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Creators | Zikoko! Creators | Zikoko!
  • Creator Spotlight: Lolade on Finding Her Voice on Her Terms

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    Hi, I’m Lolade. I’m a writer, editor and musician. I’m reclusive and not good with conversations because I’m socially awkward. It’s getting better now, but there was a time when it felt like people were pinching me just by talking to me. I’d choose dark elements over joy and fun. I’m like Wednesday Addams; I’ve loved her since I was a child. I love horror, but more than that, I love psycho-thrillers. I have a weird relationship with animal protein in the sense that I still eat it, but I don’t enjoy the taste or the thought that it was once alive. I’m vegan, but just lazy because it’s hard work. I was also a child genius.

    Tell me about the child genius bit

    I entered JSS 1 at age eight because I skipped four classes in primary school. I was good at school, so everybody assumed I’d study medicine. That must be where my social awkwardness came from. My classmates were years ahead of me, so I was always worried I’d say something stupid. I had a baby voice, and people always made sure to point that out. I was always hung up about whether what I’m about to say would make any sense. 

    Just because I was smart, people were like, “You have to go to science class.” But I’ve been artistic for as long as I can remember. I love to draw. As a child, I’d take all my picture storybooks, recreate them page by page and paste the pictures all over my room walls. Everyone just ignored that and said, “You’ll sha still study medicine.”

    On school variety days, the social people would get to participate in dance and drama, but I had to do debates, spelling bees and math competitions. I’d win the competitions, fair, but I just wanted to dance, sing and do all those other things. But I’d always hear, “No. That’s not you.” I was sad and lonely because people had put me in a box, making me reluctant to be around others. 

    Was your reluctance a growing-up thing, or did it stick with you?

    By university, I’d gotten used to being the strange one. I just wanted to be on my own, so I’d destroy my friendships without knowing. I’d be friends with some people for several months, and then suddenly, I’d just start acting up. It was like an out-of-body experience. I’d start doing all sorts of stupid things, and before you know it, they can’t stand me. 

    What did you study at uni?

    Architecture, which is like medicine. You need to be passionate to study it, or you’d be sad. The late nights at the studio, drawing buildings from skeleton to roof — I still have chronic back pains from my years in architecture school. I hated it so much I had a panic attack in my first semester. Studying architecture is one of my biggest regrets in life. And to think my family thought it was a good compromise between medicine and visual art. I never practised architecture for one day.

    How did you go from reclusive genius to architecture hater to musician? 

    I’ve always loved music. 

    One of my biggest issues in life is how I’m good at and interested in too many things — drawing, storytelling, singing. When I graduated from university at 19, I didn’t know what I wanted to do with my life. But I’ve always sung in church and school. I always joined the choir, but no one paid attention to me. Because of that, I believed my voice was average, so I even started singing off-key on purpose. No one knew I could sing in school, except my roommates. 

    I didn’t know where to start with music until I went to Calabar for NYSC in 2016. I stayed at my mum’s friend’s house whose husband was a commissioner, and a lot of young people would just come over to hang out with them. One day, I met this woman who just opened a music school. She talked about her passion for music, and how she started as a dancer and had won several competitions. She was better at dancing, but she wanted to sing, so she started taking vocal classes. I was so excited by her story.

    She gave me her number, I visited her school, and that was how I started taking vocal classes. In my very first class, she sat at her piano and just said, “Sing”. I did. She was like, “Wow. See sweet voice oh.” I was like, “Oh, me?” It was then I started to think I could actually be a professional singer. We were both dreamers. She made me feel like I could do the seemingly impossible things I dreamt of doing. 

    I can’t put into words how I feel just listening to music or watching someone perform. It was refreshing to meet someone who understood that. She taught me how to exercise my voice, perform with it, make it convey emotion and pass a message. When I applied these techniques, I sounded almost like the great performers I admired.

    Since you now know all the techniques, do great music performances still impress you

    I won’t say I know all the techniques o. Learning never stops. But I criticise a lot more. Sometimes, I hear Mariah Carey sing, and I’m like, “This woman is straining her voice here”. But I don’t do that in public o. MC is a vocal goddess, please. But it’s also made music more achievable. The classic composers — Beethoven, Mozart, etc. — made great symphonies because they had all the time and support from the church and state, not some superior talent. 

    What else do you do besides being a regular hater?

    I hate on things for sport. Hating what most people like is training. If you can argue against what most people argue for, it would arm you with the skill to have an argument for anything at any given time and to get out of any situation. 

    I’m also a good writer. But I write mostly fiction. I’ve been working on a book since 2016. I actually finished 500 pages of a first draft in 2019, but I’ve been rewriting it since then.

    For what audience — millennials, young adults? Or is it for everyone?

    It’s a family saga that cuts through five generations of women. So there’s a section that could be YA, but the book as a whole is an adult read. I want it to be a timeless piece. 

    What happened after the singing lessons in Calabar? How did your music career kick-off?

    I don’t think my music career has kicked off yet, TBH. I’m still experimenting and figuring things out. The music industry is a lot.

    As part of my training in Calabar, I had to make a cover video and post it on YouTube. So I did Asa’s Bibanke. As soon as I got back to Lagos, I started posting more covers on social media, and everybody was shocked to see them. My first real performance was during a church Independence Day celebration in 2016, where I sang the national anthem.

    I got a lot of engagement on my covers because nobody knew I could sing — not even my extended family members, many of whom were quite disappointed I chose to pursue something “unserious”. I’ll never forget my uncle calling me over the phone to tell me I’d never succeed as a musician because I was an efiko, and I should just give up now. He said I was making a fool of myself.

    What keeps you going despite the struggles?

    The numbness I feel with everything else.

    Meanwhile, my out-of-body experiences happen most strongly on stage. When I start performing a song I love, in front of people, there’s this joy I feel. Nothing else makes me genuinely happy like that. Regardless of whether I’m making money from it, I feel so proud of myself when I’m just singing. When I was younger, one of the happiest things that ever happened to me was when the Disney Channel came to our TVs. I remember being so amazed by the movies and shows. I’d watch them over and over just to learn the lyrics to the songs.

    How did writing and editing now come in?

    In secondary school, I started writing stories in notebooks just because my best friend could write and I was jealous. We both loved reading novels, so it was kind of natural. In uni, I led the student press and media team. Some months after NYSC, I started freelance writing to support myself while shooting and posting my covers, because my parents were worried I might turn into a layabout. 

    So your parents weren’t supportive?

    They were, and still are, in their own way.

    They had friends in the gospel music industry, and they’d always introduce me to them. But I remember one time, this particular friend of theirs listened to me sing, and we talked about what I could do to kickstart my career, like coming to his studio to record. I told my father about our conversation. He later said he’d talked to the man privately and he’d advised that, though I had promise, I should get a job first. So I got a job.

    A few weeks later, the man called and invited me to meet with some people. I responded with, “Oh, I’m at work. Can we do it during the weekend?” He sounded really surprised. From that point on, he hasn’t invited me for anything or tried to help my career. It’s clear now that my dad lied about the man’s advice, but I stayed at the job for the next four and a half years. I got to meet many people in the entertainment industry there, and I’d always be like, “What the fuck am I doing here? Why am I meeting people who can help my career but not being able to leverage it?”

    In hindsight, I know none of these people are interested in helping anyone’s career. A whole machine exists in the music industry that nobody ever tells you about. Nobody really wants to sign you or make you a star. There are way too many aspiring musicians for that, and 90% of them are extremely good. Some are even multi-skilled and know big names in the industry, but still don’t get signed.

    The only thing that helps is a music executive’s perception of you and how much money they’d make immediately, or a certain storyline or criteria you fit. No one really knows what that criteria is until they see it.

    I know you have a song out called “happy”. Are you working on any new music? 

    I have seven unreleased songs, and I’m working on more. But I don’t know when I’ll drop them. I hope “happy” will be the only song I’ll drop on my own. It was an experiment to see what it would be like to drop a song and promote it on my own, and how far it’ll go organically. 

    Why are you hoarding your songs? 

    What else will I use to pitch to potential investors? One thing about creative projects is only 20% of the budget goes into producing the art. 80% should be for promoting it. Right now, I only have enough to produce my art. I don’t want to waste it with zero-budget promotion. That’s how it’s done in K-pop. They spend $1m to produce a song and video and reserve $9m for aggressive promotion.

    Is this you soft-launching yourself on the internet as a K-pop fan?

    I’m lowkey trying to refrain from using Blackpink as an example. 

    2023 will be about getting sponsorships, which could come in many forms. There’s the record deal everyone’s striving for, there’s actual sponsorship or investment, management deals, so many options.

    Which artists influence your music?

    I have too many influences. I listen to all kinds of artists — new, old, legendary, underground, local, western, Asian — and they all influence my music. But to summarise, I’d start with my Nigerian love, Tiwa Savage. I love her staying power. More than everything else, I love that she started again at an advanced age and still killed it. She inspires me to keep going. 

    I’m fascinated by tragic icons who’ve passed, like Michael Jackson, Kurt Cobain, and my fave, Aaliyah. I also like hearing strong, sonorous vocals, people who sing with pure, bright tones. And I’m inspired by people who really get into performing their songs — choreo, acting, complex stage production. Nigerian artists don’t do that, and I get why. Nigerian fans prefer when you shout and hype and just vibe with them. They don’t send all the other oversabi.

    Do you have a favourite career moment? 

    My favourite career moment happened recently. I attended an industry event with a lot of influential people to support my mum. She’d just completed a music business and management program because she wants to help me in this struggle.

    The organiser invited her to a reserved seat right in front — of course, I tagged along. He especially recognised her in his speech, saying the industry tries hard to encourage Nigerian parents to support their children’s music careers. But my mum didn’t just show interest, she participated in the program, all the projects and was even involved in planning the event.

    Once the event ended, an influential woman in the industry walked up to her and said, “It’s so good to finally meet you, Ma.” I literally froze when I saw her stand in front of me. She turned to me, greeted me and shook my hand. I was shooketh. And that’s how people kept coming to my mum, and through her, I got to meet different managers of big artists.

    There was this Jamaican music exec who said to me, “You have a mum that supports and is actively involved in your career. You’ll definitely go places.” The whole night was the highest of highs for me. 

    How much more do you hope to do with music in the next couple of years?

    Just because I’m obsessed with music, I know I’ll have an entertainment company structured just like K-pop companies. 

    After NYSC, I was obsessed with the idea of getting a record deal. I still want one because it does help with structure. But now, I have an artistic vision for my sound and visuals. I already know how my songs will lead up to each other, the storyline of my entire discography. I even have a Pinterest account with secret vision boards for each song. I’m on my bed every night, just scrolling through those boards, reminding myself about all the ideas and how they connect. 

    It’s interesting because I’m finding out now that many of these record companies want stuff like that. They won’t even sign you until they’re sure you’re marketable — and for a long time. So this is my safety net. Whenever a record label decides to approach me, I already have ten years’ worth of content to show. I’m just waiting for a platform, and while I wait, I’m working on having my own resources. 

    You call yourself the “Queen of Lagosians”. Why? 

    I come from an old Yoruba family that’s originally from Lagos. One time in 2019, I attended a family owambe, where I wore traditional lace and aso-oke with my mum’s corals. When I posted the photos on Instagram, my friends started calling me “Queen of Lagos”. 

    I changed it to “Queen of Lagosians” because I want to be the queen of people’s hearts, not just a location. I’m obsessed with royalty, so a while back I heard about this woman in history called Mary, Queen of Scots, who had a very sad life. And because sadness fascinates me, I’m obsessed with her too. Even though she was the sovereign queen of Scotland, she lived in France for a long time and had a French accent, so her people didn’t like her. She tried to endear herself to them by saying she was the Queen of “Scots”. Also, Princess Diana was asked in an interview whether she thinks she’d ever be the Queen of England. She said no, but that she wanted to be the queen of people’s hearts. 

    In my mind, I was like, I don’t want to be the Queen of Lagos. I want to be the Queen of Lagosians, queen of the people. 


    READ ALSO: Creator Spotlight: Moyomade on Creating a Soft Life Through Adire

  • Creator Spotlight: Hamda ”The Lagos Tourist” on Her Storytelling Journey so Far

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    Hi. I’m Hamda.

    I’m 25, IJN. COVID stole two years of my life, so that may or may not be my actual age. I’m very crafty and hands-on. If I were a cartoon character, I’d be Bob the Builder. I illustrate, create videos, write and make outfits. I just like making shit. I think the content I create is vibes. I play a lot. I don’t take life too seriously, and I think it translates into my content. It gives off “joy”. 

    You have the prettiest name. Is there a story there?

    This name thing! I was named after my paternal grandmother. She’s late now, and I genuinely liked her. She was so full of life. The kind of grandma who went to parties every weekend. My government name is Oladoyin Hamdallah Odukoya. I started using Hamdallah in uni because I’ve always liked my middle name, but Nigerians always mispronounce and misspell it, so I shortened it to Hamda.

    Oh, I can definitely relate to that. When did you officially begin your content creator journey?

    In 2021. For me it was two things: I wanted to go out more, and I wanted to document my journey. I’d heard people say I would do well as a creator because of my personality. Plus, I used to work in an agency, and the influencers’ rate cards used to wow me. I couldn’t wrap my head around how posting one video got them one million naira. So, I sat down one day and just decided I’m going to be a creator.

    You’re so real for that. Do you remember your first project?

    My first collaboration project was for a hair brand. They shared a promo package with me, and I’ll always remember it fondly because I felt recognised. I did an unboxing video instead of a ‘get ready with me’ and found an engaging way to tell the story.

    Does what you do tie in with what you studied in school?

    Nope. My parents paid school fees for me to study architecture o! I even did a masters. Last month, my uncle still called me to explain why architecture is the truth and the light, but I know I can never return to it. I quit my architecture job in 2019 because that thing was sucking my blood. I’d gotten to the point where I was dreading going to work every day. It was just depressing. I sha took a risk and quit, but the plan was to find another Architecture job. A number of interviews later, lockdown happened, and I was stuck at home. I was applying for jobs remotely, learning new architecture software — and scrolling aimlessly through social media like the rest of us. 

    I found content marketing by mistake. I saw one ad for digital marketing course on Instagram. I found it interesting, and it sounded like something I could do, so I applied. That was the start of my content journey.

    Why did you limit “The Lagos Tourist” to Lagos?

    Omo, I’ve always been within or around Lagos. I was born in Mowe, Ogun state, but my primary school was in Lagos. We used to wake up at 4:30 a.m., and my mum would drive my siblings and I to Lagos from 6:00 everyday. Lagos is home in a way. All my friends are in Lagos. I did my NYSC in Lagos. Lagos is in my blood. 

    I love Lagos, but omo, this city needs help. How did you catch the traveling bug?

    If you’ve ever heard the phrase, “Omo, get inside,” that was me. I think it’s one of the major reasons I’m an explorer as an adult. How did I start travelling? Depression, bro. 2019 to 2020 was the most mentally draining period of my life. I just knew I needed to get outside more. It started from taking morning and evening walks, and I saw how that uplifted my mood. 

    I wanted to travel, but Nigeria and sapa did not allow me to be great. So, I decided to explore locally, and I began to go to different places once or twice weekly. It was generally feel-good, and it helped with my state of mind. 

    What are some of the best projects you’ve worked on?

    The most exciting one so far was my first trip. I think I’m very sentimental about it because it was a reassurance that my community actually sees me, the way they showed up for me. We went to Omu Resort, and it was the first time I organised an event, so I kept stressing over the tiny details. But it turned out well, and I used it as a template for future trips.

    Has it been smooth sailing ever since?

     I still struggle with taking risks. For every major risk I’ve taken, there was some external push. It shocks me how much people believe in my skills sometimes. 

    What’s the most and least you’ve charged to create content?

    The least I’ve gotten paid for content was ₦30k. The most I’ve charged was  ₦1m.

    How do you price these things?

    I have a rate card that states the cost of each content format — reels, feed post, story and in-person appearance. In the end, it all boils down to negotiation between me, my manager and the client. We agree on the content type and projected timelines. I always require creative freedom because I work best when my mind is free. We send an invoice, and alert ma wole.

    Have you ever regretted taking a bet on yourself with content creation? 

    I never really regret anything because I tend to do things with my chest. I have a coconut head, and it comes with the package. I think it’s one of the best decisions I’ve made because I make more money as a content creator than from my 9-5. But I still feel like I’m just starting out. I have some structure, with two managers — a talent manager who helps with daily content and client negotiations, and an events manager who plans my trips and experiences. 

    Initially, I would create content blindly, but I’m finally hacking the monetisation aspect of it and how to leverage communities. I’ve not neared my peak yet.

    Why is it important for you to be managed by two people?

    I used to have one manager to manage me and the event side of things. But I realised how hard it was to balance. She was really great on the client management side, but the events kept suffering.

    And although I’m not a fulltime creator yet, I work like one. So the pressure was a lot. I was burning out quickly, and it was telling on my work across board. 

    I had to hire the events manager. Now, I handle creating the actual content — scripting, shooting, video editing. One manager helps with contract negotiation, responding to mails and generally getting brands to approach “The Lagos Tourist” brand. And the other does things like location scouting and vendor management. Sometimes, we’re intertwined. Everybody chips in on content and gives feedback.

    How do you stay so relatable?

    I think I’ve hacked Nigerian storytelling. We like drama, we like gist — this helps me craft my scripts properly. I’m also always on social media, so I know what’s trending in the country. It’s basically just staying abreast with cultural trends and telling that story with my brand voice.

    Any longterm projects we should expect?

    Yes! Just know it involves plenty of group travels. I also want to delve into podcasting, but I can’t tell you much about it now because it’s still in the development phase.

    What’s something you’d have done differently now that you know better?

    Three things. First, I would’ve put out content on TikTok and YouTube from day one. My Instagram page growth has been amazing, but I know if I’d just repurposed the content for TikTok and YouTube shorts, I would’ve grown my page across board. Doing it now feels like a chore. Na every time my manager dey drag me.

    Another thing is, I would’ve reached out for more collaborations when I first started. I’m a generally shy person even though nobody ever believes me when I say so. It was only when other creators started reaching out for collabs that I realised the importance of it. I’m still a shy girl, but I’ve been accepting more invitations and intentionally asking people whose content I resonate with for potential collabs.

    The third thing I would’ve done differently is charge enough from the start. If I had been communicating with other creators, I could’ve asked them what they charged at what point. In the creator economy, nobody really knows what anybody else charges, and when you first start out, you’re never sure if you’re overcharging or undercharging. So, yeah, I definitely would’ve asked fellow creators more questions. 


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  • Creator Spotlight: Films Need to Be Playful, and Nosazemen Gets That

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    I’m a person of many names. Some know me as Sasha, Nosa, Saz or Zemi/Zemee, and I might add another one to spice things up a bit. But I haven’t really thought it through yet. I’m a filmmaker, writer, digital collager, photographer, explorer and lover of food and films.

    Shot by King_Xafe

    Do you have a favourite film?

    Oh, I do. The first ones that come to mind are anything by Celine Sciamma. She’s a French filmmaker. She made Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Tom Boy and Girlhood. I like Persona by Ingmar Bergman, one of my newer favourite movies. I love Jennifer’s Body and Kajillionaire.

    Dying because I only know three of those. How did you fall in love with films?

    I was surrounded by books because my mum loved reading. She was an English professor. We were also surrounded by movies in the same way. My siblings and I were also raised by an older relative, and she liked films. We used to go across the street to rent them. I remember borrowing Little Mermaid, Sound of Music and many others. 

    Films became an escape for me, and I think, for my siblings too. Because we moved around a lot, it became our one constant thing. Wherever you go, you see the same thing on TV. It was nice to have that locus of control. My siblings and I used to critique movies a lot. We’d talk about how their accents were too forced, things they could’ve done differently and all. But I didn’t really know it was something I’d make. There was even a time I wanted to be an actress, something I’m still hoping to explore in the future. 

    I saw your cameo in your movie, Ixora. Was that your acting debut?

    That wasn’t supposed to happen. We needed more extras, and my co-director, Nengi, was like, “Go in there, Saz.” My best friend, Lotanna, gave me clothes, and I was just like, “You know what? Maybe it’s meant to be”. I did a little dancing in the club scene. And that was it.

    Did you study something related to what you’re doing now?

    I studied sociology in school, and I was planning to be a lawyer. I honestly think everything I’ve studied and experienced helps me to be a filmmaker. Sometimes when I go through certain things, I’m like, you know what? It’s good for the cinematic experience. So yeah, sociology helped me understand how human beings create structures, what these structures mean to them, how it affects them, and how they control the structures. And with film, it’s kind of the same thing, because you are trying to replicate different structures, and just experimenting with what these structures can do. It was definitely helpful. 

    What was your first moviemaking experience like? 

    My first film was for a cultural club I was part of in university. I was the communications coordinator, and we needed to promote an event. So I decided to make a series of three short films. It didn’t require money. It was just my phone, my friends and then uploading on social media. 

    The first planned film I made and released is Anwuli, which means “joy”. That was when I really started to realise that making films is not a solitary experience. You need to reach out to people and push boundaries. I used to do everything myself: record, direct, sound. But then I just realised I needed other people. Someone showed me how I could connect with people on Facebook. 

    For instance, a director wants to make a movie but doesn’t know how to write, and a writer doesn’t know how to direct but wants to be involved in making movies. Everybody just tries to work together to create something and grow their careers. It’s a community of people who just want to create work with little to no money involved. So the budget for my first film was maybe $300. I was working a 9-5 around that time. I just asked my friends to act, and I worked with a community of people just looking to make work. 

    Afterwards, I was like, “I had to pay people”, so I decided to increase my budget a bit. The more I create things, the more I realise filmmaking is very expensive. Financing is the hardest part of filmmaking. 

    In Ixora’s end credits, I noticed you were the writer, co-director and co-producer. Was it exhausting?

    I like writing. I like being able to bring to life the vision I have when I’m writing, so directing comes naturally. While I’m writing, I’m already thinking about who would fit which role. Even if it’s hard, I don’t consider giving up filmmaking. It doesn’t feel like it’s taking anything away from me. It feels like an extension of me. 

    Some of the cast and crew of Ixora

    You’re a writer who likes to write? Wow 

    Of all three — writing, producing and directing — writing can be the hardest. I’ve come to understand my process, so that makes it look easy. I can do it, but it’s not easy. When someone hears you’re a writer, they feel you can just wake up one morning and write a book. I wish I could do that. But it requires a process. And the process is not just writing; it’s everything from experience to reading to watching things. Playing is part of the process. All of them are the ingredients that produce writing. 

    Does writing your own movies make it easy for you to bring your vision to life? 

    Definitely. I’ve directed other people’s work before, and it’s harder because you’re not in that person’s head. Yet when I produce what I direct and wrote, it doesn’t come out 100% the way I want it because I still have actors who can bring a different (sometimes better) vision. 

    This happened in Ixora. I had a vision of what I wanted out of the characters, but our main character, played by Dafna, brought a different quality to Izi’s character. It felt like she was reintroducing me to this character I made up. So yes, it’s easier to direct my own work, but it doesn’t necessarily mean my vision will come out the way I want it. It’s like, this is what you want, but keep an open mind that I might come out differently, better even.

    How many films have you created so far?

    I’d say roughly 10, including music videos. I’m still writing new ones and some are in production.  

    Do you have any favourites?

    My first film, Anwuli, is a fave. It’s so beautiful. The production process was easy. The only thing I don’t like about it is the sound quality. I wish the volume was a bit lower, and some of the audio parts were crisper. But I love the music. It was an original composition by a Ukrainian composer I met online — Myroslav Melymuk. 

    Carmilla is another favourite. It was just a fun thing to make. Another one I really like is Baby, This Is How You Break Open. When I feel down sometimes, I go back to watch it. If I want to process an experience or emotion, an efficient way for me to do it is to make a film. 

    Oh, it shows. Ixora had me in my feelings. What was the process like?

    It was shot in two days, but it was supposed to be three. If you come with that “It will work” mentality, sometimes, it means giving yourself extra room for surplus. If we had another day, there was a scene I wish we could’ve added, but we were constricted for time. 

    My friend wanted us to make a film, so I brought a draft, but they did not feel it. It wasn’t clear enough. I wrote another one two months later, based on a conversation I had with myself about women’s bodies and how they present them. I wanted answers, and somehow, I translated this dialogue into characters That was it. 

    The next thing was casting. I already knew who would play the two main characters. Next was financing. We tried to apply for grants. But we didn’t get any, so we put filming off for a bit. Later, we were just like, “Let’s do what we can with what we have”. Me alongside my co-proucer and friend contributed money, and everyone else was briefed on how much we were working with. We practised a lot. Shout out to everybody for putting in the work.  

    And are you getting paid to make films yet?

    I’m getting paid now.

    When I made Ixora, I wasn’t. Baby, This is How You Break Open costs zero naira to make. We didn’t spend much on Carmilla. We had to pay for a ₦3k location and bought a few costumes like the dress and scarf — it only had one character after all. I think we spent under ₦5k. Although we paid to host it on a website at one time, but it wasn’t expensive. Ixora is the most expensive movie my friends and I funded. I don’t remember how much it was. 

    How much are your movies making now?

    They haven’t made any money yet. When Ixora gets on a streaming platform, the team will benefit. But for now, it hasn’t made money. That’s another misconception people have about filmmakers. They assume you’re balling. Depending on your background, filmmaking requires a lot of work that might not be financially reciprocated, and you have to be patient with that.

    Do you think you’ll ever do a mainstream movie?

    Yes, it’s something I’d like to do. I’m working on two documentaries now. I’ve written romance and done music videos. I’m openminded when it comes to filmmaking and storytelling. The content interests me even more than the genre.

    You’ve mentioned a French director. Are there other people or things that influence you?

    Life itself influences me a lot. I’ve had a lot of interesting experiences, and that alone makes creating fun and easier. I like exploring films in different genres because they open my mind to questions I want to answer, and I can answer them in my own work. One of my latest unreleased films is a response to Persona by Ingmar Bergman. I’m influenced by music, quotes from poetry books, experiences, experiences, experiences. 

    Most filmmakers have a signature thing they do in their movies. Do you have that yet?

    According to people, yes. I like to have pidgin in my work. And I like a level of playfulness. I don’t do this intentionally, but there’s always some emotion that’s highlighted when you watch something I make, whether it’s happiness, empathy or curiosity. 

    I’m not even sure I want a pattern. The films I make are a reflection of where or who I am, and people evolve. What I make will also evolve. 

    What fun things do you do when you’re not busy making films in your head and in real life?

    I really like to experience where I am. When I’m in Lagos, I like to experience Lagos. Recently, a friend of mine wanted to visit someone in a convent, and because I’d never been to one, I went with him. I just like to experience different aspects of life. I like eating, watching films and digital collaging — putting together fragments of images to create something different.



    Are there some skills you feel filmmakers and writers should have to be able to create quality work?

    Emotional intelligence is very important. Being able to tell a story in a way that’s respectful to characters and the people they represent. Patience is important, but a lack of patience is also important. It’s okay to wait for something, but sometimes, you have to actively go after it too. For methods? I’m not a stickler. I enjoy seeing different methods at work. Compatibility is also important in filmmaking. 

    You make the process sound like smooth sailing. Have you never had a clash with people you work with?

    I haven’t had issues on set. Communication is important. As sets get bigger, you get to deal with more complications. You just have to figure it out. It’s good to work with people you’re compatible with on set.

    Do you have any favourite career moments so far?

    I like hearing people tell me they like my work, explaining perspectives even I who wrote it never saw. The story has gone beyond me. It’s out there, and other people are sharing it. In terms of milestones, it was nice to have Ixora and Carmilla show at S16, and just see people connect with it and talk about it. It was nice to see everybody involved getting celebrated. Having my films shown at several festivals last year was nice. 

    Are there projects you’re working on that we should be expecting?

    The next project I’ll release is an experimental film. Beside that, I made a music video for an artist, it’ll be out soon. Longterm, I want to make feature films. I’d love to work with Celine Sciamma, Love and Basketball star, Sanaa Lathan, and Genevieve Nnaji. There are some people I  want to work with but I also don’t want to work with them because I just want to watch them. In a way that I appreciate filmmakers’ capacity to create and my ability to experience their creations.

    At some point, my goal was to create films with an optimistic narrative for queer people, and I still want to do that, but I also want to tell stories that experiment with what can be. This involves a level of absurdism. I want to continue to create things that make people feel something. 

    Have you watched any film and wished you were the one who made it?

    Love and Basketball I was 13 or 14 when I watched it. I still think with film it’s not impossible. I don’t think it’s an industry where you can only wish you could create something. You always have the space to do that. I can decide to make a film based on Love and Basketball. My character could be queer and find love. I’m not sure if what she had with Quincy was love or not; I would explore her relationship with Gabrielle Union’s character or Sidra instead of him.

    I’d have liked to make Nneka, the Pretty Serpent and Suicide Mission. I’d have made them more playful but scary still. 



    READ ALSO: Creator Spotlight: How Lex Ash Reimagines a Better Future for Nigerian Creatives

  • Creator Spotlight: How Lex Ash Reimagines a Better Future for Nigerian Creatives

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    My full name is Alexander Chidiebere Ashimole.

    People tried to give me different nicknames at different points in my life, but the only one that stuck was the one I gave myself — Lex Ash. I’m a photographer, but I’m also a musician. I’m relatively good at every artistic thing I’ve tried, so I’m thankful for that gift. I’m deeply spiritual, and I don’t like anything that stresses me out. When I want to relax, I watch comedy. I’m also an amala hater. I’m a gadget person, so if I had all the money in the world, I’d probably just be buying tech gadgets for the sake of it. 

    Lex, this is not a safe space for amala hate. Also, only rich people like gadgets. Do you have Starlink?

    I’ve tried amala, and it’s not worth it. I don’t know why people put themselves through that, but Nigerians voted Buhari twice, so yeah. I’m not rich o. I spent all my money on a new place, and I’ve decided that until further notice, no big purchases. But Starlink might be somewhere in my future. I don’t just spend money like that. I have to plan and think about it. 

    All I’m hearing is wealth. I’ve added you to my list of rich people

    Where did the wealth come from, please? I started by saying I don’t have any money.

    I refuse to hear about poverty. A new place in this regime? Work must be great, then

    Work isn’t going all that great, so you people should give me work. So if you guys have an opening in Zikoko, please, let me know. I do like money, so any extra source of income is welcome. Photography can be, and I hate this part of it, seasonal. Sometimes, it’s good; other times, you get worried because you don’t know when money will come again. It’s spaced out, so I don’t get a lot of jobs too frequently. So annoying. For example, there are seasons when people get married more frequently. And I think I’m one of the more expensive brands in wedding photography. Some people come to me after some of the photographers they want have been booked, a lot of people also come to me because of my style, so I’m thankful for that.

    You make it sound like you’re second choice 

    That’s usually the case. But a lot of event planners don’t refer me because they probably don’t see a lot of my wedding photography work online. I’m trying to change that. At the same time, if I don’t get photography jobs, where will I see photography pictures? Event planners have roasters of people who cover their weddings. Most times, it’s the couple who reach out to me, and they always love my work. If you know anybody who’s getting married, or ageing up and has money as well, please tell them I’m available. 

    What’s your price range? 

    I have a base charge. I have rate cards for weddings.

    For portraits, I charge somewhere per outfit, depending on the situation. I also started creating alternative options for people with lesser budgets, we can come up with a custom price or package for you. Studio shoots are cheaper. And charging per hour doesn’t work because we Nigerians have a time problem.

    What happens when the person wears a suit, then takes off the jacket? They technically did not change the outfit

    You also get a limited amount of images per outfit. So if you’re wearing a jacket and take it off, you didn’t change the outfit, but you’re still limited to three images. I deliver three retouched images per outfit, no matter what you do to your outfits.

    How do you charge for weddings?

    I charge a day rate with extra charges for whatever service they want to add to it. If you’re going to do a pre-wedding session, an after-party, photo books and frames or if I need extra hands, those cost extra.

    Can you give me a rough estimate? What’s the highest you’ve been paid? 

    ₦4.something million for a four-day wedding. The first day was thirty minutes of work. The last day was four hours of work, but the main wedding events lasted two days.

    Wow. I didn’t know Nigerians spent money like that

    People spend as much as 200 million on weddings. Probably even more.

    Does being around all that jazz make you want to settle down?

    The weddings themselves don’t necessarily make me feel like that; there’s just the human urge to be coupled. Have you seen how stressful weddings can be? Even me, as the photographer, I know. In fact, let’s take out all the traditional wedding activities. Why do people feel the need to make sure the whole world is at their wedding, and they all have to dress up in certain weaves, aso-ebi and whatnot. I don’t like spending money like that, but if it’s my close friend, I’ll do it.

    How did you get into photography? Did you grow up with a camera?

    So remember how I said I like gadgets? I had this friend who got a camera in school. In fact, it was a camcorder, and I was just playing around with it during our science and technology week when I was randomly given the assignment to make a photography workshop happen. That was my first-ever experience in the same space with a photographer and people who are interested in photography. This is all the way back in 2011. People would see me with my friend’s camera and say, “Oh, this is nice. Take a picture of me.” And by 2013, I definitely wanted to do it for real. 

    What kind of pictures did you take at first?

    I used to do graphic design. And it was just hard to find pictures of black people to use for designs. That was my first project, manipulating, putting somebody who’s dancing in a place where there’s water flowing, for example. Or changing a person’s face to grass. Something like that, just random things.

     Do you remember your first official project?

    In 2012, my friend allowed me to borrow his camera, and we were having a trade fair in school. I was just going around taking random pictures when somebody was trying to make a decision about buying asun. So I took a picture of the asun and showed it to them, and they went, I’ll take two packs, please. The fact that the picture I took made them decide to actually buy the asun was very interesting and funny to me. Later in 2013, the pictures I took during some chapel services were used on a billboard. That was pretty cool too.

    Did they pay you for that? 

    I wasn’t even thinking of payment that time. I just made friends with the people in the Corporate Affairs Unit, and they’d let me borrow their cameras once in a while. So it was okay.

    Did that asun story prompt you to use photography to tell stories?

    Probably, but I think it was everything together. I always just loved the idea of creating images other people can connect with. From my graphic design to photography, or even when I was writing and singing in school. I always wanted people to have an emotional connection to it. But I didn’t know how that would take shape exactly. The asun incident was just one of the things I was doing to pass the time that contributed to the big idea.

    What did you study in school actually?

    I studied estate management, but that’s not what I want to be hired for. I want to be the chief marketing officer of a tech startup.

    How do you go from estate management to marketing officer?

    Estate management is about selling and evaluating landed property, and marketing is attached to it. I’ve always been big on brand building since I started doing graphic design. So all my work experience has been related to that. I worked two months in Unilever Nigeria with the internal communications team. I also worked in radio as the chair of content management. I worked in a tech company for two years before I quit in 2017 to try this photography something.

    Do you ever regret taking a bet on yourself like that?

    No, not at all. I knew it was coming. I just didn’t know when, and after I left, I was broke for a while. But I knew what was possible. This is the sixth year, and I haven’t regretted that decision one bit. I don’t miss the 9-5 life. I can’t deny that consistent income helps you plan your life and gives you something to do on a daily basis. But I don’t think I’d ever want to go back. If anything, I’d do consultancy where I choose my hours. Even now, the only reason I’m looking for a job is because my eyes have tear. I want more money. I love money. I’m trying to burn the candle from two ends. I want to get consistent money while I get photography money in a way that’s maximally efficient.

