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  • Top 8 Nollywood Wins of the Last Decade

    Nollywood has come a long way since travelling theatres in the 1940s and the VHS cassettes of the 1990s. From Nollywood’s Netflix debut to breaking into ₦1 billion naira in sales, here are all the times Nollywood shattered glass ceilings in the last few years.

    First Netflix original film and Oscar nomination

    After 28 years in front of the screen, Genevieve Nnaji made her directorial debut with Lionheart, a film about a first daughter looking to save her father’s company and prove her worth. Netflix acquired and released it in 2019. The same year, Lionheart became the first Nollywood movie to be nominated for an Academy Award in the Best International Film category, until it was dropped because only ten minutes of it featured a foreign language (Igbo).

    First Netflix original series

    A remake of the 2003 Nollywood classic, Blood Sister, the mini-series made its way to Netflix as the first Nigerian original series on the platform. It hit the top 10 list in 30 countries and garnered a viewing of 11,070,000 hours and counting.

    First Nigerian feature film to premiere at the Sundance Film Festival 

    In January 2023, Mami Wata began its journey at the world’s biggest indie film festival, Sundance Film Festival. The black and white fantasy thriller, directed by CJ Obasi and produced by Oge Obasi, has gone on to win the 2023 National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVB) Award for Best Nigerian Film at AMAA and 2023 Best Feature Film at the Mashariki African Film Festival. It’s also received an Oscar 2024 nomination for Best International Film.

    First Nigerian Prime Video original

    A storyline that mirrored the average Nigerian’s reality, love, and fight scenes that had us jumping in glee, you name it, Gangs of Lagos had it. Nollywood’s debut Prime Video original was written and directed by Jade Osiberu, starring Tobi Bakre, Adesua Etomi, Chike, Bimbo Ademoye and Tayo Faniran.

    Top five on global Netflix 

    Editi Effiong’s revenge thriller, The Black Book, was released in September 2023 and hit Number 3 on Netflix’s global charts before the end of the year, with more than 20 million views worldwide. The film, which follows a father seeking justice for his son, gained 5.6 million views just 48 hours after its release, breaking Netflix’s Top 10 list in more than 69 countries.

    Number 1 non-English film on Netflix 

    Directed by Moses Inwang, Blood Vessel follows six youths as they flee their towns as stowaways on a mysterious ship. The thriller is majorly in Ijaw and Niger-Delta pidgin, and it emerged number one on Netflix’s top 10 non-English titles chart, with over 8.8 million hours of viewing time and 4.4 million views.

    The most streamed African original in Nigeria 

    After a two-year break, Chidi Mokeme returned to our screens with Shanty Town in January 2023. The Netflix original series not only had us in a chokehold for months, but it also went on to become the most streamed African original in Nigeria and the second most streamed across Africa.

    The first film to gross ₦1 billion

    One thing Funke Akindele will do is make a box office blockbuster. With her films already gracing the top 3 spots at the Nigerian box office, her only competition is herself. 

    A Tribe Called Judah made its way to cinemas on December 15, and seven days later, it hit ₦400m at the box office. Three weeks after its premiere, the movie grossed ₦1 billion in sales, becoming the first Nollywood film to achieve such success.

  • Everything You Need to Know About “Olóládé” the Series

    Nollywood has been exceptionally consistent with Netflix releases in 2023, with productions like Black Book and Jagun-Jagun making real impact. And another TV series, Olóládé (meaning “the wealthy has come”), is set to join the lineup.

    We bring you exclusive info from TNC Africa on everything to know about Olóládé.

    Six-part series

    Olóládé, a six-part series, follows two friends — Shina, a secondary school teacher, and Lateef, an auto-mechanic — who run into sudden wealth, which they use to build a betting business. Then the consequences find them.

    PulseNg

    Inspired by an old Yorùbá classic?

    Olóládé the series brings to mind an old Yorùbá Nollywood film by Ebun Oloyede’s Olaiya Films, titled Olóládé Mr Money, a dramatic horror about a man who did rituals to become wealthy. Whether the series borrows from the old Yorùbá film or not, its production team has collectively described it as a “homage to Nollywood TV classics”. 

    Language

    While Yorùbá is the primary language, the writing team — headed by Lani Aisida (Skinny Girl in Transit, Rumour Has It) — brings us a relatable script that permeates ethnicity and tongues. According to the director, Adeniyi Joseph Omobulejo (TAJ), “When you watch Olóládé, you will feel a lot of nostalgia. It’s good storytelling at its core. You can expect to see relatable, well-developed characters and drama unfolding, which for me, is what good storytelling should be”.

    TNC Africa

    The production company behind Olóládé was co-founded by Gbemi Olateru-Olagbegi, Daniel Aideyan and Olawale Adetula — the series’ executive producers — in 2021 to focus on making original African TV series. So far, they’ve produced A Little Black Book and My Name Is A-zed.

    Production team

    Olawale Adetula, Adaugo “Falcon” Uzoma and Dele Ishola are the producers of Olóládé. The consultant producer is Leye Fabusoro, with Adeniyi Joseph-Omobulejo (TAJ) as the director. 

    TV cast

    The cast list boasts veteran actors like Femi Adebayo, Kunle Idowu (Frank Donga), Mercy Aigbe, Jaiye Kuti, Mide-Funmi Martins and Liz Da-Silva. It also features emerging Nollywood stars like Adebowale Adebayo (Mr. Macaroni), Oluwatobi Olubiyi (Agba) and Debby Felix.

    Image Source: BellaNaija

    Principal photography 

    Principal photography commenced in the first week of January 2021 in Lagos, Nigeria, and was completed in March 2021.

    Image Source: TNC Africa

    Debut release

    Olóládé the series will make its debut on Netflix on November 24, 2023. 

    TNC Africa

    ALSO READ: We’ll Never Forget How These Old Nollywood Movies Made Us Feel

  • QUIZ: Which Character From The Black Book Are You?

    Choose carefully, because we will be judging.

  • Zambia Debuts on Netflix With a Big Question

    Zambia made their official debut on the global streaming platform with Can You See Us? in August 2023, and this is everything we know about it.

    It’s about albinism

    In it, Joseph goes through a hard childhood — living with an unloving father and getting bullied because of his albinism — and finds comfort in music. This movie tells a common African story that’s rarely told on the big screens. Representation matters; stigmatisation must die.

    Originally released in 2022

    It was shot in 2021 and released in 2022, but most people didn’t know about Can You See Us? until Netflix picked it up. Truly, all good things get their time in the sun.

    The move to Netflix

    On August 27, Can You See Us? became available for viewing on Netflix. It offers a genuine storyline, clean photography and showcases young talents. Go watch, and let’s celebrate Zambia like a good neighbour.

    Inspired by a true story

    “Inspired by the true life of Mr John Chiti” appears at the opening of the film. John Chiti is a popular Zambia musician known for hits like Ifindingile and Ngoleya. He’s also an albino who was bullied as a kid because of his skin condition. Chiti is still alive, pushing awareness and support for albinism through his foundation. He’s credited at a co-writer on this project.

    A child actor with a similar real-life story

    Thambo Kaamba, who plays the younger version of Joseph in Can You See Us? is actually female. She was also born with albinism and rejected by her dad when she was small. You might’ve seen Thambo in the second season of South Africa’s Ubuntu.

    [ad][/ad]

    Many newcomers

    The cast list is full of actors who’ve just arrived in the Zambian film industry. There are some OG names like Ruth Jule and Kondwani Elliot too, but we’re rooting for these new guys.

    A self-taught director

    Kenny Roc Mumba is a Zambian filmmaker who majorly directs brand commercials and documentaries. Now, his film debut is Zambia’s Netflix debut.  

    Hold several handkerchieves

    Since it started streaming, word on the street is Can You See Us? is capable of making grown people cry.

  • Everything We Know About Kemi Adetiba’s “To Kill a Monkey”

    It’s been four years since King Of Boys: The Return of The King, and while Nollywood has given us exciting shows and movies since, the king is back. Early in 2022, Kemi Adetiba announced a list of projects that are cooking in the Kemi Adetiba Visuals (KAV) kitchen, and best believe we’ve sat and waited with bated breath since then. 

    Here’s all we know about the first project on the lineup, To Kill A Monkey.

    The casting choke

    Kemi Adetiba has pulled in the Nollywood big guns for this project. From old to new Nollywood, To Kill a Monkey is said to star Chidi Mokeme, Stella Damasus, Bimbo Akintola, William Benson, Lilian Afegbai, Bucci Franklin, Michael .O. Ejoor and Damilola Adegbite.

    It’s a crime thriller

    Nollywood has decided to choke us with crime and action thrillers, but are we complaining?  After King of Boys and The Return of The King, Kemi Adetiba makes her return with another crime thriller that promises to be better than anything we’ve ever seen.

    It’s a mini-series

    We’ve never been more thankful that Kemi Adetiba is giving us a series in the midst of the two-hour long movies that’ve taken over Nollywood. We get to watch To Kill a Monkey at our own pace as the story progresses nicely.

    Straight to Netflix 

    After the madness King of Boys and King of Boys: The Return of The King did on Netflix, it’s no surprise that To Kill a Monkey joins the lineup of films heading straight there. If we say we aren’t excited to watch it as e dey hot, we’d be lying. 

    Multiple auditions

    Kemi Adetiba is determined to give us the best of the best with To Kill A Monkey. She held three auditions to select all the best new talents to make an appearance on the show.

    All roads lead to set

    After the announcement and the multiple auditions that followed, To Kill A Monkey is finally off the ground. Production started in early August, and we’ve been getting sweet updates and visuals from the Bruce Lee of visuals herself. If we weren’t excited before, we definitely are now.

    Set to release in 2024

    We’ve been waiting for Kemi Adetiba’s return since she dropped KOB 2 in 2021, but thankfully, we don’t have to wait much longer. To Kill a Monkey is set to release some time next year. We get to see the magic she has in store for us soon.

  • The Best Nollywood Movies to Stream on Netflix

    A Netflix subscription is cool but have you tried finding movies to stream then just quitting the whole thing midway? Let’s plug you to the best Nollywood movies to stream on Netflix that are sure to keep you glued throughout the viewing duration.

    The Best Nollywood Movies to Stream on Netflix

    Anikulapo

    The Netflix original, produced and directed by Kunle Afolayan, premiered September 30, 2022. 11 days after its release, it went to top of the Netflix weekly global chart as the most viewed non-English Netflix original movie after garnering 8,730,000 views in less than two weeks. Anikulapo follows an overzealous traveller, Saro (Kunle Remi), who takes advantage of the power he got from a mystical bird. It stars Bimbo Ademoye, Hakeem Kae-Kazim and Sola Sobowale.

    Omo Ghetto: The Saga

    Funke Akindele’s Omo Ghetto: The Saga was initially released to cinemas in December 2020. But the gangster comedy finally arrived on Netflix on September 10, 2021 and became one of the most viewed Nollywood title on the streaming platform at the time. Omo Ghetto is about twin sisters who were displaced at birth. It raked in a total of ₦636m at the Nigerian box office and featured Eniola Badmus, Chioma Akpotha, Zubby Michael and Deyemi Okanlawon.

    Jagun Jagun

    Following King of Thieves (2022)’s hugely successful theatrical run, Femi Adebayo sent his 2023 offering, Jagun Jagun, straight to Netflix. The Yoruba epic raked in 2.1 million viewing hours after one week of release and is currently the most-watched Nollywood title on Netflix. Jagun Jagun tells the story of a young man who joins an elite army in his bid to become a powerful warrior and win a woman’s heart.

    A Naija Christmas

    Kunle Afolayan’s A Naija Christmas holds the record of the first Nigerian Christmas film to debut on Netflix. The title which stars late veteran, Rachel Oniga, premiered on December 16, 2021. A Naija Christmas is about an aging mother who is distraught because her sons have refused to get married and give her grandchildren. It stars Kunle Remi, Efa Iwara and Linda Osifo.

    King of Boys

    Kemi Adetiba’s feature film, King of Boys, was released to cinemas in October 2018. But the political thriller didn’t land on Netflix until September 20, 2019. King of Boys follows Alhaja Eniola Salami (played by Sola Sobowale) in her tussle for power in a world where men call the shots. It raked in over ₦231 million at the box office and was one of the most-watched Nollywood titles when it landed on Netflix.

    Citation

    Content creator and billionaire daughter, Temi Otedola, made her acting debut in Kunle Afolayan’s Citation, which was released exclusively on Netflix on November 6, 2020. She played a young graduate student, Moremi, who takes on a university professor, Lucien N’Dyare (Jimmy Jean-Louis), who tried to sexually abuse her. Joke Silva, Sadiq Daba and Gabriel Afolayan star in the film.

    Chief Daddy

    EbonyLife’s Chief Daddy is no doubt one of the best Nollywood movies to stream on Netflix, especially if you’re looking to have a good laugh. The star-studded film was released to the cinemas in December 2018 but arrived on Netflix on March 15, 2019. Chief Daddy revolves around family and what plays out after a wealthy patriarch suddenly passes away. Some cast members include Shaffy Bello, Rachel Oniga, Funke Akindele, Kate Henshaw, Ini Edo, among others.

    October 1

    Kunle Afolayan’s October 1 should be on your radar if you’re looking for a Nollywood title that gives a brief account of Nigerian history. It was released on October 1, 2014, to mark Nigeria’s Independence Day celebration at the time, and debuted on Netflix in March 2015. The Nollywood thriller stars Sadiq Daba, Kanayo O. Kanayo, Kehinde Bankole and Kayode Olaiya.

    Sugar Rush

    Directed by Kayode Kasum, Sugar Rush follows the story of three sisters who stumble upon a large sum of money and find themselves in the midst of a dangerous conspiracy. The comedy-action was released to Nigerian cinemas in December 2019. It premiered on the streaming platform in July 2020. Bisola Aiyeola, Adesua Etomi and Bimbo Ademoye played the three sisters.

    Isoken

    If you’re big on love and mushy feelings, then Jade Osiberu’s Isoken is one of the best Nollywood movies to stream on Netflix. It deserves your time and data. The romantic drama was initially released in June 2017 before finding its way to Netflix in December 2019. Isoken is about a 34-year-old spinster whose singledom worries her family members. Some of the cast members include Dakore Egbuson, Tina Mba and Funke Akindele.

    Oloture

    Directed by Kenneth Gyang, Oloture explores the dark world of human trafficking and sexual exploitation in Nigeria. The Nollywood title was released for cinema viewing in October 2019 and arrived on Netflix in October 2020. With Sharon Ooja playing the lead, it tells the story of a young investigative journalist named Ehi, who goes undercover as a prostitute to expose a human trafficking syndicate.

    Lionheart

    Genevieve Nnaji’s directorial debut skipped a theatrical run after it was acquired by Netflix in September 2018. The drama premiered in January 2019 to rave reviews from viewers across the world. Lionheart follows Adaeze (Genevieve Nnaji) as she takes charge of her father’s failing company despite barriers from a sexist society. Pete Edochie, Kanayo O. Kanayo and Nkem Owoh starred in the movie.

