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Nigerian | Zikoko! Nigerian | Zikoko!
  • 7 Signs You Grew Up With a Nigerian Father

    They’re not all the same, but one thing we know for sure is, if you experienced the things on this list, congratulations, your father is as Nigerian as they come.

    “Go and ask your mother”

    It doesn’t matter if you were asking for money or permission to go to the neighbour’s house — or if you already asked her — your father definitely sent you back to your mother to make sure you weren’t leading him into a trap.

    He bought things in bulk just because you liked it

    If you ever made the mistake of mentioning how much you like mangoes or a particular bread brand in front of your father, you had to immediately prepare yourself for a lifetime supply of it. Maybe now that you’re older you can share a bottle of Johnnie Walker with him so he sees how much you like it and buys you a carton.

    “I’m still watching it” even though he’s sleeping

    No, he wasn’t still watching the news. As a matter of fact, he was sleeping so deeply that he’d started snoring loud enough for the entire neighbourhood to hear. But woe betide you if you were bold enough to try changing the channel or turning off the TV.

    You almost studied engineering

    You once made the mistake of connecting the DVD player to the television, and your father immediately saw your future as an engineer. It didn’t matter if you were in the art class and had already told everyone your calling was theatre arts. Your father called engineering on your behalf and you had to answer.

    “No” but he still did it

    Someone needs to check why Nigerian fathers love saying “No” so much. They’d answer every request you make with a vehement “No”, and then five minutes later, you have what you asked for. What was the forming for?

    He threatened to leave everyone behind

    Every time the family had to attend an event, your father walked out of the house 15 minutes before everyone and threatened to drive off if everyone wasn’t in the car in five minutes. Thankfully he never left anyone behind and no one had to keep walking till they got to the event.

    He complained about spending money on you while spending money on you

    He’d empty his bank account on your head, that much was certain, but he’d also murmur and groan about it every step of the way. Now that you have your own money, you should take him out and share a bottle of Johnnie Walker with him, just so he knows you’ll also empty your bank account on his head – without complaining – if you need to.

  • Love Life: I Had a Crush on My Customer

    Love Life is a Zikoko weekly series about love, relationships, situationships, entanglements and everything in between.

    What’s your earliest memory of each other? 

    Segun: A friend who had bought a cake parfait from Anu referred her to me in 2021. The first time I made an order, I went to pick up cake parfaits at her house.

    Anu: I could’ve sent them through a dispatch rider, but he said he didn’t want that. I was confused, but what’s my own? I told him he could come get his order. 

    Wait, why?

    Segun: She lives really close to me, so paying extra for delivery didn’t make any sense. I could just drive down to her place to pick it up, so I did.

    What was the first meeting like?

    Segun: She had so much energy. There was this cute way she did her thing. She gave me the parfait and told me to come again. 

    I continued going there to pick up my cake parfaits.

    Anu:  Can I say my own?

    Segun: Oya.

    Anu: I won’t lie. When I saw him, I was shocked. I’d seen his WhatsApp display picture and some pictures on his story and I wasn’t feeling him like that. Then he showed up at my house, and I was like, this man is sexy.

    LOL. Was that when you both started liking each other?

    Segun:  Not really. I loved her cake parfaits and her vibe, so I always patronised her. Then, we started talking outside my orders.

    Anu: I invited him to my church.

    Why?

    Anu: I had a crush on him, and I needed to shoot my shot. So when they told us to invite two or more people to church, I thought, why not?

    Segun: I asked her if I’d find a wife in her church, and she said yes.

    Anu: Did you not find me?

    Segun, did you know about the crush?

    Segun: I had a feeling. She used to look at me really intensely. Like, I would be doing something, turn to her and find her looking at me. She didn’t admit it at first, but she was always inviting me to do things with her. I just had a feeling.

    Anu:  It’s not like I had a choice. Look at him. He’s a very fine man. And when we started talking, we found out that we had the same dreams and goals. That sealed it. I fell flat on the ground.

