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filmmaking | Zikoko!
  • Dating in Kaduna on a ₦300k+/Month Filmmaker Income

    Dating in Kaduna on a ₦300k+/Month Filmmaker Income

    The topic of how young Nigerians navigate romantic relationships with their earnings is a minefield of hot takes. In Love Currency, we get into what relationships across income brackets look like in different Nigerian cities.


    Image Source: Freepik (Actual subjects are anonymous)

    The first day Stephen* (28) met Barbara* (22) in 2017, he told his friends he had met his wife. Many boxer gifts, shared bank passwords and a breakup later, he’s convinced he made the best decision with her. 

    Occupation and location 

    Filmmaker living in Kaduna 

    Average monthly income

    I make anything between ₦300k – ₦500k monthly, depending on the frequency of the jobs.

    Relationship expenses 

    Hotel getaways: ₦48k per month (₦7k – ₦8k per night; ₦4k for food per day, for four nights) 

    Samsung phone: ₦55k

    Birthday painting: ₦25k

    Occasional dates: ₦15k – ₦20k 

    Random cash gifts: ₦10k multiple times a month and on birthdays

    Sneakers: ₦5k 

    iPhone: ₦220k 

    How did you meet your girlfriend? 

    In 2017, my friend’s mum had an event for her NGO and needed us to be in charge of videos. On my way to the lodge, which was in the same building as the event, I met this pretty girl wearing a white and black uniform. I asked her what the uniform was for. I had assumed it was a convent, having seen other girls in the same uniform. But she explained it was a culinary school uniform. We exchanged names, and I told her I was there for the event. 

    When we ran into each other some hours later, we couldn’t really talk because I was trying to shoot the lunch break, but I told my friends I had found my wife.

    Pardon? 

    Before then, I was determined to focus on my career and avoid distractions. But when I met her, I found myself drawn to her and I couldn’t say why. 

    On the last day of the event, the guys went to the club while I stayed back to work on the videos. I was going over some pictures on my friend’s camera when I saw Barbara in the background of an image he’d taken. I was so excited because I could finally show my friends the girl I had been talking about. I decided to go to the culinary school to look for her. But I got there early in the morning to find the school closed. 

    Problem 

    I waited till Monday before I went back and begged my friend to accompany me because I was beginning to feel nervous. We got to the school and tried to ask for her from some girls we saw. The school didn’t allow male visitors, so I lied I was her brother. 

    Abraham, is that you? 

    Luckily, she showed up as I was trying to describe her. I had gotten her name wrong from the start. 

    She gave me her number, and I left. I tried to call her for a week, but she never picked up. She eventually sent an SMS to apologise. I can’t remember the exact content, but seeing “Sorry dear” was enough to have me grinning from ear to ear all day. I asked her for her Facebook handle, and we became friends. 

    When did the relationship start? 

    A year later. At least, that’s when it became official. Wed spent the day together, and on the bus home, she reminded me I had still not asked her out. So I asked her to be my girl. 

    Did anything change after that?

    No. It felt like we had been dating already because we were involved in each other’s lives, talked every other day and made out occasionally. The change came when I started to make money. 

    Before, when she needed money, my only input would be to say we should pray about it. But now, I can meet her needs to an extent. 

    The first time we met after getting her number, I had just ₦30 with me. She had come to meet me at this restaurant close to the culinary school, where my friends and I went to work. I couldn’t afford a drink, so my friend bought one for her. Two days later, she came again. This time, the producer got drinks for both of us. I told her who had paid on both occasions, and she thanked them accordingly. 

    When did the money start coming in? 

    By 2018, I had started getting gigs to shoot music videos for upcoming artists and also covering more events, so I could afford proper dates. Before I got my own place, we used to have these hotel visits. I would go there because I needed light to work, and she’d visit. The rooms were about ₦7k – ₦8k per night, and we spent about ₦4k per day on food. We were there for two days, at least, twice a month. 

    She doesn’t like to eat out. So if we went out, it’d mostly be for a drink and maybe roasted chicken. We’d spend hours gisting and talking about different people around us. A proper date for us meant we’d drive out to buy the things we needed — wine, goat meat, chicken, plantain, water — and go home to cook and eat. On average, that’d cost ₦15k. I’ve learnt to budget ₦15k – ₦20k for our dates, and whenever we spend under the budget, I’d either gift her what was left or buy foodstuffs, like she always advised.

     She’s always thinking of how I should have invested or saved money instead of spending it. I’ve had to repeatedly remind her that she can ask me if she needs anything. 

    So you have conversations about money? 

    All the time. She knows everything about my finances. I’m so transparent with her because I don’t see the need to hide anything from someone I plan to spend the rest of my life with. I help her with negotiations when she has cooking jobs, and I give her money to keep for me — ₦150k here, ₦250k there. My ATM card can even be with her. 

    So she knows your pin? 

    We use the same pin. 

    Are you playing? Do you give her gifts?

    I’m not the best at giving gifts, but I randomly buy her sneakers because she loves them. They cost ₦5k because they’re imported from Cotonou. Aside from that, I’d rather just send her money, the occasional ₦10k, up to three times a month or less — depending on how frequently I get jobs. 