    How did you now get into music?

    I was in the choir in Covenant University. Even when I finished youth service, a church paid me to be part of their choir l. I say music was my first love. But I’m the type to double my talents like that parable from the Bible. Everyone needs an alternative source of income. At the very beginning, I had photography, but I didn’t feel like I could stand alone with it. It’s possible for you to love something, but because it’s your source of income, it becomes more stressful and challenging. So you want to find other artistic hobbies as an outlet. So I still love photography, but music started for me because my photography business had come to a point where I could explore another side of myself. 

    So with music, you want to express yourself, not earn?

    No o. I want to earn and express myself, please. Remember what I said about money and liking it? So if it can get me money, of course I’d take it. I’m looking for money. At the end of the day, please, it’s important.

    Are you earning from music yet?

    Not as much as I’d like. As much as I want to earn from it, I’m also big on doing what I love. I’m creating music, but I don’t have a label, or the financial backing is not as big as it needs to be. That’s also how my photography started, right? I was doing stuff I loved, and eventually, people came around to it. Now, people pay me a lot of money for it. Before you can make a lot of money off streaming, you need to get a million streams or something. I haven’t gotten to that point yet.

    But does photography open doors for you? 

    Yes, my photography has helped me meet some really interesting people. I’ve met Mark Zuckerberg. I’ve been able to change people’s lives. I’m thankful because I’ve mentored people who now live on their photography. I’ve been talked about in places I’ve never been because of my photography. You know, the bible says a man’s gift maketh way for him and puts him before great men. That’s my testimony.

    Hallelujah. Do you feel like you’re at the peak of your career? 

    I don’t think I’m anywhere close to up there. I think I’m, if anything, a tiny local champion — even “champion” is a strong word. I hope to be a global phenomenon, not just in photography, in everything. Photography, as much as I love it, is still a stepping stone to my bigger goals. 

    What are these goals? What does going global look like?

    I want somebody somewhere in Bangladesh to think, “I can be a great photographer” because this random guy from Nigeria did it. I want people I probably will never meet to connect with my work on a personal level. 

    I want to establish a University of the Arts in Nigeria. I don’t know how it’ll happen or how I’ll get there, but there are so many incredibly gifted people in this country who never get the opportunities they need to showcase their gifts. I hate how they may never get the chance to pursue their passion. The Grammys are big because there’s an academy of scholars who’ve studied music and the arts to the point where they’ve come together to create a conglomerate that celebrates them. The reason why we don’t have that in Nigeria is because the art world is still growing here. But also, people don’t think it’s a viable, life choice to become an artist. There are no schools people respect, like universities where you can study the arts.

    Are you doing anything to make these dreams happen yet?

    Everything I’ve done up to this point has led me here, and it’ll lead me there, if that makes sense. I don’t have a school currently, but one thing I’m trying to do in 2023 is create a mentorship program. I won’t restrict it to photographers, but they’ll be the main focus. And hopefully, this coming election will be the starting point of a new era, and we get to the point where our passports can do better, so creatives can stay or go and come as they please. 

    Here’s my final question: Why do you tell such bad dad jokes on Twitter? 

    I take offence to that. What do you mean my dad jokes are bad? First of all, I’m not a dad; it’s just a joke. Secondly, for you to call it a joke, that means it’s funny. I feel like it takes a refined mind to appreciate a good joke; bad is not a word I’d use for art. So the fact that you did not snicker at my snickers makes me doubt the bounty of your ability to imagine.

    You should stick to photography

    Who do you know that’s a better jokes person than I am?

    Honestly, if you ever do stand up? I’ll be throwing tomatoes and that shit’s expensive

    I’ll be getting vegetables, and that means I’ll be getting a balanced diet. So I don’t mind it. I’d still keep on my stand-up career.

  • Creator Spotlight: I Wrote “Chemical” in My Third Month of Celibacy – Layzee Ella

    Hi, I’m Layzee Ella.

    I’m a musician. I’m also an overthinker, constantly analysing things and forming smart or deep. I used to like reading a lot, but that’s changed because I can’t focus on anything for more than five seconds. I must have undiagnosed ADHD. I blame TikTok for reducing my attention span, but will I stop using the app? No.

    Will you ever get a proper diagnosis?

    I hate going to the hospital and taking drugs, so I won’t get one. I like to give my immune system a chance to fight since that’s what it’s there for. My friend has been trying to get me to get checked for a while now, but I’m just waiting it out and eating vegetables. I don’t want meds to ruin my life. That’s what I do, run away from hospitals and make music. I was in medical lab science. Then I got bored in my finals and had a panic attack, so I quit.  

    Wait, rewind. How? What did you tell your parents?

    They didn’t bring me up. Of course, I lived in their house, but they didn’t have any time for me. I was the last, and I think they were tired of raising kids. They never really made any decision for me. 

    I created rules and laws for my life. And I always paid the price on my own. One time, I got into big trouble with the police, and I called my dad. He was like, “I didn’t send you there”. It’s messed up sometimes, but I live through it. When you know nobody will be there for you when you fall, you’ll be more careful with your decisions.

    I guess their opinion wasn’t necessary when you went into music either?

    Nope. It was just me and my best friend, Teddy. He learnt how to produce music and we made my first song together just like that. I was 14 at the time. We later got into uni together at 16. I was in medical lab science, and he was in medicine. We made covers, saved up for studio equipment, rented a room and created a studio in school.

    How does a 16-year-old save up for studio equipment?

    I had to start making money fast because my pocket money was ₦5k a month. If not, there was only death by starvation at the end of the light. I’ve always been smart and calculative. My dad made sure I understood math, which helped me with money. I also used to do side jobs, like getting paid by real estate agents to broadcast their hostels around school, and I was very popular in school.  

    What made you popular?

    I was popular for being an idiot. Many people liked talking to me because I never took anything too serious. I never had enemies, and I was small and fine, so there was no reason to hate me. I was already loved before I dropped my first cover, so my second cover went viral. It was a cover of Burna Boy’s On the Low in 2018. 

    When did you start making your own music, and how was it received? 

    My first song was Sober. I dropped it in January 2020. Back then, I didn’t even have money for the promo, but it did really well. I’d been rapping on my IG for a while, so nobody knew I could sing when I dropped it. People were shocked by my voice. I got a lot of love and support. 

    How did you come up with your name?

    It was a nickname from secondary school. We had five Ellas in my class. There was tomboy Ella, tall Ella, short Ella, and I was the one who created a space in the roof to hide and avoid work. But I wasn’t lazy. I just didn’t like physical work.

    How did you get signed?

    I got picked by Kimani, the CEO of my company, and it just happened. She was obsessed with my song, Body On Me. Before we started any business talk or whatever, she really just wanted to tell me how much she loved my music. It felt so good.

    When I made it, I didn’t like it that much. It was the last song I made on When the Lights Go Off. I made it without a beat, inspired by Burna Boy. Then I gave it to Teddy, and his beat made it so sick. It worked well because Teddy and I are usually in the same headspace. But now, he’s focused on finishing school.  

    Which of your songs do you actually like?

    Deep Into You from my last project, Chemical and Put It On Me. I prefer my music when I’m going extra hard. So if it sounds like anything I might’ve heard before, I don’t feel special listening to it.

    Does the company make you create certain types of songs?

    Because of the way I was brought up, I don’t handle being controlled well. So it helps that my CEO and I trust each other’s work. We’re always sharing ideas, and we take each other seriously. But sometimes, when they play a beat, you never really know what you’re creating until it’s done and you listen to it again.

    I’m still amused a 14-year-old woke up one day and said, “Yeah, let’s do music”. At 14, I was sleeping during night prep

    I was in the choir as a child. I’d been into music since I was four or five. My brother would make me try to hit some notes and sing Beyonce’s songs. That boy was 13 to my five, but if I sang the wrong note, he’d slap me. So I picked up rapping instead because I knew he couldn’t rap.

    Who were your rap influences? 

    There was DeJ Loaf, Eminem, Baby Keem and Young Thug. I loved Young Thug. His flows are fire. He’s funny, and I imagine him on Afrobeats sometimes. Outside rap, there’s Koffee, Harry Styles recently and Post Malone.

    How about Nigerians? Anyone you want to work with?

    Fireboy. We’ve collaborated before, and that was one of my favourite sessions ever. I want a song with Rema. I’m curious how we would sound, but it’s not really my priority to work with anyone. I don’t give a fuck about anything but the listeners and numbers because, obviously, that’s how you know people care about your craft.

    It must feel good to have people support your music

    Of course I does. I created something, so I like knowing it touched people. I don’t even care if I get awarded for it. I love it when I get texts from my listeners telling me they love my music or they’re thinking of me. I know how I feel when I listen to an artist I love; it’s almost like I’m connected to the artist. So for somebody to fall in love with whatever I created in the past; it always feels so fucking good.

     

    What’s your creative process? 

    It changes all the time. I’ve been going through this creative block for the past three months. It’s gone now, and I know I’ve become a new person, but I’m still too lazy to record. 

    I wrote my first song, Sober, without a beat. I was in love then, so the person was giving me rhythm. For the second one, I locked myself up for about a month or two, creating with Teddy. I heard the inspiration for the beat of Chemical by mistake and wrote it in 20 minutes. It was like God gave it to me. 

    God? Chemical that sounds like sexual tension itself? What were you going through?

    That’s crazy because I was in my third month of celibacy when I wrote Chemical. I wanted to put all my pent-up sexual passion in a song. I’m a very sexual person, so if I’m not having sex, the sexual energy has to go somewhere else. If you listen to Put It On Me, you’d hear the sexual tension too.

    Interesting. Has anyone ever told you they added Chemical to their sex playlist?

    I see titles like “Spread them Cheeks”, “Mine” and “Contraband” on my Spotify for Artists. Just looking through now, I can see its on about 44 playlist on Spotify alone. It’s funny because we were trying to push Hypnotise, but Chemical just sold on its own. My friend, Steph, kept hyping it then people started making videos, and that gave me the ginger to promote it. 

    Are you currently making money from music?

    Well, I’m signed, so I get paid for every project I drop. It’s in thousands of dollars, that’s all I can say.

    But what’s the least you’ve made since you started?

    I only made about $300 – 400 from Sober. You get paid a certain amount per stream, and Sober did about 100k streams.

    How about performing? Do you make any money from it?

    I almost never perform. I’ve performed on stage thrice. I don’t really rate it because they’ve not started paying me big money for it yet. 

    What’s your favourite song to perform?

    Right now, Chemical, but before, it was Somebody. They both have a bounce that keeps your waist moving. 

    Has anyone ever thrown something at you while you were performing?

    Jesus, no. I would just cry.

    I mean things like their shirts  

    No, not yet. But I’m performing at Blaqbonez’s show today, so let’s see if someone throws their bra at me when I perform Chemical

    Do you think you’re at the peak of your career?

    At all. Sometimes, when you create and don’t get the energy you want, it kills your ginger. But there’s more to come. I’m already thinking of my follow up so people know I’m not a one-hit wonder. It’s all about the rollout. I’m creating content around this song while working on the next because the next song is done already. It’s a different vibe but still as sexy as Chemical. I almost never make the same type of song twice except one is an upgraded version of the other.

    And your plan for the coming years? 

    I don’t know. I’ll let God and the world decide because you can make plans but you can never tell what the results would be. There are plans for some features and joint projects with big producers, but the results of those are all in the hands of God.

  • Creator Spotlight: Tega Ethan on Why Music Should Be Free

    My name is Tega. I’m a musician who recently starred in the Netflix drama, All Na Vibes. I moved to Ibadan when I was nine. I moved around a lot because my parents were clergy people. And yes, I turned out the way you’d expect a pastor’s kid to: free, happy and living with nature. I like eating, playing games and watching squirrels walk around.

    Mobolaji Johnson 2022

    When did you start making music?

    I started early. As a kid, I used to make choruses for my brother for fun. I was a big fan of Eminem and used to rap all his lyrics, even the ones I couldn’t hear. Back then, the only way to get lyrics was to wait ten minutes for the A-Z lyrics to load, or you listen, pause and write down each line on paper. The second process subconsciously helped me understand the way lyrics are put together, the syntax of a song. 

    Down the line, I tried to be a petroleum engineer then a computer scientist because I wanted to make money. You know you just want to make money when you’re a kid.

    Isn’t Nigeria just catching up on the money-making side of computer science?

    Yeah, that’s the cool thing. I got in early. I really liked computers and programming. At 15, I’d already imagined having my own tech company. I had this book where I drew and designed the uniforms my company staff would wear. I was also a big fan of Steve Jobs. 

    But then?

    You know music. It comes out and tells you to say goodbye to all your other dreams. I started singing covers and posting on social media when I was in secondary school. Then I quit university in 2017. I was 17 and attending Federal University of Petroleum Resources, Delta State. I only stayed there two weeks before I left for Ibadan to stay with my brother who was at the UI, studying theatre and performing arts. I applied there and got admitted, but I didn’t accept the admission because I wanted to focus on music. 

    It was around that time I got a gig to play at Freedom Park, Lagos. Someone had gone through my Instagram and loved my covers. I was 18. It made me realise I really wanted to make a name for myself doing music on the road like the artists I admired. Fun fact: the road is bad; it’s full of traffic and potholes. 

    What did you do while you were at UI though?

    I started performing. I even busked in public places for voluntary donations. People gathered, and some said I sounded so well. My best experience was playing my guitar somewhere around the student union building, when an old lady, one of the cooks, came out and was like, “I thought it was the radio.” 

    Were your parents okay with you quitting school?

    When I quit the first time, it was to enrol in UI, so my parents were kinda cool with it. When I didn’t end up attending UI, it was strange because I thought they’d say no. In fact, I was willing to fight them. I already had my speech planned. But they just asked, “Is that what you want to do?” I said yes. They said, ok. I was a bit pissed by their response. It was almost like they didn’t give a fuck.

    Now, I’m doing a music diploma, a songwriting thing in London. I’ll be back in Nigeria in September and probably get more juicy gigs.

    In All Na Vibes, your character said he didn’t want to make dance music, but music his parents would be proud of. Can you relate to that?

    Oh, that was just the director and the producer. It felt weird when they brought up that line because I don’t actually care about that. But I made it sound convincing. 

    Since you started making music full time, what has the journey been like?

    It’s been insane. It started with that gig in Lagos. Mind you, I wasn’t even paid for it. I was young, so I didn’t really care. I thought it was just one of many, and that others would pay. But the industry doesn’t work that way. If you keep dishing out free gigs, you’ll keep getting free gigs. The older I got, the more I started to feel insane like I was wasting my time. The industry is fraught with people who want to take advantage of you, trying to get you to sign shitty contracts. I never did sign anything. I even got into a big fight with a guy who wanted to be my manager. I went from a scared, stressed-out kid to realising the industry is hectic, but it’s business. 

    But I did many things on the way, like starting a doughnut business with my brother in 2019. Before Krispy Kreme came to Nigeria, we attempted something like It in Ibadan, which I’m very proud of. I left the business because my music started doing fine.

    Sounds like the industry showed you shege

    There were moments when I felt like I’m almost there, I’m about to blow, like when I opened for Johnny Drille in 2019. That was the biggest crowd I’d ever played for. I thought all the hard work was just about to pay off, but the moment passed. That was when I understood I needed to have a plan and just stick to it, not caring when the big break would come but just enjoying the process. 

    I’m building something, and everything I do adds to the things I’ve already done. I’ve also since realised people love sincerity. People like to feel seen and heard when they listen to music, which is what I’ve been trying to do with mine. You’re telling people stories, so the least you can do is tell people what matters.

    What does “blowing” mean to you?

    I used to say I wanted to be famous, but now, I don’t even know. What a lot of artists struggle with when they become famous is maintaining a connection with fans on a personal level. Even a little fame would make you unable to respond to most of the feedback you get from fans. For me, blowing up is a long-run thing. It’s not about making one viral song. It’s about building something that inspires and outlives you, a legacy. 

    How did you go from putting all your eggs in your music career to being the lead character in All Na Vibes?

    It was random. Remember I mentioned my brother studied theatre arts? He started a theatre group with a vision to change the industry. I cameoed as a random musician in one of the group director’s movies in Ibadan. He called me later, during COVID, and asked if I’d like to be in a movie. I wasn’t doing anything besides learning to produce music, so I said, let’s do this. I thought it’d just be a Youtube thing. I really don’t know what gave them the idea that I’d be good, but they trusted me with their project. Now, I’m a Netflix actor. 

    Will you continue acting, or is it a one-time thing?

    I can’t really say. I’m not sure. I’m so nervous that I haven’t even seen All Na Vibes. I tried to watch the movie the night it came out, but as soon as I saw my face, I shut down the computer. First of all, I go very hard on myself, which I think I need to do less because, you know, everyone is allowed to grow. There’s that, and there’s the thing about other actors confirming that they also feel uncomfortable watching themselves in movies.

    How alike are you and Abiola, the character you played?

    He believes in a lot of conspiracy theories, and I wouldn’t say I believe them too, but I like asking many questions. You’ll find me in a wormhole of books, Wikipedia pages and Youtube, researching one topic because I want to know the truth. We’re quite alike in a lot of other things. We both make music. We’re chill people. He doesn’t have my charm, but he’s calmer. We’re different creatures at the core.

    In the spirit of talking about conspiracies, do you have a super controversial take on music?

    I feel like music you can download and play on your phone could and should be free. People should pay if they want to, but it should be available at zero cost. Many of the songs that inspired me when I was a kid, I don’t remember how I got them. They came to my phone by the power of the almighty. People shouldn’t be denied the chance to listen to music because they can’t pay for it. Digital music should be free. 

    Then how would you get paid as a musician? 

    You perform. There are a lot of other ways to make money from your music. If you go to my website, all my songs are there and downloadable for free. It’s how it’s always going to be unless I get signed to a label that controls everything, which I don’t want to do. Music should be free.

    Mobolaji Johnson 2022

    Interesting. Who do you make music for?

    I write for people who are going through it, people who sometimes sit down to evaluate their life then feel grateful or pissed off about it. Basically, people who are aware of their humanity. 

    When I’m going through something, I make music to explain myself to myself. The emotions get so heavy that the only way to get them off my chest would be to write about them. For some people, when they feel something, they go punch a wall. For me, I just write, even if I never release the music. I might eventually make money from it, and people may feel so connected that they’d be willing to pay for it, but in the beginning, I write to explain myself.

    Do you have a favourite song you’ve written?

    I have many. But one of my favourites is To Be Missed, a song I did for All Na Vibes. The whole concept is me realising in 2018 or 2019 that we’re all designed to want to be remembered, especially when we’re not in a place anymore. It’s okay to feel a bit lost, or like someone who wanted you before doesn’t anymore. It’s human nature to feel that way.

    It sounds like a heartbreak song. How many have you written when you were heartbroken?

    Between 2018 and 2020, almost all the songs I wrote were about heartbreak, and I wrote many good songs then. Most musicians would agree that some of the best songs have come from heartbreak. 

    What are your fave heartbreak songs you didn’t write?

    Sunburn by Ed Sheeran. I wish I was the one who wrote it. I likeLast Last. That’s a proper sad song. And you can make it even sadder if you sing it acoustically. But it’s a vibe. You know Nigerians will always make it a vibe, even if it’s sad.

    Who or what influences your music?

    Two of my biggest influences are Ed Sheeran and Passenger. But in recent times, it’s been places. The more time I spend in Ibadan, the more I fall in love with the place. I interact with it in a way that it starts to feel like a person and begins to inspire me. Nigeria inspired me to make angry songs like Gossip, from my old EP.

    What does it feel like performing on stage to an audience holding on to every word? 

    No matter how many times it happens — though it doesn’t happen many times — it makes me feel like the world should just end. It’s just so consuming, it kind of makes you feel small. Or maybe it’s just me wanting to feel small in that moment. I don’t know how to explain it, but it’s beautiful. I just want to embrace the moment and live in it in a way that’s not intrusive, and I can’t get too used to it so that it continues to feel special every time.

    What’s the least or most you’ve been paid, whether in music or acting? 

    Today’s prices are not really like 2022’s. Last year it was in six digits. And I may not play in any show until September, when I’m back in Nigeria.

    How fulfilled do you feel?

    Very fulfilled. I’ve learnt to abide in everything I do, however great or small. I used to compare myself with others, but I have learnt that it doesn’t matter. Right now, I feel very fulfilled, doing exactly what I want and how I want it. I write and perform music, get paid for it, and I have songs people listen to. My 16-year-old self would be mindblown. I think that’s enough fulfilment for me.

    What sort of legacy do you want to create?

    Make albums of the highest quality. Do concept projects. I have onee coming out that I’ve been working on for a long time now. It’ll be out when I return to Nigeria. I don’t want it to be a collection of random stuff. There are stories behind it, and everything just works together to create this really cool, sweetcake album. 

    I also want to work on the performance scene in Lagos and Ibadan. One of my dreams is to have it more structured and easier for artists coming after me to find places to perform. Right now, I’m focused on putting out quality projects and collaborating with artists. When I return, I want to work with more people even outside my space. 

    Which Nigerian artists would you like to work with?

    Lagbaja. Asa — she’s been at the top of my list since I was a kid. 2Baba, interestingly. His music isn’t the same again, but I plan to tap into 2Face of the 2000s. I want to work with Obongjayar too. 

    What are the struggles you face as an artist?

    Making music regularly while always being online. It’s a lot to juggle as an artist.

    What are you currently working on?

    An EP, which will be out soon. Expect a minimum of four songs.

    Mobolaji Johnson 2022

  • Creator Spotlight:“I Went to Enugu to Look for Pete Edochie”

    I’m Chinaza. I’m 25, and I’m a content creator. I make short Nollywood skits where I play myself and a very realistic male character. I pretty much stay in my house all day, shooting. If I’m not shooting, I’m editing, gaming or sleeping. I’m the worst person to ask what their favourite food is. So long as it tastes nice, I’ll eat it. As for colours, I love black. But I also like blue and purple. I feel like life’s too short to be restricted to certain things. Whatever feels, looks or tastes nice, just go with it. 

    Gaming? What do you play?

    God of War, Call of Duty, The Last of Us and Red Dead Redemption. I play anything but soccer. I don’t see the point. You just keep kicking the ball around; I’ve never understood it.  

    The question boggling my mind about your skits is how… how do you have so much chemistry with yourself?

    First of all, I’m androgynous. Growing up, I was the only child, and my parents were very protective of me. I wasn’t allowed to go out, much less make friends. They were very sceptical, so I spent a lot of time in my own company, watching people. As a child, I never leaned toward any gender completely. If I bring out my childhood pictures, you’d mistake me in some of them for my brother. When I did make friends, they were boys. 

    Have you named the male version of yourself?

    No, I haven’t. But I’m planning to. 

    When you walk in on me shooting, it’s a different person. I’ve actually shot with people, and the moment I finished dressing up, they’d be like, “Wow! There’s a change around here.” I don’t know how it happens.

    You’re really committed. You wear a bodysuit and even cut your hair

    In 2020, I went the whole year without doing anything to my hair. I didn’t make it. I didn’t care for it. I just ended up looking like I had rats running through it. I realised that since I play a male character, keeping a low cut would make it easier. 

    You’re right, I’m committed. Becoming that character is a sort of escapism. I feel like a whole new person. There’s this feeling, this aura. I get to be two different people. 

    You make it look so easy. What’s your content creation story? 

    I’ve just been coasting through life. I grew up in the east, Anambra. As a child, I wanted to be an actor. I was 15 and in university when I started to reach out to producers and directors. You can count only a handful of Asaba directors or producers I don’t know or haven’t met. I met a whole lot of them, and at the end of the day, they were all asking for the same thing. 

    Oh no. You were just a baby

    Oh yes. And they didn’t care. 

    There was this guy — he was quite popular, and I don’t want to name names. He gave me a script to read so I could hone my scriptwriting skill, then asked me to see him at a hotel. He’s been in the game since the early Nollywood days. That’s how old he was. He tried to kiss me, but I resisted. I was like, “Hello. When did we go from reading scripts to kissing?” He smiled and asked how old I was. I said 15. He smiled again and said, “You’re young. Everything you’ve done and have yet to do has been forgiven”. I gave him back his script and left. He said he’d reach out to me but never did. He stopped picking my calls. But at least, that one took my no for no.

    This other director told me everybody pays their dues in the industry because I said I believed my talent and God would take me to wherever I wanted to be. He told me that what I was saying was laughable because, before Lucifer’s fall, he was the chief angel of entertainment. And after he was cast out, God didn’t take that power from him. The entertainment industry is governed by Lucifer, so my God and I can fuck off. 

    That’s a lot. You were a kid. Were your parents aware?

    The incident that made them know was really nasty, and I still can’t talk about it. I’ve always been very curious and independent. When I want something, I go for it. There was even a time I went to Enugu to see Pete Edochie, unplanned. 

    Omo? You’re bold oh

    I got to Enugu and started asking people on the streets for his address. It was crazy. Somehow, I located his house. I waited for some time before he came down. I told him I wanted to act and had been trying for some time. He asked me how old I was. I told him I was 15 and in my first year of university. He scolded me and told me not to rush. I should go back and focus on school. I won’t say I listened, but I had a nasty experience that eventually made me stop. That was the last straw. 

    Around that time, skit-making was becoming popular, so my friends were like, “All these people are doing these skits from their homes.” I wanted to act, but who would watch me? But I eventually shot a video, posted it, and people liked it. This was around 2015. I started fully in 2017, so I’ve been at it for six years now. The growth was exponential. My creations were Nollywood-based. I migrated from Instagram to TikTok in November 2021.

    When did you have your first viral video? 

    I posted grace to grass stories, “Nollywood Movies Be Like” and more. One day, I checked my phone and saw +100 followers and +100 notifications. Tunde Ednut and Don Jazzy had reposted one of my videos. It was everywhere.

    There was also this competition Larry Gaga hosted. At the time, I wanted a new workstation, which cost ₦1.5 million, so I needed all the money I could get. That was the first time I posted on TikTok with intention, and I got 500 views. I won the competition and I think that was my second viral post.  

    What was the first Nollywood movie you saw that made you want to make Nollywood skits?

    For someone who makes short Nollywood skits, you’d think I watch many of them. I didn’t watch television because of my strict parents. I started watching Nollywood movies, and none really stood out for me. I just found it easy to spot the cliches. I don’t reference any movies; I just stitch up words and cliches I have heard Nollywood characters use, and I run with them. 

    Did you study something related to your content creation? 

    I studied English because my dad wouldn’t let me do Theatre Arts. I don’t write scripts except when a client specifically asks for it. Most of my acting is by impulse. I don’t think about them; I just know what I’m going for and how it should come out.

    What’s your dream cast and plot?

    I have a story in my head. I don’t have the capacity for it now, but one day, I will. I hope Pete Edochie will still be alive by then because I need him in it. So there’s him, Blossom Chukwujekwu, Stan Nze, Jimmy Odukoya. It’ll be an epic movie.

    If you don’t watch a lot of Nollywood movies, why did you pick this form of creative expression? 

    I stuck to Nollywood because I started taking TikTok much more seriously. The post I made for the competition was Nollywood cliche-themed. Because it did well, I made another one, which did even more numbers. The content transcended my regular audience. People from China, who’d never heard of Nollywood, were asking for more. And the slap-stick industry was becoming saturated. I’m not even good at it; it doesn’t come naturally to me. I just wanted something different. The moment I left the slap-stick comedy niche, I lost some of my audience. But when people look at my work, I want them to see the effort and thought that went into it. I just needed something special. 

    You do good work

    I give my character’s backstories. I try to get into their mind. Who is this character? A lover boy? A wicked prince? I know how the character walks and talks. The moment I have all that in my head, I’m that person. For instance, the very clear difference between my male and female characters is that I suddenly take up more physical space when I’m the male character. The way I walk and speak is different. 

    How much time and money goes into making one video?

    It takes more time and effort than money. I could manoeuvre my screen the way I want, and I already have a wardrobe full of costumes. There was one video I spent more than ₦100k to make. It was about the different tribes in Nigeria, so I had to get the different costumes. And I can spend up to a week making a video. When I say a week, I mean several hours back-to-back.

    What does a typical day of creating content look like?

    I usually sleep from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. When I wake up, I eat my breakfast, lunch and dinner all in one. I like setting up my shoot at 11 p.m., and depending on what I’m working on, I may be at it till 10 a.m. Then I sleep and wake up again around 5 p.m. to continue. It has altered my circadian rhythm because even when I take breaks, even when I am not working, I find myself sleeping through the day and being up at night. 

    What are your rates like?

    I charge brands from ₦500k to ₦700k for ads. It’s efficient. I’m not as poor as my enemies think I am, but I’m also not as rich as some people think. 

    What would you being rich look like?

    Being rich would entail waking up one morning and impulsively booking a flight to Paris to get ice cream and come back. I make enough to put food on my table and satisfy my basic needs, but I can’t go on a spending spree or splurge money the way I would want. My income isn’t consistent, so I have to make do, and plan ahead, even though it’s hard. There are some months I eat really well; I’d have like three clients I’m creating for. Then I could go three months without a client.  

    How many videos do you think you’ve created?

    I don’t keep count. One thing about me is once I’ve created and posted a video, it’s gone. When I do visit them again, I’m usually like, I should’ve done better.

    Who or what influences you?

    Kunle Afolayan, Jade Osiberu, Charles of Play — he has a lot of money to pursue his dreams, and he pursues them. Art should be all about pure passion, but unfortunately, that will get you only so far. In the real world, you need more than that. You need flamboyance, exposure and connection. If you want to make it purely on passion, make peace with the fact that you won’t achieve your full potential. You need money, you need to know people to push your art, no matter how good it is.

    What do you do when you’re not creating?

    Sleep. I close my eyes and sleep. And sometimes, I game. I’ve also made a promise to myself to go out a bit more and meet people. Since I shot that video for the TikTok competition, I don’t think I’ve left my house more than 20 times. I just shoot and post. In 2023, I’ll go out more and maybe find love.

    What’s the most annoying thing about your work?

    When I decide to try something different once in a while, people will be like, ”No, no. This isn’t why we’re here.” And I’m like, “Shut the fuck up”. Or when you offer your two cents about a concerning issue, I’ll hear, “You better focus on your comedy.” It’s annoying. 

    What sort of impact do you want to make in the industry within the next couple of years?

    I have a dream of owning a film school one day. I don’t even know how to go about that, but I’d like to see actors with more skills in the industry. When you watch a good movie, you watch an actor become the character they’re playing. It feels like they’re in their house in that movie. It feels real. You can see the connection. But when you watch a movie, and it feels like the home is from Airbnb, I want that to change. 

    Do you feel fulfilled yet, though?

    I could be doing more. There are days when I feel fulfilled, and there are other days I just don’t know. I try to tell people, and they don’t understand. 

    Do you struggle with imposter syndrome? 

    All the time. I know I dey try, but when people post my work, I’m like, are you gassing me up? I feel my own audience may be lying to me, so what I do when different accounts share my work is I go through the comments. Because I feel I would see the truth there, from complete strangers who’d rate my work without sentiments. Most times, though, it’s the same praise.


  • Creator Spotlight: How Bamy Wormed Her Way Into the Nigerian Entertainment Scene

    I’m Bamise. I was born and bred in Lagos; Bariga, to be precise. I was literally born in the house I live in. On my street, they call me ‘Burna girl’. I think that’s because of my fashion style. Today, I almost had a food coma from pounded yam, and I’m a Capricorn.

    Food coma? Wow. How would you describe what you do? 

    I actually do a bunch of things. I’ve gotten tired of saying I’m a writer when there’s more to it. So I sat down and decided “creative industry entrepreneur” is the best way to describe myself. For the most part, I just sell my ideas. 

    What’s the best idea you’ve sold so far?

    The articles I wrote for NotJustOk. I’ve had some really standout ones. In 2020, I did a listicle titled “Seyi Vibez, Bella Shmurda and Other Street Pop Artists You Should Know”. While everyone else was unsure of Wizkid’s Made in Lagos, it was one of the few projects I ever reviewed. I wrote that it was a really good album and a perfection of his career output so far.

    One of the coolest things you do is your “Fit check” videos

    For the longest time, I’ve felt that while I’m not rich in wealth, I’m rich in friends. People who know me just know I like fashion, so they end up giving me stuff. Like right now, I’m wearing a pair of white shades my colleague gave me for Secret Santa. People helped build my wardrobe, and I’m always conscious of that because I remember where I got everything from. My love language is getting fly shit. When I get dressed sometimes, I realise the only thing I bought with my money was my underwear, or something crazy like that.

    Are any of your fashion items more special or sentimental than the rest?

    I also have a pair of pink crocs I named “Flacko” after ASAP Rocky, ‘cause in A$AP Mob’s Yamborghini High video, he wore this pink bathrobe. It made me realise pink is such a cool colour, and ever since then, I’ve been a big fan of pink. Flacko has been my ride-or-die since 300 level. They were actually famous in UI because when you see pink crocs, you know it’s for Bamy. I always used to post them and just wear them everywhere. I don’t wear the crocs now though; they’re just somewhere in the house. 

    Well, I think crocs are supreme. So you know what, I get it 

     Thank you.

    What are some basics you think everyone should have in their wardrobe, as somebody who doesn’t actually get half of their stuff themself?

    I’m starting to get stuff myself. I’ve been thrifting a lot since 2022 to build a wardrobe that feels like me. 

    I want to say cargo pants, but I don’t know if there’s an age limit to this. I’ll say denim jackets because they fly and pair well with literally anything. If you’re like me and you get cold easily then, denim jackets and Oxford shirts. If you’re at a party, denim jackets might be a bit heavy, so an Oxford shirt because you can tie them around your waist and wear them later when you feel a bit cold. They’re really great for mutable fashion. Also, sunshades. I don’t understand how people don’t wear shades. People say shades don’t fit them, but it’s just a matter of understanding what type of shades work for your face. 

    But doesn’t it feel embarrassing to be scared of the sun

    When I turned 16, I had to travel with my mum and I needed shades, so she helped me choose the pair that worked best. I’ve been wearing shades ever since. I never really got people not liking shades, like why are you subjecting yourself to the harsh glare of the sun? For me, it’s not even a fashion accessory. 

    And fashion irks?

    One of my fashion irks is those thin slippers I see babes wear. I get that it’s part of the rich aunty aesthetic, but I see girls wearing them in the rainy season and I’m like, “Water could splash on you, and you might have to wade through a flood”. That’s why comfy and chunky slides should be essential.

    Fair. What are your rules for thrifting? 

    I’m not the best person at bargaining. It stresses me out because how will I know the price? I like to work based on my value of things and do some research. If I think it’s worth a certain price, and you call a crazy amount, It won’t work. I found one really good thrift store, ‘Retro Addicts’, and since then, the Instagram algorithm keeps bringing more my way.

    For my rules, I ask myself if I can see myself wearing it more than once. Also, boots are a heavy standard for me. I call my aesthetic “super rager girlfriend”. So I ask myself, “Can I wear this with my boots or any other pair of shoes?” If I think I’m being too impulsive, I come back the next day. The boots thing actually helps me create outfits that feel like me.

