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Little Miss Plateau 0.4 Set to Shine in Jos with Glamour, Talent and Creativity

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The stage is set for another exciting edition of Little Miss Plateau 0.4, a colorful children’s pageantry event designed to celebrate beauty, confidence, creativity, and leadership among young girls in Plateau State.

Organized by Little Miss Plateau Pageant in collaboration with Africuflash, the highly anticipated event will take place on Sunday, May 24, 2026, at the Sarau Event Centre, behind NTA Network Centre, Jos, beginning from 2:00 PM.

The event promises an unforgettable experience filled with elegance, talent, and entertainment as young contestants compete for the coveted crown in front of families, friends, and supporters.

According to the organizers, this year’s edition will feature several exciting attractions including:

  • Kids Pageantry
  • Kids Runway
  • Creative Performances

Beyond the glamour, the platform aims to build confidence and leadership qualities in children while encouraging creativity and self-expression from an early age.

With the theme centered around empowerment and excellence, the event continues to grow as one of Plateau State’s emerging platforms for discovering and nurturing young talents.

Tickets for the event are selling at ₦2,000 for regular access, while VIP access is available on request.

Interested guests and supporters can RSVP through: +234 808 642 2333 or +234 806 521 2501.

As anticipation builds, many are already asking the big question: Who wears the crown?

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RJ Scaringe has raised more than $12 billion across three startups and investors still want more

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Investors can’t seem to get enough of RJ Scaringe or his ideas.

In less than a decade, the serial entrepreneur best known for his EV company Rivian, has raised more than $12.3 billion from venture capital firms, as well as strategic and institutional investors for his three — and counting — startups. If the latest $400 million raise for his new venture Mind Robotics is an indicator, investors are still happily piling in.

Outsized raises for newly minted startups have become more common in recent years. But those hundred-million-plus seed rounds have generally been reserved for buzzy defense tech startups or AI companies founded by former OpenAI or Anthropic employees.

Those supersized seeds certainly weren’t flowing toward something as niche as an electric micromobility startup. And yet in 2025, Scaringe raised $105 million for exactly that — a startup called Also, which he founded that same year. The total has since surpassed $300 million, with DoorDash among its backers.

Jiten Behl, partner at Eclipse and former chief growth officer at Rivian, has spent years watching and learning from Scaringe. His firm is now one of Scaringe’s biggest backers, leading rounds in both Also and Mind Robotics — Scaringe’s industrial AI and robotics startup that he also founded last year.

Storytelling and communication are one of his superpowers, according to Behl, who joined Rivian when the company had just a handful of employees.

“When RJ explains a certain issue, topic, opportunity, vision, he just has this very unique ability to communicate it so effectively, and it comes across so credible,” Behl said. “He’s not trying to undersell the difficulty or oversell the opportunity, and that’s an art.”

Scaringe isn’t the only serial entrepreneur to repeatedly attract massive amounts of capital, but founders who can raise billions across multiple ventures remain rare. A self-professed car enthusiast who earned his doctorate in mechanical engineering from MIT, Scaringe joins a small cadre of entrepreneurs that includes Tesla CEO and SpaceX co-founder Elon Musk, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, Anduril and Oculus founder Palmer Luckey, and Jack Dorsey, who founded Square (now called Block) and Twitter.

The difference, at least in the view of some investors TechCrunch spoke to, is that he is able to separate selling the idea from selling himself. “He is very comfortable and confident in his own personality, and he’s not trying to be an Elon,” Behl said, noting that many have tried to make the comparison over the years.

“It’s not about him,” another insider familiar with Scaringe’s companies told TechCrunch. “When you talk to him, he has enthusiasm about the product that is completely external.”

Of course, there is confidence and even a little ego, the same source mused, but “it doesn’t weigh on you.” The source also added that Scaringe also has a unique ability to make you feel like the most special person in the room — a sentiment others echoed.

Giving that kind of undivided attention to an investor, supplier, or exec at a manufacturer is a challenge at the scale Scaringe is attempting. He is running three companies, often traveling between Palo Alto, Irvine, Rivian’s factory in Normal, Illinois, and a second factory soon to open in Georgia. And then there is family — Scaringe has three sons with his ex-wife.

