurthy, a colleague and a dear friend based in Chennai, South of India. We ruminated on the nature of social distancing in a densely populated city such as Chennai; a city where tactile communal interaction is not only important but central to existence. How are people making sense of the viability of social distancing? What does it mean beyond the “one-line mantra for the entire world” as she calls it? How is social distancing understood across lines of class and privilege?
What do we do with our time now that we have been forced, albeit for a few weeks, to live in it in ways contrary to our habitual routine?
Furthermore, will the world grasp the most needful lesson this crisis presents to us?
Join the conversation by leaving a comment on the episode in their preferred platform of listening. Selected comments will be addressed in a subsequent episode.
Listen to the podcast on our website, nkatapodcast.com. Also available on Apple podcast, Spotify, Google Podcast, Stitcher, Overcast and more.
To read the essay from which this conversation sprang, see here
Emeka Okereke
Hi, amazing listeners! Emeka Okereke here. I am the founder and host of this show. If you’ve enjoyed the stories, insights, and creativity we bring to this podcast series, I invite you to join my Patreon community at patreon.com/EmekaOkereke. 🎉
By becoming a patron, you’ll gain exclusive access to my artistic world, including:
• Behind-the-scenes content from my photography projects.
• Sneak peeks of upcoming films, vlogs, and video podcasts.
• Exclusive DJ playlists curated just for you.
• Bonus podcast episodes and a chance to contribute to future topics.
Whether you’re a fan of the podcast, my visual storytelling, or simply love art and creativity, there’s a tier for you. Your support helps me continue creating high-quality content, and it truly means the world to me.
Thank you for listening. Follow Nkata Podcast Station on Instagram @nkatapodcast and Twitter.
See the website for extensive materials: nkatapodcast.com

EP04: It Takes Many Trees to Make a Forest – Tribute to Tony Allen
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts
05/14/20 • 37 min
To dedicate a conversation to Tony Allen is to recall the rich history of African Music, unsurpassed wit and creative ingenuity, needful rebellion, activism and truly African artistic inventions and languages through that very melodious, harmonious, rhythmic, soul-soothing art form called music.
Much of Africa's temperament, sense of community, sharing, family, humanity and spirituality has been captured and indeed preserved in music. But it didn't stay static. If anything, it travelled at the same pace, if not more, as every slave ship that left the continent to cross the Trans-Atlantic ocean in the 16th century. It preserved itself in the subconscious and the imaginary until it was ripe to let itself out inform of Jazz, highlife, Palm wine music, Funk and eventually Afrobeat.
This episode aims to discuss the legacy of Tony Allen from a perspective which takes into account his contribution towards the preservation and dissemination of Afrobeat.
Joining Emeka Okereke (host) through a phone call is Jahman Anikulapo. He is a reputable name in the culture industry in Nigeria. He has been an arts and culture journalist since 1987. But in between, he is a theatre director, producer, and manager of numerous cultural projects and platforms. He is well conversant with the work and legacy of Fela Kuti, and he knew Tony Allen personally.
They discussed the legacy of Tony Allen given the concerted effort to attach it, and somewhat overshadowing it with, the legacy of Fela Kuti. Their conversation threw light on the achievements of Tony Allen. If Fela Kuti is, rightfully so, the inventor of Afrobeat, Tony Allen – through a consistent, prolific career, boasting a discography of over 70 albums and collaborations – was indispensable in sustaining Afrobeat. That, in and of itself, is a worthy legacy.
No foundation can stand without sustenance. No unique identity (as can be attributed to Afrobeat) can fulfil itself without collaboration outside itself. Needless to say: it takes many trees to make a forest
It is such broader correlations and historical perspectives that are of utmost importance.
Listen to the podcast on: www.nkapodcast.com/dot
Also available on: Apple Podcast, Spotify, TuneIn and more...
Hi, amazing listeners! Emeka Okereke here. I am the founder and host of this show. If you’ve enjoyed the stories, insights, and creativity we bring to this podcast series, I invite you to join my Patreon community at patreon.com/EmekaOkereke. 🎉
By becoming a patron, you’ll gain exclusive access to my artistic world, including:
• Behind-the-scenes content from my photography projects.