    The Bling Lagosians

    Directed by Bolanle Austen-Peters, The Bling Lagosians hit the Nigerian cinemas in 2019 and premiered on Netflix on October 11 of the same year. The comedy is about the Holloway family, who realise they’re broke but still try to keep up appearances as one of the wealthiest families in the city of Lagos. Cast members include Elvina Ibru, Denola Grey and Sharon Ooja.

    Living in Bondage: Breaking Free

    Living in Bondage: Breaking Free is the remake of the 1992 Nollywood classic. Directed by Ramsey Nouah, it was released to Nigerian cinemas in November 2019 and debuted on Netflix in May 2020. It follows the life of an ambitious young man who gets involved with the occult in his bid to become wealthy. Jide Kene Achufusi, Enyinna Nwigwe and Shawn Faqua are featured in the film.

    Elesin Oba

    Ebonylife’s Elesin Oba is an adaptation of Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka’s 1975 play, Death and the King’s Horseman. The Yoruba language film premiered exclusively on Netflix on September 10, 2020. In it, the titular character had to commit ritual suicide to aid the late king’s passage to the afterlife. Shaffy Bello, Deyemi Okanlanwon and Jide Kosoko feature. 

  • Everything We Know About Editi Effiong’s “The Black Book”

    In the last decade, we’ve seen exceptional growth in Nollywood. From Fifty, Wedding Party, Lionheart, Isoken and King of Boys to Blood Sisters, Shanty Town, Far From Home and Anikulapo, it’s safe to say the industry has its foot on our necks and isn’t letting up anytime soon.  

    Lately, Nollywood has taken the action thriller genre and done with it as it wishes. In 2023 alone, we’ve had Gangs of Lagos, Almajiri, The Trade and Jagun Jagun, with more such movies in the pipeline.

    Written and directed by Editi Effiong, The Black Book might still be in the works, but here’s all we know about the star-studded action thriller.

    The director’s feature-length debut

    Although he’s known for producing big-name projects like Up North, Day of Destiny and The Set Up, this is Editi Effiong’s first attempt at directing a feature-length film. His debut was born out of necessity. The filmmakers Editi approached couldn’t commit to working exclusively on his project for a year.

    Production was tough

    The director and his crew had many challenges and jumped hurdles to shoot The Black Book. From building a road on set to building an airstrip to the COVID breakouts to transporting a 50KVA generator into Tarkwa Bay for a “simple” night scene, they did it all.

    It’s been a long time coming

    The Netflix original title took two years to write, a year of pre-production and 13 months to film. 

    It’s a million-dollar baby 

    When Seyi Vibez sang Million Dollar Baby, he must’ve had The Black Book in mind. Co-written by Bukunmi Ajakiye, produced by Lala Akindoju and shot by Yinka Edward, the action thriller is the first Nollywood film to be shot on a million-dollar budget.

    This budget covered the cost of guns, props, security, shipping generators to Tarkwa Bay for night shooting, and hiring professionals from six different countries, including the UK, the US and South Africa.

    It’s heading straight to Netflix

    As announced at the “Lights, Camera … Naija” Netflix event, The Black Book will be released on the platform between late 2023 and early 2024. 

    Inspired by most Hollywood action flicks 

    In the movie, a father has to fall back on his military training to get justice for his son who was killed by a group of corrupt policemen. Sound familiar?

    Strong stories call for strong performers

    The Black Book stars Ikechukwu Onunaku, Alex Usifo Omiagbo, Kelechi Udegbe, Denola Grey, Ireti Doyle, Shaffy Bello, Patrick Doyle, Bimbo Manuel, Norbert Young, Taiwo Ajai Lycett, Asabe Madaki and Olumide Oworu. Richard Mofe-Damijo plays Paul Edima, the father, a part he spent a year preparing for, following a strict diet and working out regularly. 

    RMD dedicated 13 months 

    In Nollywood, more often than not, actors are allowed to work on multiple projects at the same time. But for The Black Book, Richard Mofe Damijo had to reject other projects and focus his time and energy on it. This might have something to do with the year-long preparation mentioned earlier.

  • I Watched Toyin Abraham’s “Ijakumo”, So You Don’t Have To

    My initial plan was to wait till the weekend, get cozy and enjoy Ijakumo: The Born Again Stripper, a movie that’s brought out the vicious critics in its viewers. But I had zero self-control and bowed to internet pressure. I’d rather have nothing to watch on the weekend than have the whole experience spoiled by Twitter comments. So I ran to Netflix and hit play.

    The movie starts with drums and the voices of a group of Ifá women dressed in white, with beads to match, singing in remembrance of a late fellow Ifá initiate.

    Enters someone with dreads so long, she has a person packing it for her. I start to ask who this Damien Marley wannabe is. Turns out it’s just Asabi (Toyin Abraham). She sits and the Ifá women welcome her. I’m quite surprised these Nigerian mamas didn’t even comment her hair isn’t part of their culture. Also, I’ve never seen a rasta with Yoruba tribal marks before. This is a discovery.

    She enters a room and stands in front of a calendar that tells you it’s a funeral. She stares at it and leaves. On a day she’s allowed to be vulnerable, she chose stoicism.

    Next, she’s at what appears to be her mother’s tombstone. She puts one 2006-ass rubber flower on it. No one’s mad at it sha. The dead can’t touch flowers, and real flowers will wither anyways.

    The title card quickly comes and goes. Asabi is now on a mountain, touching the rock and having flashbacks of her younger self lying on the same mountain, in pain and covered in blood.

    I still don’t understand what’s going on, but she’s now in her house, looking at data of different babes. I’m thinking two things:

    • She’s a pimp
    • She’s into women

    It turns out she’s neither. But she has her eyes on one of the girls — a Sharon from Uganda. And even though Asabi’s workers urged her to pick another babe, Sharon is her choice for an extraction mission. This is a stressful scene. But Asabi money has to waste, why not hire from Uganda?

    Next scene is in a church. Singing and dancing, everywhere. Then the pastor, Olujide (Kunle Remi), comes to the altar to scam believers of their dollars.

    After service, Mary (Lolade Okusanya), the church’s chorister, comes to seek financial help, but Pastor Olajide turns her to God for support. Mo’fucker wants to eat all the dollars alone. Smh.

    Then, we find out that Jide is a pastor by day, crime syndicate member by night. And… the syndicate is his church’s investor.

    What’s this world coming to?

    He faces the syndicate.

    He’s spending their money, buying properties, but he explains he’s not stealing. They aren’t having it.

    The syndicate boss (act by Bimbo Akintola) vexes, reminds Jide she’s his god and blasphemy won’t be allowed. But what’s the effect of her Scorpion-from-Mortal-Kombat-ass voice? Not even Jide in her presence is afraid. Lol.

    Pastor Jide, angry at the elders still talking to him like he hasn’t leveled up from the Jide that came from Abeokuta, heads straight to the strip club to calm his nerves. He sees Sharon with a big bum bum — yes, the same Sharon that Asabi (from the beginning) chose — and he’ll do anything to get her.

    Jide starts to force himself on her, and when she won’t let him have his way, he removes her masks but mistakes her for Mary, his church choir mistress. The creep pastor frightens the babe off. He heads home with that horniness and delivers a hot fok to Mummy G.O.

    Another day, another morning, another direction. In typical Nigerian man fashion, he starts being nice to Mary.

    Still confusing her for Sharon.

    Next, we find out what Asabi and Sharon are up to. The mission is to get Sharon close to Jide and steal a thumb drive from him.

    While Jide keeps drowning in lust for Sharon, Asabi remembers her late herbalist father and how he fortified her before he died at the beginning of the film — remember the Ifa ceremony? She also flashes back to the nice romance she shared with Jide before his pastor days, how he left her after tasting small money.

    Jide’s at the strip club with Sharon again, but this time, Sharon will do anything to get his thumb drive. She did it. I don’t know how, but the thought I hold is they’ve been inside each other, so why can’t she be inside his pockets? Anyways, she presented the drive to Asabi, and it turned out to be the wrong one.

    Jide a.k.a. always on the road, is already at the syndicate’s meeting house. Warmer temperament from their last meeting. Money is rolling in; everyone’s happy.

    Surprisingly, Sharon calls Jide that afternoon for hot knacks and insists it must be in his house. Though he’s a married man, the mf is not the type to turn down sex.

    After rounds of satisfying coital meet-and-greet, Sharon shares a bit of her life trajectory. Jide Jendo recollects his history with Asabi; he broke her heart, poisoned her and even left her for dead… isn’t he insane?

    His syndicate boss’ call snaps him out of his memory lane. He rushes out, leaving Sharon alone at his home. She finally gets what she came for; the real thumb drive.

    Been a long time coming.

    Asabi discovers billions of dollars in Jide’s thumb drive and turns Robin Hood, distributing the money to people Jide and the syndicate have duped. Sharon gets paid and plans to return to Uganda. But only an unserious person will think they’ll escape unscathed.

    Burning with anger, Asabi remembers her dad once more, and he tells her she’s destined to have only one child. Because she wasted her one child on Jide, she vows revenge.

    In other words, the thumb drive isn’t the end of the fight. She confronts Jide at the funeral of one of his syndicate members.

    He insults her and reminds her that her face looks like she fought a lion. Asabi’s response was that she’s proud of her tribal marks (she should’ve stopped here), culture, heritage and Nigeria. I’m lost. How did this become a patriots and custodian matter?

    The statements Asabi made that she’s behind Jide’s successes haunt him in his sleep. He wakes up just in time his boss calls to tell him the syndicate has been exposed, and she’s fleeing.

    Without caring to wake his wife who’s sleeping beside him, Jide speeds to his backyard and escapes police arrest on a boat.

    Jide still thinks Mary is Sharon, so he and the syndicate kidnap and torture the poor church girl for the stolen drive. He’s about to shoot her when Wale, Jide’s younger brother, calls to tell him he has the real culprit.

    While in the booth of Wale’s car, on the way to Jide’s location, Sharon miraculously manages to untie herself and texts Asabi that she’s been held hostage. Wale didn’t collect her phone? Didn’t tie her hands tightly? This movie plot keeps losing me.

    At the kidnapping lair, Mary meets Sharon, the troublemaker that has complicated her life. Then it gets quickly confusing for the viewers. What’s this sudden family reunion? How did these ladies become blood sisters? What’s that Ugandan accent? Writers of this movie, how?

    I was still thinking how that’s possible when Asabi’s men burst the door open with a grenade. BOOM!

    Gunfight ensues; men flying up and down, left and right.

    See Jide and Wale in action. Jide is many things: a pastor, whore, murderer, crime syndicate member and fighter too.

    Finally it’s time, Jide and Asabi meet for their last face-off. He isn’t here for long talk, so he shoots her straight. But odeshi. Asabi controls the bullets and turns them back to paralyse him, eventually causing his death. E be juju, e be things.

    But the display I find the maddest, that bursts my head is when she sends Wale floating in the air then tears him into cosmic dust.

    Unfortunately, the innocent Mary dies at the scene.

    The movie ends with Asabi and her bodyguard on her favourite mountain top. And honestly, it’s giving budget Eniola Salami and Ade Tiger. Now that her enemies are destroyed, is Asabi satisfied or is there another conquest coming?

    Hmm.. some questions you should be asking too.

    • Why’s there “born again stripper” in the movie title?
    • Any reason Asabi has dada that’s longer than wire for drying clothes?
    • She’s always riding in black SUV and handing out crisp naira notes. What’s her actual job aside from being an ex-babalawo’s daughter?
    • Is her hair stylist in Lagos?
    • Does the syndicate have spiritual powers? Their meetings have people carrying calabashes and give shrine vibes, so how come they didn’t go spiritual when their members started dying? What was the “disease” sef?
    • Not exactly a question, but Sharon’s overacting when she eventually found the thumb drive killed my brain.
    • How did Asabi’s bodyguard know with just one look that the thumb drive he got was empty?
    • This may just be me, but Jide is supposedly the pastor of a mega church. How come he doesn’t even try to preserve his reputation? Guy whipped off his mask because he saw his church member. What if she decided to leak his secret? What kind of fake pastor talks explicitly so casually over the phone?
    • Why did Asabi sacrifice her men in the last fight when aunty knows she has odeshi?

    ATTENTION.

    We’re looking forward to receiving your contribution.

  • 5 Times Rosette from “Young, Famous & African” Showed Us How to Shoot Our Shot

    It’s hard to watch the new season of Young, Famous & African and not get drawn into the will-they-won’t-they love triangle between Andile, his on-again-off-again boo, Sebabatso, and his baby mama/BFF, Rosette. 

    Rosette, Andile and Sebabatso

    Rosette shows up in season two as this sleek, sophisticated chick who’s here to start some hot drama. While Andile can’t seem to figure out if she’s really flirting with him or joking, it’s clear that Rosette wants this man back even though he’s figuring out his relationship with Sebabatso. 

    Andile and Rosette from back in the day

    Here are all the times Rosette stylishly (and sometimes, directly) shot her shot at Andile this season. 

    The time she reminded Andile that she’s a ten

    Andile pulled up in episode six, trying to smoothen things between Rosette and Sebabatso, but our girl had other plans. 

    Ghen! Ghen!

    She started the peace talks by giggling, batting her eyelashes and flirting with Andile. Who else tells their ex, “Can you see how good my makeup is? I look hot, but you don’t want me?” It might’ve sounded like a joke, but the good sis was reminding Andile she’s not just a catch but a catch that’s also available for him to snatch. Shooting shots takes finesse, and Rosette is clearly related to Pheelz because her joke was a smooth way of laying the groundwork for her arrow of hot romance. 

    The time she told Andile she’s very very single 

    Still on a mission to turn Andile’s truce meeting into a firing squad of romantic shots, Rosette quickly said, “No” when he asked if she was dating anyone. And like the expert markswoman she is, Rosette didn’t just stop there; she told him point blank that she was trying to win him back. See, once a girl clears her roster of toasters and decides to focus on you, bro, it’s about to go down. 

    Dear Andile, clean your glasses and read the signs; Rosette wants to eat you like hot agege bread. 

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    The time she was shooting shots in the middle of Luis and Swanky’s drama 

    Right in the middle of the Luis, Swanky and Zari’s eggs drama, Rosette made it her mission to fire some light shots at Andile. We can’t help but stan a focused queen who can multitask — squashing beef while making moves on her ex-man. 

    After a brief meeting to intervene between Luis and Swanky, Andile kissed Rosette’s hands goodbye. Only for her to touch her lips, saying, “Let’s kiss here”. Wahala. 

    De-Nile is a river in Egypt!!

    Andile’s house must be on denial street because how isn’t he seeing what this babe is doing? 

    The time Luis called her out for being messy, but she responded with more shots 

    Andile was still unsure whether or not Rosette was serious when Luis called her out that he knew what she was doing.

    Pew! Pew! Pew!

