Mpererwe has always been a place where stories are born on street corners, in barbershops, and over roadside tea. It’s where Kenneth Galiwango learned that information isn’t just facts—it’s connection.
Meet Galiwango Kenneth the passionate young entrepreneur behind Santa Media Uganda
Born July 15, 2002 to Kasozi Jackson and Najjuma Joyce, Kenneth was the kind of kid who didn’t wait for opportunities to knock. At 11 he started planting vegetables in the family plot to pocket extra cash.
Two years later he talked his parents into letting him buy a pair of goats—he took pride in feeding and watching them grow. In 2016 he added eight hens to the mix, only to wake up one May morning in 2017 to find them stolen. The theft hurt deeply, but he pocketed the lesson: losses teach more than wins ever could.
By 2019 he had saved enough to open Santa Barber Shop in Mpererwe. What began as a place for fades and line-ups quickly became a daily gathering spot. Customers didn’t just come for haircuts—they came to talk: politics heating up, celebrities trending, rumors flying, dreams being whispered.
Kenneth listened harder than he spoke, filing away the rhythm of real conversations.Then COVID-19 hit in 2020 and the shop doors had to close. Most people waited for life to restart; Kenneth used the silence to build. He spent nights teaching himself how phones and algorithms work—how a 15-second video can reach thousands, how captions make people tap, how thumbnails decide if someone stops scrolling.
He wasn’t studying journalism or coding in a classroom; he was studying attention in the wild.In February 2025 he launched Santa Media Uganda. The name carries his personal code: news should arrive like a surprise gift—unexpected, useful, honest, and free of agenda. No long opinion pieces or delayed reports—just stories delivered at the speed young Ugandans live their lives.
The platform took off on TikTok first: short, sharp videos that broke news before breakfast shows could air. Instagram, Facebook, and X followed, each getting content tuned to its crowd. A simple website gave space for deeper dives without losing the quick, no-nonsense voice.
Balancing the clippers and the content calendar isn’t easy. Money stays tight. Reliable teammates are rare. Standing toe-to-toe with century-old media houses feels like David vs. Goliath on some days. Kenneth doesn’t complain—he adapts, the same way he adapted when the hens disappeared.
What keeps him awake isn’t fame or followers; it’s the belief that young Ugandans deserve media that respects their time, speaks their language, and doesn’t lecture them. Santa Media isn’t trying to replace legacy outlets—it’s filling a space they’ve left empty.
His advice to anyone starting from zero is stripped down and battle-tested: “Start exactly where you are. Stay honest even when it’s hard. Failure isn’t the enemy—quitting is. Learn one new thing every day, even if it’s small.”
At 23, Kenneth Galiwango is still cutting hair in Mpererwe while running a digital platform that reaches far beyond the suburb’s borders. He’s living proof that big things don’t always start with big money or big connections—they start with big determination and a refusal to stay quiet.