    If you want to share your own Love Life story, fill out this form.

    Segun, when did you fall for her?

    Segun: After our first date. That was when I realised I had started liking her.

    Anu: Oh yes, that’s when I realised it too. He was driving, and I couldn’t stop staring at him. He kept going on about how happy he was. 

    He’s very shy, and I’d never seen him express himself like that. That’s when I really thought this man might like me, and my crush might be more than a crush.

    Okay, you have to tell me about this date.

    Anu: He asked me out on a movie date, so we went to Maryland Mall. 

    Segun: It didn’t start well.

    Anu: Nigeria was happening that day, so the cinema didn’t have electricity for a while. We had to sit somewhere, eat small chops and wait for the light to be restored. When it finally came back on,  we went in to watch the movie. I was so shy. 

    Segun: You were?

    Anu: I had to go to the bathroom at some point because I forgot how to breathe. When I got back, I just kept staring at him.

    Segun: I would look at her to find her looking at me.

    Seems like it was a great first date.

    Anu: The best. I didn’t even want to go home.

    Segun: It was fun. I already liked her before the date, so I was just happy we had that much fun and I could just be myself around her. Later that night, I told her about my YouTube channel. I wanted her to make videos with me because she had a lot of energy.

    Anu: I agreed, shared the channel’s link and in five months we went from 84 to 1,000 subscribers.

    That’s insane.

    Segun: I was surprised when we got to 1,000 subscribers..

    Anu: He had mentioned earlier that he preferred actions to words, and I was down to show him I cared through my actions. It’s why I was so determined to grow the YouTube channel.

    Is this what Anu meant by similar dreams and goals?

    Segun: Yes. It’s mostly content creation. She’s a content creator, and I’d just started creating reaction videos on YouTube when we started talking. I also wanted to switch to doing content with my partner.

    Anu: And that’s where I came in.

    Segun: We’re also business people. Well, kind of.

    Anu: I’m the more business-inclined person, sha.

    Segun: She really is. I’d always wanted to start some type of business, but I wasn’t getting things right. Honestly, we wanted a lot of similar things.

    Are you going to share these business interests?

    Segun: No.

    Anu: Nope.

    [ad]

    Fair enough. What about how you both help each other’s businesses?

    Segun: She helps me create content for my shirt brand and manages my business’ social media accounts. 

    Anu: He’s sometimes busy with work, so I post on the page, reply to customers, collect money, and revert to him. In turn, he helps me make videos for my business. He’s a great cinematographer and video editor, so he takes the videos and edit them too. 

    Last Saturday, he followed me to a trade fair and shot videos I could use to create content and post on my page.

    Aww, that’s so sweet. What’s your favourite thing about your relationship?

    Anu: It’s the fact that it’s him. I’m in a peaceful relationship with a man who’s very proud of me, shows me off at every chance and has actually shown that he’s interested in me. There are no inconsistencies in the way he loves me, and he always makes time for me. He gets busy with work, but he’ll always take out time to check in and text me.

    Segun: For me, it’s the way we understand and care for each other. She compliments me and carries my matter on her head unprovoked. She’s just always doing the most for me. 

    It’s also the letters.

    Anu: Oh God. 

    What letters?

    Segun: We write letters to appreciate each other, but she does it more, so I’ll randomly get handwritten letters. Last year, I got a letter in my email from the first day of my birth month till my actual birthday. It was really sweet, and I’ll never forget it.

    Best in love and romance!

    Anu: What can I say? I’m a finished woman.

    On a scale of 1 to 10, how would you rate your love life?

    Segun: Let me not do too much, but this is a solid 8.5.

    Anu:  Ahh! I rate it a 10, minus nothing.

    Check back every Thursday by 9 AM for new Love Life stories here. The stories will also be a part of the Ships newsletter, so sign up here.

    Here’s another Love Life: We’ve Co-habited, Had a Kid but Still Can’t Commit

    Get a free ticket to Strings Attached and enjoy a feel-good evening of music, dancing and games at Muri Okunola Park, Lagos on May 11, 2024.