• Sneak peeks of upcoming films, vlogs, and video podcasts.
• Exclusive DJ playlists curated just for you.
• Bonus podcast episodes and a chance to contribute to future topics.
Whether you’re a fan of the podcast, my visual storytelling, or simply love art and creativity, there’s a tier for you. Your support helps me continue creating high-quality content, and it truly means the world to me.
Thank you for listening. Follow Nkata Podcast Station on Instagram @nkatapodcast and Twitter.
See the website for extensive materials: nkatapodcast.com

EP11: 21st Century Photographers Re-articulate The Continent – with Ekow Eshun
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts
02/20/21 • 53 min
In this episode of Dots of Thoughts Podcast, Emeka Okereke is joined by Ekow Eshun to reflect on the book, “Africa State of Mind” edited by Ekow Eshun and published by Thames & Hudson. The book brings together works from 52 contemporary photographers from Africa.
Fundamental to the book is Ekow Eshun’s intention to “explore how contemporary photographers have presented Africanness and Africa as a physiological space as much as a physical space”.
The conversation departs from the book’s periodical marker: all photographic works were made in the 21st century. It would meander across various topics while touching on conceptual considerations in the works of such photographers as François-Xavier Gbré, Hicham Gardaf, Eric Gyamfi and Lebohang Kganye.
A recurrent point of consensus is that the works included in the book exemplify how today’s photographers are articulating the complex narrative of African realities. Not only do their work offer a unique yet critical gaze, but it also rescues the photographic medium from its colonial history and deployment.
“There is no simplicity or singleness to Africanness”, Ekow says. One might think that this needn’t be said in 2021. This is precisely what this book hopes to achieve: These photographers show that such concerns have become secondary to image-makers of today.
“If we say black is beautiful, it’s like these photographers are saying: we must question what beauty means”, Emeka adds.
Where are Contemporary photographic practices from the African continent heading or pointing to?
This question brings the podcast conversation towards the end while leaving enough room to account for whatever the future holds.
Use the time stamps to skip to parts of the podcast.
Listen on: https://nkatapodcast.com
Also on: Apple Podcast, Spotify, Google Podcast, Overcast, Deezer and more than ten other podcast platforms.
Host: Emeka Okereke (Barcelona)
Guest: Ekow Eshun (London)
Production: E.O Multimedia
Music: Sir Kupeski DJ.
Supported by Stiftung Kunstfonds Germany
Created during the Research Residency Program at The Over | Pol & Grace Barcelona
Hi, amazing listeners! Emeka Okereke here. I am the founder and host of this show. If you’ve enjoyed the stories, insights, and creativity we bring to this podcast series, I invite you to join my Patreon community at patreon.com/EmekaOkereke. 🎉
By becoming a patron, you’ll gain exclusive access to my artistic world, including:
• Behind-the-scenes content from my photography projects.
• Sneak peeks of upcoming films, vlogs, and video podcasts.
• Exclusive DJ playlists curated just for you.
• Bonus podcast episodes and a chance to contribute to future topics.
Whether you’re a fan of the podcast, my visual storytelling, or simply love art and creativity, there’s a tier for you. Your support helps me continue creating high-quality content, and it truly means the world to me.
Thank you for listening. Follow Nkata Podcast Station on Instagram @nkatapodcast and Twitter.
See the website for extensive materials: nkatapodcast.com

DoTShorts #1: What Are You Working For?
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts
04/28/21 • 15 min
This is the debut episode of the bonus series called Dots of Thoughts Shorts (DoTshorts). Emeka Okereke gives a glimpse of his thoughts regarding the notion of work, and what work has come to signify for him. The episode is backdropped by sonic “artefacts” made up of ambient sound and music.
Listen in full at https://nkatapodcast.com
Also on Apple Podcast, Spotify, Google Podcast, Deezer, Overcast and more.
Hi, amazing listeners! Emeka Okereke here. I am the founder and host of this show. If you’ve enjoyed the stories, insights, and creativity we bring to this podcast series, I invite you to join my Patreon community at patreon.com/EmekaOkereke. 🎉
By becoming a patron, you’ll gain exclusive access to my artistic world, including:
• Behind-the-scenes content from my photography projects.