    To shoot effective shots, you need to be shameless, and our queen owns everything with her chest, telling everyone at the table she’s just trying to get back into Andile’s heart. Closed mouths don’t get fed, so if there’s one thing Rosette will do, it’s open her mouth and say what she wants with her full chest. 

    The time she asked him to get back together and forget everyone else

    We’ve saved the best for last. 

    Bombastic side eye! Criminal-offensive side eye!

    At the end of the drama-filled season, Andile visited Rosette in episode eight to ask how she’d feel if he got back together with Sebabatso. Just when it seemed like all hope was lost for our girl and she’d accepted defeat, she struck with another shot, asking Andile to get back with her to end all the drama between her and Sebabatso. Sis, how will getting back with you end the drama? 

    WAHALA

    We have to give it to Rosette for being resilient and trying her luck even in the face of defeat. 

    While we wait for Netflix to confirm if we’re getting a new season of Young, Famous & African, we’ll be following all the hot drama on Andile, Rosette and Sebabatso’s social media pages. We’re always here for hot drama.

    ALSO READ: I Reviewed the Wigs in “Young, Famous & African” So You Don’t Have To

  • Netflix’s “Queen Charlotte” vs. What Happened in Real Life

    After giving us the epic line, “I burn for you”, Netflix’s Bridgerton is back with another interracial couple (Shonda Rhimes, I know what you are) for us to root for.

    Taking us back in time, Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story sheds some light on the love story between King George III and Queen Charlotte, who were side characters in the first and second seasons of Bridgerton. The show opens with a message that it’s not entirely factual, so we couldn’t help but do some digging to find out where exactly the writers added Maggi and salt. Here’s what we found out. 

    Was Queen Charlotte biracial? 

    Source: Netflix

    On the show, Charlotte’s arrival into British court is groundbreaking, bringing about the Great Experiment, which saw her mother-in-law, Princess Augusta, introduce other black people into court. While this storyline is a big slay for black people, no historical evidence supports the gist that Queen Charlotte was black or biracial. 

    That being said, art historian, Mario De Valdes y Cocom, who started studying portraits of the late Queen in 1967, believed she was indeed biracial and of Portuguese descent. If this is true, it means our good sis, Meghan, wasn’t the first melanated royal to step foot in Buckingham Palace. 

    How did Charlotte arrive from Germany speaking English with a British accent?

    Source: Zikoko Memes

    Last I checked, German was the official language in Germany, so how did a German princess show up in England spitting in Adele’s accent? The show obviously took creative liberties as the real Queen Charlotte had to learn English and the customs of her new country. 

    Why did King George marry Queen Charlotte? 

    Source: Netflix

    On the show, we hear the young Charlotte ask her brother why the King of England would want to marry an unknown princess like her.

    The truth is King George didn’t have plenty of fish in his marriage sea. The King had to marry a princess, and there were none in England then. He also had to marry a Protestant, which meant choosing from Germany or Scandinavia. The King himself is also of German descent, with his great-grandfather being German. So, sis, this man was just marrying from his village. That’s all. 

    Did the King and Queen marry immediately? 

    Source: Netflix

    Yes, King George and Queen Charlotte married just six hours after meeting for the first time on September 8, 1761. But it wasn’t because of love-at-first-sight. Their families had already signed off on the marriage ahead of their meeting. The future Queen was 17 (She should’ve been writing JAMB, to be honest), while King George was 22.

    RECOMMENDED: Ranking Nollywood Bridgerton Looks from “God, Abeg” to “I Burn For You”

    Are the Danburys real? 

    Source: Netflix

    We’ve already established that the Great Experiment was created to entertain us messy bitches who live for drama. Unfortunately for Lady Danbury stans, her story is as accurate as Father Christmas’s. However, England did have a relationship with Lady Danbury’s country, Sierra Leone, and it has to do with slavery. 

    Who really brought Pormenarians to the palace? 

    Source: Netflix

    On the show, King George kickstarted Queen Charlotte’s obsession with Pormenarians when he gifts her one — teddy bears weren’t a toasting technique back then, so people handed out animals or palaces. But in real life, the Queen pulled up from Germany with her little pets in hand. Pomeranians are actually German, from the Pomerania region in north-west Poland and north-east Germany.

    Cute story, though. 

    Did King George really have a mental illness? 

    Source: Netflix

    One of the saddest plotlines of Queen Charlotte happens to be true. Historians say King George battled with an unnamed mental illness throughout his reign, from 1788 to 1789 and again in 1801. It was so bad, he was nicknamed the Mad King. King George was eventually declared unfit to rule in 1810, allowing his eldest son, George IV, to act as Prince Regent from 1811. 

    Wait, so Queen Charlotte actually had 15 children? 

    Source: Zikoko Memes

    Queen Charlotte had not one, not two, but 15 children. She had nine sons and six daughters, but their two youngest sons died at ages one and four. Despite having all these children, the King and Queen struggled for heirs. Two of their daughters never got married, while most of their sons focused on scoring away matches, making the King and Queen’s grandchildren unfit for the throne. This changed when their son, Prince Edward, and his wife, Princess Victoria, welcomed their daughter, Alexandrina Victoria, or simply Queen Victoria

    An interesting connection between King George and Queen Charlotte and Harry and Meghan

    Source: The Times

    As shown in the series, King George III bought Buckingham House, which later became the famous Buckingham Palace, as a gift for his wife in 1762. While living in the palace, the couple commissioned the construction of Frogmore Cottage for quick summer getaways (their own private Ilashe without the ocean). Guess who rented the cottage while living in the UK? Yes, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex. If you look at it, King George and Queen Charlotte were Harry and Meghan’s original landlord and landlady

    ALSO READ: TV Shows You Shouldn’t Watch with Your Parents

    Can you handle the hotness of Zikoko’s Hertitude? Click here to buy your ticket and find out. 

  • The Biggest Fuckboy Nollywood Characters on Netflix Naija, Ranked

    If there’s one thing men will do, it’s stain your white. While real-life Nigerian men get dragged all the time, I think the worst type are the ones we’ve seen in Netflix Nollywood movies. For anyone who thinks I’m exaggerating, let’s do a quick rundown of some of these men to educate you. 

    Ruslaan Mumtaz as Raj in Namaste Wahala 

    Crime: Raj didn’t do anything wrong. I just can’t stand the fact that Namaste Wahala exists, so I’ll drag it any chance I get. I’m sorry, you can’t beat me. 

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: This man couldn’t stand up to his mother to protect the woman he loves. Does Prince Harry have two heads? It’s hard to fall for a mama’s boy, so Raj’s game is non-existent. 

    Timini Egbuson as Nonso in Dinner At My Place

    Crime: He was stupid enough to allow his ex-girlfriend to crash the proposal he planned for his new girlfriend. I’d understand if the proposal was in a public place. But, sir, in your house? And she even swallowed the engagement ring.

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: Yeah, it’s clear Nonso can’t keep a home. I don’t see a man who puts an engagement ring in food having enough game to seduce anyone. I just don’t see it. 

    Tobi Bakre as Andy in Sugar Rush

    Crime: Stealing money from his ex and making her chase him around Lagos for it. Yes, I know she stole the money too, but I’ll always support women’s rights and wrongs, so let’s focus on Andy. 

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: He looks like he’s just good for fornication, so as long as your legs are closed, you’ll be safe. 

    Akah Nnani as Samuel in Man of God 

    Crime: Being a fake pastor who cheated on his Mummy G.O with multiple women, including the ex who left him for another man. 

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: This man rebranded from discount Fela Kuti to discount Chris Okotie with nary a game in sight. We’ll be fine. 

    Kenneth Okolie as Deji in The Royal Hibiscus Hotel

    Crime: Making the daughter of the owner of the hotel he’s about to buy and destroy fall in love with him. And yes, he made her fall in love with him by answering the door shirtless and being super tall. Why couldn’t he throw on a shirt or something? Very whorish behaviour if you ask me. 

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: Hmmm. Anyone who’s seen that shirtless scene knows that the mind might be strong, but the flesh is weak. 

    Swanky JKA as Nnamdi in Living in Bondage: Breaking Free

    Crime: Dating when he knows he owes his cult a human head. Why couldn’t he remain single? This man dragged an innocent babe into his Tony Umez mess because of love. Eww. 

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: An Igbo man with a sweet mouth? RIP to whoever falls victim.  

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    Joseph Benjamin as Osaze in Isoken 

    Crime: Being a self-absorbed boyfriend who tries to change his girlfriend, knowing full well she’s a grown woman with agency over her life. That’s just douchebag behaviour. 

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: Osaze might be a trash boyfriend, but he’s sleek, fine and has connections. Yes, we might lose small focus. Just small sha. 

    Chris Attoh as Umar in Flower Girl 

    Crime: Breaking up with his girlfriend after promising to propose to her as soon as he gets promoted. This babe was already planning their wedding, and he just said, “Aired DFKM.” 

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: It’s Chris Attoh. I’m sorry, there’s nothing else to say. It’s Chris Attoh *insert heart eye emoji x 100* 

    Wale Ojo as Kunle in Fifty 

    Crime: Cheating on your wife is wrong, but cheating on your wife with someone she already has beef with? Kunle in Fifty was a trash husband, but the writers tried to make us root for him because his wife was self-absorbed, and he was cheating for love. Sir, with all due respect, geddifok. 

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: He’s a middle-aged Yoruba man with Wale Ojo’s face and a ton of money. My dear, how does that song go again? O ti lo. 

    Stan Nze as Ahanna in Rattlesnake: The Ahanna Story 

    Crime: Abandoning his girlfriend for another woman and the soft life in Abuja. This man started a robbery gang, set them up then moved to Buhari’s backyard for a good time. That’s savage AF. 

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: If he could convince those grown-ass men to give armed robbery a chance, there’s a high chance he could convince us to take off our underwear. Just saying. 

    Oris Erhuero as Sunday in A Sunday Affair 

    Crime: How can you cheat on your wife at your brother’s wedding then sleep with the best friend of the woman (your brother’s sister-in-law, by the way) you cheated on your wife with? We need to bring back shame because it’s clear Sunday, AKA Community D, had none of it. Nothing in his head, just fornication and vibes. 

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: The man drives a Porsche, has a seductive Christian Grey accent and uses words like “Consortium”. No wonder Uche, Toyin and their sponge wigs fell on the floor for him. Ladies, you deserved better, but honestly, I get it. 

    Taiwo Obileye as Chief Daddy in Chief Daddy

    Crime: This man cheated on his wife with multiple women then forced her to live with them and their children using financial manipulation. Nah, Chief Daddy was evil if we’re keeping it 100. It’s one thing to cheat on your wife, but to score away goals from Lagos to London? Even Abraham in the bible didn’t take his “Father of all Nations” title this seriously. 

    Chances of us falling for his bullshit: It’s clear Chief had game. It can just be his money that pulled baddies across different age groups to him. He was a pure manifestation of Yoruba demonry, so no one stood a chance. 

    ALSO READ: I Watched “Chief Daddy 2” So You Don’t Have To

  • QUIZ: You Need to Have Paid Attention to “Shanty Town” to Ace This Quiz

    You’re here because you’ve watched the movie, great. Now, take this quiz and don’t fall our hand.

  • From “Girls Cot” to “KOB”, Here’s Where You’ve Seen the Cast of “Shanty Town” Before

    Nollywood is choosing vawulence in 2023, and I’m here for it. Kicking the year off with the Netflix limited series, Shanty Town, we’re invited to an underground world of crime led by Ini Edo, Chidi Mokeme, Richard Mofe Damijo, Sola Sobowale and Nse Ikpe Etim. 

    With such a star-studded cast, it’s almost impossible for the actors to not have worked together before. And because I like doing inspector work, I did a little digging to find out where we’ve seen them together. 

    Richard Mofe Damijo and Sola Sobowale in The Wedding Party and Diamond Ring

    From playing parents to Teju Babyface’s thieving character in 1998’s Diamond Ring to handling chaos as in-laws in 2016’s The Wedding Party, RMD and Sola Sobowale have been working together longer than some of us have been breathing. 

    Ini Edo and Uche Jombo in Girls Cot

    If there’s one film that solidified the arrival of abortion belts, it’s 2006’s Girls Cot. This ensemble drama was chaotic AF (there’s a police car chase scene), served us lewks and still had stars like Genevieve Nnaji, Rita Dominic, Ini Edo and Uche Jombo. 

    Nancy Isime and Uche Jombo in Blood Sisters 

    While I still can’t get over Uche Jombo playing Ini Dima-Okojie’s mother in 2022’s Blood Sisters, I have to admit that hers and Nancy Isime’s Kemi are two of my favourite performances from the EbonyLife limited series. 

    Toyin Abraham and Ali Nuhu in Ghost and the Tout Too 

    Toyin Abraham’s characters are never normal, so imagine what they’d be like if they could see ghosts? This is the premise for 2021’s The Ghost and the Tout Too, which also stars Ali Nuhu, my fave Real Housewife, Iyabo Ojo and Osas Ighodaro.

    Shaffy Bello, Richard Mofe Damijo and Ini Edo in Chief Daddy 

    We all like to drag the Chief Daddy franchise, but those films are the definition of star-studded. Because, tell me, where else you’d find Shaffy Bello, Richard Mofe Damijo, Ini Edo, Joke Silva, Falz, Funke Akindele and Kate Henshaw all in one film? 

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    Sola Sobowale and Nse Ikpe Etim in King of Boys: The Return of the King 

    Kemi Adetiba’s 2021 King of Boys: The Return of the King stood out for many reasons, but number one on the list is the epic showdown between Sola Sobowale’s Eniola Salami and Nse Ikpe-Etim’s Jumoke Randle

    Zuby Michael and Nancy Isime in Omo Ghetto: The Saga 

    Funke Akindele’s 2020 comedy, Omo Ghetto: The Saga not only revived cinema culture after a long-ass panini, but it also gave us Zuby Michael and Nancy Isime in one film. 

    Ini Edo, Uche Jombo and Nse Ikpe Etim in Reloaded 

    From Games Women Play in 2005 to Games Men Play in 2006, Nollywood producer Emem Isong was the queen of ensemble hits back in the day. She’s also responsible for Reloaded, the film that helped launch Nse Ikpe Etim’s career in 2009. 

    Lilian Afe and Nse Ikpe Etim in Glamour Girls 

    Like Aretha Franklin once said, “Great gowns, beautiful gowns.” LOL. 

    Chidi Mokeme, Shaffy Bello and Toyin Abraham in The Therapist 

    Big confession, I haven’t seen The Therapist, and that’s mostly because therapy is expensive and inaccessible for most Nigerians— 

    Oh, we’re talking about the 2022 movie? Well, I haven’t seen that either. But I hear it has Chidi Mokeme, Shaffy Bello, Toyin Abraham and Rita Dominic. 

