You certainly want to know what your friends are doing during this corona-virus lock down.

Uganda has been under lock down for three weeks and there are two and half more weeks to go after President Yoweri Museveni slapped three weeks.

Other than Sweden, the rest of the globe is on lock down following the mass cases registered. According to www.worldometer.com website, there are 2,185,938 corona virus cases, 146,969 fatalities and 553,323 recoveries.

While we continue to keep Ugandans happy at a time when jogging that many had resorted to is banned, we wanted to know what it is, that is taking up most of their time.

Imagine Uganda without bars, clubs, playing fields, markets, arcades, hotels, lodges, mosques and churches! Yikes! What is occupying peoples’ minds? Can you guess.

We took out to find out what is actually taking most of peoples’ time. Here below our shocking findings.

People left with the option of their phones, it is high on their proggies that social media would feature highest, which our research conducted over the weekend.

Social media which includes facebook, whatsapp, instragram, twitter, snap chat, tik tok among others took the lion’s share of 54%.

Meanwhile shocking to reveal that people are spending more time on whatsapp as opposed to facebook with the former scooping 39% and the latter 29%. Twitter occupies third spot with 22%.

TV is enjoying some good air time among lock downers pulling 40% while radio at distant 24%. Meaning more people are watching movies and news among other programmes.

Breaking it down to which TV stations consume most of their lock down airtime, NBS Tv ranked top with 55%,  NTV in second position with 42% and Bukedde Tv pulling off 11%.

Most of the lock downers interviewed went for Galaxy FM as their lock down radio with (28%), Capital FM coming in second with 17%. KFM , XFM, Sanyu FM, Simba and Dembe also featured in their respective order as shown in the graph below.

15% have featured sleep as a significant ingredient in their lock down package.

The poll was conducted from 12th April to 15th April using online research tool survey monkey. 89 people responded. The sample was mostly male, urban residents of Kampala.