  • I Watched Two Episodes of “Iwaju”, and I Have Questions

    By S.A.D Alaka

    Disney has released a ka-toon that’s made by Nigerians for Nigerians, based on Nigerian culture. “Iwaju” is a Nigerian sci-fi series set in a futuristic Lagos State, and as of February 28, 2024, all six episodes are on Disney Plus and the Disney Channel.

    These episodes didn’t leave me wanting to binge the whole thing in a day just to see how it ends, but the animation is beautiful, and the creators did a good job with setting up Lagos. However, some of their choices had me asking questions.

    Why do hawkers have drones?

    In Lagos of the future, street hawkers not only still exist, but they use sophisticated drone technology to sell their wares. But regular vehicles also exist. Enough of them that traffic is still a thing in the future (because, Lagos, of course). When the main character’s driver uses their car’s flying function to escape a traffic jam, it’s clear that flying cars are a luxury that few enjoy. So what’s the point of investing in drones for street hawking? Surely it’s more lucrative to sell to the people who can’t escape a traffic jam (AKA the perfect condition for street hawking).

    We still don’t have light in the future?

    Are you kidding me? Drone technology is available to hawkers, and we’re still shouting “Up NEPA!” in the future? When we’re not cursed, abeg. I can’t even tell if this is realistic or not, and that’s what bothers me the most.

    Why the Agege bread?

    The question isn’t, “Why is there Agege bread in the future?” because Agege bread transcends time. It’s also not, “Why is the main character’s rich dad eating Agege bread?” because Agege bread transcends social status. My question is, “Why did the driver say, “By the way, sir, I bought you Agege bread” in the middle of a conversation, then pull out steaming hot Agege bread from where I can only assume is under the dashboard? There were better ways to include Agege bread in this scene (like, I don’t know, buying from the drone-operating hawkers?) Also, call me an ajebutter, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen steaming hot Agege bread.

    What happened to the main character’s mum?

    The obvious answer to this question is, “This is Disney. She’s obviously with the ancestors” and that’s fine. The real problem is she’s never mentioned, not even in passing. Usually, when the main character argues with their father because they want freedom, they’ll yell, “When Mom was here…,” sad music will play, and they’ll both be sad for like two minutes. If her mother is dead, they seem to have taken it rather well. Therapy must slap in the future.

    Why does the Yoruba sound so white?

    Voice acting has always been my biggest issue with Nigerian animation. And to its credit, most of the voice acting in “Iwaju” isn’t bad. They even avoided what I affectionately refer to as the “Wakanda Accent”. However, when the characters want to speak pidgin (or even Yoruba), the results are awkward, to say the least. Tola gets off easy since it’s established that she’s sheltered. But Kole is supposed to be the guy from Ajegunle. His pidgin shouldn’t sound so odd.

    How do I get the villain’s glasses?

    The villain’s glasses look clean as hell, but more importantly, they can scan the net worth of anyone he sets his eyes on. He uses it to kidnap children, but that’s beside the point. Can you imagine running into them “Do You Know Who I Am?” kids and pulling out the Broke Detector 3000s? You’d be able to expose their BS twice as fast. Apple or Meta should get on this, abeg.

    [ad]

    Have you watched it yet? What questions did you have?

    Meanwhile, did you know: African Animation Is on the Rise, and These 7 Shorts Prove It

  • Family Feud, The Voice and 5 Other Nigerian TV Shows You Should Follow

    Netflix and chill sounds cool, but nothing beats the satisfaction of stumbling upon ridiculously good Nigerian TV shows that have you allocating a budget for cable TV, even though we’re now in the streaming era. These shows have everything from comedy to chaotic drama and something to tickle your intelligence. Let’s get into them.

    Big Brother Naija (BBNaija)

    Family Feud, The Voice and 5 Other Nigerian TV Shows You Should Follow

    One of the most anticipated reality TV shows in Nigeria, BBNaija is a social experiment that brings 15 to 21 people from across the country together under one roof and presents their daily lives to viewers. You get to watch full-grown adults fight over food, connive against each other, fall in love and form genuine or fake friendships all to win money or fame. Contestants are evicted on a weekly or bi-weekly basis depending on the organisers.