    ALSO READ: How Realistic Are Your Favourite Nollywood High School Shows? Let’s Rank Them

  • How Realistic Are Your Favourite Nollywood High School Shows? Let’s Rank Them

    Whether you call it high school drama or secondary school wahala, shows that revolve around young teens navigating life and WAEC are always premium entertainment. While I’d love for Nollywood to dive deeper into this genre, this is a ranking of some of the teen shows I’ve seen based on how realistic their stories are. 

    Super Story: Omoye 

    Super Story has had many seasons that shook Nigerians, but if there’s one that definitely left a mark on my young mind, it’s Omoye. Allegedly based on a true life story, Omoye follows a girl forced to make tough choices to secure her future after a bank closure pushes her family into poverty. Random thought: what happened to the actress who played Omoye? It’s like she did the show and said, “Acting? Never again.” 

    Reality scale: Three. Great show, but using pregnancy as a punishment for sex, and then, death as a punishment for getting an abortion, doesn’t fly in my book. It’s giving 1000 BC. 

    Far From Home 

    Far From Home is the Netflix sensation that had everyone hooked at the close of 2022. This TV show follows the lives of teens at Wilmer Academy and how they change with the arrival of a new student, Ishaya Bello. From the debate over whether or not Ishaya’s parents were right to spend his savings to a global thirst for the lawyer-turned-actor (his father wants you to know he’s a lawyer too) who played Reggie, Far From Home was everywhere. 

    Reality scale: Four. Please, show me a school where they allow male students to dye their hair the many colours of the rainbow every week? Atlas, it’s all your fault. 

    Life 101 

    EbonyLife’s Life 101 follows four friends transitioning from high school to university. The show accurately captures how friendships evolve when everyone starts balancing their GPAs with romance, ambition and, in the case of these four, an imaginary world. 

    Reality scale: Five. Escaping to an alternate reality has never really solved anyone’s problems. Do you know what works? Grabbing your wahala by the balls. 

    Mostly Straight

    Mostly Straight is a hilarious TV show that follows the daily lives of some unhinged students trying to balance love, life and fFurther math with finesse. It’s very charming and wholesome.

    Reality scale: Six. A TV show with the gheighs? I’m totally here for it. Even though the acting, production and dialogue might be a shaky sometimes, the fact that it has a diverse roster of characters is what does it for me.  

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    Schooled 

    Schooled is a severely underrated NdaniTV teen drama. It follows the life of a street kid who gains admission to an ajebo school where he investigates a series of strange events. It’s funny and scary at the same time, and will have you missing boarding school — that’s if you went sha. 

    Reality scale: Seven. I know what you’re thinking, “Conrad, it has bush babies.” And so what? I totally believe bush babies exist, and that’s on that. 

    I Need to Know 

    Before Funke Akindele was Jenifa or Omo Ghetto to Gen Zs, she was Bisi from I Need To Know to millennials like me. The TV show aired in the early 2000s and featured Funke as a teenage girl navigating everything from her first crush to conversations about teen pregnancy. The best part? She was so close to her mum that she could talk to her about anything.

    Reality scale: Eight. The uniform and dialogue on the show were very true to secondary schools back then, but talking to your mother about fornication? Omo, that’s rare. 

    Shuga 

    Shuga might not be a full-on teen high school show, but it’s the one show that captures the craziness and confusion that comes with navigating life as a young adult. From sex to pregnancy and relationships, Shuga pretty much hits most of its story on the head. Pregnancy or STDs are not shown as punishments for sex. Instead, they’re shown as shit that could happen when you bump genitals. 

    Reality scale: Nine. Could we do with more actors who look like students? Yes. But this show still gives what it’s supposed to give every season. 

    ALSO READ: 7 Brilliant Nollywood Short Films That Need to Be on Your 2023 Watchlist

  • 10 Ways You Can Escape the Trenches After Watching “Far From Home”

    Get in here, guys. We’re leaving the trenches behind. 

    Everyone can’t stop talking about Inkblot Productions and Netflix’s new show, Far From Home, and we totally get it. The young-adult series created by Chinaza Onuzo follows Ishaya Bello, a poor boy from Isale Eko who’s down to do anything to japa from the trenches and become a superstar artist. 

    If just like Ishaya you’re tired of living in severe sapa, then this article is for you. Here’s a list of the easiest ways to make bastard money and escape the trenches before 2023. Take notes. 

    Don’t be born a Nigerian

    Everyone in Nigeria is in the trenches and the last time we checked, you don’t have two heads. Your problem started the day you were born Nigerian. When next you’re choosing to be born, please and please, ask the angel to redeploy you somewhere else. Don’t choose +234 for your own good. 

    Be born rich 

    If you mistakenly end up being born into a Nigerian family, the least you can do is make sure it’s a rich one. See, if your parents are poor, today is a good day to disown them and look for new ones. No hard feelings. They’ll support your decision if they truly want the best for you. 

    Enter the oil and gas business

    If Otedola can make money from oil and gas, what’s stopping you from becoming a billionaire too. All you need to do is start selling cooking gas and then small palm oil or vegetable oil on the side. See how simple it is? And to think everyone makes oil and gas sound like some exclusive big boys club. Don’t worry,  I’ve hacked it for you. 

    Please, fast and pray 

    Ishaya did everything but fast and pray. How do you want to escape the trenches when you’re not a prayer warrior? What God cannot do does not exist. 

    Try a lirru bit of kidnapping  

    Everyone knows streets aren’t safe during the ember months, so how about using that to your advantage by stepping into your kidnapping bag. With all the IJGBs everywhere, after two or three kidnapping adventures, who knows, you might be buying a house in Banana Island by January. 

    Become an artist 

    Note how I didn’t ask you to learn how to draw or paint? I said, “Become an artist” because there’s levels when it comes to this art thing — talent is one thing, while packaging is another thing. People that just draw and paint are still in the trenches like Ishaya’s father, but you see “artists”? Omo, those ones are like Essien, touring the world and cashing checks. 

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    Manifest Dangote’s money into your account

    Why spend all your time working for money when you can just manifest Dangote’s money into your account? This is what we mean by working smarter, not harder. Dangote has done all the work, so just go out into the rain or light candles and manifest everyday until your account balance increases. 

    Become a sugar baby 

    Falling in love is a great feeling. But you know what feels better, and could help you leave the trenches? Finding a glucose guardian that has bastard money. You might have to give some sugar here and there like Adufe on Far From Home, but at least you won’t have to choose between warming the beans from yesterday or drinking garri without milk and sugar. 

    Like Shakespeare Davido once said, “Love is sweet o, but when money enter, love is sweeter.” 

    Create your own currency 

    If CBN can use Snapchat filters to design Nigeria’s currency, who says you can’t make your own currency? All you need is ink and plenty of A4 paper. Good luck!

    Plan a dinner with Jay Z 

    Everyone on Twitter is always talking about how dinner with Jay Z is more valuable than $1m, and they’re not wrong. You don’t need money to be bastardly rich and escape the trenches; you need little nuggets of wisdom from Beyoncé’s husband. 

    ALSO READ: Seyi Vibez Misses the Trenches But Doesn’t Regret Leaving

  • 2022 Was the Year of Streaming and These 10 Actors Drained Our Data

    2022 has been an incredible year for Nollywood. From the arrival of a new streaming platform to an action film that actually had audiences by the neck, I think it’s time to admit that Nollywood ate this year. 

    While the jump to consume more streaming content took a lot of our data and almost made us bankrupt, some Nollywood actors and their performances made all that time and money worth our while. 

     Genovevah Umeh — Blood Sisters and Far From Home 

    Stealing the show from an ensemble cast of heavyweights like Kate Henshaw, Ramsey Nouah, Kehinde Bankole and Gabriel Afolayan is no easy feat. But that’s the heist Genovevah Umeh successfully pulled off on EbonyLife’s Blood Sisters. With eyes that said much more than any dialogue could convey, Genovevah’s performance turned what could’ve been a caricature into a fully fleshed-out human. 

    Genovevah is undoubtedly the breakout star of 2022.

    Meg Otanwa — For Maria: Ebun Pataki

    Meg Otanwa is the only actor with one film on this list, but anyone who’s seen her performance in For Maria: Ebun Pataki will tell you that one role was all she needed to end 2022 on a high. Diving deeper than any actor I’ve seen in a while, Meg’s nuanced turn as Derin, a young mother struggling with postpartum depression, had the internet talking and researching for weeks. 

    This was the role of a lifetime, and Meg Otanwa definitely matched it with the year’s best performance.  

    Odunlade Adekola — King of Thieves and Elesin Oba: The King’s Horseman 

    Odunlade Adekola is more than just a meme king; in 2022, it’s clear he wants you to know that. As the imposing Oba Adegbite Tadenikaro in the Yoruba revenge epic, King of Thieves, Odunlade turns the humour down but still makes his character charismatic and unforgettable. 

    While his “Father Christmas” beard in Elesin Oba: The King’s Horseman might be unnerving, it takes nothing from Odunlade’s commanding work as the film’s conflicted titular character, a performance that’s one of 2022’s best. 

    Bimbo Ademoye — Anikulapo, Iya Barakat Teropi Secxxion and Selina 

    Bimbo Ademoye is the gift that keeps on giving. Since grabbing my attention with her colourful role in 2019’s Sugar Rush, Bimbo has consistently delivered incredible performances, even when the film’s plot happens to be the weapon fashioned against her. 

    While Bimbo has been hailed for her comedic timing, her dramatic and seductive turn as Queen Arolake was one of the best parts of Kunle Afolayan’s confused Anikulapo. PS: If you’re here for the hilarious Bimbo, her Instagram skit turned web series, Iya Barakat Teropi Secxxion will have you spitting out your food in laughter. 

    Uzoamaka Aniunoh — Juju Stories and Diiche 

    Uzoamaka Aniunoh makes her way through each project, making choices and doing things that feel natural for whatever character she’s playing. It’s acting that’s more like being. While I’ve wondered out loud why Nigerian TV shows don’t have the same pull they had in the past, Uzoamaka’s role as Inspector Ijeoma Anene on Diiche happens to be one of the few performances that restores my faith in television. 

    RECOMMENDED: The Biggest 2022 International Collabs Ranked from “Flop” to “Bop”

    Deyemi Okanlawon — Blood Sisters and Elesin Oba: The King’s Horseman 

    Deyemi Okanlawon is quickly turning into the Noah Centineo of Nollywood, but I can’t be mad because the man can actually act. Marking attendance on not just one but two major Netflix releases (the third, Far From Home, drops this December) in one year is a major flex for any actor, but all the flexing Deyemi does happen on screen. 

    As Olunde in Elesin Oba: The King’s Horseman, Deyemi is dutiful and loyal, a far cry from his terrifying and unforgivable turn as Kola in Blood Sisters

    Bisola Aiyeola — Dwindle, Flawsome and Dinner at My Place 

    It’s hard to fault Nollywood producers who cast former reality TV stars in films when Bisola Aiyeola continues to hit her roles out of the park. An actress with incredible range, Bisola can make her audience laugh like they’re at a stand-up show in one scene and still make them cry like they’ve been served breakfast in the next. I’m waiting for a role that fully utilises her talents because that role hasn’t been written yet. 

    Daniel Etim Effiong — Collision Course, Blood Sisters and Selina 

    What can I do when an actor I like is cast in a role I dislike that’s also the centrepiece of a movie I can’t stand? If the acting works, I have no choice but to give this actor his flowers. And yes, Daniel Etim Effiong’s acting works in the deeply upsetting police-sympathy drama, Collision Course. I just wish he wasn’t in it.  

    That being said, Daniel’s roles in Blood Sisters and Selina slightly make up for the Bolanle Austen-Peters blunder. 

    Gabriel Afolayan — For Maria: Ebun Pataki, Blood Sisters and U Turn 

    If we’re keeping it one hundred, Gabriel Afolayan would make any list of the best performances of the year for just about any role, and with his eyes closed. He stays committed to every character and keeps it interesting, even when the film is undeserving of his talent. Thankfully, in 2022, Gabriel got the chance to sink his teeth into a wide variety of juicy roles, and he ate everything up. 

    From the supportive albeit confused husband in For Maria: Ebun Pataki to the scheming and overlooked brother on Blood Sisters, Gabriel created completely different characters whose only similarity was the actor that played them. 

    Tina Mba — For Maria: Ebun Pataki, U-Turn and Finding Hubby 2 

    Very few actresses command the screen like Tina Mba, even in minor supporting roles. While it could’ve been easy to dislike her as the mother-in-law in For Maria: Ebun Pataki, Tina plays the role with such dedication that we can’t’t help but understand her character’s point of view — right or wrong. 

    A memorable scene I can’t get over is when she sprinkles anointing oil around her daughter-in-law’s room and then uses some on her breast to get her to lactate. It’s totally uncomfortable to watch, but it’s still the most Nigerian mother thing ever. 

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  • 9 Times We Wanted to Fight Puleng From “Blood and Water” For Being Chaotic AF

    Is it me, or are the main characters on TV shows created to be annoying and chaotic all the time? Anyone who’s seen Blood and Water will confirm that while the lead character, Puleng Khumalo, is lovable and smart, she can be very annoying in her mission to prove her schoolmate, Fikile, is her long-lost sister. 

    In honour of the return of one of my favourite high school dramas, I’m looking at all the times I almost jumped into my TV screen just so I could drag Puleng for being messy AF. 

    The time Wade said she looked like Fikile, and she just went with it 

    Everyone knows the usual response to “You and this person look-alike” is, “I don’t see it”, but not my good sis, Puleng. In the very first episode, while gate-crashing Fikile’s birthday party, Wade (a total stranger, by the way) randomly told Puleng she looked just like the birthday girl, and boom, she decided Fikile might be her long-lost sister. 

    Was she correct to start the investigation? Yes. Was it a bit extra? Also, yes. 

    Starting this whole investigation in the first place like she’s Eniola Holmes 

    I can’t remember the last time I saw Puleng read a book, do homework or just go for a jog. From the moment the show started, Puleng put on her Eniola Holmes hat and refused to take it off. There could be an earthquake, tsunami and jailbreak happening at the same time, and we’d still find Puleng digging through Fikile’s trash for DNA samples. 

    The time she tried to steal Fikile’s tampon to get her DNA sample 

    Talking about digging through trash, can we also go back to the time Puleng tried to fap Fikile’s used tampon in season one so she could run a DNA test? I mean, smart move doing the DNA thing, but my good sis, trying to steal someone’s tampon is a bit much. Or what do you think? 

    Her love triangle with KB and Wade 

    Puleng must really think she’s Bella Swan from Twilight or something because why was she juggling two fine ass men like it’s nothing? 

    There’s KB, her boyfriend and original love interest from season one, and then there’s Wade, her sidekick who told her multiple times that he liked her. To be honest, everyone is tired of the “not noticing my best friend is in love with me” trope. Even though she ended up with Wade in season two, she still kissed KB in the last episode, turning her relationship map into an actual triangle. Good job, sis.

    The time she slapped Fikile (and her teammate) senseless 

    One thing about Puleng is she’s never going to miss an opportunity to bitch slap someone. She slapped her teammate from her old school after she made the team lose a match. Then, she decked Fikile when she found out her supposed sister was behind the leaked tape of their father’s arrest. 