    After this really big job I did in 2022, I gave her ₦220k to get an iPhone 11. She was okay with her Samsung, so it took some persuasion to change it. Thinking about it, I had gotten her the Samsung a10 in 2018, when we started dating. It cost me ₦55k. 

    How do you celebrate special occasions? 

    I can’t think of any time we celebrated Valentine’s Day , but our birthdays are usually the same. For mine, she’d come over with drinks while I get the cake. Then she’d cook, and we’d share with my neighbours. She always tries to buy me things. Last year, I was out of town for work, but she still went to my house to share drinks to my neighbours. I returned days later to find a new wallet, perfume, body care set and boxers — she gets me boxers every year, and I love them. Apart from her first birthday, when I gave her a painting that cost ₦25k, I’ve sent her ₦10k on her other birthdays.   

    I got really lucky with her. I’ve seen girlfriends steal from their boyfriends, but she never takes my money without permission, not even when we broke up. 

    Sorry? 

    In 2019, I was practically living in Abuja because I was managing a studio there. But it didn’t feel like long distance because our regular video calls lasted hours. During that time, she started talking to this new male friend I had warned her about. By 2020, when I returned to Kaduna, I found out she’d been going out with him.

    How did you find out? 

    I was with her phone when his message notification came in. So I read their chats and saw that she had sent him pictures she had taken before she came over to my place — nothing explicit, but she had deleted them from her gallery. I waited till she was on her way home before I texted her that I had seen the pictures she sent him, and she called me apologising. 

    A few weeks later, she came over, and I was using her phone’s hotspot for work when it stopped working. While I was trying to figure out why it had stopped, a text message came in from that same guy. He had sent something that seemed like a breakup message. I was so upset I woke her up and told her to leave in the morning because it was over. 

    Wow

    A month later, I started begging her to come back, but she blocked me. 

    Screamingg

    I fell sick weeks later with tuberculosis. While everyone attributed my mood to the illness, they didn’t know heartbreak was part of it. 

    Four months after the breakup, I moved back to Abuja. She contacted me early in 2021 to see how I was doing, and we started talking again. Then, we met when I visited Kaduna some weeks later. She explained that last text from the guy was saying she had been distant and he would no longer try to reach out to her because she had stayed away from him as promised. Thinking about it, I had been overwhelmed by emotions, so I didn’t read the text properly. 

    When is the wedding, please? 

    Don’t worry. I’ll let you know. 

    What’s your financial future as a couple? 

    I want to have at least one major personal project in three years — it’d be good to shoot a documentary that’ll find a home on any of the major streaming platforms. I also want to own a duplex, one of the downstairs rooms would be my studio. My girlfriend wants to own a mini-restaurant — something cosy that provides a homely experience. 

    Do you have a financial safety net? 

    No. I need to save myself before I save money. I usually spend my savings on business. For instance, over ₦500k will go into the documentary I’m making later this year.


    ALSO READ: You Helped Me Fall Back in Love With Filmmaking — Dare and Kayode


    If you’re interested in talking about how money moves in your relationship, this is a good place to start.

  • I Went From Taking Pictures With My Phone to Making Award Winning Films in Less Than Five Years – Nora

    I Went From Taking Pictures With My Phone to Making Award Winning Films in Less Than Five Years – Nora

    The Elevator is a limited Zikoko series that details the growth of young successful Nigerian women. We tell their stories every Tuesday by 12 p.m. 

    Nora Awolowo did what she had to when people around her didn’t believe in her dreams. At 19, she started her own production company, and by the end of 2019, when the awards started coming in, everyone else came on board. Nora is a 23-year-old filmmaker, and in today’s episode of The Elevator, she talks about her transition from photography to filmmaking and working towards her goal of being the first female cinematographer with a film in the Nigerian cinema. 

    When did you notice your interest in photography? 

    When I was a child, my dad would take us to a studio to take pictures every festive season. I thought it was quite interesting how photographers made pictures of our poses with the click of a camera. I looked forward to it every year. 

    Did you want to be a photographer? 

    No. My parents wanted me to study law. My brother was a computer engineer and my sister was going to become a medical doctor. It made sense for me to choose law but I wanted to be a banker. Bankers seemed smart and wore cool suits. I wanted to be like them. According to my dad, banking was easier than law, so I was being lazy. I stuck to it though. 

    The banking dream followed me from secondary school to university, and eventually, my parents came around. They advised me to study accounting because with an accounting degree, I wasn’t limited to just working in a bank. I could also get hired in a non-financial firm. I wanted that flexibility, so I studied accounting at Ekiti State University. 

    Uni experience in 3, 2, 1… 

    To be honest, I was just trying to prove that I could study accounting and come out with flying colours. In my first and second years, I was always in class and up to date with assignments. But then ASUU went on strike.

    ASUU experience in 3, 2, 1… How did that affect you? 

    My parents wanted me to learn a skill. My mother suggested tailoring, but it wasn’t my speed at all. Around that time, I met someone on Twitter called Dapo*. He was serving as a dentist in Ekiti State Teaching Hospital. It was a date and we were talking about what we liked to do. I told him I liked to take pictures of people but couldn’t afford a camera. My pocket money from my parents at the time was ₦10k per month and a good camera was about ₦300k. 