    But the major thing is the mutability of the outfit. I ensure that I can style the outfit in different ways. Fashion isn’t necessarily about what you wear, but how you wear it. 

    Created with RNI Films app. Preset ‘Agfa Optima 200 Warm’

    How did you get so confident about your style?

    I’m from a very conservative home, but I’ve always been very fashion-conscious. My mum would dress me in Deeper Life-type clothes, and I’d be unhappy as hell. It made me frown a lot because I never liked my outfits. It was crazier because my brothers used to wear like really fly shit gifted to them from my family friends, but the same people would conform to our conservative rules and send me dowdy ass clothes. So I felt cheated. 

    In church, I didn’t talk to anybody besides my brothers. Immediately after, I’d go and sleep in the car ‘cause I didn’t want anybody to see me. Eventually, I realised I didn’t have any friends, which affected me. One time, I designed a poll about how people perceived me, but I never gave it to anybody to fill it out. I just decided you know what, fuck this. I don’t make the rules. I’ll just rock my shit like that and try to frown less. 

    I spent all my life wearing things I didn’t want, but when I got into uni, I could start dressing as I wanted. I actually had to hard-wire confidence into myself. So now, I don’t care how ridiculous you think my outfit is. I like it, and that’s all that matters. I don’t care about what you, your grandma or granddad thinks. Once I can get out of the house with it, and the people outside see me? Mission accomplished. For me, every outfit is a reality I’m living. 

    Explain that

    The biggest example is when I went to an only women’s fest in 2021 in this mesh dress. I don’t think I’d ever even worn it before that, but I thought it would be nice to have my titties out, so I wore it that way. I knew it would be a safe space where I could get away with a risque outfit. Now, every other place I’ve gone, I layer it as a top even. But in that moment when I wore the mesh dress and nothing else, I was living the reality of that dress as the ultimate bad bitch attire. 

    Well, you can wear that dress again to Zikoko’s Hertitude. It’s a safe space for women

    I’m bigender. My pronouns are she/he/they. But I don’t enforce it because you technically can’t misgender me. It’s just irritating when my profile photo is clearly femme, and you say, “Good afternoon, sir”. For me, my pronouns should align with how I am presenting at that moment. When I’m wearing a cool, hard-ass, steal-your-girl-type outfit, and then, some guys are like “damsel”. I’m like, “Who are you talking to?” So that’s the thing about living the reality of the outfits. I’ve always been androgynous, and the biggest expression of that is my fashion.

    You also work as a producer on Taymesan’s podcast. What’s that like as a young person?

    The creative industry is actually a young industry if you look around you, so I don’t think there’s anything crazy about my age and the work I’m doing. There’s tons of young people doing kick-ass shit right now. For Tea with Tay, before I was his producer, I was actually his assistant for a year, then he needed a fresher approach to his podcast, and I was down for the challenge because I like to align my interest and my passion with my job. If the job doesn’t interest or excite me, I can’t do it. 

    What did you do differently to make him keep you on? 

    I’ve just been more hands-on. So far, I’ve put out eight episodes, so it’s still a new experience for me. For the first few months, that was just me getting clarity. Now, I’m taking a new approach to the content and how things are rolled out. We introduced a new segment called “Spill The Tea”, and that’s been fun. 

    As much as the creative industry is young, the scene is very much “who you know”. So when did you start putting yourself out there? 

    I’ve just always been an expressive person. So I guess without even saying anything, people just always thought of me as a creative. I studied English at the University of Ibadan. Along the line, I worked as a ghostwriter. Then after NYSC, I got a job as a writer, but the pay was not it at all. After a while, I started seeing Linkedin profiles with all these high-achieving corporate people, and I’d feel a tinge of jealousy. I didn’t understand it because I know I’m not trying to climb the ranks in the corporate world. So I started to tell my friends about jobs I wanted to do; they were creatives as well. One of them, Jimmy — I always joke that I’ll build him a statue one day — was already more established in the creative industry, so he plugged me on to “Notjustok’’, and since then, I’ve just been blossoming.  

    What influences everything you do? 

    How passionate I am about it or how much it excites me.

    What if the money is good, but you’re not passionate about it? 

    I can’t work in a bank, for instance, even if the pay is crazy. I quit writing for ‘Notjustok’ earlier this year because I’m not as passionate about writing. Passion and money go hand-in-hand like a handshake because, at the same time, I can’t do free work where I am. YKB’s Oshofree has actually been my mantra since the beginning of 2022. 

    Will you ever write again?

    I need to reconnect with it and just that part of me that’s passionate about writing without having to be paid for it. Capitalism ruined my first love. 

    I wish you good luck with that. How do you unwind?

    I just sleep. All my friends know I don’t really watch movies because it takes me like a million years to hyperfocus on it. I’ve also been exploring dining out with friends, but for the most part, I sleep, even when I shouldn’t be sleeping. 

    What are your favourite Nigerian designers? 

    I’m bigender. So, I really like TJWHO’s androgynous but clean designs. They have a really masculine edge to their femme designs. It’s like masc. and avant-garde at the same time — very slim cut, sharp. I love it. Then, Tokyo James, I think, for similar reasons and just how they work with fabric. It’s very exciting and groundbreaking. Then Tubo Reni, I think her sculpting skills are next to none, and what she did with Tiwa Savage on the Water and Garri tour was impressive. Tiwa actually wore Fendi and Versace throughout. I think Tubo Reni was the only Nigerian brand she wore .

    Do you have any plans to create your own fashion pieces? 

    I’ve been designing since I was a kid, but imposter syndrome hit me really early. I’ve just decided to go to a proper fashion school to learn. I went to Queen’s College, and they had a clothing and textile course. I did that from SS 1 to 3. I want to go to a proper fashion school and maybe start designing for myself first and see where it goes from there. I worked with a bunch of stylists last year, and before that, I actually styled one of my friends for his video shoot. I worked as a styling intern in 2022. I’m obsessed with getting experience. I don’t appreciate being in a place where I second-guess myself. But because I’m busy with my other passions that pay me money, I  haven’t found time to give it as much attention.

     What are the other passions that pay you money? 

    I work as a content lead for WeTalkSound. I’ve always wanted to be in a space where I share ideas and see them through till the execution point, and I’m very passionate about music, so that’s me bringing two of my passions together. I also work as Artiste and Label Relations Manager for Gojë Distro. I get to be an active part of the music distribution process. For Taymesan, I’ve always wanted to work with someone with a level of access to resources that I don’t have because it’s just a really good learning ground. I get to interact with vast minds, vast talents. 

    Favourite career moments? 

    Working as a content lead has been very rewarding. It’s something I’d always dreamed of doing. We made a viral post recently, and I know it’s hard to replicate, but we’ve grown so much, and the difference is clear. In 2021, I wrote a timeline of the alté subculture and sound. I spoke to Douglas Jekan for the interview, and he gave me a shout-out for the work I was doing. I listened to him a lot when I was in secondary school and he was actually my window to the alternative music scene in Nigeria. So this was a personal crowning moment for me. 

    What are your favourite parts about being a creative industry entrepreneur?

    The freedom. The fashion freedom. You see me pressing my phone, but I’m actually restlessly working. I could be working on a news report, putting a Canva design together or reviewing a content idea. I also love that I get to cover shows, from music listening parties to concerts. 

    What do you want to do in the next couple of years? 

    If I’m still alive. 

    This is why I don’t like you Gen Z people 

    I mean, we have to be honest. But I want to own a creative agency to build ideas from scratch that help people in the entertainment world. Do you need to bring a show to life, or a concept, we can help. People don’t understand things like how powerful a good copy is, how to sell things, how immersive concerts make people want to come back for another edition the next year, or even an artist’s social media branding, from how they dress to how they text. A creative agency helps people in the industry to take concrete ideas and execute them. 

    I also want to get into headhunting, to look out for people with a second class or even dropouts. I think I’d be great at this because when people need talent, they always come to me. I always look within my community before looking outside ‘cause it’s just always better to refer people you know firsthand can do the work. Down the line, I’d like to make headhunting an even wider reach for the creative and tech spaces. I’m not sure if I should be sharing this much, before somebody steals my idea. 

    If they steal it, we’ll fight. Can’t wait for your creative agency, maybe we’d finally have musicians who give me something outside of their music, which is great, but like, I want to connect with you

    As Nigerians, we’re actually very big on personality. We love big personalities. If you’re not selling us a personality that’s larger than life, your brand will actually suffer. 

    Very, very true. How would you describe your personality?

    I’ve never thought about my personality, but someone called me a “crackhead rockstar”. I protested at first, but I think it’s apt. 

  • 7 Nigerian Cosplayers Talk About the Joy of Finding a Community

    Nigerian anime fans got to have a safe space to gather and interact with each other at the 2022 Eko Anime Fest. And the cosplayers who attended had a lot to say about the joy of finding a like-minded community. Read about it here. 

    Emmanuel

    This is my first anime event. I love the experience so far. It’s really nice, and I know it’s going to get better, so I’m here for it. The world is advancing technologically, so I hope they have a VR experience next time. But besides that, I love anime, I love HunterXHunter, my number one is One Piece, and I really like Cowboy Bepop. I’ve been watching anime since I was in junior school.

    Mine

    I’ve been watching anime since I was six, and my first was Naruto. Yes, I’m one of them; Naruto is my favourite anime. I’ve cosplayed about four times now. I cosplayed Carole from Carole & Tuesday and Yumeko from Kakegurui. I’ve been to about four anime cosplay events, and my favourite thing is seeing other people as enthusiastic about what we love around me. I love the feeling of being around people who understand why we do what we do. It’s a small-ish community, but it makes me happy.

    Femi

    I’ve cosplayed just once before this, and I did Itachi. My favourite anime is Naruto, but I like Akame Ga Kill. My big three are Naruto, Full Metal Alchemist and Akame Ga Kill. I’ve been watching anime since 2004, when I saw Ronin Kenshin. This might be my first anime con, but I’m impressed by how people went all out. They took their time to cosplay their characters, and I see the effort. I also love how this small community helps me meet like-minded people who love anime. 

    Kammie

    I’ve been watching anime for two years. My favourite anime is One Piece and Kuroko no Basket. This is the second anime con event I’ve cosplayed at, and I love how happy everyone is. People come up to you to take pictures because they appreciate the effort you put into your cosplay. It’s amazing, and I love that we get to have this. For anyone trying to get into anime, it’s not too late. Watch Naruto, Food Wars, Demon Slayer and Black Clover as a starter. We’ll all be here for you.

    Saiki

    I’ve been watching anime for two years, since the pandemic. I’d heard about Naruto from primary school to uni, so it felt like a new starting point. I finally had time to try it because I was at home with nothing to do. I’ve seen almost 100 episodes since then because I kept watching them back-to-back to catch up. I’ve slowed down a lot, though. I love Saiki, it’s my comfort anime, but my favourites are Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood and Attack on Titan

    This is my first time cosplaying, so I tried to do something not so risky but still significant. I did Saiki since he’’s my favourite character. It was fun to source the material to make it happen. I’m new here, but obviously, anime is going mainstream, so I love the sense of community we get to have. People on the road might wonder what we’re doing, but we get each other. It’s fun to see people excited about something others consider a niche. It’s just fun to be around people you can relate with.

    Bolu

    I’ve been a big anime fan for five years now. Not to be cliche, but I love One Piece a lot. Then there’s One Piece, Haikyuu!! and Dororo. I love cosplaying. I cosplayed as No-Face for the first time last year and actually won the competition. I love seeing other people as weird as me, who share similar interests and love of anime, in the same place. It’s so cool. Where else will I see these many people looking like this in Lagos? 

    Crys.chan.cosplay

    I’ve been watching anime since primary school; my first was Pokemon. My big three are My Hero Academia, Haikyuu!! and Fullmetal Alchemist. Anyone who wants to start off should try Demon Slayer or Noragami. For romance, try My Little Monster and Say I Love You

    I’m a regular cosplayer. In 2022, I did about 26 cosplays in total, and I make almost all the costumes from scratch. I love coming to community events like these ‘cause everyone else I know dismisses my interest, but here, everyone likes it as much as I do. And I love it.


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  • This Artist Imagines Peace While Offering “Community Therapy”

    Through his art exhibitions, Onoja Jacob is promoting peace among communities in Jos, North-Central Nigeria.

    by Dorcas Bello, Bird Story Agency

    When Jacob Onoja opens the door to welcome guests into his house in Jos, Plateau State, the first thing that catches one’s eyes are the exquisite paintings on the walls. This is an artist who lives and breathes art.

    “As far back as I can remember, I have always loved scribbling, drawing, painting and visualising imaginary things in the sky. I did it in my teenage years, and I still do in my adult life,” he said.

    Onoja started to paint professionally in 1987 when he opened a studio, the Diadem Art Gallery. To refine his talent, he enrolled at Ahmadu Bello University, where he earned his first degree in fine and applied art. After his mandatory NYSC year, Onoja displayed some of his paintings at the NICON Hotel in Abuja, and after attaining a master’s degree at Ahmadu Bello University, enrolled for a doctorate in art history. Earning his doctorate in 2014, he then joined the University of Jos as a lecturer. But he never let go of his private studio engagement.

    “It hasn’t been an easy ride juggling academics and private studio practice, but what keeps me moving is the long-term impact of my work. I have already started seeing the fruit of my labour as some of my students are now professional artists,” he said.

    While Onoja uses his brush to depict a wide range of subjects on his canvases, the theme of peace is close to his heart.

    “I was born and still live here in Plateau State, a place that has suffered insecurity, both cross-border and inter-communal,” he said.

    Through his art, Onoja projects peace as a value presented not only as a right but something every individual needs to consciously strive for. This he describes as a form of community therapy.

    “I try to tell stories of peace to entrap people into my space of therapy,” he explained.

    In 2014, Onoja launched an annual exhibition called “Landscapes and More” that brings people from within and outside of Plateau State together to discuss peace as they experience the stories behind his paintings. Since then, it has been held every December as an artistic event to “wrap up the year”.

    “It is a time of the year I look forward to, and many attendees have made it their annual routine,” he said.

    One of those who’ve been attending the exhibition is Nenkinan Deshi.

    “Onoja’s consistency in bringing peace messages is so healing… the scars of the instability in our state that I had nursed for years have been healed by the exhibitions. I appreciate his work and determination to preach peace through his art,” Deshi said.

    Onoja says he draws inspiration for his work from nature: flowers, buzzing bees, the skyline, waterfalls, everything nature offers. But above all, he is inspired by the divine.

    Onoja’s work enabled him to lead the Zaman Tare project, a peace partnership between CANFOD, an NGO based in Abuja, and the European Union, from January 2018 until January 2020. Zaman Tare means
    “peaceful co-existence” in Hausa.

    Its impact was summed up by Anas Ibrahim Suleiman, a community youth leader in Nasarawa Filin Ball, one of the “hot zones”:

    “I have never experienced something so great and more than ever before, I have seen the need for us to work for peace together as a community,” said Suleiman.

    Onoja has been engaged in other group and solo exhibitions, with some of his paintings appearing in foreign publications and receiving great patronage. He also says art pays most of his bills besides being a fulfilling career. His paintings sell between ₦7k ($15) for the smallest size, to ₦350k ($780) for the big pieces. However, the prices can also be higher depending on the place and organisers of the exhibition.

    To speak to a broader audience, Onoja has gone digital and is also using Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) to sell his work.

    “Digitalisation, especially the NFTs, is revolutionising African art. More creatives should leverage the technology to advertise and sell their artworks,” he said. On future plans:

    “I want to grow and nurture this ‘baby’, the Diadem Art Gallery, into a huge enterprise specialising in collecting paintings and exhibitions on (the) theme of peace and co-existence,” he said. “I will continue to devote all my energy to art, my career as a lecturer and peace crusader”.

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  • Creator Spotlight: Bube on Not Letting Her Height Stop Her Dreams

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.

    Bube Israel likes to be defined as a multi-dimensional creator. She’s a supermodel, designer and creative director. Bube doesn’t eat chocolate, shawarma or burgers because she’s a picky eater. Bube is very pro amala and semo. She’s a cancer moon but doesn’t like to claim it cause she doesn’t like cancers. She used to play basketball when she was younger but stopped suddenly.

    We have to talk about why you stopped playing basketball. You have the height!

    I played from primary school to high school. I stopped because my mom bought me one gorgeous wristwatch. I wore it to practice because I was excited. They pushed me, I fell, and the watch broke. I quit immediately. I would like to play basketball again. I also started modelling in primary school.

    You know what? Fair. Modelling as a kid sounds fun. What was that like?

    I started modelling before I clocked 7. My mum used to take me around for shoots. She says she was a model before, but I haven’t seen any pictures.

    You said she has no proof; I’m screaming!

    No, no, no., In her defence, there weren’t pictures then. But I mean, she looked like one, so I believe her. My sister was also a model. She wasn’t a professional, but I saw her on several calendars, which made me decide to pursue it full-time. My mum is also a designer, so she taught me everything I know about sewing and designing. I’ve never in my life wanted to work a nine-to-five. It’s just not for me. I’ve never been signed or worked with an agency. Corny as this might sound, I’m just a lucky girl. My work just speaks for itself. I started officially modelling again three years ago.

    Even as a kid, you weren’t signed? How did you get booked?

    I modelled for kids’ fashion shows. I did one in Abuja. I remember only two others. My mum knew her way around all these things and supported me. Now that I’m grown in modelling, people think I’m too short. I’m 5’8, so I don’t book runway shoots. I only work private shoots. I’ve gone for casting only twice or thrice in my life because I don’t deal well with rejection. 

    My 5’5 self is just stunned. What’s one of your most ridiculous rejections?

    The first time I went as an older model, I was excited and flattered because people there told me I had high cheekbones. The judges saw me, and they were like, “Oh my god. You are stunning”, so I felt they were aware of my presence, and they’d picked me. Tell me why I didn’t hear my name when we were done. I’m not a punctual person. I’m trying, but in my head, time is not real. The call time was 8 a.m., my mum woke me by 5 a.m., and I was at the venue by 6 a.m., so tell me, why this girl who came in by 2 p.m. got the job? I almost gave up on modelling after that. But, for as long as I can remember, I’ve always said I wanted to be a fashion designer and model. What I’m doing now feels like I’m living my childhood dream. Maybe I should be bigger. 

    Does this height issue bother you?

    No, it doesn’t because I didn’t create myself. 

    I know my height is a hindrance to runway modelling. I don’t go for castings anymore because I don’t want anyone to make me feel less or bad for not being selected. I know my strength. It’s in editorial, commercial modelling or private runways where they say height isn’t a problem. For most castings, they’d tell you the minimum height is 5’9. My doctor told me I’m 5’8.

    There’s no way that one inch is noticeable

    They would literally measure you. One time, they measured me, and apparently, I wasn’t up to 5’8, so the guy asked me what I was doing there. I was like, “I’m 5’8”. And he was like, “You’re 5’7.7. Please, get out of here”. God, I cried that day. 

    Why would anybody talk that way?

    Oh, that’s standard behaviour. I went for one casting, and we were in a queue, but this tall stunning babe was on her own. Then, a casting guy who wasn’t even a judge saw her and told her to “Get the fuck out of this place”. If you see how I carried my bag and left the queue before I’d be the next target. I don’t know what devil he was fighting, but not me. Later, I jokingly asked a model what she did. Apparently, the casting guy had been a model for a long time. He said she was a new model and can’t just take up space without paying her dues. 

    Wait, what does that mean? 

    It’s a connection thing. You have to know people. He said he didn’t hate her but did that so she could toughen up. I hate embarrassment in my life. That was my last casting in 2019. 

    That must’ve been a tough decision to make

    It was. I wasn’t signed to an agency, so I had to work twice as hard as a signed model. I made myself a brand. I had to work on how people would see me. I reached out to different photographers and handled the styling. I’d reach out to photographers and makeup artists to collaborate. I’d create mood boards and send to them, explaining that I was an upcoming model.  

    I followed people who I felt were doing what I wanted to do at the time. I followed models already in the industry, photographers, everyone. I started to get work through word of mouth. You know how you work with one big person, and other people believe in you automatically? That’s what happened to me. The first photographer who believed in me was Lex Ash, so shout out to him. I started modelling full-time when I graduated high school. 

    What year was that? 

    I graduated in 2015, and I think I started modelling in 2018. I wanted a year off before going to uni, and then Nigeria happened, so I kept taking more time. I’m currently in 100 level, studying accounting.

    What sorts of jobs did you do?

    I saw my mates get cast for all those wedding makeup jobs. I’ve never been a femme girl, but I wanted to feel included. Whenever people wanted to book me, they’d say, “Yeah, that androgynous model”. Who said I was androgynous? I didn’t want to accept that. When I’d get booked with other models, they’d put makeup on them and focus on skincare for me. I was on a low cut, almost bald, and they loved the look.

    Did it affect how you felt about yourself? 

    No, actually. It made me come to terms with it. Honestly, I think modelling helped a lot in my self-discovery. I love myself now, and I think I’m hot, but back then, I didn’t understand what it meant to be beautiful in your own way. Even though I won “most photogenic” in school, I still wanted the attention of being pretty. 

    Back then, people saw models as people with strong features. I wasn’t conventionally pretty, but I did want to be one of those pretty girls. My face has brought me enough money in this life, so I’m thankful. I figured out what worked for me and stuck to it. They even bullied me for not having boobs. God will not punish them for calling me drawing board in school. 

    OMG. Kids are so mean

    For no reason! Like, we were still developing. They made me cry a lot. It didn’t help that I started to have a shape, but nothing else was growing, so they said my ribs had bent. I called my mom the next day, crying. It was insane what they did to me in Queen’s College. At one point, I used to pray to God every day to give me boobs and ass. I made my mum buy me push-up bras to push bone, and she indulged me. Until I woke up one day in 2019 and was late for a friend’s birthday. I couldn’t find a bra, and that was it. Anyone that has issues with seeing nipples needs to check themselves. I’m not the cause of your problems, man. 

    So childhood insults gave you thick skin against the modelling industry?

    Exactly. Now, there’s nothing you can tell me I haven’t heard before. 

    How would you describe your personal style? 

    I’d say free. I do anything, and I’m very experimental. I always say I have a hundred faces and personalities. I love being unpredictable. You’d expect me to turn up in a mini skirt, and I’d show up in a suit. I’ve always been blessed with a mom who accepts whatever I want to do, and however I present. Like two years ago, I struggled with mini skirts, now I just dress for comfort.

    Modelling helps me get comfortable in whatever I wear, you can’t tell them you don’t want to wear what they give you, even when it’s unflattering. It’s my job to convince people the pieces are beautiful. I work on my poses, and the photographer contributes by capturing the right angles. Confidence completes and brings out each look.

    Is it this ability that distinguishes a model from a supermodel? 

    I’m just so extra. I like to call myself a supermodel because there are models, and then, there’s me.

    Mood! Do you have a favourite editorial you’ve worked on?

    I think all the editorials I styled myself for. Those are quite old, but yeah, they’re my favourites. I design and make the clothes then curate the mood boards of what I want the outfit and shoot to look and feel like. That’s why I say I’m a model and creative director. It’s just that I can’t pay myself. This is why people believe in my styling abilities. I never came out to say, “Please, I’m a stylist. Hire me”. My work spoke for itself. 

    When did you take up styling full-time?

    About a year ago, but ever since I started modelling, I’ve always styled myself from my own wardrobe or even pieces my mum doesn’t use anymore that I DIY. I’m obsessed with taking pictures, so it was easy to document my work and put it out there. I’ve worked with a couple of Nigerian artists. 

    Now’s the time to name-drop for us

    I worked with SGaWD, and I occasionally make clothes for her. I currently work with Somadina. Almost everything on her page right now was styled by me. I’ve worked with Tomi Owo and Fave. I assisted with a Big Brother project in 2021. We designed different pieces and made clothes for that set. I’ve worked with some influencers outside Nigeria. 

    There’s also this friend of mine that was a contestant for Miss Nigeria in the UK; I made her clothes. I don’t box myself in, and I love working on new things, so if it’s something I think I can take on, I always go for it. She believed in me, and brought me the first big girl job that made me a lot of money. It’s funny because I don’t have my brand out yet, so all these people support me because they believe in me.

    That’s actually so sweet. Let’s talk money. How do you charge for modelling and styling? 

    I made my first million naira in 2022. I’ve made close to 200 clothes just based on people liking how I style myself. Whenever I want to charge, I have to ask my mum or friends how much they think I should. The lowest I’ve ever charged was ₦5k for a velvet two-piece in 2019. The most I’ve charged for one dress was ₦600k. For modelling, the least I’ve been paid was in exposure — exposure to sun and rain. I can’t lie, modelling doesn’t really pay me, and they don’t respect your time either. As freelancers, nobody tells you how much they get paid. Some people would even steal jobs from you. 

    What do you do to relax when you’re not acquiring new skills? 

    I don’t relax. My brain is always active — I overthink a lot and struggle with anxiety. You know how people have problems and can sleep them off? My village people pursue me with those problems into my dreams. Styling was just something I used to do to relax and tension people on Instagram, and now that it’s work, it feels like a chore. One of my goals for this year is to find things that help me relax. 

    Do you plan to expand your team? Maybe that’ll help you relax more

    Yes, I’m actually looking for a good tailor, but I’m a perfectionist. I’ve tried a couple of tailors. I’ve even tried to get a PA before, but it was like I was doing most of the work. So I started paying myself.  

    It sure sounds like a lot of lows. What are the highs?

    For me, my favourite thing is seeing people look hot in my piece and them actually liking it. My friend, who used my piece for a pageant, could’ve hired a designer, but she spent a lot of money supporting me, pushed me to do it and was so happy with the result. There’s also money, obviously. I also just love doing what I do. I love how much I’m growing. 

    What do you want to do in the next couple of years?

    I don’t know how to make long-term plans because whenever I do that, life will be like, “Who are you? Aired”. I’d love to own an agency far into the future. My immediate goal is to establish my brand and connect with more people. One thing I want to do differently is organise shoots for my designs that don’t restrict height, size or anything. So I have to have valuable connections so when I sign and manage models, I can actually get them good jobs. I want to try so many different things. I don’t want to lack, and I don’t even want to be in Nigeria.

    Does your brand have a name yet?

    Yes. It’s called Londier.co. I have a page, and some people know the brand, but I think it’s just my anxiety that’s stopped me from launching. I saved up for it and spent the money multiple times. I wanted to do it in 2022 but I lost my dad. Hopefully, this year. 

    I think the name is very pretty. I already make custom pieces, so I just need to release a collection. 

    I can’t wait to see all you get to do in 2023

    Thank you. I can’t wait too. 

  • Creator Spotlight: It’s Sylvester’s Animated World, and We’re All Living in It

     Hi, I’m Sylvester Effiong Ekanem, a.k.a. Effyze. I’m a 21-year-old digital artist, recording artist and content creator. I’ve been drawing all my life. I’m extremely unique; I’ve just come to embrace that about myself. Life is too short to want to be like someone else. I hate learning something new because at that stage, it’s so frustrating. My number-one supporter would be my mum because she let me study fine and applied arts — majoring in graphics/animation — and that’s really cool. I’m working on my first Webtoon show called Unfamous.

    Unfamous sounds fun. What’s it about? 

    It’s a web series. 

    It’s about four friends who go to an influencer high school in Nigeria — a satire on the lives of influencers. It focuses on the friends — Folake, Styles, Zoey and Femi — their wild imaginations and experiences. There are a lot of side characters who are influencers of different niches and genres. I really want people to resonate with these characters, especially now when everyone is on TikTok with a notion of what a content creator’s life is like. Unfamous shows the funny side of what everybody thinks about influencers.

    How did you convince your Nigerian mum to support your art? 

    My mum is one of my best friends. She’s not wild like most Nigerian or African mums. She has her moments, I’m not going to lie, but most of the time, she’s really cool. There are so many things most African youths can’t approach  their moms to ask for that I can. And it made it really easy to just let her know I didn’t want to study medicine or engineering. I wanted to go to school to draw. She already knew I had it in me. The walls of our first house really suffered. In secondary school, everyone was drawing Ben 10, Naruto and Goku, but I wasn’t just drawing stuff I saw in movies, I imagined my own characters. It wasn’t really much of a big deal to convince my mum. And I love her for it. 

    Did you have that childhood experience where your parents discover you can draw so they refer you to one uncle to put you through? 

    I was the kind of kid who’d cling to any older person who could draw. When I was little, I was so intrigued by anyone who could draw, so I didn’t need anyone to do that for me. 

    What was the first character you created? 

    Dennis the Vampire. I wasn’t as creative with the names of the characters I came up with, or their stories. The name was inspired by Dennis, the Menace — my mum used to buy me a lot of comic books. It was about this vampire who was really bad at being a vampire. He had glasses on because he couldn’t see. Every single issue of that comic book ended with him getting sunburnt to a crisp.

    How old were you when you created him?

    I was in my JSS 3, so I was 12 going on 13. I don’t have any of the illustrations anymore, but I remember what he looked like. It was my first original character, after all. If I were asked to redraw him, I definitely know how I’d do it.

    Would you recreate it anytime soon? 

    I don’t know. The thing is back then it must’ve felt super original to me, but now that I’m grown, I realise it wasn’t as original as I thought. If I revisit Dennis, I might change the story a bit. For starters, he was white and had a black best friend. I was wired to understand that was the perfect dynamic. I can change that now. 

    You seem heavily into pop culture. 

    I’m the last kid in my house. My immediate elder sibling is five years older. So I grew up with people who already knew what was trending at the time. My brothers were all into gangster rap, and my sister listened to R&B. Watching them inspired me to know what I want early on. And lucky for me, the things I like tend to go mainstream. 

    I’m watching Wednesday right now. I see stuff that’s mainstream, and it’s really intriguing to me. Some people are like, “Oh, mainstream is boring. Go underground.” I feel like it’s popular for a reason. 

    What were those shows for you growing up? Were they all animated? 

    It was a mix of animated movies/shows and live action. For starters, I’m a Disney boy (for life). Growing up, I’d watch Kim Possible almost religiously. I’m also a big Cartoon Network boy. Stephen Universe’s art style has inspired me a lot. That and Total Drama.

    Your web series art style is giving The Proud Family with some Jimmy Neutron — because of the large heads. And I sense some gaming influence. 

    I don’t play games, but I do admire game characters a lot. You’ve mentioned some really nice toons too, TBH. Jimmy Neutron and The Proud Family are very dear to my heart. But for Unfamous, I think the art style I really incorporated would be Gravity Falls, one of my best cartoons off the Disney channel. When I was figuring out the art style, I really did get a lot of inspiration from Gravity Falls, but not so much that when you see it, you’d think, is this Gravity Falls fanfiction or something? When I imitate an art style, I just take elements from the style. 

    Are you studying animation in Nigeria?

    I wish. But my final thesis sheds light on how universities need to start offering animation courses of study here in Nigeria. The closest thing to a computer-animation-related programme I could get was graphics design in UNN. And that’s where I am.

    I don’t trust Nigerian schools enough to think it’s being taught well

    It’s not. In the first semester of my final year, we learnt surface-level UI. To be honest, our lecturers don’t know much about what they’re showing us because when they were learning, they used cutters and rulers and cartons to construct stuff. They’re trying their best, teaching us the theory. The practicals, which is the real work, I learn from YouTube and Skill Share.  

    Something I find really cool about you is you make couples’ art. Tell me about that

    The first-ever couple I illustrated was my friends, Ubong and Joey. They were dating at the time. I just used them to practice. Then I started getting commissions from couples for their weddings. Every couple I’ve ever drawn ends up genuinely resonating with my goofy version of themselves, and it’s just really great to see.

    How much did you charge when you started drawing for couples, and how much do you charge now?

    When I started digital art, I didn’t understand how to put a price on my work. I felt I was just starting, and therefore, should be cheap. That’s not a good notion to carry in your head. What matters is how good you are and how well you can deliver. 

    The first-ever commission I got was from a couple who wanted their wedding souvenir to be different from what everyone else was doing in 2017. I charged them ₦10k. These people lived abroad. I was just starting, but it was still quality art. I remember the money finished just as fast as it came.

    Now, it’s a lot different. I follow a lot of artists who give tutorials about putting a price on your art. I got to know about pricing and list making, and I came up with price levels in 2021. A pack of six illustrations of you and your partner is ₦30k, for eight, it’s ₦35k, and the 16 is ₦45k. There have been times when I compromised because I just loved the project. It depends on how much I believe in the project. It doesn’t even have to be a couples thing. It could be a children’s book or stickers.

    Do you mean WhatsApp stickers? 

    When I illustrate couples, I just make the Whatsapp stickers and send if they want them. That’s a promo thing I do. I remember when I started doing that in 2020, it was for a couple who lived in Brooklyn. They wanted stickers they could use on social media platforms, and I was like, WhatsApp would be a good one. So I thought that’s what I could do on the side to say thank you to my clients for their patronage, because it really doesn’t take much to make them.

    How many have you done so far?

    I’ve illustrated well over 50 couples since I started in 2019.

    How do you bring life to the people in your couples art?  

    Some people don’t exactly know how to describe what they want, so I ask questions about character traits. Someone who loves to read or is mischievous would be represented just like that. For people I already know, or relationships I’ve witnessed, I don’t think I’d need to ask them to tell me about themselves. But if it’s a stranger, I ask them.  

    Who influenced you to take on animation?  

    I owe my love for drawing to Chris Brown. It’s his talent that motivated me to start everything I do now — singing, acting, choreography, drawing. I remember listening to With You for the first time and being like, “Who’s this guy?” When I started researching about him and found out he could draw, I  said, “Oh, I’m going to draw too” because I wanted to be like Chris Brown. Other people have inspired me too, like Butch Hartman. 

    That’s bold in 2022. Who inspires you right now?

    Yes, I have other artist inspirations too. When I started doing digital art, I was afraid I’d be the only Nigerian doing it. I was amazed to discover artists like Mohammed Agbadi, Mumu Illustrator and many more. I know a lot of really amazing Nigerians that, when you see their work, you’ll wish you could do something like that. People like Nari Animation. He inspired me to start learning how to draw backgrounds. Most of my recent inspirations are Nigerian artists. Seeing people, who understand what it’s like to be Nigerian, create these things is amazing. Also, Ridwan Moshood, the creator of Garbage Boy and Trash Can, is a huge inspiration. I follow him everywhere.

    Are you working on a big project we should be expecting? 

    In years to come, I really hope I can do an animated show. But before that, Unfamous is coming for you guys, and it’ll be great. I’m writing it with one of my best friends, Arnold. We’ve known each other since we were five.

    What are your favorite works so far?

    I’m really feeling this piece called Otilo (She’s far gone). It’s currently on my Instagram, a photo I drew of a girl smoking out her window. You can see what she’s thinking, just like random stuff in nice doodles on the side. I really resonate with it. I’m also proud of this album cover I did for an artist. He wanted something a little spooky. An artwork I think I’ll always be proud of was this angelic lady adorned in gold. She was crying; over her crying face was a smiley face. It’s the first time I drew what I was feeling. I’m proud of all of them, my little scribbles and warm-up sketches. I’m just trying to make sure I’m proud of myself before anyone else is proud of me. If you don’t approve of yourself, you’ll always be looking for approval elsewhere.