    Where does it air?

    BBNaija has a dedicated 24-hour channel on DStv, and the eviction shows air on all Africa Magic channels. The last season, BBNaija All-Stars, ran for 70 days.

    The Johnsons

    Family Feud, The Voice and 5 Other Nigerian TV Shows You Should Follow

    This comedy TV series debuted in 2012 and has remained on Nigerian TV screens for the last 12 years. It follows the life of a middle-class family navigating life in Lagos, Nigeria. This show has so many family drama scenarios you’ll relate to if you grew up in a typical Nigerian home. Charles Inojie, Osita Iheme, Olumide Oworu and Kunle Bamtefa are among the cast of The Johnsons.

    When does it air?

    The Johnsons airs at 9 p.m. from Monday to Friday on Africa Magic channels.

    Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?

    Family Feud, The Voice and 5 Other Nigerian TV Shows You Should Follow

    Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? is a weekly TV game show hosted by media personality, Frank Edoho, where guests get to test their knowledge on general subjects in front of a live audience. If you love to watch people on the hot seat struggle with questions you probably don’t know the answers to, Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? got you covered.

    Where does it air?

    Africa Magic channels, Silverbird and TVC. The last season aired in March 2022.

    The Real Housewives of Lagos (RHOL)

    The Lagos version of the American franchise debuted in April 2022 on the streaming platform, Showmax. The first season of the reality show follows the flamboyant and chaotic lives of Iyabo Ojo, Toyin “Tiannah” Lawani, Laura Ikeji, Carolyn Danjuma, Chioma Ikokwu (AKA Chioma Goodhair) and Mariam Timmer. The second season features the same cast members save for the addition of Faith Morey and Tania Omotayo who replace Carolyn.

    There’s the right amount of gbas gbos and drama between the “housewives” to keep you on the edge of your seats. Can you imagine Chioma and Tiannah almost getting physical? Yes, exactly that type of drama.

    Where does it air?

    The first season aired weekly on Africa Magic Urban and Showcase at 9:00 and 9:30 p.m. respectively. The second season is available to stream on the Showmax app.

    My Flatmates

    Family Feud, The Voice and 5 Other Nigerian TV Shows You Should Follow

    If you love The Johnsons, this is one of the Nigerian TV shows that should be on your radar. It features some of Nigeria’s biggest comedians — Basketmouth, Buchi, Yaw Wazobia and Senator — acting as friends who are struggling to get their shit together. You’ll love this show if you’ve ever squatted with friends, had landlord problems or are still hustling your way to the top.

    When does it air?

    My Flatmates shows weekdays on Africa Magic and GOtv channels at 6:30 p.m.

    [ad]

    Family Feud Nigeria

    It’s a TV game show where different families compete against each other to win cash and prizes. This global franchise hosted by Hollywood actor and comedian, Steve Harvey, debuted its first season in Nigeria in October 2022, with Bisola Aiyeola playing host. You’ll watch families struggle to outbest each other while making fun of themselves. One good thing about this show? You and your family members can join in the game while watching.

    When does it air?

    Family Feud airs on Africa Magic and GOtv channels at 9 p.m. on Saturdays.

    The Voice Nigeria

    This music talent show has Nigerians in a chokehold for one reason: Live performances of popular songs from above average singers. Every season, contestants audition to be a part of the show and come under the tutelage of seasoned musicians. Fans vote for their favourite acts every week until a final winner is chosen.

    The last season had Waje, Niyola, Praiz and Naeto C as judges.

    When does it air?

    The Voice Nigeria airs on Africa Magic, GOtv and StarTimes. It also airs on TVC. Viewing times are 5:30 p.m., 6:30 p.m., 7:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. depending on the channel.