• Sneak peeks of upcoming films, vlogs, and video podcasts.
• Exclusive DJ playlists curated just for you.
• Bonus podcast episodes and a chance to contribute to future topics.
Whether you’re a fan of the podcast, my visual storytelling, or simply love art and creativity, there’s a tier for you. Your support helps me continue creating high-quality content, and it truly means the world to me.
Thank you for listening. Follow Nkata Podcast Station on Instagram @nkatapodcast and Twitter.
See the website for extensive materials: nkatapodcast.com

DoTShorts #2: Inner Voice
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts
05/10/21 • 9 min
In the second episode of Dots of Thoughts Shorts, Emeka shares a few thoughts and impulses about what the inner voice means for him.
Duration: 9:19 mins.
Join the conversation and leave a comment on your preferred listening platform.
Hi, amazing listeners! Emeka Okereke here. I am the founder and host of this show. If you’ve enjoyed the stories, insights, and creativity we bring to this podcast series, I invite you to join my Patreon community at patreon.com/EmekaOkereke. 🎉
By becoming a patron, you’ll gain exclusive access to my artistic world, including:
• Behind-the-scenes content from my photography projects.
• Sneak peeks of upcoming films, vlogs, and video podcasts.
• Exclusive DJ playlists curated just for you.
• Bonus podcast episodes and a chance to contribute to future topics.
Whether you’re a fan of the podcast, my visual storytelling, or simply love art and creativity, there’s a tier for you. Your support helps me continue creating high-quality content, and it truly means the world to me.
Thank you for listening. Follow Nkata Podcast Station on Instagram @nkatapodcast and Twitter.
See the website for extensive materials: nkatapodcast.com

EP13: To Organise a place as if it was a photograph – with Eric Gyamfi
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts
07/22/21 • 64 min
Eric Gyamfi (1990, Ghana) is a visual artist working with and within photography. This podcast conversation was induced by the inclusion of his work in the book, Africa State of Mind: Contemporary Photography Re-imagines A Continent “by Ekow Eshun. Rightfully so, the conversation build’s on Eshun’s central premise of focusing on photographers/works that fall within the 21st-century timeframe. Eric Gyamfi’s work, although beautifully photogenic, accounts for processes outside and beyond the frame. He considers the photographic medium as a space to be unravelled. Thus when, in the podcast, he says “beyond wanting to represent something, I have been more interested in what a photograph is composed of”, he offers what is invariably an accessible entry point into his fundamental approach to the medium. This assertion cuts through his various bodies of work from, “Just Like Us” (published in “Africa State of Mind”) to his recent work titled “The things that are left hanging, in the air like a rumour”.
If Time is an indispensable component of photography, Gyamfi seems to be preoccupied with how space, materiality, organisms and human interactions collude to give rise to the techno-chemical reaction which becomes the photograph. “How can I organise a place (or space) as if it was a photograph?” is the question underlining his recent body of work. Yet what is unique to space if not an articulation of the crossroads between past, present and the future? What is referenced here is photography’s ability to make an event out of disparate and dispersed information, across time, some of which elude the grasp of known history and “hanging in the air like a rumour”.
It is one thing to speak of a life-giving process and another to know how to bring such disposition into one’s artistic practice. When Gyamfi speaks of the intriguing possibility of non-human entities—enzymes, algae, bacteria—participating in his photosynthetic photographic process, my mind wanders off to many tangents of radiant connections between us and our world. I would think, for instance, of how allowing oneself to be preoccupied with such “little things”, as he called it, about the co-habitative nature of our world, helps our grasp of how seriously damaged our world has become. Another example comes to mind: John Akomfrah’s “Vertigo Sea” is a large scale, yet grisly, counterpart of Eric Gyamfi’s thoughts. I can’t he
Hi, amazing listeners! Emeka Okereke here. I am the founder and host of this show. If you’ve enjoyed the stories, insights, and creativity we bring to this podcast series, I invite you to join my Patreon community at patreon.com/EmekaOkereke. 🎉
By becoming a patron, you’ll gain exclusive access to my artistic world, including:
• Behind-the-scenes content from my photography projects.
• Sneak peeks of upcoming films, vlogs, and video podcasts.