    What are the highs and lows of being a digital artist and animator?

    The best way to create digital art is to have good materials, and I’ve never had any of those. The ones I have are OK, but not cutting-edge. The real struggle is me trying to use regular materials to make A-grade art.

    What do you enjoy doing when you’re not in school? 

    I sing. To draw, you’d have to get your tools, press buttons and all that. But with singing, I just open my mouth and never shut up. When I’m not drawing, I’m definitely singing, and I’m an R&B boy. I think I sing more than I draw these days.

    Do you have anything out? 

    Right now, it’s just covers for people who want to listen to what I have to say and get an idea of the kind of sound to expect once I start putting out actual music. The biggest question an artist must ask themselves is how they’ll tell their story. That’s why I’m taking my time. I’m still trying to figure out how to tell my story. I have a few demos on AudioMack, but there are bigger projects coming. 

    What do you want for your life and career? 

    First of all, I’m manifesting happiness and fulfillment. What I want is for people to see my art and resonate with it. I want people to feel things they didn’t even think they could until they saw or heard my art. Everybody wants to go mainstream. But I don’t just want to blow, I want people to have a purpose once they experience my work. It may sound like a lot of pressure to put on oneself, but it’s what’s keeping me going. A lot of artists starting out have messaged me on Instagram asking for advice, and I give them everything I know. I want to impact people’s lives with my art. In 50 years, I want to look back and see I actually achieved what I wanted to achieve. 

    And in terms of measurable success? 

    In the next five years, I want to see Unfamous go from a comic to an animated show, maybe on YouTube. We could start from there and build up. In music, I feel like every musician’s dream is to pour their heart out in a song, have everybody singing that song, and then a few awards here and there. For me, it all boils down to resonation. Even if I don’t win awards, if I walk down a street and see people just listening to my music on their phones, I’d feel like I’ve won.  

    What would you like to share with people who are scared to start creating?

    Don’t compare yourself with any other person. Most artists are in love with everybody’s art except their own. It’s one thing to be driven by someone else’s art, but it’s another thing to continuously compare yourself with them. You shouldn’t do that as a beginner artist. Let your last work be your competition. Think this way, “I’ve created this. The next one will surpass it. I’m in competition with myself. I’m only getting better.” You might not know how long the people you compare yourself with have been practising. Art is subjective; whatever you’re creating is still art.


  • Visual Artists in Nigeria Turn Trash Into Valuable Artworks

    Award-winning visual artists, Gbenga Adeku, Dotun Popoola and Samuel Anyanwu are converting Nigeria’s plastic, metal and textile waste into beautiful art and getting global recognition for their work.

    By Gabriella Opara, Bird story agency

    Artwork by Uzoma Samuel. Photo Credit: Uzoma Samuel

    A typical workday in the life of Gbenga Adeku starts with sorting through materials in his studio. Then, he digitally sketches out his concepts and collaborates with contract workers to bring them to life. Based in Osun State, Nigeria, this visual artist transforms plastic waste into something valuable.

    Adeku didn’t have this perspective on plastic art seven years ago. He’d recently completed his fine and applied art degree at Obafemi Awolowo University but chose to be a freelance illustrator because it paid more at the time. However, a chance encounter with Dotun Popoola, a metal sculptor, sparked his passion for plastic art.

    “Dotun Popoola made it easy for me to transition from being a freelance illustrator to a full-time studio artist. His roadmap was inspirational because he is big on art that solves problems. I was keen on that. Seeing him do a lot with metal motivated me to do a lot with plastic,” said Adeku.

    In 2018, Adeku started a full-time career as a professional upcycle artist. After the International Breweries Plc’s Kickstart initiative awarded him a grant, he founded his studio, Orinlanfiju, with his father, Segun Adeku.

    “I read an article about how a PET bottle might survive 300 to 400 years before it breaks down and realised that plastic is present everywhere, including the air and our food. I concluded that upcycling is a better approach, to take the waste and turn it into something of higher value,” he said.

    Adeku has been creating upcycle art for four years.

    “I used to collect PET bottles and other recyclables at events. After setting up my studio, I started purchasing used plastics from local women. It’s quite affordable, a dozen for a penny, so I get a lot. My group and I collect, sort and use heat to reshape them. We experiment a lot; some ideas work, some don’t. But most often, we get interesting results, even if we have to spend months working on each part,” he said.

    A recent collaboration with Nike will help transition Adeku’s signature art of ants and fishes to merchandise.

    “Fish signify aquatic life, whereas ants stand for terrestrial life. Because ants rely on waste to sustain their economy, I think they are environmentalists. They work hard every day to find things along the way; an ant is never broke. It gets around barriers. Nigerians are extremely resilient, like ants. This idea rubbed off on Nike when they decided to open their flagship store in Nigeria. The idea of ‘Just Do It’ syncs with my art,” he explained.

    Gbenga Adeku and guest at his art exhibition. Photo credit: Gbenga Adeku

    Dotun Popoola, a metal sculptor, has a similar viewpoint on his work. He recycles abandoned metal to protect the environment.

    “I like what I do. It contributes to the Sustainable Development Goals to protect the environment. My metal sculptures are a protest against environmental decadence. They’re a call to repurpose and upcycle the vast amount of trash endangering the earth,” said Popoola.

    There’s a distinction between recycling, repurposing and reusing. As an upcycler, I give dead things a meaningful new life while preserving the earth. I feel like I’m one of the people saving this environment while making art, playing my role powerfully,” he added.

    RELATED: A Kenyan Company is Recycling Rubber Slippers and Saving the

    He asserts that raising young people to be change-makers and environmentalists is another way to protect the environment. Explaining his passion for mentorship, he said:

    “Over the years, I’ve tried to encourage young visual artists in Nigeria and around the world. I had ten outstanding sculptors exhibit in my studio in October. I chose five top ones, some of whom will go for residency in India, and another, in the USA. That I can make a difference in their lives is a fantastic privilege. I see it as contributing to society, which is one of my core values.”

    Dotun Popoola artwork. Photo credit: Gabriella Opara

    Elsewhere, Uzoma Samuel Anyanwu, who grew up in a home of tailors, had first-hand experience with the effects of fabric waste. To solve the problem, he quit his job as a full-time photographer to become a textile artist in 2012.

    Anyanwu, who describes himself as an experimental artist, combines his abilities as a visual artist, photographer and upcycler to produce portraits on canvas using fabrics. He views it as a lifelong endeavour rather than merely a studio practice.

    “Fabrics have long been the object of my attention. I’ve been tinkering with them since I was a baby. My mother was a seamstress, and she taught my siblings and me the trade. Many individuals view my work but don’t grasp its fundamental concepts. I’m pleased they love my work, but I also use it as an avenue to educate them about climate issues,” he said.

    A decade after he started, Anyanwu is still struck by the amount of fabric waste he can get his hands on. With studios in Lagos, Owerri and Port Harcourt, he gets discarded fabric from fashion houses, tailors and markets.

    “We can’t use them all up at once. The sacks of fabric we receive last us for a year or two, and we never throw them away because they’re always useful to us,” he explained.

    Sourcing for fabric is easier than he thought because discarded pieces are everywhere.

    “We approach some people, and some approach us. Some offer us large quantities for free, others sell them to us at low cost. The highest I’ve paid for a sack of fabric pieces is ₦8k (appox. $18). We usually get them in bulk towards year-end because that’s when tailors sew Christmas clothes, and everyone wants something trendy. Old fabric get thrown out; new ones leave pieces behind.”

    Uzoma Samuel with one of his fabric art pieces. Photo Credit: Uzoma Samuel

    His work as a fabric artist is a community endeavour. The amount of work it takes to find fabric, learn about them, classify them, draw and make his collage art keeps his studios busy all year long. Because of how time-consuming the work is, Anyanwu outsources some of it to contract staff, which sometimes includes his neighbours.

    “Telling stories is my profession. I spend a lot of time researching each fabric’s backstory to ensure I accurately convey it. I have to hire individuals on an hourly, daily or weekly basis, depending on the workload of each project. My assistants, mentees and interns participate. I occasionally ask my neighbours and relatives for help, and we all work together,” Anyanwu said.

    Despite the months and years required to source art materials, one thing that drives these visual artists is the desire to see a cleaner, waste-free environment.

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    EDITOR’S PICK: African Animation Is on the Rise, and These 7 Shorts Prove It

  • Creator Spotlight: Moyomade on Creating a Soft Life Through Adire

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    Hi, I’m Moyomade a 21-year-old graduate of law. I don’t intend on practising. In fact, it’s of no use to me. I studied law because my father wanted me to. I had a high post-jamb score, and they didn’t want me to “waste” it. My favourite food is jollof rice. I don’t like pounded yam, even though I grew up eating it every Sunday. It’s a family tradition.

    How can you not like pounded yam?

    Pounded yam, for me, is a symbol of patriarchy. I grew up in a place where the women were always expected to do the pounding every Sunday. They made it clear if I didn’t help out, I couldn’t eat it. I wasn’t down for that, so I stopped eating it. I also don’t eat noodles at all.

    Noodles? That’s not very Gen Z of you

    I know, right? I actually don’t think I’m Gen Z enough because I don’t display Gen Z behaviour. For example, I don’t know how to use Snapchat. I genuinely do not understand people who use it to communicate. 

    Picture by: Ogunranti Dimeji

    We’re just there for clear pictures. What do you now enjoy? 

    I consume a lot of Asian media. From Japanese, Thai, Taiwanese, sometimes, Chinese, occasionally, and a lot of Korean. I don’t keep up with K-pop, though. I enjoy writing and designing, and I also love sleeping. I mean, it’s good for my brain. I also spend 90 per cent of my time indoors.  


    RELATED: What She Said: I Haven’t Stepped Out of My Front Door in 10 Months


    How do you get away with that?

    Everything I do is remote. I barely have business that takes me to the outside world. Being outside stresses me. Practically speaking, in a week, I spend like three hours outside. 

    What? Are you serious?

    I’m serious. But then, I realised living a sedentary life is a good way to kill yourself. So I walk at least 6k steps per day, mostly in my living room. My three hours outside are when I go to buy dye and fabric. I always have a budget and know exactly where I’m going. I get on a bike, get everything I need, and in like an hour, I’m back home.

    In an hour? This can’t be Lagos

    I don’t live in Lagos. I wake up every day with the aim of living a soft life, and being outside of Lagos helps. There’s no traffic, so I can easily go out and come back in. Trees and rivers surround where I live — it’s very serene. I realise I can’t do the whole hustle culture Lagos life demands. I desperately want to live a quiet life, and I’m trying my best to. Everything I do actually aligns with that. I write and make adire, and they both only require creativity. 

    Must be nice. How did you fall in love with adire? 

    In 2020, ASUU went on strike. I was in year five. I needed to learn something, so I went to the Nike Art Gallery to learn pottery. But they didn’t have the resources for it, and I had to choose between adire or wood making. I made my decision and bought the required instruments. It was hard to actually fall in love with it because the environment was highly patriarchal. I spent a lot of time crying. I’d call my late dad, and he’d say, “If it’s that toxic, leave. I’m not forcing you to earn money”. But I was really determined to learn, so I stayed there, kept my head down, and in the long run,  fell in love with the culture. I fell in love with the orisa Yoruba people worship. You never finish learning at Nike Art, they register you as a student for life, so you have to take the initiative to leave when you feel you’ve learned enough. 

    Did you leave?

    Yes, I spent more than the required time, to the point where I started creating designs for my boss for free. By that time, I was no longer a beginner who needed to be shown the ropes. What was the point of staying there and creating designs that would never be credited to me without getting paid for it? So, I decided to start making my own designs. I’m at the stage where I can do brushwork, stamping and stencils if I want, but I prefer to be organic. 90 per cent of my work are custom-made.  

    How does custom-made adire work? 

    When someone comes to me to make adire, I ask them if they want a new or existing design. I sketch out the design — sketching was an important part of my learning process for a month. While sketching, you get to perfect your line work. It’s basically drawing on clothes. I show my clients the design, and if they like it, I proceed to get the materials. You can also use foam to cut out the designs when it has to be duplicated. If the client wants detailed designs, I’d use foam. If not, I’d freehand it. 

    That sounds like a lot of work

    I really like the dyeing part of the process. I enjoy making adire because of that and it’s Yoruba culture. I’m a very cultural person. I’m an Osun devotee, and this is a way to connect with our ancestor’s work and clothing from before the colonialists came, and it resonates a lot with my spiritual practices. Dyeing clothes is honestly fun. Sometimes, you have to mix the colours yourself, taking colour theory into account with everything you make. People just want to wear adire, they don’t really know how much thought goes into it. The dyeing process is very delicate, and any mix of colours can change everything. I’m constantly thinking about things that would make the clothes interesting but still very comfortable and functional. I ask my clients if they’re ordering for a specific event and their response into consideration, so they won’t have any reason to complain about the design in the future.

    Have you ever made a mistake with colour before?

    Oh yes, I’ve made plenty of mistakes. When I started learning, I experimented with many of my mother’s wrappers and clothes. It helped me grow in the way I mix my colours. Now, I know better. I also take better care of myself because I work with chemicals, so I always have a nose mask on. I can stand the smell, but I have to be considerate of my lungs and body. I also use gloves because caustic soda can burn your hands. And you have to know the amount of caustic soda you need because too much will make your clothes tender. 

    This sounds risky though

    I’m used to it. For tie and dye, the dye has to be much thicker, so you have to be careful not to get colours in the places you don’t want the colour to be in. With Batik, you’ve already waxed out those places. With tie and die, any small mistake and the customer’s cloth is ruined. Next thing, Gobe. 

    What’s your favourite work so far? 

    I have a lot of favourites because I don’t choose based on what it looks like. I’m happiest when I make clothes I feel good about. I’m an overachiever, so when the client is like, “Moyo, I wore this thing in London”, I’m happy. Karimot Odebode, a Nigerian poet and feminist whose work takes her to many different countries, contacted me to make her clothes for a book launch. I made clothes for her and her team members. I was very happy about that.

    I also made a whole Encanto-themed adire when the movie was trending. I love all the characters and felt they all had individual designs for clothes. I picked out some of them and remade them in a traditional way. I made one for Bruno, Camillo and Dolores. It was really fun creating them.

    That sounds so cool. What’s your favourite song from the Encanto soundtrack?

    We don’t talk about Bruno for sure. The song did a great job of shining a light on who Bruno really was. 

    Facts. Roughly, how many adire products have you made since 2020?

    I’ve made over 100 yards. I really can’t count.

    You mentioned making adire is spiritual for you. Does it feel odd to make money from it? 

    Absolutely not. While I was working at Nike Art, I wanted to learn Adire Eleko, but everywhere I went, they’d refused to teach me because I didn’t come from an Idile Alaro, a family of Adire people. Yoruba families were divided back then. My name is Moyomade, and Ade is royalty. There are the Oloyes — the chiefs — the Oguns and Akins, who were warriors. They cited my genealogy as a reason not to teach me the ancient style of Adire making.

    These same people would teach any white person willing to throw a couple of dollars around. I eventually went to the Ifa temple to see the priestess, and she told me not to mind them for withholding trade secrets and connected me with someone who’d teach me. Since the people at Nike Art would give white people clothes for free, I thought I could as well put a price on my work and not feel bad. Frankly speaking, we should be charging more, especially to white people. They used colonialism to take away a lot of our traditions. The least they can do is pay for the culture they are accessing now. I don’t feel bad about it at all.

    Let’s talk a bit about you being an Osun devotee. How did that happen?

    I was raised Christian. My mom is a church deaconess. But my dad, bless his late soul, was a man of tradition. He’d come to church or the mosque but leaned more towards traditional religion. In 2020, he had his first Odun Ifa, and I was the only one who followed him. The priest told him I belonged to Osun. They called out to me first, and it was right to honour that invitation. In 2021, I went to the Ifa temple in Ife, wearing my consecrated beads, and prayed in the shrine. But I don’t practise in gatherings anymore because I don’t want to be involved in any kind of patriarchal thinking. No matter the religion, people will always infuse their beliefs. The Yoruba orishas are not only non-gendered, they’re also not homophobic, transphobic or misogynistic. But people interpret things based on their social conditioning, and they’ll always project that no matter what.

    And your mum was chill about your conversion? 

    She was not. I didn’t mention it to her. And she pretends she doesn’t notice when I wear certain things like my beads. We’re okay now.

    A win is a win. What’s been your favourite career moment so far? 

    I have none. When I feel joy, I feel joy; that’s just it. I do have least favourites, though.

    Like what?

    When someone extorted my friend and me. 

    A guy came to the Nike Art workshop and contracted us to work on 100 t-shirts, 12 bucket hats and socks. My friend happened to know him on a personal basis. I thought it was a good deal and made the mistake of not asking her how much she charged him. We finished the work in three days and nights, and he paid us both ₦25k to share. That’s the worst deal I’ve ever done in the adire business. I was a beginner then.

    What’s the best deal you’ve got so far?

    It has to be the book launch deal. It was worth my effort. I told her the price, and she actually accepted. So, I wasn’t stressing about cutting down on this or that. When you’re young, people want to make you feel small. But I’ll always charge my worth.

    Even though they’ve seen your work, people will look at you and tell you they need someone with more experience. I kept trying to break into a market full of people who’ve done this for the longest time. Last year, I had to find a way to market to the younger generation. 

    How?

    I’m not an Instagram person, but I have to post there. I also do a lot of one-on-one marketing, which is one of the things I hate most in this life. I even started making TikToks of my process. I’m actually at the point where if I post, I post. If I don’t post, people who know what I do will still come to me. I’m okay right now, but it’s not completely where I want to be. 

    Where would you like to be in a couple of years?

    I don’t really foresee a future for myself in this country. So, it’s hard to picture. Whichever country I decide to settle in, I hope that I can build a mini factory there. I’d love to go into textiles properly, making my own fabric from scratch, produce my own organic dye. Because of this, I studied how to make the Indonesian and Malian types of batik online. It’s something I’d like to heavily invest in even if it’s here in Nigeria.

    What’s something you wish people told you before getting into adire making? 

    You’ll hate it. You work with people less exposed than you, who think differently from you, and if you can’t stand it, you’ll drop out. Also, finding a market will be hard if you don’t have enough connections. It’s very easy to get stuck in a cycle of stagnancy. But it you prioritise yourself, with time, you’ll love it.


    READ ALSO: Creator Spotlight: Jeiel Damina on Learning From Olive, the Fictional Character She Portrays

  • Creator Spotlight: Jeiel Damina on Learning From Olive, the Fictional Character She Portrays

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    Hi, I’m Jeiel, a singer, songwriter and actor. I played Olive in the YouTube drama Best Friends in the World. I used to be into sports but haven’t had time for it between work and school. I’m obsessed with fashion. Right now, I’m working on music; it’s my first solo thing. Writing and reading are therapeutic for me. I write songs and wrote a book in 2020. I’m working on a second one. 

    How old were you when you wrote your first book?

    I was 17. It was during the pandemic period, and I was bored. I’d written many short stories before but never completed them. One day, I just went on my Instagram and was like, “Hey guys, my new book is coming out in three days”. I hadn’t written anything, so that literally forced me to write since people were now expecting a book. But I’m never doing that again. That was horrible.

    Wait, you wrote a book in three days?

    I wrote the first seven chapters in three days, then posted the remaining chapters on Wattpad every week. So I had time to catch up and finish it. It’s called “Honey Eyes”.

    After you, na you. How do you get into so many things? 

    I grew up in a family that encouraged me to be multifaceted regarding things we wanted to do. It didn’t matter how big or small our interest was. My parents would always push us towards them. I’ve always had a wide range of interests in the entertainment industry. As soon as I could speak, I was making music with my sisters. We called ourselves Triple J Plus. We’re still a band, but right now, we’re focused on film. We released an album called Story, and it was kind of Christian-oriented but infused with pop elements. That kickstarted my love for music. 

    What about acting? 

    In 2018, when I was 15, my sisters had just finished film school. They came back to Nigeria and wanted to work on their first project. I wasn’t even interested in acting at the time. I wanted to be the next Ted Baker or Versace. But while prepping for their short film New Girl, the main actress playing Olive, and her understudy, didn’t appear on the first day of the shoot. I was supposed to be an extra with a five-second screen time just to support my sisters. I wanted to be behind the scenes helping the actors learn their lines or whatever department needed help. 

    We went home disappointed, and my mum was like, “Are you guys even thinking? You need a 15-year-old girl. Your sister is 15”. It didn’t help that while I was helping the actors with their lines, I pretty much learnt everything. So they asked me to take the uniform and do whatever I wanted. The next day, I ended up playing Olive, and that’s how my journey as an actress began. 

    It doesn’t seem like you were happy about it

    It was so embarrassing because it wasn’t my best work, and I felt like I could do better. I told myself I would die of embarrassment if 100 people saw it. A week after, it was at 200k views. I was excited, but I also wanted them to take it down. Soon it was 500k and then 1m. This was during the lockdown in 2020.Soon it was 500k and then 1m. This was during the lockdown in 2020.  At some point, we stopped checking because it was just scary. This was our pet project. We didn’t expect this many people to see it. 

    The fact that so many people were invested in the story when it wasn’t the best we could put out was mind-blowing. All the comments were like, “Oh my God, the actors are so good. You guys should make it a series”. It wasn’t the plan, but my sisters were down. 

    Halfway through the first season, I realised it was something I’d want to do for the rest of my life. It felt right. I liked stepping into another character and being someone else. When I was younger, I wanted to be so many things; this was my chance to be all the things I wanted to be through acting. From there, I started doing my research and taking classes to learn how to act, and it grew on me.

    You took acting classes? Nollywood, when?

    They weren’t professional classes. I watched YouTube videos and lots of high-school movies. The number one for me was Hannah Montana. I binge-watched season one to the end right before we started shooting. I watched a lot of  Netflix teen shows too. An old movie called The Breakfast Club taught me so much about passionate acting. I read scripts from movies I’d watched and tried to act them out exactly. I focused more on sitcoms because of the comedy delivery. Best Friends in the World is more of a sitcom than a drama.

    I wanted to put in the work even though I’d already got the role. I didn’t want anyone to think it was just because my sisters produced it. But even after all my hard work, people still left comments about me getting the role because of my sisters.

    How much of Olive’s character is you? 

    When I first met her character in the first season, I’d always ask my sister, “Why is Olive doing this? She’s so annoying. If it was me, I would slap her”. My sister would say, ”This isn’t supposed to be you. Be Olive”. 

    Olive always wants to help people even if they don’t like her. Sometimes, I strive to be like that. We didn’t have a lot of similarities, but it would’ve been harder to be authentic if we did. s I got to know her, I began to empathise with her, and she became my best friend and sister. We have more similarities now, like how she loves her friends as fiercely as I do. She’s definitely taught me a lot of things over the past five years that I would’ve never learnt on my own or as quickly. For example, she’s terrible at communicating when she needs help. Yet once you offer, she’ll accept it. I’m not great at accepting help. She trusts and loves her mum, and that really strengthened my relationship with mine even though we were close before. I also became very attentive because Olive always paid attention to people. She’s very opinionated and strong-willed. In this world, people have opinions and want you to have those same opinions. I’m working on finding my voice and being more confident in who I am. And I learnt that from her character.

    Oh wow, and that actually works?

    It’s a work in progress because some days are harder than others. You need to have a certain level of confidence in yourself and your skills. In the beginning, my confidence was shaky 90 per cent of the time. I was always second-guessing myself, always asking questions like I didn’t know what I was doing. During the second season, senior year, I started to say things like, “Oh, she would definitely do this. She wouldn’t do it like that”, and it started to translate on screen, better than in the first season. Hopefully, people saw the growth in me as an actor. 

    You were 15. How did you juggle work and school?

    It was exhausting but also rewarding, which is why I keep doing it. I didn’t want to do the first season, go to school for two or three years and be forgotten. So I chose an online school, which has a really flexible schedule. You could do all your homework for the month in a day. You can also take time off. I remember when we were shooting, I took two months off school because it was too much for me. My sisters would also give me time off from shooting to focus on school or just relax. Nothing suffered. Thank God for that.

    How does it feel to be God’s favourite?

    I always complain that they’ve spoiled me because I know it won’t be like this when I’m working for other people. It’s made me really grateful. As much as it’s easier here for us, I think I’m also mentally prepared to work with other production companies. There were times when my co-stars had busy schedules, and we had to shoot multiple episodes in a week or few days. I didn’t have the luxury to space out my schedule. Still, it was the best of both worlds, working hard sometimes and chilling.

    Are you working on other productions now?

    For now, I want to keep working with my sisters. They’re great at what they do. Jesi has figured out where Nollywood should stop and Hollywood takes over and is great at blending both standards. I’m not saying I don’t want to work with any Nigerian writers or producers. But there’s a gap because there are no actors my age or younger. They give those roles to older people. I’m still waiting for a big teen film where I’d see actors my age. 

    Maybe teenagers are hard to work with? Did your team have those sorts of problems on set? 

    If I’m being honest, I’m Gen Z, and I think I’m difficult sometimes. But you’ll find millennials who are hard to work with and baby boomers who are easier. People just need to be willing to give teenagers a chance. I’ve met so many talented people on our sets. If I could make 20 different films and cast all of them, I would. But I can’t. We just need to be given a chance to show we’re capable and aren’t as difficult as people assume we are. 

    Your sisters are doing a great job of platforming them. I keep seeing fresh faces

    Yes, they are. Fun fact: the guy’s who played Adam and Roberts are my best friends. Some of the other actors are my friends from school. A lot of them had strong acting backgrounds, like Esther, who graduated from the University of Uyo with a theatre arts degree. They realised they wanted to act, and it’s something they’re good at, all because someone gave them a chance.  

    That sounds so soft. Who influences you as an actress? 

    I look up to actors who are versatile and embody their characters. I’m obsessed with Viola Davis, Natalie Portman, Octavia Spencer, Lupita is my queen and Timothée Chalamet. I like Robert Pattinson; after his Twilight era, he returned better. Nicole Kidman inspires me to act in more versatile roles. Olive is pretty much a teenager, but I want to do more weird characters set in fantasy worlds.

    What about your music? 

    I’m kind of leaning towards alternative indie music. My music is influenced by the stuff I listen to, and I didn’t start listening to Nigerian music until 2018. I’m still new to it, so it hasn’t had the time to influence what I write. I listen to more American singers like Billie Eilish before she became famous, Sabrina Carpenter, Sasha Sloan, Julia Michael and Bea Miller. They’re honest with their music. 

    So no Nigerian makes the list of inspirations?

    There’s Victony and Young John, Omah Lay, Joeboy, Fireboy, Asake, Burna Boy and Reekado Banks. Ayra Starr — I can’t decide whether I love her or am jealous of her because she’s so good and she’s my age. Like, God, I don’t want to be a mechanic; I want to be a baller

    Please, you’re not a mechanic. But what do you plan to do differently with your music to get people’s attention? 

    For me, music is a means of communicating because I’m a terrible communicator in real life. I’ll have a mountain of problems, and I won’t tell anyone. I want to be an honest artist who talks about relatable things — music that makes you feel  understood and less alone. I want to write songs to make people feel like the world isn’t such a big, bad place, especially in Nigeria, where our instinct is to suppress our feelings and invalidate our emotions. 

    Whew. Between acting and music, do you rest? 

    I make TikToks, but it still feels like work. I always have to plan the perfect outfit, learn the dance and ensure it comes out great. When I’m not doing that, I hang out with my family, and if I want to be alone, I just listen to music and think. There’s never a time when I’m not working or thinking about work. But they don’t feel like work. They’re hobbies I’ll eventually make money from.

    Wait, you’re not making any money yet? 

    The streams are good, but on YouTube, you’re only paid for the ads people watch. Everyone skips ads, so it doesn’t count. We get like five cents, ten cents, a dollar, if the ad is like 30 minutes. And there’s a 30 per cent tax on YouTube revenue for Nigerian creators. We’re making next to nothing, and it all goes back to production. We have to feed, transport and pay for locations. We’re also paying off debt because we borrowed money from our parents. We’ll probably do that for the rest of our lives.

    How do you pay the actors, though?

    When we wrote our contract for the show, we made it clear we wouldn’t be able to pay anyone. But at the end of this last season, we did a little gratuity thing to thank them for the past five years. It wasn’t a lot, and Lord knows they deserve so much more. We’re just thinking of it as an investment into our future because we know for sure our next few projects will have sponsors. It’ll be worth it. 

    What’s your favourite thing about what you do?

    Every time we upload an episode, I love seeing how the fans react to my work and the project as a whole. All I do is read comments. It makes me so happy. That’s my payment. Even the mean comments, I read them because there’s a bit of truth sometimes. I’ve even accepted Olive as my new name and stopped correcting people.

    Want to leave a message for your fans? 

    I just want to thank them. Without them, our production wouldn’t be where we are right now. I’m really grateful for all the love. Some people randomly start over from season one. I haven’t felt that kind of devotion before. Nigerians definitely know how to support their own. Even non-Nigerians support us. We’re working on a new project, and I’m really excited for them to see it. It’ll be bigger and better.

    What do you plan to do in the next couple of years?

    A lot of music and other projects. Even if it doesn’t give me as much income, I’m more of a quality-over-quantity kind of person. I model when I’m not acting and get paid well enough. In the far future, I want to open a cafe and invest in different things. I also want to start my own fashion line. I’m definitely not putting my eggs in one basket. My dad taught me better.

    Finally, Would you have done things differently? Like just enjoyed being a teenager? 

    Those five years on set were pretty much my formative years. Sometimes, I wish I could’ve taken the normal route. There’s also the fact that my dad is a famous preacher. I used to wish I was a farmer’s daughter in some village. But I couldn’t have asked for better. It was a really wholesome set, very family and friends-oriented. We had premiere parties at the camp where we shot the series, or at home, whenever an episode was released. We’d dance, eat and sing. It was peaceful, and as much as I felt lost sometimes, I started to see the world more maturely.


  • Creator Spotlight: Bryan Dreams of Creating More “Experimental” Music Videos

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    Hi, I’m Bryan Ibeh. I’m in my second year at Unilag. I’m a self-taught creative director and experimental filmmaker. I’m also into photography, I make music sometimes, and I model.  I guess something weird about me is that I like nuts — peanuts, almonds and pistachios. My favourite place to be is the beach.

    How did you start as a creative director?

    I’ve always just had an interest in the arts which my parents supported. My dad was an artist, so I grew up in an arts-accepting home. I had my family’s support in any interest I had, from fashion to music. I didn’t know what I wanted to do until I turned 16, which was when I started making films and exploring my creative direction. I taught myself every day and practised constantly. Even though ‌it seemed like I was just playing around, I’ve made something out of it.

    What was so significant about you turning 16?

    I was fresh out of high school, so I completely reinvented myself, physically and spiritually. One thing I discovered was a love for film. It came naturally. I’d film birds, cars or people. I’d think of a song that would go perfectly with it and make a video. I also met my now best friend of three years. She was just starting in the underground music scene, so I gave her ideas for cover art direction and then music video ideas. Back then, we would play around and make fun music videos and promotional visuals for her. That was my first experience with creative directing and experimenting. 

    You did these for free?

    Yes, because it was a collaborative effort. I can’t even call it my work, per se. My friend and I would hang out. While they were playing their music, I’d have an idea for a video, and we’d go outside and shoot something. It happened organically. At the time, I wasn’t thinking about the big picture. I was still discovering what my art should look like.

    Would you consider your best friend your muse?

    All my friends are my muses. But yes, she was one of the very first. 

    How would you describe your aesthetic?

    I’d say experimental, very avant garde. I like to experiment with odd, abstract elements. I centre my work in nature. For example, if I were making a music video, I would use exaggerated colours and strange lighting to create a very otherworldly experience. 

    What has your work looked like since then? 

    I  recently released a fashion film on NATAAL Media, titled, “We Are Looking for Ourselves in Each Other”. It’s an experimental film and a great representation of my work. Recently, I worked with a talented artist named Julrity, on visuals for her single, “BahtShit”. I’ve done other things with more contemporary, underground talents in Lagos.

    Who else have you worked with?

    I recently worked with another creative director and a stylist, Seun Odebunmi, on a project titled, “Villain Identity”. It was an editorial photo shoot I coloured and edited for. I also worked on another experimental music video with another upcoming artist, Snt Rei, and created some experimental, meditational films for a showcase I did last year, called Expo Lagos.

    What are you studying in school? Does it influence what you do?

    I’m studying Mass Communication, so yes.

    How do you juggle school with all this ?

    I haven’t had to juggle a lot because the universe has been in my favour. Earlier this year, I had a nine-to-five in the creative industry, and ASUU went on strike, so that was perfect.  After I left to focus on freelancing in July, ASUU was still on strike. Now that school is back in session, my parents keep telling me I can combine my work with school. It would be a challenge for sure, but I’m in too deep now, so I have no choice. Once you’re on a trajectory, you must keep climbing to establish yourself. 

    What was growing up in an artistic family like?

    My dad was an R&B artist. I like to live my life separate from that fact, but it was cool and entertaining growing up. We would go to award shows, fashion shows, concerts and music video shoots. My first time on my dad’s music video set, I was four or five years old. While I wasn’t featured in it, my older sister was.

    So you’ve always had a video camera around to play with?

    I wish. That sounds like a better story, but my dad was a musician, so it was mainly about the music. It encouraged my interest in art, and I thought I’d be a musician for a while, but it’s now just one of the many things I do. My parents have been very supportive.

    What does their support look like?

    I’m self-reliant, so I don’t ask my parents for much help. Their support is primarily moral. They understand I’m an adult and are more lenient about the things that can come with this line of work, especially fashion-wise. They also offer advice with the business aspect of my career. 

    Who are your biggest filmmaking influences?

    I don’t have any influences. I love a lot of different films and my work definitely takes from many places, but I’ve never felt like someone influences my work. My life experience influences the work I do.

    What about people you’d like to work with?

    I’d like to work with Rema, SOLIS, Odunsi and Obongjayar. When I listen to a song, and the song is good, I start conceptualising. SOLIS is one of those musicians for me. I remember just watching the video of her first single back-to-back and thinking about the beautiful video we could have made for this song. With Odunsi, wanted you is one of my favourite songs. I wish I could’ve worked on the music video with him. 

    What’s your creative process like? 

    With the music videos, usually, I’d draw out the themes of the song and picture what the general story idea would be. But with film, I’m very experimental. I compose anything that looks visually appealing and explore that as much as I can.

    How long does it take for you to create a film? 

    It depends on the project itself and what goes into it. The fashion film I released recently was shot about two months ago but released three weeks ago.

    How much do you spend on a set? 

    The one thing about being an independent creative is you can make do. Some sets are very self-providing. Everyone contributes to the production in a way. If it’s the clothes, they could belong to a friend. The model could be a collaborator, but sometimes, I pay for models, rent lights and possibly a camera. You must bring a crew because production is a bunch of moving parts. Some projects are more cost-effective than the rest. The “Bahtshit” music video was probably the most expensive production I’ve done, but I can’t disclose the amount.

    What do you do when you aren’t conceptualising video ideas?

    I listen to a lot of music. I love to make beads in my spare time. I love to style myself and people. I love to go out with my friends; I go to a lot of EDM raves.