    If you love Nigerian TV shows, you should get into this: The Reality TV Shows We Nigerians Deserve

  • 5 Nigerian Scenarios Christmas Carols Should Cover

    Let’s face it: the Christmas carols we’ve come to know and love as Nigerians don’t cover scenarios that apply to us. For example, here are the lyrics in the first of Jingle Bells, one of the most famous Christmas carols ever.

    Dashing through the snow
    In a one-horse open sleigh
    O’er the fields we go
    Laughing all the way
    Bells on bobtails ring
    Making spirits bright
    What fun it is to ride and sing
    A sleighing song tonight

    What does all this mean? We don’t even have snow.

    We need Christmas carols that cover relatable scenarios that pretty much every Nigerian can relate to. Scenarios like:

    Happy holidays, folks!

  • 10 Mr Ibu Onscreen GOAT Moments

    Growing up in a Nigerian household in the 2000s, one could hardly miss or be oblivious of Nollywood comedy films that had Mr Ibu, born John Okafor, in it.

    Mr Ibu, known for immersing in rib-bending and over-exaggerated movie roles and characters, has established himself as one of the funniest men in Nollywood. His four decades career have brought some of the funniest local films and moments which have even influenced the Nigerian meme culture.

    The celebrated thespian turned 62 on October 17th, and it was mixed feelings to see him celebrate the special occasion  in the hospital. It was hearty to see his family members surround him though. While I wish him a quick recovery, these moments he delighted me on the TV crossed my mind.

    Mr. Ibu (2004)

    It’s funny scenes from the beginning of this film till its end.

    The father-son relationship between Mr Ibu and Paw Paw (Osita Iheme) are memorable. They lived like cat and mouse on most days. It was so intense that MrIbu wrapped his son up and presented him as a wedding gift to a relative. 

    This film also gave us the popular Paw Paw’s “Biggie, biggie” rap lines. In my opinion, this film is a Nollywood classic.

    Mr. Ibu In London (2004)

    Mr Ibu entered the UK, ignorant AF. After roaming London without bearing and sleeping on the streets for five days, he came across an old friend who housed him for months.

    In his naivety, Mr Ibu saw an aquarium and called the Oscar albino inside it a shark. He saw a house furnace and almost poured a bucket of water inside it due to his fear that it’d burn down the house. One time MrIbu was on a rotating bed, he thought his village people were operating it from under. LMAO. Every time Mr Ibu experienced something for the first time, it was an unforgettable, funny moment.

    Parish Priest (2006)

    In this movie, Mr Ibu plays the troublesome and drunkard son of Sam Loco Efe. The film became funnier when Mr Ibu insisted he should be the one to attend the seminary and become a Reverend Father, instead of his younger brother who actually showed interest.

    He was unhinged when he eventually got admission into the seminary. There’s no single rule in the parish he didn’t break. The memorable one was surrendering to konji.

    A Fool at 40 (2006)

    Kulikuli (Mr Ibu) and his friend, Hygenius (Nkem Owoh) are men in their late 30s parading themselves as the village youths. Without any good thing to contribute to themselves or their community, they peaked into their forties, fooling around the village.

    Mr. Ibu Goes to School (2005)

    Instead of attending an adult school, a  village “egbon adugbo” named John Bull decided to go back to secondary school. Despite being the biggest dullard in class, John Bull was made a school prefect.  You too see for yourself.

    https://youtu.be/GShyw-G6IYA?feature=shared

    The Great Servant (2007)

    After causing the biggest nuisance with his friends in their village, Omalu (Mr Ibu), on a paper chase, went to Lagos to be a house help. But he didn’t last long there. He went back to his village to become a fake prophet and duped unsuspecting people.

    Maybe the victims deserve it too, since everyone knew he was only a troublemaker.

    Overheat (2006)

    Mr Ibu shined alongside Charles Inojie in this film that explored family issues and poverty. Mr Ibu left his wife in the village to find a job in Lagos. But he got there, no job. Eventually his problems got bigger when he impregnated his city mistress.

