It was one of those afternoons when coins are counted twice, and hunger wins the argument. A small pizza joint promised “loaded pizza” at a friendly price. The box was warm. The smell was right. Expectations were high.
Then, the lid was lifted, and everything changed.
At the centre of the pizza sat bright yellow sweet corn.
For a moment, no one spoke.
“Hii ni gani sasa?”
One of the boys stared at the slice as it had personally offended him. Another poked the topping, as if it might apologise and disappear.
“Bro, tumescammiwa,” one of them finally said. “Who puts maize on pizza?”
Laughter followed, mixed with disbelief. In their minds, pizza meant meat, cheese, maybe pepperoni if life was being kind. Sweet corn belonged elsewhere — on the cob, at the roadside, with salt and chilli.

A Pizza Culture Clash
What the boys didn’t know was that sweet corn on pizza is a common ingredient in many parts of the world. But logic doesn’t always travel faster than hunger.
The reactions came quickly:
- One boy removed every kernel with surgical focus.
- Another refused to eat, claiming “principles”
- The third shrugged and took a bite anyway.
A hush settled over the group again.
Then a nod.
The Unexpected Twist
It wasn’t bad. In fact, it was… okay. Sweet, soft, and oddly balanced against the cheese. Still, pride couldn’t allow full surrender.
“Sio mbaya,” he admitted.“Lakini bado ni suspect.”
Phones came out. A short video was recorded. Laughter, jokes, and mock accusations filled the clip. Within hours, it was doing rounds online.
BY Gabriel sironka