    Processed with VSCO with b5 preset

    What’s your favourite career moment?

    It has to be my first exhibition — Expo Lagos. It was this immersive experience where the art was projected on the walls. It’s my favourite because it was the first place I got to show my work, and it was the perfect place because my work is centred around colour and psychedelia. It was a match made in heaven.

    What’s your favourite thing about the work you do?

    It’s having an idea, imagining it producing an intended effect and watching it happen. While working on the fashion film, there were scenes and sequences I wanted to be so uncomfortable, almost unbearable, to watch because it was strange. The audience reacted as I’d imagined to those moments. Experiencing that is the most exciting thing about being a filmmaker or creative director.

    What are your plans for the next couple of years?

    I’d like to release many music videos with prominent and not-so-prominent artists. I want to establish myself as an experimental music video maker. I’d like to have a portfolio that stands out because of something stylistic and specific, creating a culture around my work. Every time I make a music video, it’ll be a visual statement. I want to play my part in building the genre of experimental videos in Nigeria. 

    Have you gotten any comments about your work that stuck?

    A friend I respect commented that he’d never seen a talent like mine. It touched me because he’s somebody I’m constantly around. It’s easy to think of something a friend does as ordinary when you’ve witnessed it many times. He saw me editing a video and said he felt very proud. Creative directing is something I started doing for fun by myself, so I appreciate when people compliment my dedication to it. It’s my life, and I hope my commitment to it shows.



  • Creator Spotlight: “My Culture and Queer Identity Influence My Art”

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    Alexandra classifies herself as a multidisciplinary artist. She is a self-taught artist, who’s into photography, makeup, styling and creative direction. She’s also a content creator and influencer on Instagram. She loves everything about beauty, fashion and lifestyle. She champions conversations around respecting plus-size women and queer people. Fun fact: she can’t stand honey.

    Which art form caught your interest first?

    My interest in the creative industry began in 2016. I had just entered university, and my mum made me learn a skill — makeup. Even though I felt lazy about it at the time, I’m grateful for that now. I ended up loving it and it became a side hustle for me in school from 2016 to 2018. I started doing collaborations and working with other creatives, and I used to call myself the collaboration queen. I did that until I graduated in 2019. At the height of COVID, I started taking pictures and editing them with my phone at home till 2021 when my parents gifted me a camera. Then I started calling myself a photographer. Since I’d had a year’s practice, I felt like I knew what I was doing, but now, I realise I was doing rubbish. But A for effort.

    Alexandra taking pictures.

    How did you convince your parents to get you a camera?

    My little brother, Zim, is a model. He became a meme when he was three, and it got him a lot of attention on Instagram in 2020. My ex used to take his pictures, but then, we fell out and having no one to do it pushed me to take photography seriously. Because of this, my parents didn’t mind getting me my first camera from the money we had made from Zim’s modelling.

    Is he easy to work with?

    He’s tough to work with because he’s a child. If you didn’t give him what he wanted, he’d throw tantrums, and when he agreed to take pictures, he’d be so angry that he made faces. Fortunately, his frowning face was his selling point. But he’s getting better as he grows. Hopefully, next year, I’ll focus more on him.

    How did you get gigs when you started?

    Even after my makeup classes in school, I kept practising until I got good and could confidently charge people like ₦1000 – 1,500 for it. People got to know me through word of mouth. My makeup was always colourful. In many ways, my identity has always influenced my art, even before I knew I was queer. I always do things differently, I would do editorial-style makeup and use graphic liners before it got popular, and that attracted people to work with me. 

    Make-up done by Alexandra.

    What was your first project?

    In 2021, I worked on my first project as a photographer to celebrate and document Nigerian queer and non-binary people. With that project, I wanted to create representation on social and mainstream media. My thought was simple; if I had seen someone doing what I did when i thought I was straight in 2018-2019, maybe I’d have realised sooner that I was queer. I wanted younger people who were struggling with their sexuality to relate to my art. I wanted them to see themselves through it.

    How come you hadn’t met any queer person before then?

    I have a lot of ambition, which blinds me to life’s romantic side. I was too busy focusing on my dreams and goals to think of a relationship, so I didn’t realize I was queer until 2019. I’d never met a queer person until I met my ex-girlfriend during a photo shoot, and it was like something clicked in my head. I also take my time photographing fat people because of fatphobia and body shaming, which I’d been a victim of all my life.  

    Should this be a “love life” conversation?

    Oh, please, that relationship didn’t last. It was less about the person and more about me coming to a realisation. 

    How did you meet queer people to work with? 

    My partner introduced me to her friends, who introduced me to their friends, and that’s how my circle widened. Social media is a big game changer too. My art also draws people. It resonates with many queer people, so that’s how I got to meet them, even though it’s hard to photograph them because of the fear of homophobia. The project eventually had to pause because of that, and I’ve taken the time to apply for grants to travel around and photograph more queer people. I haven’t received any yet. 

    Has anyone ever asked for their pictures to be taken down? 

    Of course. I get their consent beforehand, but I’ve had issues with people getting in trouble with their parents, and when they ask me to take it down, I do. It’s okay because I understand the struggle. As annoying as it can be to work on something and hide it, I know it’s not their fault, and there’s not much I can do about it. But I always tell them I’ll leave it as part of my portfolio, and they usually agree. Photography has changed my life and how I look at things. 

    How?

    I’ve achieved so much in such a short time. I wanted to get a MacBook, a new  phone and a camera, and I have. And it’s all because I took photography and NFT seriously. I’m always ready to work hard and explore as much as possible when it comes to my passion, so I can’t wait to see what happens next.

    Did you get a lot of money from creating NFTs? 

    Not a lot of money. About 600-700$. It was a lot of money to me when it came in earlier this year, but I’ve made more since, so it’s not a lot anymore. The collection was one of my first queer shoots called “Colours of Love”. It’s so dear to my heart, and the pictures still stun me. It was so timely. After all, I was broke, anxious and depressed because I was almost done with NYSC and didn’t have anything to do. That sale was like a catalyst for two other deals I got, and it was just amazing. 

    Your art was displayed in Times Square New York. How did that feel?

    Oh yes! It wasn’t even something from the queer series. It was from a collection I titled “Tribe”; a lot of my art is inspired by my culture. It was a picture of three guys. They had face paint and were wearing these wrappers.

    What’s been your favourite project?

    I believe “Celebrating Queers “ will always be my number one because it’s for my community and tribe. Right now, I’m working on a project called “Black Men Journal”, a series to celebrate black and African men. I’m also hoping to start a new project next year. I don’t know what I’ll call it yet, but it’ll be something along the lines of “the relationship between a mother and a child”. 

    Do you compensate your models?

    Most of my creative shorts are collaborations, so I just end up paying for transportation and maybe outfits, if I can. Sometimes, we don’t even have time to buy food, but there’s always water or drinks, and it’s just because by the time we’re done, everyone’s tired and just wants to go home. So like ₦15-20k, depending on the shoot location.

    Where does the money come from? 

    I do social media management on the side, but I quit my last one last month because it wasn’t for me. My art funds my art most times. I’m not where I want to be, but this year has been good, and I’m grateful. My dream is to live off my art one day. 

    What are your biggest struggles as an artist?

    Being a queer person in Nigeria is struggle enough. There’s always some homophobe in every space. You might be the best, and people would still undermine your work because of where you come from. And Nigerians don’t value or support talent, so that’s a struggle. I just love what I do; my passion is my inspiration to show up every day. I’m way past homophobia and all that.

    Who’s the biggest influence on your work?

    It’s less of who and more of what. The answer is my lifestyle, sexuality and culture; those are my biggest inspirations, and you can see those clearly in my art form. 

    What should we expect from you in the next couple of years? 

    Hopefully, my creative studio. Not just for photography, but also makeup content creation and other things. I’m really interested in film, and I’ll get to it as soon as I settle down to learn properly.

    Would you like to share any words of wisdom with fellow creatives?

    Do your thing as differently as possible. It’ll be hard sometimes, but if you’re really passionate about it, go for it with all your heart. Always put yourself first, especially when it comes to your art form, because nobody has the power to tell you what art should be. Only artists can choose what their art should be. 


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  • Creator Spotlight: Healthy Living Is Cheap and Possible in Nigeria; Just Ask Fareedah

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    Fareedah Abdulsalam is a lifestyle creator who’s also killing it at marketing for a startup firm. She’s into many different things, including food, fashion and interior design. People tell her that she’s funny and always laugh at her own jokes. She’s a big fan of Asian culture and reads a lot of Asian literature. Her food advice is for people to try jollof rice with seaweed because it slaps; according to her, if you don’t like it, you don’t have good taste.

    What Asian literature do you read?

    I read a lot of books by Haruki Murakami. I’m reading Norwegian Road for like the seventh time. I like his writing style; he can be cheeky, but he makes his characters feel real. He’s my go-to when I feel overwhelmed. Norwegian Road is a story of loss, love and pain. It’s a young adult book, and I can see myself as the main character. It’s not an easy read, especially if you’re reading the book for the first time, but it’s very relatable for me. Every time I pick it up, it’s like I’m reading it for the first time.

    Are books a big choice of escape for you? 

    Books are important to me. I used to read feel-good, cheeky romance novels every night before bed. Recently I’ve opened my eyes to many different genres and improved my reading culture. But my ultimate source of escape is music. I listen to a lot of hip-hop, EDM and jazz. If I weren’t into everything I already do, I would be a DJ.

    Who listens to jazz? Your uniqueness is second nature at this point

    For starters, my name, Fareedah, means “unique”. Since I was young, I’ve always wanted to do things differently. I’ve never been a follow-the-crowd type of person. Even if it’s tiny, I must be different. 

    Made by Fareedah

    Speaking of different, it’s rare to see a young Nigerian pick healthy cooking as a content niche. How did that happen?  

    I started posting food and talking about recipes because I discovered a vast gap in the misinformation about healthy eating culture in Nigeria. You’ll tell someone you want to start eating healthy, and they’d think it means salads and ice cream deprivation, but it goes beyond that. My page teaches people how to live their best healthy lives, based on the Nigerian palate, and without compromising on the food they love.

    When I started posting my videos on TikTok, it was just about creating cute content of the food because I’m all about the aesthetic life. I found I enjoyed cooking, how colours come together to make a sumptuous meal, and people were interested in my content, even though it looked different. It turns out many people don’t know they can eat healthily in Nigeria, and to be fair, I grew up eating efo and ewedu, so I would’ve been shocked if anyone told me I could make soup from celery and carrots too.  

    Why was teaching people about healthy food options important to you? 

    I’ve always been fascinated by how human beings interact with food: how people can eat a particular food every day without getting tired, and the power it has over us. I was so into it I added food science and technology as my third choice when I wrote JAMB. Plus, my mum was a caterer. She’d make these elaborate meals for the family, for example, moin-moin, and all I’d have to do is double the nylon for the beans puree.

    So, you’ve always been surrounded by food?

    Yes, but I didn’t learn to cook until I was 18. I remember boiling rice when I was younger and burning it. I’ve also dealt with my fair share of food problems. I had an eating disorder as a teenager and was diagnosed with ulcer shortly after. I’ve also had appendicitis, so I’ve always been particular about things I put in my body because I know they can have negative effects. 

    I was tired of going to the hospital and complaining about my gut health, so I took matters into my own hands, researched, and took a nutrition course in uni. Then I looked for foods like broccoli and celery around me. I was shocked at how easily I found them. I wondered why my mum never cooked foods like those.

    How’s your relationship with food now?

    I told myself I couldn’t keep going to the hospital for food problems and had to do things differently. For example, I did a January challenge and didn’t eat rice for 30 days; my body felt amazing. That month, I had the best menstrual flow, and my skin was glowing. My relationship with food is much better. Even my conversation around it is different. 

    A lot of your content is on different oatmeal recipes. It’s your good taste for me

    They’ve even started calling me “the oat babe”. I especially like oatmeal, and I wish people appreciate it more. It’s so versatile. How can you hate it? It’s rich in fibre and fills you up quickly. Oat is more than adding sugar and milk. When I started sharing my recipes, people kept expressing shock. I understand eating rice every day is culturally ingrained, and it takes a lot to get out of that mentality. I’d make a simple pasta meal and get comments saying, “Where’s the stew/meat?”

    How many oat dishes have you tried?

    30. I have this note app where I came up with over 50 oat recipes and other things I want to try. I’ve shared some, but I haven’t had time to shoot more. Now, I have a website, so I’ll upload some more soon. 

    A website sounds great. What should we expect?

    I’ll write about lifestyle, house plants and interior design tips. I design houses on the side. I do it well and have had people hire me to redesign their spaces. It’s a thing I take on when I have time. After the lockdown, many people wanted their space to look nice, to spark joy or make their videos look nice. I wake up and move things around my house almost daily, and my friends always complain. You can come to my house today and find my bed in my living room. That’s how much I love interior design.

    I feel like we don’t have the same 24 hours. How do you make time for all your passions?

    Omo, I sometimes suffer from working on one thing even when it takes me hours and wastes my time. My 24 hours aren’t enough. It sounds like many things at once, but I give everything unequal attention. 

    You sound more human now, but to crown it, do you have many food fails?

    The omo is long. I’ve tried many food recipes that tasted horrible and didn’t look good. That’s why I always try recipes I find online and taste them before I make a video, so people don’t drag me for recommending nonsense. I won’t recommend what I can’t eat. For example, I  tried to make pesto pasta and didn’t have basil. A recipe online said kale tasted equally amazing. I was so confident it would be sweet that I didn’t taste it before serving it to guests. My friends were like, come and taste this thing. I tasted it and couldn’t swallow it. 

    That’s why when people recommend things for me to make, I avoid them. I can’t make my content around other people’s requests except if it’s a series. My series are usually well-planned as opposed to my random videos.

    What about food wins?

    My “What I Eat in a Day” (also known as WIEIAD) series has to be my favourite. I can’t say I pioneered it in Nigeria. Still, the series has inspired many people to share their daily meals — something I’d rarely seen from Nigerians on social media before then —, and it makes me proud.

    Who is your content for? 

    Everyone. As a young person, I know how important healthy eating is, and I’m also aware of how expensive groceries are in Nigeria. I don’t want people to spend too much on something they’d hate. I do everything with intention, and the way I share tips and reply to comments reflects that. After making my account public, I started making food videos in mid-year 2021, and I decided to take my content seriously. It meant replying to comments, interacting and building a community of people interested in what I do. People have told me my account isn’t growing as fast because I do this one thing, recommending healthy recipes as opposed to native Nigerian meals. The biggest misconception people have is my recipes are expensive to recreate. I’m 22, living alone, and I can’t buy expensive things. It goes back to people’s misinterpretation of healthy living. That’s why I’m constantly educating people, even though I understand that access problems and food insecurity stops people from exploring new foods. 

    What do your groceries for a month look like, though?

    I can’t track that because, as a food blogger, I tend to make meals outside my usual weekly meal plan, or if I don’t get a recipe right the first time, I have to try it again. I also make food for my friends — a perk of being friends with me — so it’ll be hard to track the cost. But most meals would have things like oatmeal, sandwiches or wraps, maybe a rice dish. I’d go to the local market, which is always my go-to. I buy a little of everything while considering the electricity situation in Nigeria. I’d buy a bulb of lettuce for ₦200, parsley for ₦100 and local or imported lemons from those Hausa men who sell in barrows. I buy bell peppers from ShopRite at three for ₦900. There’s this soup pack with peppers, corn and green beans, and it goes for less than ₦1k. I have a “grocery haul” highlight on my Instagram to give people insights on costs.

    It does sound a lot cheaper than I expected. Does what you do feel fulfilling?

    It feels worth it, especially when people send messages telling me how my content helps them, and I have gotten a lot. I wrote a book earlier this year, during Ramadan, because I wanted people to spend less time trying to figure out what to eat when they break their fast. The book had about 90 food inspirations. Even though I don’t have a lot of followers, the quality of people I have are enough. I can’t disclose the amount, but I sold a lot of copies. Even non-Muslims bought it, and the feedback inspired me. It felt good to see that I’m making an impact. What you put in your body affects everything positively or negatively. Even for myself, my skin is glowing, and I feel good. My mental well-being is great. I’ve seen shege, but the beautiful life people think I have is real, not just for the gram. It’s giving rich in a “fake it till you make it” way. 

    I’m jealous sha. What inspires you? 

    I’m inquisitive, so most of my content inspiration comes from research. Sometimes, I think, “Has anyone tried to mix this and that?” I get on Google, explore related content and find ways to tweak it based on what’s accessible to me and my audience. I also follow other inspiring creators on Instagram and TikTok. 

    Do you have any challenges as a creator?

    Monetising content is my biggest headache as a creator. I’ve realised that I put more effort into building, retaining and growing my audience than on finding ways to monetise my content. There’s a lot of running costs of creating content, especially in a country like Nigeria, where people undervalue creativity. I also wish I had more time. I have a 9-5, and finding balance can get challenging. I’d love to make it my full-time profession, but the decision isn’t simple, especially when you don’t know where your next paycheck would come from. I might as well use this as an open call for a manager because the business side of content is giving me a headache.

    Any plans for the future?

    I’m taking a certification course to learn how to be better at several things, from wellness coaching to recipe development. I’m also furthering my education and research experience; I’ve gotten an MBA admission to make that happen. These align with my goals of building my lifestyle brand, Bloome Living, and transforming the discourse around wellness and lifestyle in Nigeria. I’m a girl of lofty dreams, so plans might change. Who knows?  

    Give us food for thought

    Here’s one I like even though I don’t know who said it first, but you can live your best healthy life without having to compromise heavily on the food you love and are accustomed to.


    READ ALSO: Creator Spotlight: Sigil on Breaking the System Through Rock Music

  • Creator Spotlight: Sigil on Breaking the System Through Rock Music

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    Hi! I’m Sigil. I use they/them pronouns, and I’m a Virgo. I host rock music meetups for Nigerians who love the movement to break down oppressive systems. I’m pretty much interested in everything creative. I make digital art. I draw, paint and crochet. I basically don’t know where to quit. 

    Rock music meetups sound interesting, but what made you fall in love with rock in this way?

    Growing up, my brother had Greenday’s American Idiot and Welcome to the Black Parade by My Chemical Romance on CD. I burnt them on my laptop and listened to them all the time. Eventually, I started collecting rock CDs. I’d go on YouTube and different podcasts for recommendations. If a band was interviewed and spoke about another band, I’d go listen. 

    How did you go from coming up with the idea of a meetup to actually hosting it?

    I’ve had the idea to start a queer rock scene in Nigeria for a while. And I knew hFACTOR was a good space for an event, since their venue was now smaller. I thought the appropriate type of event for that space was a listening party because it seemed easiest to put together.

    How did the planning go?

    I reached out to hFACTOR about two months ago. From then, I played out what I wanted to do in my mind, but it was a mad scramble within the last week of the event to actually make the calls that put everything together

    What did you have to do to execute it?

    I did a lot of research into music created by black people, queer people and women, and edited the playlist in a semi-chronological, semi-narrative fashion with some old Nollywood clips for humour sprinkled throughout. I knew I could use the speaker and projector in the space so people could discover the artists and music.

    How did you get people to attend?

    I pretty much just posted on mine and hFACTOR’s Instagram page.

    How old were you when you decided “rock music is my life now”? 

    I don’t know if it was a conscious decision, but those two albums I mentioned had a big influence on me and pushed me to find more albums. I was 13 back then. It’s why I decided, earlier in the year [2022], to create a space for people who like rock music to meet. More communities have been formed, but I thought to create one for queer people since those spaces aren’t always the safest. I wanted to be in a space with people who were disenfranchised but also politically engaged, could talk about, make and enjoy rock music together.

    Songs played at the event 

    How did it turn out?

    I thought it was really fun. I learnt a lot about dos and don’ts. Holding a physical meeting for the first time is always rough, so it was entirely expected. The people who showed up made it worthwhile, and I want this to become a small ecosystem of like minds. Everyone was open and interested in the music. 

    The enthusiasm to gather in great company was everything. It’ll be a regular thing. This first time, I did it because I had a bit of extra money, but going forward, I’d have to figure out the finances to make it work. Maybe I’d expand to selling some art and building a community of people who make art and grow together — a creative renaissance, in a way.

    You make that sound so good. Do you make music too?

    Right now, I’m just writing songs and figuring out how to record. I write alternative rock and pop; overt, sarcastic songs that make fun of things. Part of the reason I wanted to host the event was to mingle with people who make music. I didn’t get to do that, but I’m not too worried about it.

    That sounds like fun. What song, in particular, should we look out for when it’s released?

    I have a song without much of a title, but let’s call it “Moon Cycle”. It’s a bit controversial, and I have an insane video planned. I’m pretty excited for it to be released. I can’t wait to share it alongside the album. 

    Who would you recommend if you had to introduce someone to rock, and they aren’t into hearing white people sing?

    Cicada and The Thermometers. They show up in an afro rock and psychedelic compilation of songs called “The World Ends”,  made in Nigeria in the 70’s. Clay has one song that’s pop rock mixed with afrobeat, in terms of modern-day Nigerian artists. But hopefully, people will pay to go to her shows so she can produce more. If someone was into r&b, I’d recommend more fine rock music like Betty Davis, who influenced rap music. There’s also Meet Me At The Altar, a new pop punk band fuelled by ramen. 

    Who are your musical influences?

    Fall Out Boy, The Runaways and My Chemical Romance. I like Max Martin, who’s one of the greatest producers of all time. He made almost every hit of the ’90s and early 2000s. I like Fun and Paramore too. 

    There’s an ongoing theme of you liking bands. Ever been in one?

    No, but I want to. I think it’ll be so fun to work with other people. If anyone is queer, genderqueer or a good ally, I want to be in a band with you. I don’t play an instrument, but I sing and write. I’ve been writing since I was a teenager and I’m 27 now. 

    What would you name your band?

    I like the name “AJE”. It’s Yoruba for “witch”.

    Does rock influence your style, or something else?

    I was really into emo and scene fashion in secondary school. And I was influenced by how people dressed on Myspace; I only wear dark colours.

    Myspace? I just know you used to blog on Tumblr

    LOL. Yes, obviously.

    I knew it! What was your blog about, and do you still use it?

    Oh no. I stopped blogging there in 2017. I wasn’t even talking about music back then. I was just into fandoms of movies and TV shows I liked.

    What fandom were you in?

    Don’t judge me for my past mistakes, but I was in the supernatural fandom. I liked Sherlock and Doctor Who. I watched eight seasons of Supernatural, since everyone else was watching it, and was like, “Why the fuck am I watching this?” So I stopped. I kept waiting for something to happen, and it just didn’t. Nothing ever happened. 

    It took you eight seasons? You’re patient. What do you do when you’re not writing songs or organising events?

    I make beads and visual art to sell. I’m always trying new things out of beads and the planning takes a while. I also collect rocks and forage for them in my grandma’s garden. I’ve found 30 rocks so far.  I’m an outdoor person, but I don’t push my limits. Which is why I just forage at my grandma’s. 

    What do you think Nigerian creators could do in the rock/alternative scene?

    I think everyone is doing what they want to do creatively, and I admire that. I’ll say, though, that there’s a space that needs to be filled with rebellious and irreverent things, not just the status quo. Rock’s subject matter is taking down the system, and I like that there’s room for pop punk which I love. We need more songs that question the way things are. 

    What do you plan to do differently?

    Lyrically, I want to represent something that hasn’t been represented before, a narrative that’s unusual but breaks norms. I want visuals that might be upsetting to some but necessary to allow the next generation to understand that there’s no limit to how they can express themselves. 

    I’ve always been influenced by pop surrealism so I want to make art that inspires people to stand out. In terms of visuals, I make things that you could find both on Tumblr and adult swim. Think colorful, campy sci-fi soundtracked by multiple genres of rock music.

    What do you want the next couple of years to look like?

    I’d like to have a balance between the music I’m making and my visual art. I’d like to not only lift myself up with my music but have an ecosystem of people who are interested in the same thing — to create a movement to break the system, that lasts throughout the ages. 


    RELATED: Creator Spotlight: Zonna on Creating Sustainable Art Through Tuft

  • Creator Spotlight: Zonna on Creating Sustainable Art Through Tuft

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    Hi, I’m Zonna. I’m a creative director, content creator, Interior artist, and photographer sometimes. I create tufted wall and rug art.  I watch videos of puppies before I go to bed because it calms me and helps me sleep well. I can dance, but people think I can’t for some reason. 

    Wow, you do a lot. How did it all begin? Did you just start doing everything at once?

     I started fashion blogging in 2017 but stopped blogging around 2019 and focused on content creation. 

    I got into creative directing two years ago when my previous boss saw my Instagram page, liked what I was doing and asked me to be the creative director for his agency. Now, I have my own with my clients I work with and I don’t work at the agency anymore. 

    My interest in interior design is relatively new, and the comments I receive whenever people come to my house inspired it. They’d mention that my space was aesthetic and ask me to help them recreate it in theirs. Eventually, I decided to start a career creating furniture or anything you’d need for interior decorating.

    How do you find the time to pursue these many interests?

    I won’t lie, it’s tasking. I just organise everything I do so it doesn’t feel overwhelming. I have an account for my fashion influencing, one for my studio and another for my interior design. It helps me focus on each of them. I also have a journal where I plan out my day, so I don’t lose track. 

    It’s hard, but I’m passionate about these things, and when I like something, I give it my all and just get it done.

    Did you get professional discipline in any of these?

    No, I didn’t. Even with photography, I sit with my camera until I get what I want, I didn’t study photography professionally either. I studied marketing in school, and after school, I wanted to work in an ad agency, but fashion in all its forms took over my life, and I can never go back to that depressing corporate world. I had to work at an office once, and being in a confined space with office chairs made me depressed. It was my first day. 

    As a creative person, I enjoy my freedom. 

    So how did you get into tufting? Where does it come in with all your passions?

    That will be interior design. I make tufted rugs by myself from scratch.

    How did you even decide that it’s something you’d like to do? I’ve only ever seen it on TikTok

    Exactly, I saw a video randomly on Instagram, and it just looked so unique and exciting, so I watched thousands of YouTube videos and I was obsessed. I started searching for where I could get the equipment and materials too. I saw it as a unique addition to my interior brand because I can count the number of people in Nigeria that do what I do.

    It’s an untapped opportunity to have the first creator advantage because even the few people I know that tuft just use it to make traditional rugs. I make art. I’ve always admired artists, but I didn’t know how to paint or draw, so tufting was my opportunity to be an artist. I didn’t even think twice. For me, it’s not about making rugs. It’s touchable art that can be in an exhibition someday. 

    How easy was it to get the material you needed?

    Sourcing my materials was a struggle. Because very few people do it here, I only had one person I could ask for help or advice. But everything is fine now. 

    I like that you don’t second guess anything you want to do

    I don’t waste time. I’m staring at my tufting canvas because it’s just beside my bed since I don’t have a workshop yet. In the morning, I just shift my bed aside and start working. When I first got my tufting gun and just got fabric to practise, I was like, “What is this?” The gun is very heavy. Your hand will be weak, but I can tuft for hours straight now.

    What’s the longest time it has taken you to finish a rug

    Four days. I took time because I was feeling lazy. I haven’t had as many tasking design requests as I’d like yet. 

    So do you draw the pattern or just use a projector?

    Since I started, I’ve been drawing by myself, but then I realised that I’m not an artist, so I caved and got a projector. So far, the most unique thing I’ve done is a CD rug inspired by the work of an interior designer, Sean Brown. For the CD rug I started off using my hand, but I realised I needed to use a projector so it could be much neater. 

    So is it paying off? What’s been your most expensive and least expensive order? 

    Because it’s a business where you can customise anything. Prices differ based on the design, size and how detailed it is. So far, I’ve only made custom rugs. I haven’t made the actual art I want to do. I’m still treading slowly, and people are still trying to understand what I do but, it’s been a decent start. I plan to introduce more unique designs, so they just don’t think it’s customised rugs or mirrors.   

    What about the tuft mirrors? Ever broken any?

    I haven’t. The challenge with the mirror tuft is that I don’t have enough equipment to carve hardwood yet, so I use ply boards and use scissors to cut it. The wood is just supposed to back it up, so it works. To be honest, the mirror is easier to make since it takes up all the space, but rugs sometimes have complicated designs and can be more challenging. 

    What’s your favourite design so far?

    The CD rug for sure, but I also have this “Stay weird” wall hanging art, and I love the colour plus, it was freehanded and look how good it came out!

    Speaking of the CD rug, are you a big Michael Jackson fan? 

    I am obsessed. I listen to MJ every day. My YouTube is just full of him. 

    It’s cool that he inspired that rug. Who inspires everything you do?

    The answer is me. I was trying not to be proud. I never need a push to do anything. I go for everything I want. I inspire myself. 

    Bold, I love it! What do you do when you’re not busy creating art?

    I love watching movies. I’m a big movie person, and it helps me zone out. I’m obsessed with horror movies, and they make me laugh. It’s not real, so it‘s hard to take it serious. I like mystery and suspense, and horror movies always have that. 

    What goes in your head when you’re creating content outside? Do you get shy?

    I don’t. It doesn’t bother me. I’m very shameless when I need to create content. When you can tell that you’re about to create magic, you have to drop your shame. Just try not to care about who is watching you and take advantage of those precious moments. 

    As someone that gets shy taking pictures or documenting memories, I need your tips for more confidence

    For me, I don’t care; I just do what I have to do. If I had to give someone advice, I’d say no one is really looking at you. Just pretend they are admiring you, and you’ll get all the confidence you need. 

    Do you have a favourite career moment so far?

    No, I don’t. But, I’m proud of myself for what I’m currently doing. I do so much at once, and I’m happy with how much I’ve improved my skills. I take myself seriously and always follow through when I set my heart on a project. I don’t have a favourite career moment yet, but I hope I get it soon.

    Where do you not want to be in the next five years?

    I don’t want to send email pitches about my work. I want to be requested. It’s normal to always sell yourself in life, but I don’t want to keep introducing myself. I want to be big enough by then. I’m doing what I can to ensure that happens—seizing opportunities and doing more than my best. 

    READ ALSO: Creator Spotlight: Sandra Discusses Using K-drama to Help Navigate Her Feelings

  • Creator Spotlight: Sandra Discusses Using K-drama to Help Navigate Her Feelings

    Creator Spotlight is a fun weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it. 


    Today’s subject is a podcaster who, after graduating from university and frustrated with everything, decided to navigate her feelings and struggles through the lens of K-drama. 


    Hi, I’m Sandra. I love and enjoy watching K-dramas, listening to K-pop, and spending all my time crushing On BTS members. People who see me outside won’t know that I’m constantly blasting K-pop on the highest volume while singing and dancing like I’m in a concert inside my room. 

    I mean, if BTS would just come here, you wouldn’t have to do that

    Exactly! I have to keep giving myself my concert, please.

    So, you’re an ARMY, right?

    Of course, I am. My bias is Taehyung. He was the first person I saw when I decided to get into BTS’s music. My bias wrecker is J-Hope. At first, I used to just listen to K-drama OST, but after I got into BTS, I couldn’t stan any other group. I listen to SEVENTEEN and The Rose, but it’s not the same.

    Her favorite picture of Taehyung

    The Rose? That’s good taste. What was the K-drama that made you obsessed?

    My first ever K-drama was City Hunter. The story behind it is even ridiculous. I was in SS1 and staying with my cousin and grandma. I saw a movie called Spartacus lying around the house and started watching it. My cousin caught me watching Spartacus and he scolded me. Then he gave me the City Hunter DVD to watch instead. The first scene was filled with older men and a woman giving birth, and then the next thing they showed Lee Min Ho, and I was sold. I’d never heard of Korea or the language before then. I started watching all of Lee Min Ho’s films and never returned. 

    Screaming! I loved that movie too, but I’d love to see the actor play more mature roles. He did a great job with Pachinko.

    What did he do? I want to defend him so bad. He did try with Pachinko. It was a different character from what I was used to seeing him act; maybe that’s why I didn’t even enjoy it. Some actors are talented enough to play different roles, but some have that one role where they’d always shine. Lee Min Ho shines when he plays that romantic drama lead. Drag him, but he’s still my fave. 

    Her favorite picture of Lee Min Ho

     Gotcha. Where did the depression that made you start a podcast come from?

    To be fair, I started my podcast this year. My plans crumbled. I thought I could just go back to school for my master’s program, and from there, I’d figure out what to do with my life. But that didn’t work, so my dad started suggesting that I follow him to his shop. I don’t even blame him because I’d do the same in his position. 

    I don’t even know if it’s depression. I’d feel down today and better the next day, and starting my podcast helped me understand how I was feeling.

    What happened next?

    I saw someone on Instagram talk about her podcast journey, and I’d just watched this K-drama called Today’s Webtoon. The main character’s dad was helping her make big decisions in her life, unwilling to listen to what she wanted, and I could relate to that struggle. I decided that talking about those feelings in relation to K-drama would be my thing. I started listening to other people’s podcasts to get a feel of what I wanted mine to sound like. 

    So, your plan for your podcast was to help people feel seen?

    Yes, but not just for other people. I do it for myself first. I was in a K-drama slump last week, which was odd because I watch K-drama every day. It might seem silly, but people struggle with that and me talking about it might make someone out there feel seen. And for me, when I talk about my struggles, I feel relieved and lighter. I remember when I was listening to other people’s podcasts and kept going, “Wow, I’ve been in that same situation, and this is how I felt too.” I wanted to recreate that. 

    Do you use special types of equipment, and where do you record?

    For now, I use my phone, close my door, lie on my bed and talk. There’s nothing special that I use right now. 

    At first, I thought I had to get professional gear to record my podcast, but my sister just told me to download the anchor app, and that was it. I type my script— it’s more of an outline —  on my second phone. 

    With editing, sometimes I don’t know what I’m doing, but I keep trying until I get it right. 

    Why did it specifically have to be about K-drama?

    I kept getting ideas when I watched K-dramas, so it made sense. Around the same time Alchemy of Souls was airing, I made a link and asked people to share their thoughts in a voice recording. I won’t lie; I wasn’t expecting people to answer me, but they did, especially people from TikTok, so I made that my first ever episode. 

    I made so many mistakes, I paused a lot, and it felt unnatural, and I wanted it to flow. Now I record without pausing, anything that happens happens. I mean, I was listening to a podcast where the host farted and kept going. I wouldn’t do that, I think, but that’s me. I want that easy flow to be there. Plus, I don’t have a life outside K-drama, so that’s that.

    To be honest, K-drama is enough life.

    Hahaha. Exactly! It’s enough. There’s so much to watch and enjoy.

    How do you get over the sound of your voice?

    I’m a very shy person, but when I’m recording, it’s a different situation entirely. I kind of like listening to myself talk now.

    What’s the best thing that has happened to you since you started your podcast?

    Someone once commented on my TikTok page about how much she loved my podcast. She said it helped her get through the night.  

    I finally felt like I was doing something good. I also posted the link to a random episode on my WhatsApp status, not expecting my friends to click, and a friend texted me and said I mentioned some books in my last episode and she’d like to read them. I was so excited that she listened. 

    Do you think you’ll still be talking about K-dramas in the next five years?

    I don’t know where I’d be, but I’ll always watch K-drama. My kids and husband will watch it with me, and I’ll create content about things I love that resonates with me in the K-world. Maybe by then, I’d have even attended a concert. 