    Puleng’s slaps are annoying because they land her in trouble every time. But I can’t help but mutter a little “Yasss, bitch” under my breath everytime it happens. 

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    Using KB to get an internship someone else deserved 

    This episode in season two confirmed that Puleng was actually written to be an annoying protagonist who would do anything to move the plot forward. Despite having zero interest in law, Puleng manipulated her relationship with KB to get an internship with his dad’s law firm, knowing other deserving students wanted the slot. Did she have a good reason? Yes. But it didn’t make her move any less shitty. 

    The time she tried to prove she wasn’t a drug addict by doing shady drug addict activity

    In season two, when Puleng’s parents suspect she might be using drugs and call a rehab to pick her up, this babe decided to wear a hoodie, pack a bag and steal some money from her brother’s piggy bank (not the app, an actual piggy bank), so she could run away. Like, what was she trying to prove? Because if it was that she was drug-free, then she failed woefully. 

    When she finally revealed her investigation but didn’t drag her parents’ like small gen 

    African parents blaming drugs once their kids breathe different will never be wild to me. After it’s revealed Puleng isn’t a drug addict but a sergeant with Panti police station, she misses out on a wonderful opportunity to drag her parents on behalf of the rest of us. She could’ve at least hissed or rolled her eyes because they deserved small disrespect in that scene. We were rooting for you, Puleng! 

    Going to the hood unsupervised 

    Sometimes I believe Puleng wakes up every morning thinking she’s Lara Croft or an avenger. If she has any superpower or martial arts training we don’t know of, now would be a good time to share with the class. I don’t understand why she dragged Wade to the hood on an investigative trip, but of course, it ended with them being attacked by some bouncer-looking man. Puleng, abeg now. 

    ALSO READ: “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” Is Great, But Some Things Are Off

  • 10 Ways to Use Your “Abobaku” Privilege From “Elesin Oba: The King’s Horseman”

    What would you do if you knew you’d die tomorrow, and everyone was obligated to fulfil all your wishes? This question sets the stage for Netflix’s Elesin Oba: The King’s Horseman, an adaptation of Wole Soyinka’s classic play, Death and the King’s Horseman

    While the film’s title character, the Elesin, makes some big mistakes as the story unfolds, we can’t help but wonder about all the things we would do if we had the Abobaku privileges he had. 

    Try all the creamy pasta in Lagos 

    Imagine eating all the creamy pasta you can manage without emptying your bank account and your parents’ pension too? As the Elesin, you can ask all the restaurants to bring the most expensive pasta for food tasting in your house. 

    Have your face on the new naira notes

    Word on the street is Meffy baby and the Central Bank team are launching an arts and craft department to redesign the naira notes out of boredom. Even though the naira faints every two to three days, having your face on it is a good way to be remembered. Just make sure it’s on an important note, like the ₦500 or ₦1k, because the others might go out of circulation soon. 

    Change your university result to a first class 

    It’s never too late to say you graduated from university  with a first class. Do results matter in the afterlife? I highly doubt it. But who cares? You’re still a first class student and that’s on period. 

    Hang out with the Otedolas on their yacht 

    Not everyone gets to hang out with Daddy Cuppy AKA Femi Ote$. For once in your life, you’ll get to eat like, and with, a billionaire. If you ever get tired of rich people gist, you could easily bounce Otedola and invite your friends instead. 

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    Organise a special concert with your faves

    Imagine a music concert featuring Wizkid, Burna Boy, Tiwa Savage and Davido. Not only will it be free, but it’ll also be private, with the artists actually showing up on time and singing live just to honour you. This is what people mean when they say, “Celebration of life”. 

    Demand for the presidential candidates’ real ages

    This one is not for you; it’s for the Nigerian people. How can a politician who’s been in politics since our grandparents were in primary school come out to say he’s just 70 years old? The maths is not mathing. Kindly take one for the team and force these politicians to submit their original birth certificates so we can know who’s who ahead of the elections

    Hold a pageant to choose a new spouse 

    Why settle for an average person when you can host a beauty pageant and select the winner as your husband or wife? You only die once, so make the best of your upcoming death. 

    Erect life-like statues in every state

    What’s the difference between an Elesin and a national hero? Nothing. As someone who’s dying for the people, you deserve to have your statue at the entrance of every state in the country, to remind everyone of your sacrifice. 

    Force Elon Musk to verify your Twitter account for free 

    We heard Elon Musk is about to charge people on Twitter to get verified. But as an Elesin, you don’t have to pay anyone $8 for a blue tick. Just tell Elon Musk to make it happen ASAP. 

    Sleep

    Imagine how different Elesin Oba: The King’s Horseman would’ve been if the Elesin had stayed in one place and slept until it was time to die. There’s no use doing anything crazy when you’re literally going to die the next day. Just relax, eat some ice cream and sleep. 

    Elesin Oba: The King’s Horseman is currently streaming on Netflix.

    ALSO READ: Aníkúlápó: 8 Ways You Can Use Saro’s Powers to Solve Your Problems

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  • How to Watch Netflix’s “From Scratch” and NOT Cry

    Everyone is talking about Netflix’s From Scratch and how it made them cry. Well, I’m here to testify that I saw it and not one teardrop left my eyeballs. 

    The show follows the ups-and-downs love story of Amy (Zoe Saldana) and Lino (Eugenio Mastrandrea) . I didn’t cry, not because I’m heartless or insensitive, I just have some tricks that helped me get through the show without crying. So if you want to watch the TV show and maintain your street cred like me, here are a couple of things you could do. 

    Don’t watch it 

    You heard a show is making everyone cry, and you thought, “Wow, let me watch it too.” Do you think you have two heads and that’s why you won’t cry? Sorry dear, just watch something like Papa Ajasco and save yourself from the emotional distress waiting for you. 

    Start from the last episode

    If you start watching the show from the last episode, you won’t understand why bad things are happening or how sad the situation is because you don’t really know the characters. You can’t pity someone when you’re only watching their ending and have no idea what the hell is going on and how they got there. 

    Read spoilers online 

    There’s a high chance you won’t cry once you know what happens on the show. Read the plot, episode by episode, on Wikipedia, and then go on Twitter to read everyone’s tweets about it. At least, this way, you know when a character dies or has cancer before you watch the TV show. 

    Cry ahead of time 

    If you cry very well before you watch the show, you’ll definitely run out of tears when the show starts tugging at your emotions. Water can’t come out from an empty well, so empty your eyeballs beforehand. 

    Think about the naira 

    Before you start crying about Amy and Lino’s drama, remember that the naira is currently fighting for its life, and you haven’t started vomiting pounds yet. The only people allowed to cry are those who earn foreign currencies. Better focus on your focus if you’re still earning in Nnamdi Azikiwe and Alvan Ikoku. 

    Watch it with your parents 

    Nigerian parents will never miss an opportunity to make fun of their children, so your parents will probably start laughing at you the moment your tears threathen to fall. This goes without saying that it depends on the parent, because if your parents are softies too, then, omo, all of you might just end up crying together. 

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    Look for something cringe and focus on that

    Am I the only weirdo who finds crying faces funny? I doubt it. The moment there’s a sad scene, I’d advise you to focus on something cringe like a weird-looking wig or how Amy (Zoe Saldana) has a funny cry face. 

    Watch a sadder TV show or film

    To avoid crying while watching From Scratch, you need to watch sadder shows to raise your sadness expectation. By the time you watch When They See Us, Three Idiots or Miracle in Cell No. 7 at least four times, your emotions will be so over the place, you won’t be able to find new tears to cry when you start From Scratch

    Don’t binge watch From Scratch

    Most people are crying because they’re watching the whole show in one sitting, so it’s easy to get really invested in the characters. If you don’t want to cry, watch one episode a month so you’ll become emotionally detached by the time all the bad things start happening. 

    Remember it’s just a TV show

    Babes, it’s just a TV show. It’s called make-believe and people are acting. If you think I’m lying, look at Zoe Saldana, the actress playing Amy. Don’t you remember her from Colombiana and Guardians of the Galaxy? Remind yourself that her character isn’t not real and squeeze your face with vim.

    Make the film cry 

    Omo, my job here is to tell you what to do. Information on how to go about itt is above my pay grade. But where there’s a will, there’s a way.

    ALSO READ: Ranked: Nobody Beats These 10 Nollywood Actresses at Crying in Movies

  • Aníkúlápó: 8 Ways You Can Use Saro’s Powers to Solve Your Problems

    Everyone is talking about Kunle Afolayan’s latest Netflix fim, Aníkúlápó and its lead character, Saro, a man who could raise people from the dead. While being able to stroll into a cemetary to summon folks like Michael Jackson in Thriller sounds cool, we can’t help but think of some more pressing Nigerian problems that could benefit from a little revival here and there. 

    Raise your account from the dead 

    This is the first thing you’ll do the moment Akalo, the mystical bird, gives you the power of resurrection. No time to waste, just an immediate japa from poverty to Dangote-level wealth. The funniest part is you probably won’t tell anybody the source of your wealth before they pour sand inside your Ijebu garri. 

    Become a tech bro 

    Every three market days, some tech company comes on Aki and PawPaw’s internet to inform us they’ve raised millions of dollars in funding, and everyone starts running helter-skelter looking for tech jobs. But with Saro’s powers, you won’t have to apply for a tech job. You could just raise your own dollars yourself and replace the likes of Odunayo Eweniyi and Timi Ajiboye as the happening tech bro

    Raise the naira from the trenches 

    Remember when it was ₦150 to $1 and we were complaining and asking for ₦1 to $1? Omo, this is a serious case of “had I known” because the way the naira has fallen into the trenches over the past few years can give someone high BP. What’s the point of reviving your bank account if the naira is still swimming in disgrace? Better wake our national currency so that life can go back to normal for everybody. 

    Raise the national grid every time it collapses

    Aren’t you tired of hearing that the national grid has collapsed every three Eke market days? You’ll be out here making plans and the next thing you know,  the national grid will faint and leave you without power until further notice. Enough is enough. The national grid collapsing wouldn’t be a problem if you had Saro’s powers. Think about it. 

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    Invest in bread 

    If there’s one thing Nigerians must eat, it’s bread. The best thing to do the moment you realise you have Saro’s resurrection powers is to buy the first bakery you see. No jokes. Who needs ovens or yeast when you could look at flour and command it to rise just like that? Less manpower, less equipment, but plenty of profits. Do the maths, dear. 

    Raise your boring love life from the dead

    This is for single people struggling to find romance in this tough rainy season. Imagine having the power to summon your love life from the great beyond and not using it? Just be careful so that love and romance will not land you in hot trouble like Saro sha. 

    Raise your bumbum

    Yes, Victony and Burna Boy both told us that bumbum comes in different sizes, but there’s nothing wrong about wanting a bigger bumbum to intimidate your enemies and the internet. The power of resurrection means raising things up, so if you can raise a dead body up, why can’t you raise your bumbum too? Common sense. 

    Raise Nigeria from the ghetto 

    We don’t even have to do too much explaining when it comes to this one. The proof is in the akamu. If your Saro powers don’t work here, you can join us in putting Nigeria inside raw rice. Hopefully, we can restore our country’s factory settings together.

    Kunle Afolayan’s Anikulapo is currently streaming on Netflix. 

    You can also read: How to Make a Badass Nollywood Action Film, According to “Brotherhood” Scriptwriter, Abdul Tijani-Ahmed

  • Bimbo Ademoye Is NOT Underrated, She’s Nollywood’s New IT Girl

    It’s hard to stand out and steal scenes playing opposite actresses like Adesua Etomi-Wellington and Bisola Aiyeola, but that’s precisely what Bimbo Ademoye did as the third sugar sister in Kayode Kasum’s 2019 comedic thriller, Sugar Rush

    Coming into 2020 as the film’s breakout star and the face of countless memes, Bimbo Ademoye has become an unstoppable force, transitioning from underrated YouTube and Iroko TV actress in films like, The Diary of a Crazy Nigerian Woman and One Long Day to a Netflix queen in Kunle Afolayan’s Aníkúlápó

    My introduction to Bimbo Ademoye came with 2017’s Back Up Wife with Seun Akindele. Her role reminded me of Funke Akindele’s star-making turn in the original Jenifa from 2008. While it was funny, I was also scared of these roles — the razz village girl who unintentionally makes herself the butt of every joke — as we’d seen it become a trope Funke Akindele still struggles to escape from years after Jenifa. 

    With new Nollywood constantly relying on comedic elements, whether they’re necessary or not, I’m not surprised Bimbo has successfully caught our attention. She was the funniest sister in Sugar Rush, the funny friend in Nneka the Pretty Serpent, and we can’t forget Ayinla from the legendary Tunde Kelani. 

    However, while other performers grasp onto these funny elements like their lives depend on it, Bimbo seamlessly skates through like it’s nothing. Her jokes are timely, and her presence is so consuming that, half of the time, I worry for her back because it can’t be easy carrying an entire production from start to finish. 

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    Comedy can often make characters one-dimensional, but Bimbo seems to have hacked the tropes she’s been given to present characters that feel real. Yes, her character is presented as a joke in films like Selina and Breaded Life. Still, instead of just laughing at them, you end up understanding their motivations and the fact that these could be real human beings, even though they’re exaggerated and fictional. 

    After making Citation — a film which failed to make the post sex for grades statement it was aiming for, and Swallow — popular only for it’s wigs, production design and Ijeoma Grace Agu’s revelatory performance, Kunle Afolayan finally redeemed himself in my eyes with his latest Netflix project, Aníkúlápó.

    The Yoruba epic was released in September 2022, and quickly became one of the most talked about Nollywood films of the year. Aníkúlápó also served as another reminder that men will disgrace you, even in the 1900s. 

    Stealing the show once again as the seductive turned vengeful, Arolake, Bimbo eats into her role with a certain level of depth and nuance that, in my opinion, the script didn’t really deserve. You want her in the beginning of the film, pity her by the second act, and by the time the credits roll, she makes you understand that it pays to be wicked, sometimes sha. 

    If there’s one thing Aníkúlápó showed, it’s Bimbo doesn’t have to be funny to keep you locked in by her performance. Another film that hinted at this side of her was Daniel Ademinokan’s 2018 redemption drama, Gone. That was the first time I thought, “Omo, this babe is going to go all the way.” 

    It also doesn’t hurt that Bimbo actually has a personality off-screen. Her sense of humour and ability to turn what could’ve been boring sponsored ads into hilarious original skits has made her a social media darling with over two million followers. If you haven’t already, you really need to get into her instagram character, Iya Barakat

    With the announcement of Sugar Rush 2 and Amazon Prime’s Gangs of Lagos coming soon, it’s safe to say Bimbo has made that transition from underrated to Nollywood it-girl status. I know we love it when our faves are underrated, but the truth is, Bimbo has become everyone’s fave, and honestly, that’s fine. It means we had taste from the start. 