    Dapo said I shouldn’t let that stop me. He advised me to use my phone to take pictures in the meantime. He showed me photographers that used phones to take good pictures, and I was inspired. I started practising. Six months later, I got a job at a smartphone company. I was to create content with their smartphone. They didn’t pay a lot of money but within a few months, I was able to save up and get myself a camera. The same day I got my camera, someone asked me to cover a burial ceremony. I was really excited and I did a good job but I decided not to cover funerals again. I realised that I don’t like seeing coffins. 

    Your parents seem to be very involved in your career trajectory. How did they feel about your new career path?

    They weren’t very pleased when I told them I wanted to chase photography. My dad said, “You want to be collecting ₦200 for passport photographs on the streets, abi?” I didn’t let their disbelief stop me though. My gigs had already started paying me good money so I stopped asking my parents for money. I focused on my work instead. 

    Tell me about the work during that time. 

    I started taking portraits of people. I enjoyed it so much but I realized I wanted something more. I wanted to do more than take pictures of people — I wanted to tell stories.

    Before I could explore, ASUU strike ended and school resumed. I got gigs while I was in school. I got to work with people who made documentaries and I started filming behind the scenes of people’s jobs. The first person I shot was Lota Chukwu. I followed her while she worked on her food show, Lota Takes

    In 2017, the principal of the project I was working on had to return to the UK impromptu. There was no one to edit the project so my team asked me if I could do it since I had been working on it with them for two seasons. I was hesitant at first but I decided to try. I read a lot of articles to help me. I was using a Windows laptop at the time so I used one of the inbuilt applications to edit the first clip. It turned out fine and that’s how I decided that I wanted to focus more on film. 

    I asked some of my friends who edit professionally what software they use and how they worked. They gave me tips and helped me with the apps I needed. I started getting editing gigs. 

    What about school?

    My final year in school was difficult because I was barely in class. I was always working — I was in Lagos every other week for one project or the other. I graduated with a second class upper in 2019 and I was glad to be done. 

    Were you still interested in accounting?

    By the time I graduated, I had two years of experience working in the film industry so I started my own production company called Rivel studios. I promised myself I would create at least one personal project every year. Since then, I have shot three short films and a documentary. 

    In 2019, I was on the 25 under 25 awards list for the media and communications category. In 2020, I was nominated for The Future Awards Africa prize for film. And again in 2021. The film I shot in 2021 called David won two awards and was selected for six international film festivals. To be honest, I can’t remember all the nominations and awards but these are the ones that put my foot forward in rooms. 

    Mad o. What kind of rooms? 

    At the end of 2021, I got an email from a huge production company about working on a project with me. I thought it was a scam at first but I read the email again and man, I was elated. Since then, I have worked on two projects with them. 

    That’s amazing. I’m curious about what you are up to now. 

    I’m currently shooting a film that’s going to be in cinemas in June 2022. I’m probably going to be the first female director of photography that has a film in the cinema in Nigeria. This is huge to me and I simply cannot wait. 

    Would you say that you are at the top of your career? 

    I’m on the journey to becoming one of the finest cinematographers in Nigeria. I want my company to be one of the best production companies in Nigeria. I want to work with more top production companies, like Amazon and HBO. I would like to have blockbusters in the Nigerian cinema. I want to tell stories that impact the lives of people. I want my work to cause awareness of important social issues. That’s when I’d say I’m at the top of my game. 

    I hope you get there. What’s your work process like? 

    My work is in two folds — client projects and personal projects. If it’s a client’s project, the first thing I do is decide if I want to take it on. This involves reading the brief and checking out the company and what they stand for. If the project aligns with my career goals, I take it on. Then I sit down for a conversation with the client before we start the production. I ask them for their vision for the project. This helps me choose the best base for production. After that, my team and I shoot and work on post-production. 

    For personal projects, it’s different. Some projects are more tasking than others, but typically, it goes like this — I have an idea, I develop it, set it into preproduction, and then shoot before going into post-production and distribution. I work with my team of five. Sometimes, we hire freelancers to help us with projects. So far, we’ve been doing great, I must say. 

    Sounds about right. How do you deal with creative blocks? 

    Two things help me with my creative block — sleeping and drinking. When I notice I am approaching a block, I take a glass of wine and sleep. Sleep helps me solve problems. When I wake up, I feel light-headed enough to attack the project better. I also watch movies to relax. 

    The last thing I do is research or ask people for help. Although, I believe some problems don’t need people to solve them because it’s yours to deal with. 

    I feel you. If you could change anything about the trajectory of your career path, would you? 

    Yes, I’d have liked to have a female mentor — a cinematographer. I feel like it would’ve helped me navigate the journey easier than it was for me. I know I found my way early, but with a female mentor, I’d have found my feet in the industry earlier. 

    If you could tell your 15-year-old self something, what would you say? 

    I’d say I’m glad I didn’t give up, despite what people said because I’m proud of where I am now right now. I’d tell her not to overthink things and just keep at it. It’s going to pay off someday. 

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