    Right now, I’m not focusing on blowing or getting many followers. I want to build a great community and take it one step at a time. So I can’t say what the next five years will look like. I’ll work on any opportunity that comes my way but only if I enjoy it. I have to enjoy what I’m doing. 

    I hope you get to do all that. Can you recommend the best K-dramas you’ve seen? 

    If you don’t see any K-drama, you must watch Alchemy of Souls because it’s such great storytelling. Then there’s Our Beloved Summer; that drama is perfect. Another one I like is Today’s Webtoon. It’s slow-paced and so good. Then an old-ish one is Mr Queen. Don’t be like me, watch it early, also Master of the Mask no it’s incredible. Then finally, The Heirs, I watch it every year, and it still makes me cry even though I know how it ends. K-drama directors are trying, so you too, try to enjoy these dramas. 

    READ ALSO: Creator Spotlight: Meet Shelah, the Gordon Ramsay of Book Reviews

  • Creator Spotlight: Meet Shelah, the Gordon Ramsay of Book Reviews

    Hi, I’m Shelah Jegede, a 25-year-old bookstagrammer who writes book reviews.

    I like rock music. I read a lot and work at a bookstore as a buyer/procurer. For fun, I watch anime. I don’t really think I’m interesting.

    What’s your favourite anime?

    One Piece!

    See, I don’t know why I asked. Your Twitter name is “Luffy’s wife”

    Laughs*  Yeah, that’s my favourite anime.

    So, you’re a bookstagrammer. How did that happen?

    I have a friend, Uche, who ran a bookstagram account two years ago. I read a lot, and I’d tell him how good I think a particular book is, so he asked me to open one too. I was so confused about what a bookstagram account was. He showed me his page, and I saw that the people he was following and his followers were all book accounts. I opened mine in 2020. 

    What’s it like to be a bookstagrammer?

    You get to meet many people and work in the book industry. It’s always funny to hear people say, “Nigerians don’t read,” because working in the book industry has shown me that’s a lie. The sales we make daily at the bookstore where I work, selling only books, show that a lot of Nigerians read. I’ve seen someone walk into the store and buy ₦100k worth of books just like that. Not for a library or charity, just for themselves. 

    Have you always been a big reader?

    Yes, I’ve been a big reader since I was a child. I always make sure to read 100 pages every day. 

    What types of books did you read as a child? 

    When I started reading, I didn’t read children’s books. I was reading thrillers and horror when I was like seven.

    So like Goosebumps? Please say Goosebumps

    Yes, I read those, but I started with the gory ones. It got to a point where my mum started burning my books when she noticed I was buying and reading stuff like that.

    Do you think those books had any influence on you?

    Well, I’m goth. I’ve always been into dark stuff like rock music and horror. I used to take pictures at home dressed as a goth, but I no longer have time for that. I also have a lot of tattoos, and people are always surprised by them. It’s just what I am and what I’ve always been. I can’t go full goth to work, but I always wear black. When people ask if I’m mourning someone, I just explain that I’m goth and can’t express myself how I’d like. 

    And you said you’re not interesting. If you could live in a fictional universe, what would it be?

    I wouldn’t survive but the universe of Six of Crows. You can only survive if you have money. Actually, even money can’t save you. Tbh a better option would be One Piece. I’d like to chill with Luffy and the gang. 

    How many books do you own?

    I own a lot of books. I started to run out of shelf space, so now, they live in boxes. They should be up to 300.

    What! How do you handle rodents? 

    I don’t have rodent issues. They don’t disturb my books.

    How can you afford that? Are you laundering money?

    Laughs* I’ve been buying books since I can’t remember. Plus the old ones and the ones I’ve been given. If I have a book I don’t like, I read and sell or give it out. 

    Does working at a bookstore get you discounts?

    Yes, I get discounts. I also get proof copies. Also, one advantage of running a bookstagram account is authors and publishers will reach out to you for book reviews. I don’t review books for self published authors in Nigeria anymore because they don’t take criticism well. They also like to pay, and I don’t like getting paid so I don’t feel obligated to write a nice review. If your book is horrible, I’ll say it’s horrible, and I don’t want money to tie me down. 

    Ever had issues because of a bad review you wrote?

    Yes, two of them. I didn’t even give bad reviews. I have a reputation on Instagram as the Gordon Ramsey of books because I’m always honest. The  first author sent me a review copy, and the book was awful. I had to force myself to finish. When I was done, I took a picture and said, “For reasons known to me, I will not be reviewing this book”, and she blocked me. What if I had reviewed the book instead? 

    The second author  wrote about queer people condescendingly, and it had nothing to do with the plot. It was even Christian fiction. I had to call it out. Then she wrote a blog post saying how she was not homophobic. I told her to write her Christian fiction and go away, abeg. 

    How do you get to review books from non-Nigerians?

    You reach out to the publishers, not the authors, and tell them what you do. Share your handle and where you’d be reviewing it. Some of them will air your message because, who are you? And there is this bias they have towards African book reviewers. During COVID, they told me that because of the pandemic, they couldn’t send books out, but they sent them to other non-Africans. It’s just luck. Most times, I just buy the book. 

    What are some other struggles you face as a bookstagrammer? 

    Sometimes, it can be overwhelming when other bookstagrammers are reading a so many books. I feel pressured to do the same. There’s also the pressure of taking nice pictures. Sometimes, I take breaks from posting so I don’t feel pressured and can just enjoy my book. Another thing is there’s always the pressure to read popular books. People ignore you when you’re talking about the non-popular ones, except you already have a following.

    How did you become the Gordon Ramsey of book reviews?

    There are these popular books people on TikTok always say are interesting, but when you read them, it’ll be the worst thing you’ve ever read. No plot, just heterosexual sex. I started doing this thing where I review those specific books, dissect and tell people how trash it is. 

    There was a time when I said many writers on TikTok don’t know how to write romance. They’d write sexual connections and sell them as romantic, and people started agreeing with me. I like romance but let it be well written. I’m just tired of the heteronormative rubbish in romance. If it’s good, I won’t say it’s bad. I thought people would unfollow me for these opinions, but it turns out they like them.  

    Which romantic books do you consider well-written?

    I’ll say She Gets the Girl, the Heartstopper series. I don’t read a lot of romance; fantasy is my favourite genre. Six of Crows is fantasy, but some of the characters were in love and had good relationships. The Song of Achilles is also good, and finally, Seven Days in June

    Her favourite books right now

    Which do you prefer, hard copies or ebooks?

    Definitely hard copies. I don’t enjoy reading on my phone; it’s very distracting. 

    Book pet peeve?

    Unremovable stickers and annotating books. I can’t stand it. Just get a jotter or something. It’s like defacing a beautiful white wall. Why would you do that? Get sticky notes, don’t just write on the book nau.

    No. Let’s fight because I annotate. Let me guess, you don’t lend people your books, right?

    Let’s not fight, please. I don’t borrow people my books oh. I’d rather buy you a copy. I had this book titled Knots and Crosses, a series about an alternate universe where white people are oppressed. I borrowed this boy, but he didn’t tell me he was travelling. I didn’t see him for a week so I visited and his Grandma said he’d travelled. With my book! I bought a new one, but never again. 

    What’s your favourite and least favourite thing about being a bookstagrammer?

    Just discussing books with people is what I love most about it. I love when I post about a book I’m reading, people reply, and we have the most interesting conversation. I don’t like the arguments and when people are snobbish with books that aren’t even good. 

    D’you think you’ll still be talking about books in the next five years?

    Way more even. I’ll still be reading and reviewing books. That can never change. I’m thinking of starting a sapphic book club. The idea is nice, but I’m not an extrovert and gathering people together is hard. It’ll be monthly, for people who are just starting to read and want something fluffy. No pressure to read whatever we’d be reading monthly. 

    What’s your favourite quote about books?

    A book is a gift you can open over and over again. I don’t know who said it. 

    READ ALSO: Creator Spotlight: Itohan Uses Her Love for Amebo to Document Stories

  • African Media Consumption Shifts to Local Content

    Local content is beginning to outcompete international films in Africa as rapid smartphone penetration and an affordable and expanding internet bring African creatives closer to audiences.

    By Seth Onyango, Bird Story Agency

    African creatives are finding a new audience among the youth, who according to the latest Africa No Filter report have grown their proclivity for local content.

    The narrative change organisation’s report indicates Africans are consuming African films equally as much as they consume the US or international content.

    “Most respondents watched films every week, whether local/African films (67%) or US/international films (66%). Among respondents who had watched between one and seven films, slightly more respondents had watched local or African films (57%) than international or US films (53%),” the report reads in part.

    Regionally, North Africans were the least likely to have watched a film (45%) but were equally as likely to have watched local/African and US/international films (51%). 

    West Africans were marginally more likely to have watched local/African films (70%) compared to international films (67%). 

    “International films received a marginally greater audience in East Africa (78%) and Southern Africa (73%) compared to local/African films. Respondents from Côte d’Ivoire were most likely to have watched a film, whether local/African (86%) or international/US (76%),” Africa No Filter, a donor collaborative that supports African narratives, reports.

    “Given the minor discrepancies, it seems that audiences are as interested in watching local/African films as they are in watching international ones.”

    Recent studies also show that Africa’s young population is helping to drive video subscription business revenue for streaming services as content on the go shakes the African media market.

    Digital TV Research’s figures now show the continent will have 13.64 million paying Subscription-Video-on-Demand (SVOD) by 2027, up from 4.90 million at end-2021. 

    Household SVOD subscriptions will still remain low compared to more mature markets like Europe. 

    Digital TV Research further shows some 6.6% of TV households will pay for at least one subscription by 2027 – up from 3.9% at end-2021.

    International streaming services like Netflix have also taken note of the shifting trend in Africa towards local content and are now co-producing both films and reality series like the popular Young, Famous & African.


    Creator Spotlight: Mitya, the Mukbang Creator Who Tells Stories Through Food


    Tellingly, Netflix now has a category of “Made in Africa” and “Nollywood” which highlights how serious it conceives the African market.

    While Africa’s ballooning youth population and growing middle class could represent a profitable niche for streaming services, this could also be a big opportunity for African production industries. 

    However, Nigerian film critic Wilfred Okiche, warns that Nollywood may, for now, have lost its shine and that the Netflix “opportunity” should be handled with care.

    “For independent Nollywood filmmakers, the Netflix relationship is a lifeline to an industry badly in need of structural uplift, having hit something of a plateau with both video and theatrical, its two primary distribution models,” Okiche argues.

    Netflix, Showmax, Disney, and Amazon have been studying consumer habits on the continent to appeal to its one billion-plus audience.

    Netflix has about 2.6 million subscribers in Africa and wants to grow that number to 5 million by 2025. The number of people watching movies on the platform is said to be much higher, factoring in family sharing by its premium subscribers.

    Netflix’s chief rival, MultiChoice’s Showmax, which has invested heavily in original African content, is beginning to reap the reward as African content now accounts for 40% of its viewing.

    MultiChoice is Africa’s largest pay-TV group, available in 50 African countries. Its streaming service launched in 2015 and is available in 46 African countries, as well as in Britain and France, where it targets the African diaspora.

    In April this year, the streaming service said it will double its investment in creating movies and shows set in its biggest markets of Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa.

    Meanwhile, the Africa No Filter report further found that African writers are not writing for local audiences, the continent’s readership also hardly reads for pleasure. 

    Hardly any respondents had also read a book in the month before the interview; 75% with 71% had not read any African authors.

    “This indicates that African authors are not attracting an African youth audience. We also compared the respondents’ reading habits, asking how many books by African and/or international authors they had read for pleasure over the last month,” Africa No Filter notes.

    Bird Story Agency


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  • Creator Spotlight: Itohan Uses Her Love for Amebo to Document Stories

    My name is Itohan, my pronouns are she/her, and I’m a storyteller.

    I think I’m a very open book. There’s nothing about me people won’t immediately see and know. I’m a shawarma lover, and that’s my brand. 

    Storyteller? Tell me about that

    Not so fun fact: everyone refers to me as a writer and that sounds like a plain job. I tell stories, meaning, I create and retell people’s experiences in ways that capture other people’s attention. I believe human beings are books, and every single person has a story written inside them. My job is to pry them open and take as many stories as possible.

    Pry? By any means?

    Laughs* Not by any means. Of course, it’s important for the people sharing their stories to be comfortable telling them. Some people have great stories but need a little encouragement. 

    For example, whenever I interview people, I ask them to tell me a story, and they’re like they don’t have anything to tell, but once they start, I hear the most amazing stories. 

    Making them comfortable and volunteering information about yourself makes them more likely to share, so I have their stories and they have mine. If I fuck up, they can fuck me up. Consider it trading secrets. 

    Can you share one of those stories that stuck with you?

    I can never forget the story of a woman who reached out to me in 2019 when I was writing my abortion series. She told me about how an abortion had traumatised her physically and mentally because of the terrible state of abortion care in Nigeria. 

    She really needed it so she had to go through quack doctors. She was sick for a month, mentally scarred and kept hearing babies’ voices. It really stuck with me because her life would’ve been so much easier if we had better, more progressive healthcare facilities I’m glad I got to tell her story. 

    Did you always want to be a storyteller?

    No, actually. I wanted to be a lawyer when I was little. Wait, I don’t think I actually wanted to be a lawyer. Everyone said I talked too much, so being a lawyer would be perfect. My family wanted me to be a doctor, but I couldn’t pass basic maths, so that was out of the question. My brain is constantly in wonderland and numbers destroy the fairytale in my head. 

    What did you end up studying?

    I studied English in uni. My parents are still hoping I’ll go back to study law. I’m just 21, but if I have to go back to school for anything, it’ll be something I like, like psychology. 

    They also think English is a gateway to getting into law school, but I’m not down for that. I want to teach English when I retire. I even considered marketing, but I heard you had to do math in Jamb for that. Anything that involves maths, I’ll simply run away from it. 

    Very valid. I’m horrible at math too

    I hate maths so much that I had a dream that someone asked me for the area of a parallelogram, and I woke up crying.

    Okay, you win. That sounds horrible. When did your storyteller dreams come into the picture?

    When I was little, I despised eating. We had this driver who made a deal with me that if I ate, he would tell me a story. He never told me the same story twice, and I feel like he came up with some of them on the spot just so I could eat. 

    I had an aunt who’s late now. She was an English teacher who lived in Benin, and whenever she came to Lagos, she’d come with books and tell me stories. In secondary school, my English teacher told me she loved my letters because I focused on what I wanted to express through them and created beautiful words. This went straight to my head. 

    I want to believe these interactions shaped me into becoming a non-fiction writer, plus I really like amebo.

    What happened after secondary school

    I was sick, so I missed my jamb date and had to wait for a year. I wrote a lot during this period. I wrote letters and poems and told myself that one day, I’d write a book. I even had a title, but I won’t reveal it because I’m protective of it. Anyway, I told my father, and he said, “Okay, where’s the book?” I had to explain that it hadn’t been written. He went off on me, comparing me to Chimamanda. 

    First of all, I’m not a terf, so tell me to be better than someone non-terfy. It got to me. I got into uni and took creative writing classes. I joined a creative writing workshop but left halfway because I went to do love with a man and he annoyed me. Plus, I didn’t feel like I was learning anything. After all that, I started a blog.

    A blog? Tell me about that

    Valentine’s day was coming, and I was talking to a friend about how dating as a creative is a wild experience. So I wrote an article titled: “Creatives and the People Who Love Them”. Then, I did an abortion series, wrote about fatphobia, homophobia and the queer dating scene in Lagos, and eventually, I applied for a writing job. Let me tell you something; they don’t rate writers oh. Someone offered to pay me two naira per word. 

    Girl! What’s the lowest offer you’ve ever gotten?

    They told me to write three articles a day, five days a week, for ₦5k a month. Original articles oh. I took the job because I  heard three a week. Naira still made sense, so I thought it would cover my data. Plus, I had pocket money from my parents. I just wanted to feel useful. 

    Then on my first day, I wrote one article, and they called to ask for the remaining two. I was shocked and asked if I had to submit it in advance. When I heard three articles a day, I quit. That’s the shortest job I’ve ever had, four days and three of those were Easter public holidays. 

    The disrespect! What about the best offer?

    Fun fact: I turn down offers for my peace of mind. If it stresses me too much before I start, I’ll leave it. But a close estimate would be an offer to write a book. They told me to name my price. Like, they’d pay anything I asked for. I thought they were using me to launder money, so I disagreed. It was scary. I didn’t want them to flag my account because I knew I could be greedy. I’d have asked for five million.

    You know what? Same. How many stories have you written?

    Wow, I can’t say, but I write a lot. If I follow the schedule made by my editor, I write like 20 articles a month.  That’s minus what I write outside my job and on my blog. I’ve written over 200 articles, if not more. 

    How do you juggle writing for a job with personal and freelance work?

    The trouble with writing outside is I don’t like my name attached to it. I get embarrassed. I like when they say “Contributor” instead. That’s good enough for me. Also, I enjoy writing, so if it’s not a project I’d enjoy, I’ll drop it because I put a lot of myself into everything I write. Writing is a very long process. You have to edit and rewrite and, if you aren’t enjoying what you’re writing about, the constant rereading and rewriting will stress you out. 

    What’s your favourite thing about being a storyteller?

    Transporting people into a world they didn’t know could exist. When I started writing, people called me a feminist writer. I wrote a lot about women and women’s issues, and then, I fell in love and became a relationship and sex writer. I got more interested in my sex life and started to read more about it. 

    I was so invested that I began to write about friendships, partnerships, the whole spectrum of it. I say this all the time, but I would write for free if it’s a good story. Nobody should tell me to do that in this economy, but I would. 

    Do you feel fulfilled as a storyteller?

    Not yet.

    Why not? 

    My ideal life is to travel and write. There are so many interesting people outside Nigeria, and I want to tell all their stories. I want to talk to the market women, fish sellers and CEOs (even though I hate rich people, I want to know what made their hearts so dark). I’m very curious and, until I’ve told the story of everybody on earth, I may never be fulfilled. 

    How will you achieve that?

    Well, I’ll keep writing and meeting people. To write non-fiction, you have to meet people. I’ll put myself out there more. I currently stay in Ogun state. When I leave my parent’s house, I can travel all over Nigeria to tell stories. 

    Any writing advice you’d like to share?

    As a storyteller, the best way to tell stories is to become a safe space for those stories. You have to work on building trust, but you also need to create boundaries so you don’t get overwhelmed in the process. 

    You don’t want to become vulnerable to the point where your mental health is in distress. Sometimes, people come to you with sad stories about rape, murder and abuse, and as much as you want to tell those stories, it can take a toll on you. 

    Can you give an example of when you experienced this?

    Recently, I wanted to write a story about my eating disorder. I’d never really sat down to think about it, but I’d just eaten so I became so aware of the food in my stomach that I started to throw up and couldn’t eat properly for the next week. 

    The thought of writing that story was overwhelming, and I still haven’t written it. Be a safe space for people’s stories but not at the risk of your mental health.

    READ ALSO: How Elizabeth Adedeji Wants to Pioneer Crochet Wedding Dresses  

  • The African Creatives Using NFTs to Sell Art

    With the growing use of blockchain technology, African artists are harnessing its benefits to create communities of sellers and boost their creations in a global marketplace.

    By Patrick Nelle, bird Story Agency

    It’s an ordinary day on the web for a diverse group of African creatives; or at least, as ordinary a day as it has been since they found a new and exciting way to advance their careers.

    “Ordinary” now involves a daily gathering on Twitter Space for a long chat. The creatives mostly come from Nigeria (Lagos, Enugu, Lekki, Port-Harcourt, and other cities), but they rarely, if ever, see one another. Photographers, painters, animators… just six months ago they didn’t even know of each other’s existence. Yet, today, they have a strong community, working together to build names and sell their art on NFT marketplaces, like OpenSea, Tezos, Foundation, and others.

    NFT stands for Non-Fungible Token. It’s a digital asset based on blockchain technology (the same that is used for cryptocurrencies), that includes the name of the owner of the asset, in the blockchain. This allows the platform on which the NFT was created to keep track of who is holding it or trading it – a viable solution for artists who lack a marketplace to create financial value from the artwork they produce.

    “It helps artists to secure their work and control their revenue. He has access to the international market from where he is – in a country like Cameroon, for example. He will be able to get his royalty paid to him in perpetuity. Anytime the piece of art is resold, the artist will have an opportunity to earn a royalty”, explained Frisco D’Anconia a.k.a Kofi Akosah, the president of Africa Blockchain University, an organisation which promotes blockchain technology adoption across Africa.

    To leverage NFT opportunities, African artists are building communities to provide mutual support and promote each other. An example is the Art Support System, which came about when 24-year-old Nigerian photographer “1Jubril” saw an opportunity to promote African artists and artwork on NFT marketplaces.

    “Art support system is a community of artists-turned-friends, built out of genuine vibes and love to give artists the support within the blockchain ecosystem,” he said.


    RELATED: Why’re You Into NFTs? — We Asked 5 Black Artists


    “The recipe is quite simple, it consists in engaging each other with art posts on social media by sharing, liking and commenting. It also consists in experience-sharing, he further explained. The ultimate vision is to promote genuine African art and to champion African values on the road to becoming a force on the global stage, making it together without leaving anyone out,” 1Jubril explained.

    1Jubril joined the NFT space on February 1.

    “Like anyone, I didn’t know anybody”, he recalled.

    He followed a few people and joined spaces hosted by other artists. While he never got to meet them in person, he was inspired to create a group focusing on the opportunities for NFT art. From conversation to conversation, the space and the number of participants started to grow.

    “There’s been massive support. We’ve been expanding our reach. On Twitter, you can only have 75 people in the group. I periodically remove inactive people. So the group today is not the initial 75,” he said via Twitter messaging.

    The community attracted many young artists and has already been transformative for their careers. Temi OG, a pencil artist based in Nigeria, is among the group of emerging artists.

    “I got into the NFT community in February this year, through a friend on Instagram. I thought that NFT was only for digital artists, not for traditional artists like myself”, she recalled.

    She had tried it before but didn’t really understand anything about it, she confessed. After being introduced to the NFT Twitter community, she started to connect with people and quickly learned how to navigate the NFT universe.

    “It actually took me two months to make my first sale, which was an amazing feeling,” she remembered.

    The NFT appeal is also striking a chord in people who initially don’t have an artistic background. Based in Port Harcourt, Stanley Ebonine designates himself an “entrepreneur who sees problems as an opportunity to provide solutions”.

    Known on Twitter as Odogwu Stanley, Ebonine initiated the CruzMetaNft project. His goal is to demystify NFTs in Africa and help to boost African arts and culture, both physically and digitally – including in the Metaverse.

    “I am neither an artist nor a photographer”, said the 29-year-old who as of 2019 was still running the maritime business company founded by his father in Port-Harcourt.

    “My vision is to create a next-generation service through an NFT Blockchain to give our community and the rest of the world an equal chance to see African culture like never before. We sincerely believe that our project can create a globally-accepted service in promoting African culture, and collaborate with talented African artist creators, innovators, blockchain and smart contract experts,” he further detailed.

    The Art Support System community has been very supportive of the project, Ebonine said. Since starting his NFT journey, he has produced 15 NFT art pieces, himself. He is also a collector and has so far acquired 6 NFT artworks from African artists.

    According to 1Jubril, Art Support System now has over 250 members. As Twitter allows only 75 people per group, he is turning to other apps to scale the community. That is important as there is growing interest from Ghana and South Africa, as well as from the rest of the continent.


    READ ALSO: He Donated $500K+ Worth of ETH to Support an Art and Dance Academy. How Did He Do It and Why?


    Cover image by Uzunov Rostislav on Pexels

  • Creator Spotlight: How Elizabeth Adedeji Wants to Pioneer Crochet Wedding Dresses

    I’m Elizabeth Adedeji, and I crochet and own 21 Wool Street

    Growing up, I used to draw, but I found myself crocheting and left drawing alone. I miss it, but here we are. Also, don’t ask, but 

    I can speak a little German.

    Okay, so a different question then. What’s the difference between crocheting and knitting?

    Crocheting is a one-hook work. Knitting uses two needles or hooks, and you can even machine knit. With crocheting, everything is done by hand. 

    I like that every crochet piece is original because of this. I’d never thought about it like that

    Exactly. You can create a piece really fast, with the help of a machine if you’re knitting. But crocheting takes a lot of time. You have to put a lot of work into it. People always mix them up, so I’m glad you asked. People always ask what I’m “knitting”, and I have to explain I’m crocheting, not knitting. There’s a difference. 

    How did you go from drawing to crocheting?

    I was in art class in primary school, and I was probably my art teacher’s favourite because I was really good at it. Everybody is so good at art these days that competing is difficult, but I enjoyed art class. I thought I’d become an artist when I grew up. I remember having an art exhibition when I was in what? Primary five? 

    I’ll say you’re still an artist, but carry on

    Exactly! I think my first memory of crocheting was watching a woman do it in church when I was in secondary school. I was immediately fascinated by the idea of making something from scratch. She gave me a beginner’s tutorial, and from then on, you’d always just find me with pins and yarn, making one thing or the other. We also had crocheting classes in secondary school home econs. I spent so much time crocheting that I didn’t have time to draw anymore. 

    Does your drawing background help you visualise the things you create?

    It definitely does. Plus, I draw once in a while now. It makes it easier for me to sketch my ideas and bring them to life before starting a project. That’s one advantage my drawing background gave me. 

    *One of her earlier works*

    This is so random, but I just know you were that kid who always gifted people things you’d crocheted

    Yes, omg! So, one of my friends still has a bag I crocheted for her in secondary school when I was 11. She’s always like she’ll keep it till I blow, so she can say, “Lizzy made this for me back in secondary school.” I definitely was that person who gave things I made to people a lot. In secondary school, I made bags, small purses, and scarves, and I’d give most of them out. 

    Disclaimer! this used to be peach and black.

    So people are just out there walking around with your originals? When did you decide you wanted to earn from crocheting?

    In 2017, I started my brand, 21 Wool Street. Before then, I didn’t even know you could crochet outfits with wool, but I always thought I’d try it out anyway. Then I started seeing a lot more people do it on YouTube and Instagram. One of my friends reached out that she needed something to wear to the beach. I’d already made a beach outfit for myself and was rocking it everywhere, so I made the exact same thing for her. She got a lot of compliments, I got a lot of referrals, and I thought, “Hey, I can make money from this.” This was in 2016. I started making things for my classmates in uni.

    A model in a dress crocheted y Elizabeth.

    Which of your crochet pieces do you love above all else?

    I’ll say a couple. Last year, I collaborated with a friend’s brand, Stepping with Semi to create a footwear collection we called Gaze, and I enjoyed the process of making it. The whole shoe collection, for me, was just giving. Another project I liked was when I replicated Kate Spade’s crochet design for a customer in 2020, and the whole process of doubting myself then actually achieving it was a lot. The funny thing was the original designer who worked on the design under Kate Spade’s brand reached out to me, and he was kind about it. The most recent one I really love is my sister’s wedding dress. 

    Picture Credit:  Mohini Ufeli-Ezekwesili

    How did you get to crochet your sister’s wedding dress?!

    I posted a picture from one of my favourite brands, Studio Imo, in June or May [2022]. He made this beautiful white dress, and my sister replied saying, “Shey you will not just make my wedding dress for me like this?” I laughed because I love challenges, so I said, “Sure, let’s do this.” She sketched out a design she wanted, and I started researching the kind of pattern I wanted to use and inspiration from what other people had done. It didn’t have to be bridal; it just had to be crochet. It took a month and a lot of trial and error. I had to start over when I made errors. When I felt confident I was getting it right, we added more details to make it really come out and added the lining and the elaborate sleeves. By the second fitting, everything looked good. 

    How many times did you start over?

    I honestly lost count. I started it two or three times and kept it aside because I had a dinner event for a Topship grant I applied for and made the top three finalists. I had to crochet an outfit for myself at the last minute. I came back to my sister’s dress a week later. When I got to the knees, we had an idea to make it A-line. We loosened it about three to four times until we decided to make it a straight dress. Then, the sleeves didn’t fit, so I had to redo them twice. The thing with me is that if I notice a slight mistake, I’ll start all over. It helps me retrace my steps, so I don’t make the mistake again.

    Doesn’t going back to fix mistakes take a lot of time when you have many orders?

    It does. Since I work on a preorder basis and I’ve mostly worked on bags recently, it’s not so bad. I usually have delivery dates for every order and ensure I create time to fulfil each order. This wedding dress did take a huge chunk of my time, but for the sake of getting it right, you just have to do that. It would’ve been worse if the whole outfit was a mess and there was no way for her to wear it. 

    How many pieces have you crocheted since you started? Do you have assistants? 

    Maybe over a thousand. I’ve worked with two crochet designers this year and I’ve had a couple of people work with me this year, on side projects I can entrust to someone. I worked on my sister’s wedding dress alone because for a project like that; you don’t need too many hands. I’m working on getting more people because I obviously can’t do it alone forever if I want my brand to be big. It’s been a challenge trusting people, but it’s been good so far.

    What’s the most expensive or least expensive thing you’ve crocheted?

    My sister’s wedding dress is the most expensive thing I’ve crocheted so far. I sold it to her for ₦200k. I consider many factors when I determine the price of my pieces: time, the design, the quantity of yarn and if it’ll require other artisans like a tailor to add linen to a dress, or zips and buttons.

    Picture Credit:  Mohini Ufeli-Ezekwesili

    Ever ran into a loss?

    Yes, with my Jadesola bag. Late last year, prices of yarn and fabric kept increasing until I realised I was no longer making a profit. When I started, I would buy the materials at a particular price, but one day, my usual supplier stopped selling the yarn. I had to use a supplier in Nigeria, and the prices kept going up every time I went back to re-supply. I was running at a loss at first. I had to increase my prices in January.

    What’s your favourite part of being a crochet artist?

    I mostly call myself a crochet designer. My favourite part is just being able to start things from scratch and bring it to life, to see the end product or result. Whenever I finish my work, I’m always so shocked, like, “Wow, I did this! This came out of my hands!”. The process of creating each piece is beautiful, and I enjoy every bit of it. I like that my work would always stand out from other designers’ works because I aim to create timeless pieces that outlive fashion trends. I love that as a crochet designer I get to show people the endless possibilities of crochet wear and how it goes beyond just swim/beach wear. Finally, I love when my customers share pictures and feedback on their purchases, being able to curate them and post them on my brand account gives me joy every time. 

    What do you do outside crocheting?

    I’m a content creator and I’ve worked in tech and public relations. That’s my 9-5; I write and create content. I recently got into embroidery art. I just enjoy anything that allows me to express myself and start something from scratch. I don’t exactly make embroidery art for money right now. It still feels like fun; the business part tries to spoil it. 

    No one likes this question, but what do the next few years look like for you? 

    Laughs* You’re right, but I’ve realised most of the things I said I would do, three to four years ago, I’ve done bits and pieces of them. With 21 Wool Street, I’m trying to branch into other aspects of crocheting. 

    I started off making swimwear and dresses, and I remember writing in my business plan that I would make footwear and bags. Seeing what I’ve accomplished is amazing. In the next couple of years, I want to get into menswear and the bridal industry. It’s a market that needs to be tapped, so I’m strategizing on how to get into these markets. It would be cool to be one of the pioneers for male and bridal crochet wear in Africa in the same way that Deola Sagoe has modernized the look of traditional bridal wear in Nigeria and globally. ‘

    READ ALSO: Creator Spotlight: Blessing, the Skateboarder Creating Safe Communities for Girls

  • Creator Spotlight: Blessing,  the Skateboarder Creating Safe Communities for Girls

    Hi, I’m Blessing. I’m 25, a skateboarder, and a community developer. Dencity is my community.

    Something people don’t know about me is I’m from Cross River. I enjoy seeing groups of girls skating, especially after seeing a movie about a girl skate group. And I decided we needed something like that in Nigeria. 

    What movie was that?

    Skate Kitchen. I loved the movie.

    So, how did you get into skating?

    I started coming to the stadium. This was before the lockdown, and back then, there were just two guys who skated. I started skating fully in 2021 when I began Dencity. I was like, “Since there’s no community, why don’t I build it?” I started posting my videos and telling people, “I’m a girl who skates. If you want to join me, here’s my number. Meet me here,” and they did. 

    Is that how Dencity kicked off?

    Yeah, I just started Dencity last year, and we host sessions at the National Stadium. We also host events in Abuja and Port Harcourt. And Dencity is in five states now, and I love it. 

    Dencity Lagos

    Why was it important for Dencity to exist?

    It’s good to see so many girls interested in it. According to some people, “it’s a masculine sport,” so being in Nigeria, it’s euphoric for me every time I come out and see all the girls skating. Even when we recently hosted a beach thing, the number of people that showed up stunned me.

    Wow, that’s super cool. What else influenced you to skate?

    I was into sports growing up and was even my secondary school’s games prefect. So when I was really young, I watched a movie I can’t remember, about skateboarding, and I wanted to learn how to do it because it looked cool.

    In the movie, people were doing crazy tricks. I thought, “How can you fly from this place to this place?” It was just really fascinating to me. 

    How are you already so good after a year of skating?

    I’m not that good! I’m still trying to be better every day. I want to land a kickflip before the end of this month. I just know I can get better, and I will. 

    Were you with another group before Dencity?

    No. But now, I’m also signed to Waffles and Cream, a community of like minded creatives bringing a genuine approach to celebrate subcultures. I work there, and the management owns WAF, the brand, so there’s that. 

    How did you get signed?

    I posted videos of me skating on Instagram. Then, I started talking to and skating with a guy called Henry, who used to work at WAF. One day, I had a board that wasn’t too good, and he asked me to bring it to the shop so they could change it for me. I got there and introduced myself to JOMI, WAF’s owner. He set up my board for free. 

    Back then, I was working a 9-5. I’d work and skate afterwards at the stadium or freedom park.

    Why did you need management?

    Skateboarding is now popular. People like to add skateboarders to their music videos or get us to wear their brand for photo shoots. And skateboards aren’t cheap. It’s like ₦105k. If you like what I’m doing and think it’s cool, pay me. They don’t enjoy paying. They just want to “collaborate”. Come on. I need to buy my boards and pay for transport to come out and skate. I also need to pay bills. 

    Yet Dencity is free?

    Yeah, it is. I provide the boards for 70% of the girls in Dencity because I know it’s tough for us girls. I know what I went through at first. People kept saying, ”This sport is for boys. Na man thing you dey do.” Like, guy, I just want to have fun. I know how parents frown on stuff like this, so I wasn’t about to let them struggle through all that.

    Did your parents give you hell for your hobby?

    Nope. I’m 25! My parents are in Calabar. I’m alone here in Lagos. I came without a job or anything. 

    That’s like the Nollywood Lagos dream

    It was not the dream, oh. A job brought me here, but it ended up being a scam. After I got to Lagos, they switched their numbers off. I sent countless emails, and nobody replied. 

    I’m so sorry that happened. What’s your favourite thing about skating?

    Learning a new trick. I’m currently learning to kickflip, and as soon as I land it, I’ll go for thanksgiving. Before you ask, no, there’s no easy trick to land. Skating is hard. You just have to keep trying.