Joe Fath, another partner at Eclipse, credits his open-mindedness and collaborative nature for helping him attract investment and juggle these connected, yet disparate businesses.

He noted that Scaringe also “has the rare combination of being a truly great engineer while also having an exceptional instinct for product design,” said Fath, who previously worked at a major Rivian backer T.Rowe Price. “Very few founders can operate at that level technically while also understanding what resonates emotionally with customers — both consumers and commercial buyers. That combination is incredibly uncommon and has clearly been part of what makes Rivian’s products, and now Also and Mind’s, so differentiated.”

The pace of Scaringe’s fundraising over the past eight years is particularly notable, and doesn’t seem to be slowing.

More than $11 billion, and by far the largest slice of VC and strategic capital, went into Rivian — most of it between 2018 and its blockbuster IPO in 2021. That’s a startling timeline especially considering the company, initially called Mainstream Motors, had existed since 2009. For years, Rivian operated as a small, unknown entity until its breakout moment in late 2018 at the Los Angeles Auto Show, when it revealed prototypes of its all-electric R1T truck and R1S SUV.

The money soon flowed, and from every direction. In early 2019 and just a couple of months after that reveal, Rivian raised a $700 million funding round led by Amazon. U.S. automaker Ford would invest $500 million and make plans to collaborate on a since-scrapped future EV program. Cox Automotive contributed $350 million. Rivian would close out the year with a $1.3 billion round — its fourth in 2019 — led by funds and accounts advised by T. Rowe Price Associates, with additional participation from Amazon, Ford, and funds managed by BlackRock.

In July 2020, Rivian raised $2.5 billion and another $2.65 billion six months later. As whispers of an IPO got louder, Rivian closed another $2.5 billion private funding round led by Amazon’s Climate Pledge Fund, D1 Capital Partners, Ford Motor and funds and accounts advised by T. Rowe Price Associates Inc. Third Point, Fidelity Management and Research Company, Dragoneer Investment Group and Coatue also participated.

Then the IPO came. Rivian raised nearly $12 billion in gross proceeds after locking in $78 per share. Its market cap hit $100 billion when it debuted on Nasdaq in November 2021. Today, it stands at $18.2 billion today, a significant comedown that also reflects the broader struggles of the EV sector.

The ability to raise that much capital, despite those headwinds, is exceptional. But Scaringe didn’t stop with Rivian. If anything, the pace has accelerated. Also and Mind Robotics have together raised more than $1.3 billion so far, with Mind Robotics moving especially fast: $115 million in its first year, $500 million in March, and another $400 million just this week.

Rivian also continues to land notable backers through high-profile deals like the $5.8 billion joint venture with Volkswagen Group and a robotaxi partnership valued at up to $1.25 billion with Uber.

“Now, the big question is, how much can he do?” Behl said. “That’s a question [that] already assumes that he’s reaching his limit. The thing is, he doesn’t look at it that way. His perspective is that there is huge value to be created, there is huge impact to be created, and I just have to do it.”

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Amaechi 2027 presidential posters surface across Bauchi streets

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Posters projecting former Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Chibuike Amaechi, as a presidential candidate for the 2027 general election have surfaced across major streets in Bauchi State.

The posters, branded with the inscription, “Amaechi for President 2027: Move Nigeria Forward,” alongside the logo of the African Democratic Congress (ADC), were spotted at strategic locations within the Bauchi metropolis.

Amaechi, who holds the traditional title of Dan Amanar Kasar Hausa of Daura, previously served as Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly, Governor of Rivers State, and later Minister of Transportation.

The campaign posters were mounted on electric poles, billboards and major roundabouts across the state capital, drawing the attention of residents and commuters.

Some of the areas where the posters were sighted include Ahmadu Bello Way, Awalah Roundabout, Wunti Flyover, Jos Road Roundabout, Bauchi Club axis, Nasarawa Gate Roundabout and Emir’s Palace Roundabout.

The posters were also displayed along Railway Road, Sabon Titin Karofi and Kofar Dumi streets, among other locations.

The posters attracted considerable public attention, with several motorists and pedestrians slowing down to observe them, particularly around Awalah Roundabout.

DAILY POST reports that the former Rivers governor, Amaechi, contested the presidential primary of the All Progressives Congress, where he emerged runner-up to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in 2022.

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