• Exclusive DJ playlists curated just for you.
• Bonus podcast episodes and a chance to contribute to future topics.
Whether you’re a fan of the podcast, my visual storytelling, or simply love art and creativity, there’s a tier for you. Your support helps me continue creating high-quality content, and it truly means the world to me.
Thank you for listening. Follow Nkata Podcast Station on Instagram @nkatapodcast and Twitter.
See the website for extensive materials: nkatapodcast.com

EP16: We need to move the body elsewhere to see what sticks – with Dior Thiam.
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts
03/05/23 • 64 min
You are listening to the sixteenth episode of "Dots of Thoughts" Podcast. Every episode of this podcast project originated from a thought, an idea, a persistent spark or maybe a poem. I follow the prompts, often leading to an encounter and a conversation.
Lately, I have been reflecting on the works of the critical thinkers Frantz Fanon and Edouard Glissant, rummaging through their thoughts for clues about the dialectics of the future. As such, I have been engrossed with the question of presence, consciousness, embodied knowledge and "re-membering".
As our world gets increasingly convoluted, it begs for new readings of Difference and new poetics of relation. An understanding of how, through our body and presence, we animate the social power of the places we traverse and the people, we meet along the way in this epic journey called life. How do we give form to the paradox(es) that makes up the contours of transitory spaces and voids of borders for which our bodies serve as delineators?
In my wanderings, I come across persons whose disposition is an embodiment of a chaos-world. Chaos, in this case, does not mean disorder. On the contrary, it means the flourishing of Difference divested of all inscription of violence. These individuals are imbued with what Glissant calls the "Poetic force", which cannot be tamed because this force is its own turbulence. This force is also the main component for creating new myths that leave the past where it belongs and points to the future shaped by the vibrancy of newness.
A few weeks ago, I visited the studio of the Berlin-based artist Dior Thiam. Our conversations about her work and her way of being and moving in the world sparked my interest. So it led me to want a more extensive discussion based on the abovementioned intention.
This episode is the outcome of our meandering yet synergic thoughts that continues my deliberation on the notion of movement, borders, being and motion. Think of it as a deliberate act of tiptoeing and floating across multiferous concepts that takes the body – specifically the Black body – as locational coordinates.
Why Dior Thiam? The answer to that question is evident in her ability and willingness to follow, with fluttering words, all the signs of unravellings, fragmentation and collations that foregrounds the duality of her reality. Hers is a life that gives in to the porousness and osmotic tendencies animating sites of Difference within it. Art, in this case, is both the conduit and location for the interplay between notions of stability and instability that ensues.
As with many of my podcast conversations, the gems of the discourse are scattered, like seeds, across the entire discussion. This approach intentionally borrows from the disposition of the hopeful gardener, who is often cognisant that the ground is fertile at disparate patches. The listener must find, for themselves, what part merits further nurturing and watering.
I wish you joyful and active listening.
– Emeka Okereke
Guest: Dior Thiam
Production: Atelier E.K Okereke
Music and Sound Effects: Epidemic Sound
Sonic Inserts: Dior Thiam
Host and Curator: Emeka Okereke
Thank you for listening. Follow Nkata Podcast Station on Instagram @nkatapodcast and Twitter.
See the website for extensive materials: nkatapodcast.com
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FAQ
How many episodes does NKATA: Dots of Thoughts have?
NKATA: Dots of Thoughts currently has 26 episodes available.
What topics does NKATA: Dots of Thoughts cover?
The podcast is about Society & Culture, Personal Journals and Podcasts.
What is the most popular episode on NKATA: Dots of Thoughts?
The episode title 'EP03: Morrison's Black Book, Chimurenga's Festac '77 – "Unwritable Stories" in a Book Form' is the most popular.
What is the average episode length on NKATA: Dots of Thoughts?
The average episode length on NKATA: Dots of Thoughts is 48 minutes.
How often are episodes of NKATA: Dots of Thoughts released?
Episodes of NKATA: Dots of Thoughts are typically released every 44 days, 1 hour.
When was the first episode of NKATA: Dots of Thoughts?
The first episode of NKATA: Dots of Thoughts was released on Apr 7, 2020.
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