    What do you do outside of skating?

    Oh wow, I feel like a boring person. If I’m not skating, I’m working or at a party. I love techno and house music. 

    What does fulfillment in your skating career look like?

    I don’t have a career yet, but I want to be signed by Adidas. I love them so much. I love their shoes and clothes. I’m always wearing Adidas. 

    I’m hoping in two to three years, Dencity will leave the stadium and have its own skate park and shop, so girls can skate and work. I want to grow a community where everyone who just wants to meet people can have a space. Not just for skating, you know? 

    Many people I’ve met while skating have become some of my closest friends. I enjoy coming to the stadium to teach the Dencity community new tricks, see their progress and just skating together. We come, skate, take pictures and hang out. It’s a safe space to be comfortable and express yourself. I feel so fulfilled already. I’m thrilled you can find Dencity in other states. I wanted this, and it’s just the beginning.


    Loved This? Read This Next: Creator Spotlight: Meet Ayo, Finance Bro by Day, Illustrator by Night

  • Creator Spotlight: Meet Ayo, Finance Bro by Day, Illustrator by Night

    My name’s Ayo. I’m 22, and I doodle.

     I prefer to be called an illustrator, which is a bit distinct from an artist. A random thing about me is my longest streak on Duolingo was about 100 days, and I’m proud of that. When people get to know me, they say I give off white girl vibes because I’m into a bunch of stereotypical white girl things like hiking, candles from Target, matcha and astrology, interesting for someone with a very Yoruba name. 

    Okay, but like how ‘white girl’? 

    I was in Lagos, specifically Balogun market walking up to people to say, “Hi. How’re you doing?” They were so confused. There was a time I was in Osun for NYSC, and the indigenes kept calling other people to interpret what I was saying. I tried to speak broken Yoruba, and they’d insult me. It was tiring. I spent all three weeks at the orientation camp, trying to live the authentic Nigerian experience but I definitely won’t do it again. hard to be authentic

    Skrim. They did you dirty. So, you prefer to be called an illustrator. Why’s that?

    I just want to define the kind of work I do. In college, I studied art with a concentration in painting at some point, and did posters for people, in my graphic designer era. But then, I found I enjoyed digital art and drawing with markers. I wanted something that defined the niche I liked the most, and the word ‘artist’ was too broad. Still, I didn’t want people to call me a graphic designer or content creator because that didn’t fit. Even though I do create content.

    Ah, I see. What sort of content? 

    I don’t think of myself as a content creator, but if I made a reel of myself drawing, I find people commenting they love my content. This is interesting because I think of it as a process video, not exactly content, but I guess, everybody is a content creator now. I just like making these videos and seeing what I’m doing from an outside perspective, but I think that’s my “content”. 

    Let’s go back to how you convinced Nigerian parents to let you study painting 

    I scammed them a little. When I initially went to uni, I was studying economics. After my first year, my school let me add a second focus, so I added arts and did both for the rest of my three years. Doing both saved me because there were times economics was frustrating me, so I’d focus on art. Economics was the course I told older people I studied. Art was what kept me sane. 

    If economics wasn’t giving you a hard time, would you have pursued arts?

    I can’t lie. No. Initially, I thought I couldn’t pursue it because of the Nigerian parent mentality. You have to do something they consider serious. But after one year of fighting with my econ degree, I realised I needed something for myself. When I graduated from uni and worked my first 9-5 in finance, I was frustrated because I didn’t have art classes anymore and couldn’t find time to draw. This was the trigger I needed to create more time for art, share and publish them. 

    What happened next?

    I got incredible personal satisfaction from it. But it’s hard to paint when you don’t have the facilities. It’s expensive and time-consuming, and you need space. This led me to digital drawing and marker art. I also love learning new things, so I taught myself photoshop and watched lots of youtube videos. I was trying to find a better way to have an outlet and gradually became more consistent. For example, I did the inktober challenge of a digital drawing a day for 31 days. Then I posted them on my Instagram, which helped build my confidence. My friends hyped me up, so I made a dedicated instagram account for my art, and it grew organically. People could see I enjoy what I do, and they liked my work too. 

    What’s the most enjoyable thing about illustrating?

    There’s the challenge of getting something out of your brain and onto a tangible piece of paper, which I think every artist enjoys. Number two, I love the idea of doing whatever I want. I love the freedom, especially after working a structured job where you have to follow rules. If I want to draw a naked body or something serious about the government, I can and I’ve done both. It’s not easy to do, but it’s fun. Sitting back and admiring my work like, “Wow. I really did that,” excites me. 

    Do you remember the first thing you painted that made you proud?

    Two pieces for two different reasons. The first is from one of my last painting classes in school. I remember feeling depressed because I thought it would be my last painting and the depression channelled itself into the piece. It was a lot more detailed than I would usually do. It’s a self-portrait I made for my senior thesis. Looking back now, it was so ordinary, but at the time, I loved it.

    And the second one? 

    It was an illustration I made in 2019 about the social media bill. It had a more enormous reach than I could imagine, and people found it really useful. I remember thinking, “Wow, this is helpful and over 30,000 people saw it!” It made me proud.  I’m proud of the first one for personal reasons and the second because it was meaningful to a lot of people.

    I remember seeing those everywhere. Would you like to try other art styles?

    I don’t think I’ll ever make a painting that looks like a real person, but I’d like to play around with that. At the same time, I never want people to wonder if my work is a painting or photograph. I think that’s a bit too much. I like to add a bit of caricature to my work. 

    What’s the best compliment you’ve received for your art?

    There was a time I randomly posted something, and Mr Eazi privately messaged me that it was real work. I was shocked because how did he find it? It was something I could show my parents like, “See oh. People are noticing my art.”

    Do they give you hell for doing this full-time? Do you do this full-time? 

    Not anymore; I’m back to being a finance bro. I’m currently in business school but I  make art on the side, with the free time to pursue it. Plus I think my MBA will probably help with the business side of my art too. I’ll fashi this finance job at 30, after I’ve made a shit load of money, then focus on art full time. 

    So right now, art’s not making you enough money?

    It’s definitely a part-time income source, but I’m trying to get so good that when I charge outrageous amounts, I can justify it. I’ve seen people’s interest and gotten enough commissioned projects , so I know I have an audience, but I feel like I can improve. I want to get to a point where all my doubts are eliminated because I know I’m great at this, but I’ve also invested the time and effort to be better. I don’t know if I’d ever get there, but in the meantime, I like having a plan B to fall back on.

    The starving artist life is not for you at all

    I think it’s the firstborn in me that makes me this way. I’d rather be a comfortable artist.


    RELATED: How To Be The ‘Perfect’ Nigerian First Born Child


    Back to your parents. What do they think? 

    Initially, they thought it was a cute hobby I enjoyed, so they never gave me hell. Now, they’ve been supportive even. I once had an exhibition I couldn’t attend.  They took pictures for me and helped live stream it. Another time, my mum overheard her boss talking about wanting a portrait in her house and recommended me to her. My mum even tried being my business manager, but I was like, “Thanks. Please, don’t do that”. That would’ve just put too much pressure on me. I can’t hold anything against my parents. 

    What’s a dream project for you?

    For two years, I’ve had an idea to create a web series like the Archie Comics about being a young Nigerian living in Nigeria, travelling abroad, falling in love, all of that. Something with a clear storyline and recurring characters. I’ve made sketches and the outline for the first story. But who knows? Maybe I’ll start properly this year or next year. 

    I hope you do. I’m exactly your target audience. I loved Archie but couldn’t relate to half their struggles, so this should be cool

    Exactly. I want something simple, like a weekly series. At one point, I tried to tailor it to current events. But since I’ve put this out into the world, I guess I have to do it now. 

    If you could describe your art in a few words, how would you?

    A colourful process. Because I try too many different things, and I don’t want to have a tight niche. As much as I love illustrations, I also love painting, drawing and digital art. I tried to use only two or three colours in my work, because I tend to go overboard with colours, but couldn’t stick to it. I love to experiment with style and medium, so yes. It’s a colourful process, and I’d like to do a bit of everything. 


    Enjoyed This Article? Read This Next: Creator Spotlight: H Thinks People Who Get Tattoos Are Heroes and So Do We

  • Creator Spotlight: H Thinks People Who Get Tattoos Are Heroes and So Do We

    My name is H,  I like to live almost anonymously. I don’t want anybody to be able to remember me, so I can up and go whenever.

    Outside my 9-5, I’m a tattoo artist and body modification enthusiast. I used to be an athlete with the strength to throw a discus. But ask me to take a 20-minute walk now; I’d rather die. 

    Give me all the tea on your tattoo journey

    I’ve been a tattoo artist for almost two years. It happened when I moved to Abuja in late 2020; my friend was getting tattooed and asked me to come to watch. I went there with plans to get a tattoo but ended up telling the tattoo artist — now my business partner — to teach me. He asked if I was serious, and that’s how it started. I took classes, watched him tattoo. In a little under a month, he was tattooing someone and had to leave, so he turned to me and went, “You’re up.”

    Wow, that was bold! How did the first time feel? 

    I was so excited, my heart was going off in my chest, and this person had no idea what was going on. He was just waiting for me at the table and giving me his body. It’s a new learning experience each time. Everybody’s skin and healing levels are different; needles and ink react differently too. It’s very intimate when someone leaves their house and says they want to pay you x amount of money to permanently mark them. My confidence peaks everytime this happens. 

    What was the first tattoo you drew? 

    It was a single Japanese character. I don’t remember what it means now. But my partner had done the line work and I just had to shade it in. I quickly learnt that fake skin is nothing compared to the real thing. You just have to be confident and finesse it. I saw it recently, and it looks great.

    Some of here work

    Ever messed up a tattoo?

    No. The issues I had were healing-related. The customer ignored my aftercare instructions. When I tattoo people, I text them every day within the first two weeks, but every time I’d text her to show me the tattoo, she’d weasel her way out of it. After ghosting me for a month, she texted me saying it was hurting. I tell people they can’t go to the gym or go swimming until their tattoo heals, and they just do what they want instead. She was using aloe vera and completely derailed from my aftercare instructions. But at least, it didn’t get infected. 

    What’s the most common mistake people make after getting a tattoo?

    Tattoos are open wounds, so they tend to itch while your body is trying to cover up the skin. People pick at it, not knowing that spot will end up not having as much pigmentation as the rest of the tattoo. They’ll need to come back and get it touched up. Don’t itch new tattoos. Also, for first-timers, start with small to medium tattoos on less painful places like the arms. I’ve tattooed someone on the back of her ear, and she said it didn’t hurt. Women would get painful tattoos for their firsts and take it like champs. They tell you to tattoo down their ribs and spine, no fear. 

    Now, I’m scared of getting a tattoo. What’s the most challenging tattoo you’ve done so far?

    Haba, it’s not that bad. 

    I’ve tattooed over 50 people, so let’s see. I’ll say the person that ghosted me for a month without completing her tattoo. It was supposed to be an interpretation of the Gemini zodiac sign — a huge double-sided head on her back, which must’ve been painful for her — and we could only do one head the first day. She’s come back for a bunch of other tattoos since, but we haven’t gone back to the Gemini one because I want to see how it continues to interact with the ink. I tend to fix my sessions over the weekend so the client gets the whole weekend to let the tattoos heal. But there are so many styles of tattoos I haven’t tried yet.

    Like what? 

    There’s black and gray realism; that’s my partner’s specialisation. There’s blackwork which I’d like to do full time, but I don’t think the average Nigerian is ready to commit to that. I imagine it’s painful, but it always looks cool. Maybe I’ll convince a client to let me give them a free one and see how it goes. Tattooing is very reliant on word-of-mouth, and referrals are based on good work.

    an example of a blackout tattoo

    Does this mean Nigerians aren‘t daring with tattoos?

    To be fair, everybody is getting tattoos now, which I love so it’s a 50/50 situation. There are people who want and get lots of tattoos, and people who have sentiments attached to it, so they get that one tattoo. There are those who want one but don’t want to commit to getting anything over the top, so they go for simple stuff they can easily hide. Not me, though. I have big tattoos, and when I get asked if it affects my 9-5, I’m like if I walk into a room with my tattoos showing and you decide not to work with me professionally because of them, that’s on you. 

    What’s your 9-5, and do your tattoos affect it?

    I lead a small group of writers in a media company. So, no. I just get stares. But then again, I have a piercing in my mouth. By the time I smile at you, you’d know what you signed up for. Last year, I had to be on an advisory board with people from a private media house, NGOs, the Ministry of Justice, the army and the presidency. So I tried to hide some of my tattoos because I understand it’s a lot to take in at once. I wore a short sleeve, but you could see a bit of my parrot tattoo poking out. After we were done with the session, people came over to see the tattoo because it’d been distracting them. They asked what it meant, and TBH, I don’t know. It’s just a parrot named Polly.

    Her parrot tattoo

    How many tattoos do you have? 

    I currently have five, and they are all big. At this point in my life, I don’t want to get a small tattoo. The most painful one I have has some lines that run into my armpits. But, my tattoo artist “wisdom” is when the needle stops, the pain stops. 

    Most of the tattoos I want to have are floral. I love flowers. I think my body is a garden, and eventually, when we die, we’ll return to the earth, so why not prepare myself for that, I suppose? I have a tattoo that’s half face, half flower. So when people ask what it represents, I tell them it’s a tribute to the Mayan goddess of tattoos and body modifications. It’s on the back of my right arm, so it helps me to say a little prayer to the goddess — like, madam, I want to tattoo somebody, bless me.

    Do you think tattoos have to mean something?

    I don’t. If you like a tattoo design because you think it’s cool, do it. The people who get one just for fun are my favourites. It’s bold to come in and put something on your body that has no bearing on your life. In fact, you’re a hero. When people ask, “what if I change my mind?” I say, “well, you get another one”. 

    People change their minds all the time. I don’t do cover-ups, but my partner does. Recently, we had this couple come in to get matching tattoos, and a few months later, one of them returned to have it covered. Tattooing is fun like that, but it would be more fun if I didn’t have to take it as a business.

    Oh? It’s not fun because you’ve had to monetise it?

    Not just because I’ve had to monetise it. We’re in Nigeria. Tattooing is not a big thing here. Most of the needles, ink and equipment we need have to be shipped, so as the prices continue to go up, our charges have to adjust to make some form of profit. When clients come in, and we say how much it’ll cost, I feel bad because I don’t want to charge so much, but the country is weird.

    What’s your price range like?

    It depends on the size, location or style. A small one would be about ₦20k. I can’t say for the big ones. But the tattoos on my body probably round up to ₦500k. The biggest tattoo I’ve drawn was for a client-turned-friend of ours. It covered half of his back and took us two sessions; it cost about ₦300k. Some tattooists charge more than us; everyone charges differently.

    Oh, I’m not judging. Art should cost as much as the artists think it should

    Exactly. Tattooing takes a toll on your body. We bend over people’s bodies for hours. We’ve had clients leave the studio at 2 a.m. You have to be awake for a long time and be alert. If I have to tattoo something big, I don’t eat so I don’t get tired. It’s a lot of work. You have to soothe anxious or scared people and take in their underlying health issues. Are you hypertensive or do you have blood-related anomalies? You might bleed a little if you’re any of these things. 

    What’s been your favourite career moment?

    I reached out to Adrian Harlow once. She does coloured tattoos for people of colour, which can be very tricky, so she gave me tips, and that was cool of her. Apart from black, I’ve only done red tattoos so far.

    Generally, every moment is my favourite. You need to see me when I finish a tattoo, I always have the biggest smile on my face. Sometimes, I’m so jealous of the clients because I wish I had their tattoo on my body. I also like returning clients. Lately, we had five people come to get the same tattoo, that was nice. We’ve had people come with a friend and decide to get one too. It’s all just enjoyable to witness.

    What does the next couple of years look like?

    If I’m not dead, I should still be tattooing. Tattooing is usually a man’s thing, but we have more women like me doing it now. I want to be able to have my own studio. I love working with my partner, but who knows where he’d be five years from now? People grow up, marry or ideals change. He gave me the best gift. Fun fact: the tattoo I originally wanted to get? I still haven’t got it. It’s supposed to be a cat drinking wine. Now, it’s a running joke between us. 

    If you could tattoo anything on your body right now, what and where would it be?

    Not you interviewing me? Well, it’ll probably be the heart of Etheria from She-Ra, on my collarbone. I’m a basic bitch.


    Enjoyed this? Read last week’s article: Creator Spotlight: Mitya, the Mukbang Creator Who Tells Stories Through Food

  • Creator Spotlight: Mitya, the Mukbang Creator Who Tells Stories Through Food

    Hi, I’m Mitya, my pronouns are she/her and I’m a food critic and tourist. My food ick is I have a problem with people who soak garri with groundnut and milk. And for an Igbo person, I don’t like ukwa. Something people don’t know is I’m reticent. I’m always expected to be outgoing and the life of the party, but I’m that millennial you’ll find sleeping at the club by 4 a.m. 

    Confession time. I remember seeing you on my timeline, always eating a lot of eggs 

    Oh no. You know the crazy egg lady. I used to talk about her like she never existed and tried to deny her. Those were dark times. But eating eggs is a big part of my diet. I support Ghanaians; eggs can go with anything. Egg in pepper soup, ogbono, banga and okro soup slaps. I’ve decided not to be in the egg closet anymore, so I’m coming out now to say I’m proud of it.

    I… Wow. Was that how you got into mukbangs?

    In 2020, I went on my first food tour of Akwa-Ibom. While I was there, we got the news COVID had hit. I was with my sister and friends, so we had to return to Warri. It didn’t take long before there was a lockdown. I’ve always had a passion for food, so when I couldn’t travel to create content, I decided to start making mukbang content. For me, it was trying to show the world what I’m capable of through eating, basically, for bragging rights. I got into mukbangs because I love food. Food for me is better than love. It’ll never break your heart.

    Mitya’s first mukbang.

    How many states have you created content in since then?

    I’ve made content in Asaba, in Delta state, which is where I live. I’ve been to Port Harcourt, Yenogoa, Oshogbo, Abuja, Lagos, Maiduguri, Ilorin and Ibadan. Just seven so far. 

    How did you stay safe in Maiduguri?

    After I went to Maiduguri, I realised all the rest of Nigeria sees is stories about the bombing and crises. I’m not a fearful person; I have a lot of passion for what I do and a “you only live once” mindset, so I don’t care if I die doing what I love. So yes, I went there because I needed to tell their story differently from what mainstream media shows. I understand it’s dangerous, but there’s a lot more happening in these places. 

    You’re fearless o

    Actually, Maiduguri was peaceful when I was there, but the surrounding towns weren’t. In fact, after I left, I heard about a bomb blast in Maiduguri. But before you ask, I can’t wait to go back there, that’s how much I enjoyed it. It’s a secular state, and while I tried to blend in by wearing a hijab, there was no need to. I met friendly people, and they have Christians there too.

    And what about the language barrier?

     I kept meeting people who spoke English. Many people speak Hausa there, but it’s not a major dialect in Maiduguri. I wouldn’t have known that if I’d never visited. I also got to eat a bunny there. 

    What does a bunny taste like? Wait, don’t answer. What are some other weird foods you’ve eaten?

    I wouldn’t say weird, but the most challenging thing I’ve tried was the edible worms/tree lava called “Bayelsa suya”. It’s a major delicacy in Bayelsa, and while I wasn’t crazy about it, it’s an acquired taste. In Maiduguri, there were locusts which tasted like dried shrimps, camel meat slow-cooked over gas and a roasted bunny rabbit.  

    The poor rabbit.
    Mitya with edible worms.
    Her eating locust.
    Mitya eating a monitor lizard in Ilorin.

    Does your day job fund your mukbangs?

    Yes, but it’s not a nine-to-five. I co-own a food consulting company. We hire staff for restaurant development, social media management/strategy, staff training and tour guides. I mean, travelling and eating are expensive.

    What’s the most and least expensive state you’ve been to so far?

    Both my Abuja food tours were costly. The cheapest was Osun state. At a point, I was even begging people to take my money there. 

    Travel to Osun, noted. Do you have a favourite state you’ve visited? 

    No. Every state has its special memory and amazing food, and I wouldn’t compare them. Eating local dishes in their states of origin hits different. It’s like the dish is telling you a story, and my job is to tell stories about the culture of people through food. Nothing connects people like food, not even football.

    What are the best and worst things people have said about your mukbangs?

    People have told me I’ll die soon, or be hospitalised, and I’m wasting money. Some have said I only do this because a man is funding me. Despite all that, I love when my old followers are proud of me and acknowledge my growth. Or when I leave food reviews, and people tell me it helped boost sales. 

    There’s also my dada. Being my biggest fan, he’d comment on every post and help me shoot videos; he still does these things. I got him to participate in a mukbang contest one time, and he won. People loved it. He’s where I got my appetite from. 

    How fulfilled do you feel?

    I don’t always feel fulfilled — sometimes, I get imposter syndrome — but what I do makes me happy. If I wasn’t creating mukbang, I’d be a poet. In fact, I’m a poet. I just didn’t blow with that one. All I want from life is to keep doing things that help me express myself. 

    What’s something you wish food content creators would do?

    I feel like sometimes, we are passive about our Nigerian dishes. I don’t see the excitement or flair we give western foods. I’m very pro-African food; my social media is full of it. Afro-fusion is nice, but our dishes are magical on their own. All of us as content creators need to shine more light on Nigerian Cuisine. 

    That’s why when I travel I make sure to showcase the traditional dishes of that particular region. There’s much more to Nigerian cuisine than suya, Jollof rice, Egusi soup and fufu, and food content creators across Nigeria can help showcase that.


    IF YOU ENJOYED THIS ARTICLE, READ THIS NEXT: Creators Spotlight: Peer Pressure Got Plantboy into Gardening

  • Creators Spotlight: Peer Pressure Got Plantboy into Gardening

    Hi, I’m Ebuka, mostly known from Plantboy. I’m 33, and I’m a plant addict. I enjoy my ‌company and constantly have conversations in my head. Nobody wants to be in there, I promise. I’ve always been very different than most guys; I mean, my favourite colour is pink. But in this country where non-conforming isn’t always applauded, it’s paying off for me. Being different has made me stand out. 

    So, your love for gardening didn’t start when you were younger?

    No. But now that I’m thinking about it, when I was a child, after eating yam one time, I planted the head and was so surprised it grew even though it was bitter. I also hated fine arts as a child because I couldn’t draw, but I was told to draw a plant, and I did it so well I went from getting two over ten to nine over ten. In secondary school, my favourite subject was agriculture as well. I never had to read it because it came naturally to me. So to be fair, it’s always been there, just not encouraged. 

    As someone who used to fail agric, must be nice. When did your official gardening activities kick-off?

    It kicked off in 2020, during the pandemic. I was on Twitter and saw lots of people getting plants, so I bought some to feel among. This happened at a point in my life when your boy lost his job. I wanted to japa, but that fell apart since we were in a pandemic! 

    Ngl, I was depressed and suicidal. So I bought a pencil cactus, and it gave me a sense of purpose. I went from not wanting to wake up to caring for my plants and being happy to see them do well. I started to read up about plants, and let me tell you, they’re addictive. You can’t just get one. I have 200 plus plants now. 

    I’m so glad you could find comfort that way. But 200?

    I just kept buying them. My Instagram followers were sick of me posting pictures of my plants and made me open a page for it, and that’s where I found a community of Nigerians like me. Fast forward to 2021. People kept reaching out to me to ask questions, which made me start posting helpful information I’d learnt. What took it to the next level was when I made a funny reel and got many views. 

    People reached out for plant installations, asking to buy plants and for the soil I use, which I began to sell. My followers skyrocketed, and I decided to go into plants full-time, quitting my freelance video editing job. I don’t regret it; it has afforded me a better lifestyle. I’ve met interesting people and been to places I wouldn’t have believed I’d go. Look at me; I’m getting interviewed by Zikoko.

    You’ve been doing such good work. Hard not to notice.  How challenging has this journey been for you?

    Aww, thank you. So, there’s a huge information gap for plant lovers in Nigeria. One significant challenge I had was soil. Before I got into plants, I thought you could just plant with any soil, but that’s not the case. A lot of the soil we get here isn’t great for growing plants indoors, which is how I started mixing my own soil. 

    Also, getting suitable plant accessories like pots and plant hangers is difficult. I keep telling people there’s a market for these things because people who’re into plants have disposable income and will spend it. When you’ve eaten, you’ll have money to buy plants. 

    Do you think it’s possible to enjoy being a plant person without money?

    Yes too. Because as much as it requires you to spend a lot of money and can be very bougie, there’s a plant for everybody. Some plants sell for as low as ₦200 – ₦500. The more common the plant is, the cheaper it is; it’s just the quality won’t be great. It’s only when you want unique, uncommon plants that it costs a lot. Even when I sell common plants, I always add value to it. I’ve seen a plant sell for ₦6m, and someone will still buy it.

    You people are scaring me oh. How much is the most expensive plant you own?

    I can’t give an exact figure, but it was above ₦80k. It gives me joy and makes me feel fulfilled, so please. And to be honest, the plant community in Nigeria is very welcoming. Where you’re from and how much you earn doesn’t matter. As long as you’re a genuine person who loves plants.

    Is this community like a group chat or just people you follow?

    There’s always been an offline community, especially for the older generation. The idea of an online community became a thing last year [2021]. There’s this “welcome to my garden” group on WhatsApp, and it’s primarily made up of older Nigerians who organise events and travel together, and it’s fun for them. 

    My friends and I want to build a community for younger people outside of Instagram. We are not a lot, but it’s ‌tight-knit, and I’ve made some fantastic friends I can call and talk about plants for hours with.

    Do Nigerians leave annoying comments on your page?

    I’ve noticed when Nigerians see you’re passionate about something, they encourage you. Recently, I started making content around landlords and their reactions to me having so many plants, incorporating humour and personality because Nigerians like drama, and it paid off. I also realised they like greenery. They just don’t know until they see how it’s beautifully displayed. If only Lagos developers would incorporate it in their spaces. 

    Recently, someone in my comments section asked why I was “growing flowers” instead of growing things I can eat, and they came for him. I was shocked. The only problem is my exposure is low because it’s such a niche interest.

    Does having a niche audience affect the earning power of your business?

    The advantage of doing something different is you’re the first person people go to for guidance. I always tell people to add value to what they do because I charged for advice even when I had just 100 followers. Now, I do virtual and in-person consultations starting from ₦7500. 

    I also do installations for as high as ₦600k and as low as ₦100k. I give everything my all and get good results and good clientele. They hardly ever argue with my prices, mainly cause they can afford them. I don’t sell myself short, and at the same time, I don’t overprice.

    What’s the most challenging thing about owning so many plants?

    It’s a lot of work. You can spend the whole day nurturing them. When you have an extensive collection like I do, something will always need to be done. That’s why I started managing the number of jobs I take, so I don’t get overwhelmed and lose the fun side. 

    What’s the most common mistake you see plant owners make?

    Growing cacti and succulents inside the house. That’s why they die; it’s too far from the nearest window, and they need a lot of light. They are not indoor plants. Please take them outside!

    RELATED: The Zikoko Guide To Being A Good Plant Owner

    Have you ever killed a plant?

    Of course! Every plant person has killed a plant. I can’t even count how many I’ve killed at this point. One time, I killed one of my most expensive plants. It didn’t even take up to three days, and I don’t know why. But that’s the thing; killing plants is part of the experience. 

    Gardening is not just seeing your plants thrive. You will struggle too. Just take it for what it is. Spending on plants taught me how to spend on myself. If I can spend ₦50k on plants, I can get that shawarma with my last ₦2k.

    What else has gardening taught you?

    I’ve also learnt not to get too attached because plants can just die, and you’d be depressed. When I first started, I used to be attached to my plants. One time, someone damaged the leaf of one of them, and I cried. 

    But I had to learn to let go; if my plants die, I’ll be fine. We’ll all die someday. Just enjoy things in the moment. Plants have also taught me patience because taking care of them tested my patience.

    How fulfilled do you feel in all this?

    I’m a very spiritual person, not religious, but I believe in God. There are indications in the bible that God loves nature and blesses people who care for it, and I’m a living testament to that. My life has completely changed financially, and while I’m happy with what I have now, I want more. I want to have my own home with a beautiful garden where I can plant a tree and just do green things. I want to travel, go on botanical tours and be on TV.

    How do you plan to achieve these dreams? 

    I’ve been more intentional and ambitious. I shamelessly pitch myself more. I’ve started tagging large accounts to my posts because I want to get featured. I’d also like to get large-scale landscaping jobs so I’m strategically making content towards that. I now boldly call myself an influencer and plant icon too!

    I just want my passion to take me as far as I want to go. There’s no timetable for success and achievements. My life only started to go upwards in my 30s. So I don’t usually get things when I want them, but when I do get them, they come in such abundance. I know whenever I achieve these dreams,  they’ll come abundantly. Till then, I wait.


    Enjoyed this story? Read this next: Creator Spotlight: How Loliaba’s Spirituality Intersects With Her Music

  • Creator Spotlight: How Loliaba’s Spirituality Intersects With Her Music

    Hi, I’m Loliaba, a singer, songwriter and siren. I’m also an astrologer, tarot reader and all-round metaphysical mami. I’m emotionally intelligent, but I am drawn to chaos. I love sweet and spicy foods; think suya with bread and jam. Most people don’t know, but I’m an introvert with an outside personality. It’s so bad I had a friend replace the heart emoji he used to store my name with a ghost emoji. I’m Loliaba, the ghost. 

    I love your name. What does it mean? 

    My name, is Ijaw, and it means “star”. I think it’s a very befitting name with everything I am.

    Your parents are the best in manifestation. What’s your relationship with them like? 

    I grew up in Port-Harcourt with my German-Nigerian dad and Nigerian mum, who were a bit psycho. None of them were adulting adults. We’re all very playful, affectionate and emotional, and this has led me through adulthood. My dad is late, but my mum and I have a great relationship, even with all my non-conforming spirituality. I’m grateful for that. 

    How easy was it for you to accept your spirituality?

    I realised there was more out there because not everyone in my family is Christian. Dad’s dad was a traditional ruler, but he and his wife were Scientologists. My introduction to astrology happened after I read a cousin’s slum book in 2009; I was ten and intrigued. Officially, it took off when I fell in love with a Libra man, knowing I was Pisces and kept looking at our zodiac compatibilities and birth charts. Libras like to pretend they are fair, but they don’t know how to separate their personal opinion of fairness from what fairness is. I’m thankful I found myself while looking to validate my feelings for this person even though everything was saying no. After my grandma died, I’d written my EP, Retrograde, but my relationship with him made me revisit it.

    As a Libra, I take offence, but also, we suck. Did that relationship influence your EP?

    The songs in Retrograde are about processing love, the loss of my dad and grandma, my mental health, and my relationship with him. But there are songs about dealing with grief after my grandmother died. My favourite has to be Troubled Waters; I sang and listened to it a lot after my experience with him, but consistent listening made me realise there were bits of me in the problem too, which is where “retrograde” comes from. You’ve moved forward, but the universe says, “wait, take a step back”. I’ve written music scatteredly before, but Retrograde is my first work in the world.

    RELATED: The Zikoko Guide To Dating A Nigerian Astrology Babe

    How much of your music is influenced by your spirituality

    I feel like my astrology career feeds into my music. I mean, I titled my first EP Retrograde. Retrogrades, where astrology is concerned, is a time to reflect and feel because things you don’t want to deal with are eager for attention. I wrote those songs between 2018 and 2020 while going through my personal retrograde. I think of every song as a planet in my solar system going through its own retrograde. There are discussions about love, loss, embracing and triumphing over your inner darkness. My music and spirituality both help me make sense of human experiences, which I think are blinding lights of happiness and an abyss. 

    I thought retrogrades were bad, but you make it seem beautiful, like an unfolding of self. 

    That’s my speciality, explaining astrology. We’re not close if I haven’t told you to call your mum and ask for your birth time, so I can explain your chart. With life, you want to keep moving forward all the time, but retrogrades stop you whether you notice it or not. That’s something we constantly fail to do, stop. Let’s stop moving. It’s okay to sit and reflect and take stock of what’s happened in the past. It doesn’t mean getting stuck in the past; it’s just a means to move on. 

    What do you do when you’re not making music or helping people discover their problems via astrology?

    I studied English, but I’m a content analyst for ART X Collective, the creators of ART X Lagos, where I get to meet revolutionary people. I mean, contributing to African and African diaspora culture in a way that presents us, not as a dark continent but as thriving and evolving is just incredible. I enjoy it. 

    I think people who study English always do exciting things with their lives

    Yeah, it’s an exciting course, and I enjoyed studying it. I can’t help you with syntax, but language and literature? I’m your girl. I read a lot; I think books have galaxies in themselves and reality is very sus. 

    How easy is it to switch from your superhero job to your day job?

    It’s not so difficult because my work environment is very inclusive. I’ve had tarot and birth chart readings for colleagues and patrons during my break at work. I’ve never felt the need to separate one from the other. 

    How did you get into tarot reading? 

    I don’t know if you can call yourself a self-taught tarot reader, but I didn’t take classes. I did get into it because of the same man. Bless him for the 180° spiritual awakenings. He was the valley of the shadow of death I had to walk through to get there. I also watched YouTube videos like a crazy person, and so far, I’ve done readings for over 50 people. I charge about ₦5k for a reading just cause Nigeria’s tarot audience is still growing. I also have a spiritual botanica where I sell candles and crystals and do house cleansings. 

    Do people make weird comments about what you do?

    Every time. And it’s normal when you work in my type of space. I’ve come in contact with people who think I’m crazy. I’ve even been called the “village witchy lady”. But for most people, they see the usefulness once they can get past the initial disdain. Granted, they might not become astrology enthusiasts, but they become more respectful of what astrology is. 

    How fulfilled are you in your astrology, music, tarot and work?

    I feel blessed and fulfilled with my current reality. I think of my music as healing. It’s me putting forward the darkest, most uncomfortable parts of my humanity. It helps me feel less alone, and that’s the basis of my spirituality. It’s a connection to self and a link to the divine. I lean in on my spirituality to uplift myself and vice versa with my music. I hope in years to come, my music reaches more people in need of support, connection and community.

    Enjoyed this story? Read this next: Creator Spotlight: “I pick challenging cosplays to impress myself”

  • Creator Spotlight: “I pick challenging cosplays to impress myself”

     Hi, I’m Ezzi Jude, a 22-year-old cosplayer obsessed with creating anime-inspired outfits. A fun fact about me is that  K-dramas used to have me in a chokehold, and up to 2021 I covered K-pop choreographies. I founded a Korean community for Nigerians out of my love for all things Korean and even became an honorary reporter.

    “Used to be” a die-hard fan? How did that, unfortunately, happen to you? 

    Okay, so I’m still a fan. Okay, so I watch K-dramas sometimes, I just don’t complete them, so I can’t call myself a fan. I still love korean culture though, that’s why I started my Korean lovers community, other than me feeling like people didn’t know enough about Korean culture please!  And it’s a group of over 700 people. I’m a fan of the culture, but right now I can’t focus on one K-drama at a time. 

    You know what? Fair. What’s it like being a Korean honorary reporter?