    As Nollywood continues to push itself with productions like Brotherhood and For Maria: Ebun Pataki, I’m super excited to see more of Bimbo Ademoye, and yes, as this tweet said, we’re still rooting for a Bimbo and Uzor Arukwe romcom

    ALSO READ: How Damilola Orimogunje and Meg Otanwa Made “For Maria”, a Nollywood Game Changer

  • Collision Course is not the Deep Police Brutality Film Its Pretending to Be

    In September 2016, I was picked up from my university apartment in Enugu by members of the now “defunct” Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) with a gun pointed at my face. My crime? I lived in the same building as an alleged cultist. That Saturday was one of the scariest moments of my life, only to be rivalled by the time gun-wielding police officers chased me during the #EndSARS protests

    Going into Bolanle Austen-Peters’ new Netflix film, Collision Course, I knew I would be triggered. The film’s promotional narrative sold it as a story attempting to hold a mirror to society, with a heavy focus on police brutality and its impact on Nigerians like me. And yes, I did get triggered watching Collision Course, but not for the reasons you’d expect. 

    Collision Course introduces its protagonist, Mide  (Daniel Etim Effiong), with a situation that feels all too familiar to young Nigerians. On a night ride, Mide is kidnapped by the film’s version of SARS (TARZ), beaten and extorted. The events of that night leave him traumatised until another encounter with a local police officer (Kelechi Udegbe) changes his life forever. 

    While Collision Course starts on the right, albeit traumatic foot, the film quickly turns away from Mide’s life to focus on the police officer who kills him, Corporal  Magnus. If trenches were to be captured on film, Magnus’ house and family life would do it justice. From a dilapidated structure and bowls of garri  to a “nagging” wife, Collision Course tries to convince us that Magnus is really going through it and is a victim  of his circumstance. The pity party for Magnus is so intense that by the time Mide dies, you’re supposed to pity both the murderer and the murdered.. 

    This pity party for Corporal Magnus is one of Collision Course’s biggest flaws. 

    Despite a rousing effort by Daniel Ettim Effiong to make Mide feel real, the film’s script works as an opp. Corporal Magnus gets a well-rounded story arc to get the audience to understand his motives, but Mide doesn’t feel like a real person. What millennial performs dead rap music with an Afro wig at Quilox in the year of our lord, 2022? 

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    There’s no gainsaying Nigeria is messed up. We all live here. But Collision Course’s attempt to all-lives-matter one of Nigeria’s most unfortunate social problems with rogue law enforcement makes it a copaganda project. It’s not trying to hold the police system accountable, it’s a contrived attempt to get people to “understand” their side, and that’s just fucked up.

    Two other things stick out like sore thumbs in Collision Course. In the film’s climax, Corporal Magnus kills Mide by accidental discharge, a move by the film itself to avoid accountability. If Corporal Magnus had let Mide go, perhaps Nigerians would’ve called the film out for not being true to reality. But if he had taken a clean shot at Mide, it would’ve been an outright call out of the Nigerian Police Force. So Collision Course took the easy — too easy — way out: an accidental discharge which still leaves Corporal Magnus as a victim even though he called his friends at TARZ to finish up the job. 

    The other upsetting part of Collision Course is the team’s decision to slap scenes from real #EndSARS protests at the end of the film. Why use actual footage of a real situation when you’re clearly not on the side of the movement? 

    In Collision Course, police officers and citizens are the same, equals even. After all, we’re all being fucked over by a corrupt system. But how can I be equal with someone holding an assault rifle? How is the power dynamic balanced when a police man can shoot me and walk away scot free? 

    Once you have a gun, it doesn’t matter who our mutual oppressor is, we’re not on the same side level. 

    We’ve been asked to applaud Collision Course for making an “effort”. But as someone who’s suffered at the hands of men like Corporal Magnus and TARZ, I think I’ll save my applause. I don’t get the concept of approaching a topic if you’re not ready to have a real conversation. No one is asking for a perfect story, but we also don’t deserve to have our trauma harvested and used for profit without us getting anything in return. 

    There’s an ongoing conversation about how Collision Course tries but fails actually to say anything, but I think that’s false. Collision Course says a lot, it just happens to be saying all the wrong things, and that’s even worse than saying nothing at all. 

    ALSO READ: Nollywood Needs to Go Back to Making Films About Juju

  • 7 Korean Movies on Netflix Everyone Needs to See

    We get it, sometimes Korean series are just too long for you to watch, but that doesn’t mean you should miss out on the greatness that is Korean entertainment. Here are seven of the best Korean movies you can watch on Netflix. 

    Love and Leashes

    Some of the best romantic K-dramas started with an office romance, and I’m glad this movie did not fail me. What happens when two coworkers find themselves in a contract-based BDSM relationship and try their hardest not to fall in love? Chaos. This movie accurately represented how kinks play out and still managed to be sweet and wholesome. The lead actors had great chemistry; the best part was that the dominant was a woman. Hard not to root for them. 

    RELATED: QUIZ: Can We Guess Your Sexual Kink?

    Alive

    Koreans realized that they could put multiple spins on zombie movies and haven’t stopped making them ever since. If you enjoy films like Train to Busan, this zombie thriller will hit the spot. The movie follows the life of a loner millennial video gamer who has to fight to survive after the world turns into an apocalyptic zombie nightmare. But it’s more than horror; it’s the struggle to keep hope alive even while the world burns before your eyes which is fitting since it was released in 2020. 

    Wish You

    For people that enjoy K-pop, Wish You is an LGBTQ romance set in the K-pop music industry that stars two actual singers in the lead roles. In Wish You, Sang Lee is a Keyboardist who falls in love with the work of a street musician played by Kang Ye Na. They spend some time working on music together, and of course, they fall in love. This cute romance will hit the spot if you enjoy movies where characters fall in love at first sight.

    https://youtu.be/yoSOUb1gwmM

    The Bros

    The Bros is a hilarious movie about two brothers who haven’t spoken since their mother died, forced to work together to carry out traditions at their father’s funeral. Add a mix of classic sibling rivalry, a mysterious woman, family secrets and meddlesome siblings and be ready for premium entertainment. The movie is funny and heartfelt as we watch the two brothers try to fix their relationship amid the crazy situations they find themselves in.

    Okja

    If you’re a Bong Joon Ho fan or loved Parasite, you’ve either already seen or will enjoy this movie. It follows the life of a young girl called Mija who tries to rescue her genetically modified pig “Okja.” This gut-wrenching movie spoke about the horrors of capitalism and the brutal treatment of animals in the food industry. After seeing Okja, you might become a bit obsessive about how the food industry works, pele. 

    Space Sweepers

    Koreans have range, and they showed it with this sci-fi movie. Space Sweepers is set in 2092 after Earth has become nearly unlivable, and a corporation called UTS starts to build homes on mars for people that can afford it. It’s a hilarious movie about a crew of “space sweepers” who collect debris from space and sell it for money. Their lives are a mess, but it gets worse when Dorothy, a robot which belongs to UTS, stows away on their ship. At first, they try selling Dorothy to the highest bidder, but the crew falls in love with her and make it their mission to protect her. 

    The Pirates: The Last Royal Treasure

    For people that love adventure, The Pirates: The Last Royal Treasure fit’s the bill when you don’t want to watch something too serious. A group of thieves and their eccentric leader Wu Mu-chi are stuck in the middle of the ocean but are rescued by pirates. Both groups are after a lost royal treasure and form an unlikely alliance to find it. It’s a movie about thieves and pirates, so expect lots of deceit, hilarious scenes and romance. 


    READ ALSO: Feel-Good K-Dramas like “Extraordinary Attorney Woo”

  • QUIZ: Which “Glamour Girls” Character Are You?

    This particular movie left us with more questions than answers, and we know we’re not the only ones that felt the sudden urge to know what Glamour Girl character we are.

    So take this quiz to find out.

  • QUIZ: You May Have Seen Breaded Life but We Bet You Can’t Ace This Quiz

    This movie is proof once again that the Nollywood industry can only get better. We can all agree that everything from plot to actors in Breaded Life was spot on, but only people that really paid attention to details will ace this quiz.

  • Are you ready to get geeked?!

    Netflix Geeked, Netflix’s home for all things genre entertainment, is prepping for our second annual Geeked Week and we’re going all out for this year’s festivities. Geeked Week 2022 is a free five-day virtual event celebrating Netflix’s genre series, films, and games that runs June 6-10 across all your favorite platforms. You can expect tons of exclusive news, new trailers, celebrity appearances and so much more. Here’s everything you need to know so you don’t miss a thing:

    How to Watch

    We’re hosting Geeked Week across all major platforms including our YouTube, Twitter, TikTok, Twitch and Facebook channels.

    When to Watch

    Geeked Week runs Monday, June 6-Friday, June 10 at:

    Monday, June 6

    • Series Showcase at 9am PT/12pm ET/5pm GMT
    • The Sandman Panel at 10:10am PT/1:10pm ET/6:10pm GMT
    • The Umbrella Academy Panel at 10:40am PT/1:40pm ET/6:40pm GMT
    • Most Presents: Vampire Pride with First Kill at 11:15am PT/2:15pm ET/7:15pm GMT

    Tuesday, June 7

    • Film Showcase at 9am PT/12pm ET/5pm GMT
    • The Gray Man Panel at 9:40am PT/12:40pm ET/5:40pm GMT
    • The School for Good & Evil Panel at 10:10am PT/1:10pm ET/6:10pm GMT

    Wednesday, June 8

    • Netflix Geeked Week After School Special at 3pm PT/6pm ET/7am JST
    • Animation Showcase at 4pm PT/7pm ET/8am JST
    • Cyberpunk: Edgerunners Inside Look at 4:45pm PT/7:45pm ET/8:45am JST

    Thursday, June 9

    • Stranger Things 4 Vol. 1: Unlocked at 9am PT/12pm ET/5pm GMT
    • The Hellfire Club: A Stranger Things Dungeons & Dragons Adventure at 10am PT/1pm ET/6pm GMT

    Friday, June 10

    • Games Showcase at 10am PT/1pm ET/6pm GMT
    • The Cuphead Show! Table Read at 11am PT/2pm ET/7pm GMT
    • Resident Evil star Ella Balinska LIVE at the /twitchgaming Summer Gathering at 11:30am PT/2:30pm ET/7:30pm GMT
    • Geeked Week Podcast LIVE: Best of Geeked Week at 12pm PT/3pm ET/8pm GMT

    What to Expect

    Every day promises lots of excitement about our Netflix genre series, films and games, including exclusive teaser and trailer premieres, sneak peeks, surprise announcements, never-before-seen footage, cast interviews, script table reads, and much more covering more than 60 Netflix projects. There even is a whole day dedicated to Stranger Things!

    And each day of Geeked Week has a special theme:

    • Monday, June 6 (Day 1) – Series;
    • Tuesday, June 7 (Day 2) – Film;
    • Wednesday, June 8 (Day 3) – Animation;
    • Thursday, June 9 (Day 4) – Stranger Things; and
    • Friday, June 10 (Day 5) – Games.

    For a breakdown of what series, films and games to expect each day of Geeked Week, check out our new poster above and watch the explosive trailer below.

    Who to Expect

    We don’t want to spoil the surprise, but you can expect a few drop-ins from the cast and creatives behind some of the series and films listed above. And, as previously announced, we’ll also have an exciting group of hosts to help break down all the jaw-dropping news and must-see first looks, including Jacob Bertrand, Megan Cruz aka jstoobs, Jaeden Martell, Reece Feldman aka guywithamoviecamera, Juju Green aka Straw_Hat_Goofy, Ella Purnell, Tiffany Smith, Felicia Day, B Dave Walters, Geoff Keighley and Mari Takahashi.

    How to Co-Stream

    The Geeked Week feed will be open for co-streaming via Twitch so that our loyal fans and fellow Geeks like you can get in on the action.

    How to Get the Latest News and First Looks

    If you miss any of the fun, don’t worry, you’ll still be able to catch up. We’re compiling all the biggest news and first looks to come out of Geeked Week right here on the Netflix Newsroom, and you can rewatch the full day’s programming on YouTube, Facebook and Twitter. Tudum.com, Netflix’s official companion site, will also be sharing bonus content from each day’s programming.

    So get your cosplay ready and keep this page bookmarked for all the latest on Geeked Week.

  • QUIZ: Can You Guess These Nollywood Movies Based on the Opposite of Their Real Titles?

    You’ve probably seen a lot more Netflix Naija movies than before, but we bet you won’t get all 10 movies right.

    Water Brothers

  • We Need to Talk About the Fabulous Outfits on Blood Sisters

    Everyone is talking about Netflix’s Blood Sisters. The star studded limited series follows two friends, Sarah (Ini Dima Okojie) and Kemi (Nancy Isime), as they try to escape the police and a ridiculously hot/silent Ramsey Noah after beheading Sarah’s abusive fiancé minutes to their wedding. Yes, it’s chaotic as hell, but I loved every minute. One thing about the show that’s blowing people’s minds (asides from the gripping plot) is the fashion. Every single character served lewks worthy enough to grace the MET Gala red carpet   Let’s talk about some of our favourite looks from the show. 

    9. Abasiyama’s seduction outfit

    Starting this right with my girl, Abasiyama (Toke Makinwa). This is how you turn up to your ex’s wedding with the intention to spread bad vibes and wreck homes.. I still can’t get over her “Chai, let me kiss you for the last time as a single man,” line. Abby baby, please seek help.

    8. Kemi’s girl boss looking for a gun look

    I call this outfit: Suited to kill. This babe was on a gun hunt while trying to hide a murder, but still had time to dress in couture. The fabric from the sleeves alone is enough to make another dress. This outfit is giving She-E-O/Girlboss/Beheading queen vibes. You better werk, sis! 

    7. Sarah’s engagement dress

    While we can all agree that Kola (Deyemi Okanlawon) was a terrible man who lowkey deserved the ending he got, we also have to admit that the dress he wanted Sarah to wear for their engagement party was way better than her first choice? I mean, unlike that “show me your back” number she first had on, this dress is giving wealth and opulence. Anyways, RIP Kola, your fashion sense may be top notch but the evil you’ve done is enough. Have fun styling Karashika in hell.

    6. Yinka’s wings of celebration outfit

    This is exactly the type of power suit I also want to wear while receiving updates on the man I’ve paid someone to kill. Look at the wing thing on the shoulder. Sis, where are you flying to? While we’re on Yinka’s (Kehinde Bankole) case, can we get into her acting in this scene? She was probably doing sungbalaja in her head while pretending to be saddened by Kola’s death. A true Uduak (Kate Henshaw) in the making. No wonder they were giving each other hot hot. Uduak could see herself in Yinka and lowkey respected her for being that bitch. 

    RECOMMENDED: I Watched The First Two Episodes Of Netflix’s “Blood Sisters” So You Don’t Have To

    5. A literal slay queen

    She came, she slayed and she beheaded. This jumpsuit is EVERYTHING! This look alone is enough to convince the judge that Kemi (Nancy Isime) doesn’t deserve to be in jail wearing those ugly prison uniforms.