    Police Recruit (2003)

    After joining the Nigerian Police Force as a recruit and becoming an officer, Mr Ibu was stationed at the checkpoints.

    With funny actors like Sam Loco and Charles Inojie as his colleagues, it was a pleasure, drinking around and going on an extortion spree.

    You haven’t seen the most ridiculous police officers until you see Police Recruit.

    Nicodemus (2003)

    Ibu is an electric repairer who knew nothing more than unbolting and bolting screws in appliances. No care for his family, no discipline, no work efficiency, or love at home. Nicodemus was just running on vibes.

    Bafana Bafana (2007)

    Aside from the theme of tribal marriage, this film showed parent rivalry at its peak. At any slight chance, Mr Ibu attacked his son’s father-in-law. One funny scene that’s hard to forget is the one where the two elderly men fought over food and threw morsels at each other. Smh.

    https://youtu.be/nWzRSpVJayE?si=ykBVA6WxhAH5yMX9

    Hey, hollup.

    Come and have the time of your life on November 11th, at the Burning Ram Meat Festival in Lagos. Tickets already on sale. Don’t sleep.

  • What She Said: My Parents Once Ignored Me for a Year

    Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it’ll amaze you how similar all our experiences are. Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here.

    When did you realise you weren’t your parents’ favourite?

    I’ve always known. They never hid it.

    I was the ugly sister — the third child of three girls and one boy — and as far as I can remember, my father and mother always picked on me about it.

    What was the first memorable thing they did that made you know for sure?

    When I was around seven years old, my mum stopped me from going with my sisters to a birthday party because she didn’t want me to embarrass them. I ended up alone at home with the nanny, who followed my parents’ example by treating me badly too. She only ever fed me cold Indomie when I was alone with her. I cried the whole day. 

    Sometimes, I think back and realise even at that age, I knew I was considered ugly, and that was why my mum wouldn’t let me go to a party with my sisters.

    Why were you considered ugly?

    I’m very dark in complexion, and anyone who had my skin colour in the 80s was almost always looked down on. People also made fun of my big eyes, nose and lips. The funny thing is I took after my father, unlike my siblings who favoured my mum’s looks. She was fair with more fragile features. Meanwhile, my dad would still blatantly call me ugly.

    What do you mean by “blatantly”?

    Anytime he was angry I spoiled something or failed a test, he’d say something like, “Get away, you ugly somebody.” Or sometimes, he’d just want me out of his sight.

    One time, when I was in primary six, my dad’s boss came to visit with his wife. 

    My mum warned all four of us kids not to come out of our rooms except they told us to. An hour into their visit, they called my siblings to greet the guests, but they said I didn’t need to come. The second time they called them out, I waited for some minutes, and then I followed into the living room. I was curious to see how the “big man” looked. 

    My parents were so upset when they saw me, but they pretended in front of the guests. I couldn’t even introduce myself before I saw my mum give a look, and we all returned to our bedrooms.

    OMG. What happened after?

    My parents didn’t speak to me at all after they left, and I was both shocked and relieved because I expected a beating. That night passed and the next day came, and they still didn’t speak to me. That’s how almost a year passed without them saying a word to me. 

    How was that possible?

    You have to understand that I never had normal communication with them before that, so it wasn’t a huge jump. I was still in primary school, and there wasn’t much that had to be said between us. Instead, I was referred to as part of a collective when they spoke to my siblings.

    For some reason, I didn’t try to speak to them either. It didn’t even occur to me to beg for forgiveness until our firstborn brought it up. I just kept to myself and pretended not to exist. It was only after I went to apologise to them about that day that my mum hissed, and they started speaking to me again.

    Wow. I can imagine growing up in that situation was difficult

    It was the worst. 

    Every time I tried to talk about anything, my mum would tell me to shut up. I’d always get served food last just so I could get the bottom of the pot. And she’d conveniently forget to buy me new clothes except once in a blue moon. It was petty things like that, but also, she’d over-punish me when I made mistakes, compared to my siblings who’d get a small scolding. 