    Well, it is unpaid work, but if your article does well, you may be invited to Korea, and there are occasional gifts such as snacks and rice cookers. I applied to Talk Korea to be an honorary reporter and  It was a fairly simple procedure. I filled out a form and sent them links to a bunch of my TikToks where I’d already been covering a lot of Korean content, and I got in. Honorary reporters write at least six articles per year. It sounds small but it required lots of research.   I quickly became bored and quit because I am not a writer and it was difficult. But, to be honest, I applied to build my portfolio for a Korean scholarship program. 

    Just six? Wow. Liking K-dramas is a long way from cosplaying. What influenced your interest?

    After I stopped writing , on some random day,  I saw an advert online for a comic con in Port-Harcourt and decided to create a free promotional video for them. 

     I’d only seen the new generation anime like Demon Slayer because everyone told me the old ones can be boring. But,I was hyped and I wanted a lot of people to know about the event and I figured that I could go in cosplay.  I wanted to  cosplay a character I knew, so I prepared for my Azula costume. But then, I saw an Ankara pattern that looked like water prints, which gave me the idea to make the water bender costume I wore  in the  promo video. After that went out, someone reached out to me and asked if I’d like to join a Nigerian cosplay community. The deal was I had to have done at least two cosplays so they’d know you’re serious. It’s a good thing I was already working on my Azula cosplay.

    Don’t mind them. Watch the older anime, they’re really good. How big is this cosplay community?

    Back then, we were about 12. Now, we’re 17. They always add new people, but cosplaying is expensive so people leave a lot. Some members even left because their families disapproved of it. Some were medical students, and their parents wanted them to be more focused. I don’t get why people always react badly to innocent pastimes. 

    RELATED: 10 Best Feel-good Anime for Beginners

    Omo, that must suck. How did your family react to your cosplay?

    I think they are cool with it because I used to cover K-pop choreography before I started cosplaying. I made so many covers, and one time Jennie from Black Pink reacted to one of my videos, which had 11k views. But I twisted my ankle dancing to the choreography of Stray Kid’s God Menu, and my mum made me promise to only dance with a knee brace. She’s supportive in little ways like that. My dad just minds his business. They like that I’m happy and hope my obsession with cosplaying and Korean things works out for me.

    If it wasn’t cosplaying, what would you have gotten into?

    I’d just always create things. I used to paint a lot till I clocked 19. I stopped because I had to pay attention in school. Plus, it cost a lot to buy the things I needed to paint, and the money I had wasn’t enough for it. 

    Is cosplaying cheaper than painting? 

    It is cheaper, tbh. I’m a style influencer for an Asian costume brand, so I apply to them when I want to cosplay, and they  are supposed to give me the costumes. But I’ve only successfully gotten two from them. I made the other 13 myself. 

    What’s your favourite and least-favourite cosplay?

    Okay, so I spent a lot of money and time on my Azula cosplay because it needed to be detailed to give it that “oomph”. The tiny details cost a lot too — I only wanted small bits of each item sold at retail price — only for it to be my least favourite cosplay. Meanwhile, the cheapest one was my mushroom hat cosplay. But I made it by myself and it’s my favourite one so far. 

    What’s the longest time you’ve spent on a costume?

    If I have all my materials, I can finish in a week. If not, it takes up to a month. For example, my Azula costume took me a month to create, and I didn’t even like it. I didn’t like being called Azula after that; that babe is wicked.

    I am dying, please. Do you think you’d create cosplays to sell in the future?

    Maybe, all I know is that I ‌want to be an official costume designer someday. I don’t want to create original pieces. I want to recreate things people have already made. That’s what I’m good at. There’s a comic con event in September [2022], and some creators reached out to ask if I could help ‌ with their costumes. I’m excited about working on that. 

    I fantasise about making costumes for cosplayers and celebrities on a big scale, like Kamui Cosplay does. She uses technology like led lights to make some of her cosplays glow in the dark, and I love it. That’s the future I see for myself, but… baby steps. 

    Speaking of the future, have you found fulfilment in cosplaying? 

    I’ve had former friends tell me to use my following for regular brand influencing, whatever that is, but that’s not me. They don’t understand my audience is not as big as they think. People follow me because I’m creative, but they’re not really interested in me. They follow for free tips on how I make my costumes. Not everyone is anticipating my next cosplay. 

    My satisfaction comes first. I pick challenging cosplays to impress myself. I do what makes me happy, hoping to find an audience interested in it too. I’d only stop if it stopped making me happy, but creating will always make me happy. So, of course I feel fulfilled. I’m always creating. 

    READ ALSO: Anime Cosplays Even Broke Bitches Can Try

  • Creator Spotlight: Wetalu Obi Thinks Cakes Are Magic

    Hi, I’m Wetalu Obi, the 22-year-old co-owner of W’s Bakeshop. I never wanted to work. I always wanted to be a hippie, but here I am. I’m obsessed with smelling like food, so if anything is vanilla, mango or cocoa scented, that’s my shit. Want to hear something wild? I baked my first cake when I was eight. 

    You were eight? What made you interested in baking? 

    I loved watching Nigella Lawson bake on BBC’s food network. She’d mix up a bunch of stuff, put it into the oven, and it always looked delicious. That’s my earliest memory of wanting to bake. 

    I was obsessed with how it looked and unaware of the actual work behind it. But I was already in too deep by the time my eyes opened.

    Tell me about that first cake you baked

     Also, I was eight when I baked my first cake, so it was awful. It was supposed to be a basic vanilla butter cake, but it came out as one big, dense pancake. It was still special to me, but it was pretty horrific.

    This sounds like you have supportive parents. Has that helped? 

    I do and it helped initially because they didn’t have gendered expectations for my sisters as kids and me. So if I wanted to bake, cook, sew or knit — and I did all that — they didn’t make a fuss about it and that opened my mind. I felt like I could do or be anything I wanted.  They were pretty supportive until I got into university. From then on, they wanted me to focus more on my studies than on my “hobby”, and that’s when we clashed. They are pleased because I’m out of school and went straight to managing a bakery with my sister after graduation. I think they are happy. 

    Did they have a specific reason to worry? 

    They did. I studied chemical engineering. It was very demanding, and my parents feared I’d spread myself too thin. They wanted me to just focus on school and get a good GPA. I told them I wouldn’t do that because time wasted is hard to get back. I knew if I started working after school, I would never get back to baking, so I didn’t listen, and they didn’t like that. 

    I graduated from uni this year and co-own a bakery, so these problems are a thing of the past. 

    What does it mean to co-own a bakery? 

    Yes, I do. The bakery is co-owned by my sister, Ella, and we get help from our sister Buogo. We are a close-knit family of seven. Running the bakery together is a family love effort. For instance, whenever I was in school or things were too much for me, Ella would just step in to run day-to-day operations until I was back. 

    Nobody is fighting about running it because we both share the sentiment that we can’t do it alone. So we show up every day.

    As for the day-to-day operations, we have a manager and ten employees, so things would be okay without us, but we still show up every day. But managing a business in Nigeria is tough. There are always power issues and spike in market prices, but that’s life as we know it.

    What’s your favourite thing about baking? 

    I think my favourite thing about baking is how whimsical it can get. I love the feeling of putting my AirPods in and getting lost in my world for hours. I worked for eight hours straight when I made my sister’s wedding cake. I was so happy and relaxed that I could cry. I could never get sick of cakes. They’re so soft and texturally enjoyable.

    Have you ever been in a baking slump? How did you get out of it? 

    When I was in year three, required to take courses from other engineering departments and had like a million units. I was so uninspired and heavy, so I didn’t bake for a whole semester. 

    One day, I went to a cafe, ordered four desserts to-go, went to a park and sat on a bench to eat them and people-watch. It was such a good day, so I took a sky picture. I returned to the bakery and tried to recreate that colour palette on a cake, and that was it. I can’t find a picture of the exact cake I made, but I have a version of it we modified for the bakery’s cake design catalogue.

    I’m weirdly glad about that slump; it’s a beautiful cake. Do you remember your first positive review? 

    I was invited to a birthday party and asked to bake the cake. It was a double chocolate fudge cake. People would take a bite, and I’d watch them open their eyes in disbelief and smile. It was amazing to witness. I think that’s my favourite thing about baking; sharing the finished product with people and watching them act like happy children.

    What’s the weirdest ingredient you’ve baked/wanted to bake with?

    I’ve baked with mayonnaise. It’s a moisture/flavour enhancer, so it’s an excellent substitute for fat/eggs in most recipes. I only experiment with our personal recipes because I can’t experiment with other people’s food.

    I want to bake with chilli pepper one day. I still haven’t wrapped my head around the sweet/spicy combination, so it’ll take a while.

    This is a safe space. What are the worst cake flavours, and why is it chocolate and/or funfetti cake?

    Right?? Chocolate is not my favourite. I love a good vanilla cake, maybe a red velvet, but I can’t eat chocolate. It’s ironic because it’s our most requested cake flavour, so it’s our most done recipe. 

    But funfetti? No, please. I love a good funfetti! Especially with creamy white buttercream frosting. Such a classic!

    RELATED: These 7 Types of Cakes Should Not Exist

    I’m judging you, but go off. Would you be willing to share an easy cake recipe with your fans?

    I don’t have “fans”, please, but I have a recipe I learnt from our grandmother’s Betty Crocker book that’s burned in my brain. 

    It’s the 1-2-3-4 vanilla butter cake recipe:

    1 cup butter

    2 cups sugar

    3 cups flour

    4 eggs

    2 tsp baking powder 

    1 tsp vanilla extract

    1/2 tsp salt

    1/2 cup milk 

    Knock everything into a mixer and whip for six minutes. Batter into a pan and bake for 30/45 minutes.

    You make the type of cakes I see on Pinterest. Do Nigerians appreciate them? E.g., your mini cakes and the strange planet cakes?

    When we started on those cakes, this was our initial worry. Did it seem too minimal/quirky to catch anybody’s attention? But surprisingly (and fortunately), people like them. And we made the snack cakes with a very special set of people in mind. People who wish they had a whole birthday cake to themselves. I love the idea of a single-serving birthday cake. It’s so practical.

    In all of this, how fulfilled do you feel?

    Baking is my life. I always knew I would do something pastry related, so ending up where I am now is something I expected. The bakery is where I love to work. I love the relationship my sisters and I have with each other. It’s our safe space. Yes, I feel fulfilled. 

    READ ALSO: Quiz: What Kind of Cake Are You? 

  • Creator Spotlight: “I can do this music thing in my sleep” – Dwin, The Stoic

    My name is Dwin, The Stoic. I’m a singer, songwriter and performer, which is interesting because I wanted to be a Catholic priest for the longest time. Some fun facts about me are that I collect coins and I’m a cancer. Apparently, that’s why my emotions influence my sad songs. (laughs in millennial)

    Coins? How is that fun?

    Okay, it’s not like I don’t have other hobbies. But it’s something I like. It’s my thing. That’s a fun thing about me. 

    Dwin, that’s 40+ hobby, but let’s talk about that priest thing you mentioned 

    Like every other boy that grew up Catholic, I wanted to be a priest. I convinced myself it was my calling until I turned 15. The year I discovered women.

    RELATED: 17 Pictures That Nigerians Who Grew Up Catholic Will Understand Immediately

    So, from potential priest to musician that sings about heartbreak? How did we get here?

    I’ve always been singing, but it was something I did with friends. It started in secondary school with a record label my friends and I started, but that didn’t last long. I’ve also made music with my friend 3rty. We’ve been friends since high school, and we went to Covenant university together. Besides that, I’m also in a band with a friend. It just makes sense to work with close people you know are talented. Officially, I put up my first album in 2017, and I haven’t looked back since. 

    So your name wasn’t always Dwin the Stoic? 

    Nope. in secondary school, it was Ozone and then Nu Maestro. The Stoic just started as my Twitter handle. I picked it up from a song by Mumford and Sons, they are an enormous influence on me. And Dwin is a shortened version of my name, Edwin. I’m not stoic, but I sing about sad shit and emotions, which is the opposite, but I like the name. Plus, a musician named Dwin exists, so it stuck. 

    Speaking of you singing sad shit, who was that person that got away? Are you doing okay? 

     I can see how they feel that way. I’ve listened to my songs. It’s not like I’m getting heartbroken left and right out here. I’m just a talented songwriter, and it’s because I am an excellent writer as well. So, all my sad short stories and poems became songs. Sometimes, it’s direct heartbreak. One person inspired Heavy Heart after all, but sometimes it could be three heartbreaks that my brain would turn to one song.

    So you combine the heartbreak into one song, so none of them feels special? I love it.

    Sometimes it’s one person wicked enough to give you heartbreak to sing about, but sometimes it’s just inspired conversations with people. In my next album, there is a song called Mad It’s probably my saddest song. 

    As sad as my music can be,I think that’s why people are drawn to it. When you listen to me, you can feel all those feelings you can’t explain with words because I’ve done it for you. 

    It’s your confidence for me. I love to see it.

    Well, I’m at a place where this music thing has gotten effortless for me. For instance, I’ve made songs on the spot at some of my shows. At first, it was nerve-racking. I never knew what would come out of my mouth, but it always ended up good. At my last show, I did a freestyle where people gave me the words like, “Happy” “Broken”, and “Alcohol”, and I came up with a freestyle that was so nice the producer asked to produce it, and now it’s the final song on my album. 

    On a scale of 1-10, how fulfilled do you feel doing what you do? 

    I’m about to sound braggy, but quite good at this music thing. My album and the next two EPs are ready. I want people to hear this because of how much range they showed, so I would say that I am pretty fulfilled in music-making. I enjoy it and can do it in my sleep. If I don’t write another piece of music for the next three years, I’ll be fine.

    I’m looking forward to writing music for other people. I loved writing for Adekunle Gold. Hopefully, I will get to work with some fantastic people this year. 

    Are there some specific people you’d love to work with?

    I want to work with Asa. We would have the best of times because her vibe is excellent. I think I would write killer songs for Sam Smith. I have a piece ready for the Cavemen. We haven’t spoken yet; I just have plans to work with them. Hopefully, I’ll release stuff with other people. Long term, I want to work with Labrinth. He has a solo career outside his group, LSD, and I have Ignis brothers. So, we are very similar. 

    If you’re done recording, can I send a voice note you’ll use in one of your songs so I can say I’ve made it? 

    You know what, just freestyle. If you can think of something cool, send it to me. And I might even make a song around it. 

    Enjoyed this story? Read this next:Creator Spotlight: How Heartbreak and a Failed Writing Dream Birthed Vangei

    How chaotic would Zikoko on TikTok be? Follow us to find out!

  • Creator Spotlight: How Heartbreak and a Failed Writing Dream Birthed Vangei

    Hi, I’m Kanaan, the genius behind Vangei, the fashion brand, and I think I’m hilarious. 

    I’m the shortest person in my friend group, and I’m also a cancer. Yes, cue the red flags. A random fact about me is that I wanted to be a writer until I got heartbroken. 

    Interesting, so you didn’t just wake up one day and decide to be a fashion designer?

    Nope, I was never interested. I only loved fashion when it was time to play dress-up or pretend I was walking a runway. I wanted to be a model. But then I turned 13 and my height wasn’t heightening no more, so that dream died. 

    I even considered blogging, but it’s too time-consuming. Guess I still won because now I make the clothes instead of modelling them. 

    Fighting the urge to scream but also purr. I get not wanting to blog sha. Writing is the ghetto.

    To be fair, I did want to be a writer. I used to write serious love letters back then. In my high school yearbook, I wrote that I would be a writer or a poet. But after somebody broke my heart, I said fuck writing. There was no more inspiration, so I closed shop and opened Vangei instead.

    RELATED: How To Be A Nollywood Lover Boy

    How did you come up with Vangei? It’s the coolest name 

    Funny story, when I joined Twitter in 2019, my first Twitter name was StefflonDo. As you can see, I’m terrible at giving myself nicknames. 

    I hated StefflonDo, so I spoke to a friend about how I needed something that represented my brand and my being gay, and then he came up with Lolu VanGay. It was cool but too on the nose, so I changed it to VanGei, and it stuck. 

    Do you have a favourite collection or fashion piece made by you? 

    The best thing I’ve created and I feel really attached to is the Bibi co-ord, which is named after my ex. Don’t drag me; my friends already did. They were like, “This is one of your sickest pieces, and you named it after someone that’s not in your life anymore?” But I’d already made up my mind about it.  

    I really loved the piece, and so did a lot of people. There was something distinct about the fabric. I’ve tried looking for something like it and still haven’t found anything. 

    Are you sure it’s the fabric you’re attached to?

    For real, fabrics make me happy. You know how drugs make people feel? That’s exactly how it is. When I’m sad, I  go to Yaba market. Most times, I have no money when I do this, but as soon as I get to Tejuosho market, I get super pumped. 

    I touch a pretty fabric and it makes me feel like I can speak french because it’s so rich. The only thing I love more than fabrics is shoes. 

    I wasn’t going to bring it up, but boy, you like the weirdest shoes. Or maybe I don’t know fashion…

    I would judge you, but I know what it feels like to be judged, so I won’t. People have asked me if I’m all right because of the shoes I like. Can’t you all see the arc on those shoes? Several times, my friends have stopped me several times from wearing my shoes when going out with them, but they’ll be fine last last. 

    RELATED: #NairaLife: What Did This Shoe Vendor Learn From Living Large?

    Would you ever want to design shoes?

    Maybe, but it’ll just be two other people wearing it. My target audience is outside Nigeria, but I’m keeping my fingers crossed sha. 

    Have you ever designed something that you weren’t proud of? 

    That’s the thing it would never see the light of day. I love my pieces to be perfect. I don’t keep it if it’s something I’m not proud of. I threw the last piece away. 

    What’s your creative process like?

    I don’t have a process. I tried to get a sketchbook and draw out my designs once, but that didn’t work. I buy fabrics that speak to me, so anything coloured, playful and loud. Then I scroll through Pinterest or Instagram and get inspired. 

    I once had a block for three months, and then I woke up and made five outfits in a day. 

    What are proven steps that get you out of a creative block?

    Hm. My longest block was for about four months. What got me out of it? A girl I was seeing. We were supposed to go out on a date, and I don’t like repeating outfits. I wanted to impress her because she was tall. I started to think of a theme, wrote it out and the next thing I knew, I’d made my fit. This was the day before the date, by the way. 

    If you ever sell your audacity, I would buy it 

    Not to brag, but I make my outfits in two-three hours. 

    Honestly, my confidence in what I do came from my friends trusting me to create stuff for them. It boosted my self-esteem and so I was able to start selling to other people. Initially, I didn’t want to own a brand because I feared criticism. 

    I’m curious. How does it feel creating for an audience bigger than your friends? 

    It was scary at first ngl, but maybe it’s because my brand is aimed at queer people who were my inspiration, so the transition has been easy. I sit with my clients and go back and forth through the creative process. I’ve even had a couple of people sketch their designs and have me recreate them. Making outfits from my friends and listening to criticism helped me grow, and now my brand is better for it. 

    What’re you looking forward to doing now? 

    I started a thrift store to fund my long-term collection, which will be released in the middle of next year. I’m thinking of collaborations, especially with Louie & Dray because they make contemporary Y2K fashion, and that’s a big influence on my brand. Finally, I’m looking forward to introducing my brand to Lagos fashion week.

    Enjoyed this story? Read this next: Creator Spotlight: How the Igbo Wolf Became a Social Media Trendsetter

  • Creator Spotlight: How the Igbo Wolf Became a Social Media Trendsetter

    In 2019, Christian Obi, popular as the “Igbo Wolf”, made his first “official” Instagram skit

    Before then, he just made videos for fun, sharing them with his “two followers on Instagram”. But he soon got tired of making skits because his old LG mobile was barely holding on for life. 

    Two years later, in August 2021, he bought an iPhone and decided to start making video skits again. But he couldn’t have imagined how ready the world was for his content. He went viral just two days after he bought the phone. 

    Inspired by a TikTok trend of Nollywood queen mothers, he recorded a video of his face with a mermaid underwater filter, reeling out threats to swimmers. The video was an instant hit. 

    The natural thing to do would’ve been to ride on this popularity and milk the content style as much as possible, but Igbo Wolf didn’t do that. He wasn’t confident having not done comedy for a while. So he took a step back. 

    “With TikTok,” he tells me. “You don’t need to create original content.” Since Tiktokers can remix other creators’ content or just hop on trending sounds, he decided to hang around in that space for a while.

    But one afternoon in early 2021, he remembered a former classmate in secondary school. The student, Kunle Ogunfowokan, had a teacher who always mispronounced his name with a deep Igbo intonation. Christian had an idea. He swiped to his Camera app and recorded a skit which would quickly become another internet sensation.

    The Igbo Wolf Professor Uwa

    The idea was simple: take on an Igbo lecturer persona, who he named Professor Uwa (pronounced “Pro-fess-uu-wa”)  and do a roll call of Yoruba student names which had lewd or negative meanings in Igbo. But a mistake happened while shooting that would launch him into pop-culture relevance. 

    “When making videos, I don’t like cutting and joining,” Igbo Wolf says. “So I have to do everything right in one take.” So while filming, after his Professor Uwa character listed out the Yoruba names, he forgot his lines at the end. But he needed a conclusion, so he said, “Dazz ya name?” on the spot and ended the video.

    “It made me cringe,” Igbo Wolf tells me, “And I wanted to remove it.” But he eventually decided to let it stay anyway. “Instinct,” He recalls. “I just said, ‘let me leave it there.’” 

    When he posted the video on Twitter at 6:24 p.m. on September 21st, 2021, he didn’t expect his line to become an internet meme. “The next morning, I started seeing, ‘Dazz ya name’ everywhere!”

    It took him some time to remember that he’d even used the line, as he had to rewatch the video himself to see and hear it. To this day, he still doesn’t understand why people like the phrase, but as long as it gets the people going, he’s happy with it.

    However, Igbo Wolf is not one to rest on his laurels. While he initially rode on its popularity, releasing viral video after video, he decided to retire the Professor Uwa character. His reason? He sees himself as an actor and wants to continue evolving.


    Editor’s pick: QUIZ: What Career Should You Actually Have?


    And his broad portfolio of comic personas is a testament to his creative ability. Several more characters have hit the limelight. From the frowning Work Chris who’s ironically always happy to go to work, to the toxic, uber-religious RonkeHR; his characters touch across relatable themes in Nigeria’s youth culture.

    When asked how he consistently hits the Nigerian youth cultural nerve, he admits that his characters are a reflection of his state of mind at the time he creates them. When people see comic characters living out their reality, they fuck with them. Take the “happy” Chris meme, for example.

    In December 2021, Igbo Wolf’s year-end holiday was restful. For the first time in a long while, he took a break from his product manager day job, hung out with friends, cooked, ate and played games. But when the time came to resume work on January 4th, 2022, he struggled to find the energy to get out of bed. When he finally got to the gate of his workplace, he turned and went into the restaurant opposite it to gather himself.

    While there, he tweeted a selfie of him grimacing and captioned it “Work is such a fun adult activity especially after spending 2 weeks consistently getting drunk and eating”. He returned to his office at around 11 a.m.

    He continued taking selfies, captioning them in a similar way, until the end of January. “It wasn’t just content for me,” he says. “I was miserable, and [making those tweets] was my own way of dealing with stuff.” 

    So when his first “Happy to be at work” tweet blew up in February, he felt dejected.

    reactions on Twitter: "wikihow how to handle fame https://t.co/T5ha66R8xt"  / Twitter

    “It wasn’t just Nigerians. There were other Africans and white people,” he says. And when people started hailing his comedic prowess with compliments like, “Nigerian people understood the assignment”, Igbo Wolf couldn’t deal. “It wasn’t even an assignment, to begin with. It was just my way of dealing with my state of mind, but now, I was content to these people? I felt like they had taken something away from me.”

    That day, he resolved not to post again. But the following morning, he experienced the same sadness that plagued him the day before, so he took another selfie and tweeted it, again with an ironic caption. More people could relate to his struggles and respond with selfies of their own tired, stressed faces with “happy to be at work” captions. Igbo Wolf had to get used to being a pop-culture trendsetter.

    The turning point, he tells me, was when he attended an event and some guests were excited to meet him. The following Monday, he opened his Twitter DMs to see messages from some of the guests, telling him they were waiting for him to make his usual Monday morning tweet.

    Other characters in his portfolio are just as relatable. Work Chris is the Nigerian youth who has to deal with toxic workplaces, Mama Elo is Elon Musk’s mother reimagined as Nigerian and Professor Uwa is most Igbo lecturers who’ve found themselves teaching in a Yoruba town.

    Igbo Wolf characters

    An interesting aspect of Igbo Wolf’s skit-making is that he keeps the use of slapstick to the minimum and never employs exaggerated voiceovers or sound effects. “I hate them”, he says. “Because I see myself as an actor.” He does his best to get into character and lets his acting and mannerisms carry the humour. Also, he shoots his skits indoors when no one else is around, as he considers himself a shy, indoorsy person — a testament to his artist name which is a combination of his spirit animal (lone wolf) and his ethnicity (Igbo).

    But Igbo Wolf is not afraid to deviate from his creative formula. He’s constantly writing stories; the pressure to keep up with his popularity keeps him grounded. To hack productivity, he always has at least six skits banked. 

    When he’s not producing viral content, he’s working as a product manager in Lagos, a job that has inspired some of his most iconic videos. I asked him if going to work still causes him pain. His response? Not really. But in future, he hopes to get a remote work arrangement, so he has more time to create entertaining content and achieve a perfect balance between his day job and his content creator life. 



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  • MBA Notwithstanding, This Jewellery Designer Left The Corporate World Behind

    Bridget Mudota, a Zimbabwe-based jeweller, is taking the road less travelled, even if that means leaving the corporate world and her MBA behind to follow her dream.

    An MBA is not needed to become a jeweller. But it may prove useful.

    When Bridget Mudota left her office job in 2019 to venture into jewellery design, the reaction was considerable. Here was a highly qualified individual with a master’s in Business Administration, “giving it all up” to venture into a trade that in many parts of Africa is associated with handicrafts and roadside stalls.

    However, Mudota was determined. She wanted something else from life.

    “The beauty of this art is that it is therapeutic. It takes one’s mind away from the worries of life and at the same time opens up the mind to creativity,” she explained.

    There is also a lot to be said for a high-end jewellery production industry in Zimbabwe. The country is blessed with copious amounts of diamonds and other gems, platinum and gold. Jewellery is a great way for any country to add value to what otherwise is exported simply as raw commodities, without any downstream benefits to the local economy.

    Known as “BridgitTheJeweller” in business circles as well as on social media platforms, Mudota prides herself in making beautiful jewellery that subtly combines Zimbabwean traditions with modern trends. Her style ranges from a striking infusion of beads to jewellery that incorporates fabric, wood, seashells, gemstones, metal, strings and hooks.

    Her foray into an entirely new business has paid off, thanks to being able to engage with a fast-growing clientele in the diaspora via social media. Having an MBA and the skills to run one’s own business have clearly contributed too.

    Despite her wide array of textures and styles, Bridget still plans to venture into leather jewellery, not only as a means of expanding her venture but also to stretch her creativity.

    “I have become very passionate about jewellery-making because it brings out the creativity in me. Also, this art has made me realise that anyone can be creative if given the opportunity,” she explained.

    Having access to fashion trends via the internet has meant that she is able to regularly update on changing trends and tastes in the international market.

    Bridget’s name as a jeweller and entrepreneur has become so popular in Zimbabwe that it earned her an invitation to the country’s Ministry of Women’s Affairs, where she was encouraged to showcase her skills and exhibit her products as a way of encouraging other women to venture into the business. As a result, she now has an opportunity to show that jewellery design and manufacture can be a significant income earner for the wider economy.

    Mudota’s suggestion is to make sure that the engagement with a buyer is personal, as each piece has a different reaction from a potential client.

    Bridget says that her clients are mostly mature professionals who love to accessorise their outfits to look good, wherever they are in the world.

    Recognising that the market for local, high-end jewellery in Zimbabwe has yet to mature, she has called for jewellery-making in the country to be considered as a valuable art form and for the stereotypes around African jewellery to end. She would like her craft to be recognised for what it truly is: a profession worth engaging in.

    Contributed by Mandy Kanyemba/bird

  • 5 Reasons Why Being A Digital Artist Is The Best Thing After Jollof Rice

    There are few things that compare to our beloved Jollof rice in this life, and one of them is being a digital artist. *Pauses to inhale the scent of artistry* Before you try to argue, go through the 5 reasons we’ve listed out below. займ безработным

    1. More room for self-expression

    With digital art, there’s ample room for you to fully express your creativity without being overly cautious of irrevocable mistakes. Unless the mistake looks like this sha.

    2. Wider reach, which can attract more clients…

    …and more clients equals more coins. It’s possible for millions of people to come across amazing art on the streets of Twitter, Dribble, Pinterest, or Behance while seated in their rooms compared to a physical showroom (except you’re Da Vinci). Yay technology.

    money
    Portrait happy man exults pumping fists ecstatic celebrates success screaming under money rain falling down dollar bills banknotes isolated gray background with copy space. Financial freedom concept

    3. Cool tools and softwares

    Unlike traditional art where physical paint and brushes are like bread and butter, digital artists have a wide variety of digital tools to aid their creative process. Little wonder their art turns out fabulous.

    4. Saves money

    Gadgets can be bought once, but you see paint, brushes and canvas? You will keep buying till Jesus comes. Wahala for who no be digital artist o.

    5. A means to drive social change

    Creating art is more than an action, it can also spark a movement for the good of all. Digital artists are no strangers to this fact.

    For the love of art!

    If you are a digital artist between ages 18 – 30 who loves good vibes and seeks to drive positive social change through art, then The Absolut Creator Competition will interest you. It’s a perfect opportunity to share your aspirations for a better Nigeria through your digital art works.

    Follow these steps to participate:

    1. Find the Absolut bottle outline and brand logo tagline here and incorporate them in your design.
    2. Create your vision of a better Nigeria using Absolut Nigeria’s theme: “Everyone should be free to express themselves” and incorporate the Absolut bottle outline.
    3. Visit the www.absolutcreator.ng to sign up and submit your artwork.
    4. Enter your name, email address and relevant social media handles in the submission box.
    5. Finally – Upload your design or artwork and click on ‘submit’.

    To improve your chances of winning, follow these guidelines:

    1. Artwork should be based on stated theme only.
    2. Artwork must include the Absolut Bottle outline from top to bottom.
    3. Artwork must include the brand logo and campaign tagline at the bottom.
    4. Artwork must be developed in portrait format – not dimension specific.
    5. Avoid multiple silhouettes within your artwork.
    6. Artworks must embody the theme in a Nigerian context.

    Stand a chance of winning the following prizes if you make it to the finals:

    • A MacBook Pro Laptop
    • One-year premium subscription of Adobe Creative Cloud
    • The Absolut Creator merch
    • One-year internship with a creative agency

    Good luck and happy creating!

  • “The Astrology Memes Are My Favourite” – A Conversation With YungNollywood

    For Creators Spotlight, we spoke to Bahati Imaan Beauvais, the name behind YungNollywood. She is a young Nigerian living in Toronto and Lagos, who is very passionate about the old and new Nollywood scene. With 51.9k followers on Instagram and 35.8k followers on Twitter, Imman has created content that has proven to be timeless and relatable. We spoke to her about her creative process, her love of old Nollywood aesthetics, and how she keeps coming up with these memes we can’t stop sharing around.

    Can you tell me a bit about the creation of Yungnollywood?

    It was created in February 2018. I was into Nollywood before anyone thought it was cool, maybe because they kind of look like me and I liked that.

    I had been watching and collecting content for years but the idea of posting everything on one page didn’t come to mind until I saw Nollybabes. My best friends sent it to me and asked me to join because I already had so much content but they were going in a different direction so I decided to start my page. I decided to call it Yung Nollywood because it’s kind of like ‘young money’. After all, I’m a big Barb. So, it’s old Nollywood but when they were young, that tied up nicely.

    (For the 30+, young money was an imprint of cash records founded by Lil Wayne and Nicki Minaj was managed by them. A Barb is a huge Nicki Minaj Stan/fan)

    I get that. Zikoko has a whole new/old Nollywood section on our memes page. Before the interview, you mentioned something about being a sagittarius moon and that’s why you have no structure, so how do you organize your daily posts?

    I don’t, none of my posts are structured. I wake up in the morning and I’m like, how do I feel today? Collecting content is something I do for fun. It’s work, but I’m always relaxed. I collect random things that I find interesting from movies I’d seen before, or I’ll wake up in the morning, go through what I already have, and post. It’s just instinct I guess.

    Why is it important for you to document memes?

    I have a whole lot of reasons why creating these memes are important. For one, I’ve always been one of those TV children —  I didn’t go out a lot. I also have a lot of random knowledge about the media. I am Nigerian and I find Nollywood interesting, but Nigerians don’t talk about it or promote it enough, even though it’s the second-largest industry. We make fun of it and criticize it harshly. I want people to accept that this is our style of film and it’s cool.

    I guess it’s important for me to push my culture to the world. I am a big believer in the fact that everyone should be Nigerian.

    Hmm, that’s interesting…

    How do you come up with captions for each meme?

    It is inspired by movies I watch, some captions are based on how I feel at the time or what’s happening in the world or actual lines from the movies, sometimes I change one word from their lines to make it look better. I am an English major so I am good at description.For example, “homosexual defiance.” I just like words.

    Can you give me an estimate amount of memes you’ve created?

    I have no idea about the amount. I see memes shared sometimes on the timeline and I’m like “I don’t remember making that” but it’s a lot, I produce a lot but I could check someday.

    You say “Me” a lot, so I’m going to assume there is no team?

    No, not right now. For content production there is no team, I produce all the content. This year though, I plan to invite people if they want, but it’s just me for now.

    What aspect of meme creation do you enjoy the most?

    I like it when I do the astrology memes because I have to think and because it’s like a puzzle. I enjoy those a lot.

    How did you decide on your brands voice?

    It’s all mine. it wasn’t deliberate at all but it works.

    How sustainable is your line of work? Do you plan on monetizing it?

    I never think about the future. I want to have a yungnollywood festival because I am a big kid, it’ll be fun, with candy floss and bouncing castles, it’ll be a festival that travels.

    The first one, of course, would be in Lagos and then my next biggest market is London.Then a bodega, but besides that, I’d like to do something with the actresses. I don’t know what yet.

    I have a movie coming out soon and I’m going to do a lot of personal content on yungnollywood’s page this year. I also have a short film on my website.

    A bodega?

    Yeah, just a random shop with an old local tv screen showing Nollywood shows.

    Is Zikoko invited to any of these things?

    Of course.

    Did you try reaching out to any of the actresses though?

    I have not, I’ve gotten feedback from a few icons but nothing on business. Not till I figure out what I want to do, but in due time.

    Did you ever feel the need to stop creating at any point?

    Yeah, right now.

    I am taking an indefinite break. I went through a major loss in my friend group so I’ve been a bit low.

    I have never taken a break,  I am very sensitive mentally, so I get exhausted sometimes. For now, I am taking the time to figure out what I want to do with my brand.

    So sorry for your loss. You mentioned the festival and the bodega but what’s next for Yungnollywood?

    Probably a film. Something for the actual young actors, not just the people we see on our screens all the time.

    To find out more about the work Yungnollywood is doing, check out their website.