    4. Frozen part three

    Madam Uduak is giving ice queen with that cape and big ass diamond earrings. Elsa was found dead. By the way, is it me or was this staircase a supporting character on this show? 

    3. #Kate4Disney

    Someone get Disney on the phone. We need to get Kate Henshaw a role that’ll let her explore her Disney villain fantasy.

    2. The “I don’t want to be here” Iro and Buba

    How else will everyone know you’re beefing your soon-to-be daughter-in-law if you don’t show up and try to outshine her? Madam Uduak was on a mission here, and she clearly succeeded. Our favourite perpetually irritated villain ate and left no crumbs. Those shoulders alone na die. 

    1. She is an icon and she is the moment.

    THIS IS IT. No words. How is this woman dressed like this in her living room on a regular afternoon. What will she now wear when there’s something really important going on? The colour of this dress, her nails, the earrings, the couch…This is a moment. 

    ALSO READ: We Ranked Nollywood-Hollywood Crossovers from Waka Pass to Iconic

  • I Repressed My Experience With Racism For a Long Time — Man Like Teslim Alabi
    What does it mean to be a man? Surely, it’s not one thing. It’s a series of little moments that add up.  Man Like is a weekly Zikoko series documenting these moments to see how it adds up. It’s a series for men by men, talking about men’s issues. We try to understand what it means to “be a man” from the perspective of the subject of the week.

    Teslim Alabi is living the dream: leading Product Design at Netflix Global after five years at Microsoft, living a nice life in a country with constant electricity and having great skin — yes, I noticed. Honestly, Teslim is the tech bro I aspire to be. But as I fawn over his life, our conversation shows that the self-declared introvert hasn’t always had it easy. It’s been a long journey, and now, he’s finally getting settled into the life he deserves. 

    In this episode of Man Like, Teslim talks about growing up with a Muslim dad and Christian mum, stepping up to save his university relationship and how he’s been able to navigate life as a black man living in America.

    What was growing up like for you? 

    I grew up with my family in Enugu. We didn’t have a lot, but I wouldn’t say we were poor. My dad was a branch manager for a restaurant start-up in Enugu, and my mum was a trader with her own store. We were generally okay, my parents did a good job of shielding my siblings and I from the tough times we’d routinely experience. Interestingly, when we were younger, my dad was Yoruba-Muslim, while my mum was Igbo-Christian. We grew up with that mix and went to the church and mosque. We were in between. 

    Wow. I’m interested in knowing how this worked out? 

    I don’t know how they did it, but my parents made it work, and we never noticed any friction between them about religion. We would go to the mosque on Fridays and church on Sundays. Outside religion, the difference in their cultures was another interesting intersection for my siblings and I. My dad always said, “When you’re old enough, you’ll decide the path you want to take.” He later converted to Christianity, and if you ask my mum, she’ll tell you it’s because of her prayers. LOL. 

    Did growing up with a structure like that affect your sense of identity? 

    The only time I became aware that my family was a bit different was in primary school, specifically in social studies classes, where they’d talk about the makeup of an ideal family. Those were the moments I realised my family didn’t fit into the typical box of what a Nigerian family should look like. Intertribal & inter-religious families weren’t as common as I assumed at the time.

    Growing up like that helped me realise that multiple truths can co-exist. It has shaped my mind to accept different views and ways of living and being. 

    Now that you’re older, what religion have you settled on?

    I was raised primarily Christian, but I’ve always been very curious about exploring philosophy and understanding more about the universe. I don’t oppose any beliefs. I will always be curious — wherever that leads me, I’ll go. 

    Still on identity, can you tell me when you first realised you were a man? 

    I feel like I’ve always been independent since I was like 8 years old. But one significant moment I can pinpoint was when my wife’s (my girlfriend at the time) parents wanted her to return to Nigeria for NYSC, after university in Canada. We had done long-distance in the past and understood a move would strain our relationship, so we had to act fast. There was a short period of time when she wasn’t getting any direct support, and I offered to help.

    It wasn’t easy. I wasn’t making money at the time, but whatever pocket money I had, I’d split it with her. We made it work. She’s also very independent, so the idea of someone who’s not her family supporting her didn’t sit well. It took her a while to accept any help from me. I had to beg. LOL. It was a lot of pressure and sacrifices on both sides.

    I told my dad about it, years later, after we had gotten engaged, and his response was that these are the things that make us men — we make sacrifices and give even when we don’t have. 

    What did you take away from this experience? 

    I learnt how to see things from a mindset outside of my own. My wife is more balanced and level-headed with how she approaches things. But as a man, I wanted to be useful and do something immediately. In a bid to act, I could’ve come off as desperate and controlling, and she’d have just gone back to Nigeria instead of putting herself in that situation. Working through this process with her taught me to be gentle in my approach to conversations and problem-solving. It was a learning curve for me. 

    Why did you feel this need to be “useful”? 

    From my perspective, it’s a massive part of our notion of masculinity — the need to always be the problem solver, to want to be seen as the person mobilising and moving everyone else forward. But over time, I’ve realised that people’s needs differ, and masculinity should be about a malleability of approach. I’m learning that being there for people doesn’t always mean that I have to solve their problems. Sometimes, they just want you to be there, to listen. 

    Nice. Being a black man in Nigeria is one thing, but being a black man in the US must be different. Can you tell me about your experience? 

    So I moved to the US for my master’s after completing university in Nigeria. I’d been to the US with my parents a number of times, but this time, I travelled on my own. When I arrived, on my first day, I went out to look for food, and it hit me that my parents had been doing most of the running around whenever we visited. For the first time, I was on my own. I went to this crowded park across the street, and even though there were so many people around me, I just felt incredibly alone. 

    Things got easier as I started cultivating relationships, but something happened in my first week that messed with me. I was walking on the street with my headphones, and a group of mostly white teenagers started following me around, yelling the N-word. All I could think about was how I was alone on the road and how this could end badly for me. 

    I’m so sorry. 

    I was coming from a country where I looked like everybody else, and suddenly, I was in this country where I stuck out like a sore thumb. It was a jarring switch for me. Oppression is rife in Nigeria, but people see it, everyone is aware, it’s undeniable. As black men in America, we get oppressed and people act like it’s not there, they can’t see it, so we feel paranoid and question our reality. There was another time I was in Hawaii, this woman on a scooter called me the N-word and just sped off. There are other less apparent instances like being the only black person at work and having no one take your ideas or suggestions seriously. Even though you’re the expert, your qualifications are always being questioned. 

    Early on, I had to repress my experiences with racism, hoping that maybe if I didn’t dwell on them, then they never happened. It wasn’t until a community gathering after another black man got profiled, shot and killed that all of the repressed emotions came flooding back again. Coming from Nigeria, the use of the N-word might not be seen as a big deal. But getting here and knowing that some people say it to intimidate me, to make me feel small, gives it a different meaning. 

    I’ve adapted to the system because I know I wouldn’t be where I am today if I didn’t come here. But despite all this, every time I go back to Nigeria, I immediately feel like I’m home. There’s something peaceful about being around people who look and sound like me. 

    I agree. Let’s switch gears for a bit. What brings you joy these days? 

    Joy, for me, is starting to look more like impact. I’ve always been in this space where I try to make an impact by telling stories. And now, I am getting to a point in my career where I am mentoring other people, and I co-founded a program to help underrepresented people get jobs in tech. When I think about joy and fulfilment these days, I think about these things. It’s always about service and what you can do for others.

    As a product designer, I’m working with Netflix to design features that ensure users have the best possible experience on the platform. I’m doing what I love, so my job is a source of fulfilment. Also, making time for family and the important people in my life. I’m trying to invest more in those relationships. 

    Looking at what we’ve discussed, and your journey so far, if you could change one thing, what would it be?

    If I changed anything, I don’t think I would end up where I am. We can have all the speculations about what could have gone better, but I feel like I only have the power to influence what is before me, so I spend a lot of energy on that. I don’t have regrets. 

    Amen to that. 


    ,
  • We Replaced the Bridgerton Season Two Cast With Nigerian Actors

    We’ve watched the second season of Bridgerton and thoroughly enjoyed it. The plot, the enemies to lover trope and the intense chemistry between Kate and Anthony

    Watching the show made us wonder what it would be like if the characters were replaced with Nigerian actors and here’s what we came up with. 

    1. Eucharia Anunobi as Queen Charlotte

    It’s almost as though Eucharia was made for this character. From the brows to the way she speaks, there’s no better Nigerian actress and veteran who can body this role.

    2. Joke Silva as Lady Danbury

    Joke Silva embodies wisdom and class, very much like Lady Danbury. She has a readily available personality to carry the role and succeed at it.

    3. Bimbo Akintola as Mary Sharma

    The range of this woman. We need to tell Netflix to give her a call if they ever get the bright idea to give us a Nigerian version of Bridgerton.

    4. Ireti Doyle as Countess Bridgerton

    She’s the perfect dotting mum who wants the best for her children in terms of marriage and happiness.  Countess Bridgerton is an unproblematic fave, very much like Ireti Doyle.

    5. Sola Sobowale as Lady Portia Featherington

    Conniving Lady who’d do anything for her family? Almost reminds of us our own king of boys. It’s either aunty Sola or no one else. 

    RELATED: 6 Women in King of Boys We Should Learn From

    6. Nse Ikpe-Etim as Madame Delacroix

    The older self-made woman who doesn’t conform to societal norms and has chosen to work hard to make a name for herself seems like the perfect description of real-life Nse. 

    7. Jemima Osunde as Penelope Featherington

    To be very honest, Jemima Osunde seems like someone who has all the tea on what’s going on in Nollywood but decides not to speak. Jemima Penelope Featherington Osunde

    8. Susan Pwajok as Eloise Bridgerton 

    We surprised you with this one, didn’t we? Susan’s character on The Johnsons is already similar to Eloise’s. We’re not trying to put her in a box, we’re only pointing out how perfect she’d be for this role. 

    9. Uzoamaka Aniunoh as Edwina Sharma

    Uzoamaka has proven herself in all the roles she’s ever been in. Her beauty and talent are so surreal. There’s no better person to play Edwina than her. 

    10. Meg Otanwa as Kate Sharma

    Nollywood is filled with a lot of talented actors, but none of them is like Meg. She has the beauty and charm to deliver the best performance in this role. 

    11. Nonso Bassey as Anthony Bridgerton

    Nonso Bassey playing Viscount Anthony Bridgerton? Yes, please, count us in. Even in his music, you know Nonso is the ultimate lover boy. If it’s not him, it’s no one else. 

    12. Jim Iyke as Lord Jack Featherington

    Poor businessman turned scammer who eventually got played by a woman sounds like a role created for Jim Iyke.

    13. Efa Iwara as Colin Bridgerton

    Colin can’t see the love of his life right in front of him same way Efa can’t see all the women who’ve been trying to marry him. 

    Efa Iwara as Colin Bridgerton

    14. Adesua Etomi-Wellington as Duchess Daphne Basset, née Bridgerton

    Anyone who argues with this is simply a hater.

    ALSO READ: If the Bridgertons Were Nigerian: A Play

  • Quiz: Which Young, Famous & African Character Are You?

    We know you’ve watched the Netflix show, Young, Famous & African and wonder what character you probably are. Let’s tell you.

    Take this quiz to find out.

  • 5 Nigerian Books We’re Itching to See on the Big Screen

    Adapting a book and transferring it to the screen is no easy task. While Hollywood is known for churning out like 80 adaptations a year, Nigerian novels rarely get adapted, and even when they do, some of them make us wish the source material had been left alone. Following the success of Kunle Afolayan’s Swallow (and its many wigs) and HBO’s current adaptation of Chimamanda Adichie’s Americannah starring Lupita Nyong’o, we decided to list out some of the other adaptations we’re excited to see in the coming years. 

    1. The Secret Lives of Baba Segi’s Wives – Lola Soneyin

    While Lola Soneyin’s debut novel has already been adapted into a critically acclaimed play starring Bimbo Akintola and Uzor Asimkpa, in 2020, EbonyLife Studio’s Mo Abudu announced that she was adapting the award-winning book in a collaboration with Netflix. 

    The book, which can be described as Fuji House of Commotion on steroids follows a polygamist, Baba Segi, and the chaos that unfolds when he decides to bring in a younger, more exposed woman into the family as his fourth wife. Although we don’t have a date yet, let’s just say we are super excited to see this one when it hits the screen. 

    Freshwater – Akwaeke Emezi

    A controversial story and a pretty interesting read, Akwaeke Emezi’s Freshwater is the autobiography of an Ogbanje. Yes, you read that right. Its lead character Ada begins to manifest different alter egos and down the line, shit blows up fast (read it for the full gist). An adaptation was announced back in 2019 by FX, the American channel known for another creepy show, American Horror Story. We’re still waiting to see it, so fingers crossed. 

    Children of Blood and Bone – Tomi Adeyemi 

    There was a time when almost everybody had a copy of this book either in their hands or somewhere in their house like a piece of decoration. While the author has been known to get into a little bit of drama here and there, we’re still gassed to see the adaptation of this award-winning book. The book follows its protagonist, Zellie as she fights to restore magic to the Orisha Kingdom. Currently in development at LucasFilms—the brains behind Star Wars, this is one book that seems to be in long development hell. Anyway, we’re willing to wait. 

    Who Fears Death – Nnedi Okoroafor 

    For a country that understands the intricacies of juju, it’s funny that we don’t have a lot of books that focus on magic. Chronicling the magical journey of its protagonist, Onyesonwu, Who Fears Death is one of Nnedi Okoroafor’s best works. The science fantasy novel is set to be adapted by HBO into a television series. Why are we itching to see this? Bruh, HBO gave us Game of Thrones, so we already know this adaptation is going to be fire. 

    Death and the King’s Horseman – Wole Soyinka

    Although Chimamanda Adichie’s Half of a Yellow Sun gave us a fictional glimpse into Nigeria’s political history, not a lot of Nigerian adaptations have touched on this. Based on a true story about the horseman of a Yoruba King who is prevented from committing ritual suicide by colonial authorities, this play has all the makings of a quality drama. Currently being shot by EbonyLife in collaboration with Netflix, this is one project we’re looking forward to, most especially because it’s one of the few being adapted by Nigerians.

  • Love It/Hate It: Netflix’ Red Notice

    Netflix’ Red Notice is the long-delayed collaboration between Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Gal Gadot, and Ryan Reynolds. Since it came out, the interwebs have been buzzing with different takes on the $200million blockbuster. For the first episode of Love It/Hate It, we decided to ask Nigerians what they thought about the film. 

    Mirabelle

    The acting was garbage. Ryan Reynolds played the role he always plays (himself) but was nowhere near convincing as a high-class thief. Gal Gadot is stunning but, MY GOD, she can’t act for shit. Then there’s Dwayne Johnson who has the acting range of an actual rock. How is it that two people who are hot as hell filmed a sexy dance scene and the scene itself ended up having the sex appeal of a Redeemed pastor in a short-sleeved suit? I loved it and hated it at the same time. It’s pretty entertaining nonsense.

