If 2025 has taught us anything, it’s this: the internet never forgets. Screenshots, archived tweets, those spicy TikTok comments you thought disappeared after 24 hours — they’re all receipts.
In Kenya, we call it “kutoa ushahidi” — proof that can resurrect at the worst possible time. Politicians, artists, influencers, even your everyday Twitter warrior have all learned the hard way that when you talk big, the timeline is listening. And the moment you slip, someone will pull up the screenshot from 2018 faster than you can say #TBT.
But receipts aren’t just weapons of shame — they’re also our collective memory. They remind us of promises made (and broken), of growth, of contradictions, and sometimes, of just how much we’ve all changed. That blurry tweet you made as a campus kid? It might come back to haunt you, or it might prove how far you’ve come.
The question is: are receipts keeping us accountable, or are they trapping us in our past selves? Should every mistake be immortalized, or do we allow people the space to evolve without screenshots being used as handcuffs?
At SundayFunday, we believe receipts are double-edged: dangerous in the wrong hands, powerful in the right ones. They can be receipts of hypocrisy, but also receipts of resilience. The trick is knowing when to flash them and when to file them away.
So, SFD Daily 002 leaves you with this thought:
👉 What’s the most iconic “receipt moment” you’ve witnessed in Kenyan culture? Was it a politician’s promise, a celebrity clapback, or maybe your own WhatsApp chat dragged into the light?
Checkout the video on YouTube
Drop your receipts. We’ll be here keeping tabs.