    I’ve heard her talk to her siblings over the phone and mention how she doesn’t know how she gave birth to someone like me. She often said it as a joke followed by loud laughter, but I don’t know if that made it better or worse.

    I don’t know what to say

    To make matters worse, I started comfort eating once I entered secondary school, so I became overweight in no time. At some point, my dad started calling me “nwaezi”, which means “baby pig” in Igbo. I thought it was an endearment until I found out the meaning one day.

    I’m so sorry. What were your siblings’ reactions to this treatment?

    We’re all close in age, so they were young too. 

    They tried to ignore it instead of interfering, but you could tell they were uncomfortable about it. They just weren’t uncomfortable enough to stand up for me against our parents. The only person who was particularly mean was our eldest when we were all in secondary school. She’d join my mother to laugh at me, but she stopped that once she entered university.

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why

    How did you manage to survive it all?

    I’m not sure. 

    It deeply affected me then, and it still affects me today. I failed out of secondary school because I never read or listened in class, and no one cared enough about me to make sure I did. After repeating about three times, I had to take post-secondary classes to enter a polytechnic, while my siblings all attended university. 

    That made me feel worse, coupled with the fact that I wasn’t interested in what I was studying or any career at all. I graduated with a pass and went back to my parents’ house. They descended on me, and this time, they had many reasons to. I was ugly, overweight, had no reasonable degree and couldn’t get a job. I lived off of them for almost five years and enveloped myself in their verbal abuse.

    Did you have any support system growing up?

    I was and still am quite antisocial. 

    At that time, I didn’t have friends or relatives I was close to. In school, I carried the weight of self-hate and low self-esteem around with me, so people hardly ever approached me. Even teachers ignored me. 

    I cross paths with people I attended secondary school or polytechnic with, either online or in life, and 95% of them have no memory of me. Some even recognise my sisters but swear they don’t remember me. As a child and young adult, I never really had anyone I could casually reach out to.

    It sounds like things improved at some point

    Yes. Taking church seriously was the turning point. 

    In 2004, some years after I got my HND, I switched from my family church to another one and started attending every service and special programme to escape from home. In less than a year, I was a full-fledged church worker and gradually opened up to the other workers. For the first time, I was part of a family with a defined purpose. While it wasn’t all love and light like it was supposed to be, it was a thousand times healthier than the situation at home. 

    And that’s where I met my husband.

    How did that happen?

    He was also a worker, about five years older than me. 

    When he first started talking to me nice, in 2006, I immediately decided I didn’t deserve someone like him. He was well-liked in church and had a pleasant face. I thought I’d embarrass him by being romantically associated with him. I didn’t want him to feel bad and ashamed of himself when he finally realised I was actually ugly. So I started avoiding him.

    But he was persistent for a good year. Even when I skipped services, he’d come to my house — sometimes, with our pastor — to check on me. As soon as I agreed to date him, he proposed. I was ecstatic. I ended up being the first of my siblings to get married. Everyone was shocked.

    What did they say?

    My mum laughed at me when I told her. She said, “I thought you would be our stay-at-home child, to take care of us in our old age.” She made a show out of telling me how lucky I was and how I should make sure to “tie the man down before he runs”. When he came for the introduction, she was very happy. My father was indifferent.

    Please, tell me it went well

    Our marriage was great until I had our first child in 2009. As soon as I became pregnant, he grew distant, and the affairs rolled out. For several years, I accepted this as normal and even encouraged it. 

    Affairs?

    He started seeing other women. Of course, at first, I felt betrayed, especially because he was supposed to be a born-again Christian. I really didn’t expect adultery from him. He’s an assistant pastor today, but it hasn’t stopped him.

    But I’m curious. How and why did you encourage it?

    After I found out about the first one, I told him it was okay, that I understood.

    I thought it was expected, considering how ugly I was. I found myself making excuses for him and justifying it. In fact, I believed he did me a favour by marrying me, giving me an escape from my parents and having to figure out a career or finances. 