    Blessing

    I hated it! I mean, some scenes were funny but it just didn’t give anything. It’s a movie you watch when you have nothing to do and want to kill time. I just feel bad that Wonder Woman was cast in this.

    Wale

    What was everyone expecting? I loved it! You saw The Rock and Gal Gadot and thought you were going to get Oscar-level acting? Abeg. I knew it wasn’t going to give, so I watched it with my bar under the third mainland bridge. It reminded me of all the worst parts of Indiana Jones but I couldn’t stop watching. Gal Gadot is fine sha!

    Bukola

    I can’t be the only one who was thinking “Kal El, nooooo” every time Gal Gadot appeared on-screen? Justice League ruined her for me and now that scene plays in my head every time I see her. I laughed throughout the movie but not at the jokes. The film itself was a chaotic mess and I loved it. Quick question, is Netflix doing jazz? Where are they getting the money to pay all these stars?

    Sope

    Would I pay to watch this attractive cast have sex? Yes. Do I regret watching them pretend to be savvy thieves? No. This felt like all the films we’ve seen before. It’s like they put The Hitman’s Bodyguard, Fast and Furious, and Keeping Up With The Joneses into one pot and  forgot to add salt. I hated it!

    Ekene

    I am tired of seeing Ryan Reynolds as Deadpool as Ryan Reynolds as someone else. It’s exhausting! That man plays the same role over and over again. Is he not tired? Because I am.. And then there’s The Rock, In yet another film playing a police man working with one criminal to catch another criminal. What in the fast and not so furious is this film? By the way, we need to defund Gal Gadot. This affliction she calls acting keeps rising and we have to stop the evil once and for all.

    Uche

    The CGI in this film was so bad, it reminded me of Spy Kids. Why did they promote this film like it was going to blow our minds? I wasted time I should’ve used to fornicate or make soup on this stupid film. Do I like it? Of course not!

    Austin

    First of all, I know this film will have a sequel. You people have hate-watched it to the point that it broke a record. I know, I watched it too. Netflix has too much money because tell me why they hired three actors who can’t even act? Do they think we’re mugs? I wouldn’t even recommend this to my worst enemy. 

  • 6 Nigerian Icons Who Deserve Their Own Nollywood Biopic

    Nollywood is in a constant state of evolution. Over the past few years, the industry has found its way out of the ghetto. We bade adieu to bad wigs with no frontals and ghosts that obey traffic signs, and quickly said hello to that one bridge that never misses a project and an array of actors with accents we just can’t trace. All in all, we’ll take what we can get and call it progress. 

    Izu Ojukwu’s Amina is currently showing on Netflix. The film is one of the few Nollywood offerings that take us away from the overly milked Lekki-Ikoyi set “Why can’t I find a man” romcoms that come out every Eke market day. Chronicling the life of Northern icon and the original Khalessi, Queen Amina, the film had us thinking about some other badass (some are just downright bad) Nigerian historical figures that deserve biopics of their own. 

    Welcome to history class. 

    Fela and Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti 

    What better way to kick off our class than with the man Burna Boy so desperately wants to be like. Arguably the most famous Nigerian musician of all time, Fela has been sampled by everyone from Beyonce and Missy Elliot to Skales and Wizkid. While Fela has two plays based on his life with one showing on Broadway, seeing the story of the man who dared military leaders for breakfast on a big screen would slap real hard!

    Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti, a renowned feminist leader, and mother to Fela is another figure who deserves a Nollywood biopic of her own. Before she was thrown out from a second-story window by the military in 1977, the original badass Kuti had her foot on the necks of the British and the Nigerian military. She was known to lead marches, revolting against unfair taxation. She’s also famous for being the first woman to drive, a feat some of us have failed to achieve years later

    General Sani Abacha

    Uganda has The Last King of Scotland, Britain has all the adaptations of Henry VIII, so it’s only right we get a full feature film about the military dictator who “allegedly” met his death eating a ₦100 green apple. General Sani Abacha who ruled Nigeria like Game of Thrones’ Jeoffery is by far one of the most brutal leaders this country has ever seen. His reign of terror lasted from 1993 – 1998. The man was offing people left, right, and center. However, these days, Abacha randomly gifts Nigerians a couple of millions from all the money he looted during his tenure. Where does this money go? Well, tomorrow is another day. 

    Samuel Ajayi-Crowther

    We all know The Oscars love a good slave story. Well, Samuel Ajayi-Crowther is our shot at the gold naked man. Slave turned linguist, turned the first African Anglican Bishop, Crowther served us some serious range! Our good bishop was praised for his contribution to education and religion in the country. Years later, he was eventually pressured out of his position. Why? well, two European missionaries accused African pastors of fraud, ignorance, and immorality – smells like racism. Imagine a Nollywood biopic about this? The drama! The tea!

    Nnamdi Azikiwe

    It’s not easy being the face on ₦500. When you’re big, you’re actually big! Popularly known as Zik, Nnamdi Azikwe was famous for forming a temporary government alongside another iconic figure, Abubakar Tafawa Balewa. He received the largely honorary posts of President of the Senate, Governor-general, and, finally, first President of Nigeria from 1963 – 1966. A controversial figure during the Biafran War, his biopic will be sure to feature long monologues and enough political backstabbing to have us at the edge of our seats. 

    Kanu Nwankwo

    Kanu Nwankwo, also known as Papilo is one of the most famous Nigerian footballers of all time. Scoring two last-minute goals that saw Nigeria beat Brazil, he led the country to victory at the 1996 Olympics. He is also famous for that one milk ad that we all couldn’t escape growing up. Whether or not we’ve made our parents proud is still up for debate. We are sure that a Nollywood biopic, aptly titled Papilo, will have Nigerian cinemas in a chokehold. 

  • 7 Struggles Only Nigerians Who Pay For Subscription Services Will Understand

    There are just so many services out there now and quite a number of them are subscription-based. This means if you’re not ready to pay for them, you can’t have access. Fair enough, yeah?

    But for the average young Nigerian adult, this also comes with a set of struggles.

    1. You, looking at a new service you think you will enjoy

    I have Netflix already, but Showmax and Disney Plus look interesting too.

    2. You, when you realise you can afford it every month

    Just ₦3k? Let’s do this.

    3. Also you when a service requires you to pay for a full-year at once

    You people should better take up arms.

    3. When you eventually find out that you’re subscribed to more services than you actually need

    Make it make sense why I’m giving all of these people my money.

    4. When the people you share your accounts with for free use the service more than you do

    And I’m the only one paying?

    5. When it’s the end of the month and the debits start coming in

    It’s the end of the world. No one can tell me anything.

    6. When you share subscription costs with someone and they stop paying after the first month

    You think you’re smart abi?

    7. And the most painful part, when you forget to cancel a free trial before the next charge

  • 10 Things That’ll Happen If Squid Game Was A Real Life Nigerian Game

    I recently started watching the Netflix show titled Squid game. Personally, I’d have offered myself to be eliminated or begged for a voluntary exit. But I’ve also been wondering what the game would be like if it was hosted and played in Nigeria with Nigerian contestants. 

    For this article, I’ve decided to explore this alternate reality.

    *Might contain spoilers*

    1. A Nigerian won’t stop to talk to anyone at a bus stop except they’ve been jazzed.

    First and foremost, you can’t stop a Nigerian at a train station to ask them foolish questions like if they want to play a game or not. Oh, wait. We don’t even have those kinds of train stations in Nigeria. 

    2. A Nigerian would have slapped you back harder after the first slap.

    The slap would have been hard enough to make you forget what you wanted to tell them in the first place. Nigerians don’t turn the other cheek. Nope. Nigerians take revenge so they show you that first to do no dey pain.

    3. Most people would have been eliminated after the red light, green light game.

    Yes, we have traffic lights in Nigeria, but we don’t respect them. Now, imagine Nigerians respecting a robot. A female robot, no less.

    4. Some Nigerians would have eaten the cookie.

    I know some Nigerians would have eaten the cookie because I am one of them. There is hunger in the land, please. It takes a lot of effort to see a cookie and not eat it.

    5. There’ll never be enough food.

    Just imagine giving a Nigerian one egg and sprite for breakfast? Of course,  we’ll find multiple ways to disguise and get more food till we’ve exhausted all possible disguises. No one will have to convince game players to kill the cheats. There’ll certainly be blood.

    6. There’ll be morning devotion before each game.

    Nigerians do not joke with their chances of going to heaven, especially when faced with death. The morning devotion will last long enough to get annoyed and forget the games altogether.

    7. Nigerians won’t wait till game time to kill their enemies.

    After all, everyone dies eventually. Nigerians won’t wait till game time to kill their enemies. All you have to do is hiss at someone older than you and get eliminated right then.

    8. Yoruba people would expect you to respect them even when faced with death.

    The possibility of dying in the next few minutes won’t be a justifiable reason to not greet the Yoruba adults properly. 

    9. Sang-woo’s mother would have killed him before the game did.

    A Nigerian mother won’t wait for her son to be killed in a game before killing him herself for the crimes he committed and the shame he brought to her doorstep. She would have killed him twice. 

    10. The game will end and everyone will find out the host embezzled the prize money.

    Not half of the prize money, but the whole thing. The players will realize that they played the game because the host already promised some people premium entertainment.

    Which Squid Game Player Are You?

  • Here’s A Beginner’s Guide To Setting Up Your Netflix Account

    Kemi Adetiba’s highly anticipated King of Boys; “The Return Of The King” was released earlier this week and is available on Netflix. The 7 part sequel comes at a perfect time as last month, Netflix unveiled its affordable mobile plan to make all its titles available to everyone in Nigeria and South Africa for as low as N1200/$3 a month.

    With the Mobile plan, it’s safe to suggest that the platform will see an increase in member subscription and it would be a buzz kill if after subscribing you’re unable to watch your favorite titles with ease or take full advantage of Netflix exciting mobile features or movie lists, and recently, media caught wind that Netflix would be going into gaming!

    So, to help transform you into an expert Netflix member in no time, follow this guide.

    Step by step guide for beginners:

    Confidence to watch all your favorite movies on Netflix starts first with having a good and solid profile. Netflix understands this and has made it easier with profiles. Here’s a guide to get started:

    Creating your profile:

    The most important step is to create a profile. After downloading Netflix on your mobile phone or pc, simply go to “Manage Profiles” and hit the “Add Profile” button. Add a name, you could use your native name. Also, when you are fully registered you get to pick three movies of your choice and this will help Netflix recommend similar movies for you without having to stress about searching for your next title.

    Add a name

    You could use your native name. Also, when you are fully registered you get to pick three movies of your choice and this will help Netflix recommend similar movies for you without having to stress about searching for your next title.

    Adding a kids’ profile

    After creating your profile, you’d notice the option to select “kids”. This selection gives your kids (if you have any) exclusive access to watch their favorite cartoons and shows while also restricting them access to adult content.

    Adding to “My List”

    Are there moments when you’ve been to watch a particular movie on Netflix and just when its released, you just can’t the find the time to watch it. You can choose movies and content to be saved on “https://help.netflix.com/en/node/10523 “My List”. Simply clickon the “Add to My List button.” Also, you can remove titles from your list just as easily as you added it: select a show/movie and select “Remove from My List.”

    Also, you can remove titles from your list just as easily as you added it:

    Select a show/movie and select remove from

    Adding an email for your Profile

    ProfileAlso, after registration, don’t forget to add your email. Netflix sends you, all your latest movies suggestions; Netflix newsletters, launches, and new developments and these email only go to the account of the primary user. From the account screen, scroll to “My Profile“, and click “Add Profile email”.

    Restricting certain shows and movies

    Go to settings and create your PIN and on that PIN control page, you will also see an option to restrict certain shows/movies. This will help you keep your kids in check and without the pin, they cannot access the restricted movies.

    So, congrats on creating your profile. Here are a couple of things to always remember when managing your Netflix account;

    • Make sure to change your password periodically to keep your account and information safe.
    • Add your email to your profile so you can also log onto your account whenever you forget your username.
    • Also, in creating your profile make sure to use your mobile number for your account recovery, it is believed that no one ever forgets their phone numbers.
    • Make sure to also sign out all attached accounts to a primary user whenever you are receiving suspicious emails on your phone to protect your account.
    • Ensure to never share your login details, your payment information, and your account password. Netflix will also never ask you for such information.
    • It is also important to note that there is nothing like free Netflix or discounted Netflix. If there is going to be any discount on Netflix it would be duly announced by Netflix across its various social media handles, blogs, and online platforms.

    Netflix isn’t just great on your TV. It’s great on your smallest screen too, which is your mobile phone. You can now use your smart download to download the new “King of Boys.

    You can also flip through the latest shows and movies like “Slay” and add them to my list so you can go ahead and watch them later. Likewise, with the new partial-play download feature, you can watch titles while they are still downloading on your mobile device.

    You can as well share your Netflix experience with friends on social media get to them to join in and watch. To do this, Netflix will share a poster art of the show or movie, and even let them join in, simply by clicking on the image!

  • QUIZ: Can You Identify 10/12 Nollywood Movies From Their Netflix Description?

    This quiz should be a breeze. Each box describes a Nollywood movie and all you need to do is to identify all 12 of them. Type your guesses into the answer boxes.

    Surprise us.


    [donation]

  • We Can’t Wait To Watch ‘Oloture’, And Here’s Why

    EbonyLife recently released the official trailer for their upcoming movie, Oloture, and we can’t wait to log into our Netflix account (or our friends’ Netflix account) and watch the thriller, which drops on October 2.

    The trailer, which depicts Sharon Ooja as a young and naive undercover investigative journalist, is a gripping introduction to the central theme of the movie: human trafficking.

    As EbonyLife describes it:

    Òlòturé is a viscerally depicted, unsettling thriller that tells the story of a young, naïve Nigerian journalist who goes undercover to expose the shady underworld of human trafficking. Unused to this brutal environment, the main character Òlòturé finds warmth and friendship with the prostitutes she lives with. But, in her quest to uncover the truth, she pays the ultimate price – one that takes her to the verge of no return”

    What we love the most about Oloture is its perspective. There aren’t a lot of Nollywood movies that depict a strong female character, who is set on a course to take down something much bigger than themselves.

    In the trailer, Oloture shows no signs of backing down. She fully immerses herself into her quest for a change and for the salvation of the women being trafficked, even at the risk of her job and her life.

    A lot of fans on Twitter have also commended the role Sharon Ooja plays in the movie as her “breaking out of the usual”.

    The actress, who starred in Bling Lagosians, King of Boys and Who’s The Boss is gradually becoming a household name, and it’ll be nice to see her in a different light in Oloture. The early signs are very encouraging.

    The movie, which was directed by Kenneth Gyang (Confusion Na Wa, The Lost Cafe), also stars notable actors like Beverly Osu, Segun Arinze, Omoni Oboli, Yemi Solade and Wofai Fada.