    Our marriage stopped being romantic or intimate after our first year, but he’s never treated me badly or disrespected me for one day. I’ve told myself I’m content with that.

    Are you?

    I am. 

    When you say “stopped being intimate”, do you mean no more sex?

    Oh no. He still performs his marital duties — we have three kids now — but it’s clear he doesn’t enjoy it with me. I understand why. I’ve never really been able to let loose in bed for him. 

    Do you still believe your looks justify his infidelity?

    Not at all. I’ve seen too many marriages in which the wives are simply perfect but the husbands still cheat or treat them badly to believe that. But something in my head still tells me it’s only natural that he’d seek comfort in other women. 

    A part of me feels like I’m a source of shame to him. When others boldly show their wives off, what can he do?

    Did you ever confront your parents about how they treated you?

    No. I was terrified of them, so I just treated it as something normal I had to endure. 

    They’re still alive and strong today. My mother did Omugwo for all three of my children. I’m still not their favourite, and they hardly notice when I don’t communicate with them for a while.

    Have you ever considered therapy?

    No, I haven’t. The church community has been quite helpful with counselling and that feeling of fellowship, so I’ve not yet found it necessary.

    Has your experience affected your relationship with your own children?

    As a young adult, I was so sure I wouldn’t have children because I didn’t want them to have a similar experience. But when I got serious with church and married my husband, I healed from that. I realised my children wouldn’t suffer like I did because I’d never behave like my parents. Neither would my husband. 

    We bring them up as Christ would, with gentleness and kindness.

    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women-like content, click here

    RELATED: What She Said: Growing Up With A Pastor Mum Was Hard

  • What She Said: I’ve Completely Given Up on Dating Men

    Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it’ll amaze you how similar all our experiences are. Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here.

    Take us to the beginning of your dating experience. Was it a good start?

    You tell me. My first boyfriend was a cultist. 

    I didn’t know immediately, but when he told me over a year into the relationship, I didn’t break up with him. It just explained why he often disappeared for a while and was rather inconsistent. I only broke up with him about three years later, when I couldn’t handle his inconsistency any longer.

    How did you meet a cultist though?

    I met him in 2011 at a JAMB tutorial centre, and we dated on and off during the three years it took me to finally gain admission into university — no thanks to federal universities. I remember when we started dating, he disappeared for about a year, and I couldn’t get in touch with him. I was so confused. But then, he came back and eventually showed me his cult shirt. I was 19 then, and very naive. I already liked him a lot, so I didn’t break up with him.

    Let’s talk about the inconsistency that eventually led to that

    One time, he kept me waiting for up to an hour for a date. Other times, I’d just not hear from him for weeks. Then, he’d turn up and want to carry on with the relationship like nothing happened. I’d just find myself crying in bed because I missed him and didn’t understand what was going on. I eventually convinced myself that the heartache wasn’t worth it.

    And after him?

    After him, I finally got into school and another relationship. This person cheated on me with my friend because I wasn’t ready to have sex. My friend was even the one who came and told me. After that one, I didn’t date again throughout uni. 

    But there was a guy who asked me out for up to two years. He was consistent; he’d come to my hostel on campus, and we’d gist and laugh for hours. I decided to give him a chance after graduation in 2017, and he ended up being my best boyfriend to date. He was kind and thoughtful, but he lied about being a smoker when he knew it was my dealbreaker at the time. When he finally came clean, I broke up with him. 

    Ironically, I smoke now.

    What is this life?

    Around that time, I started learning about things like gender inequality, feminism and internalised misogyny. I’d been poking holes through things society portrayed as normal for a while, but it really came to a head that year. I started NYSC at the end of 2017 and got into another relationship. The problem started when I decided to carry my new boyfriend along on my newfound journey. 

    He didn’t take it well?

    No. We started having arguments from early on, about things as little as having rights as a woman. 

    One time, we went to computer village to fix my phone. As we were leaving, the repairman ran after us to return something my boyfriend forgot, saying, “Thank God say no be your woman you forget like that.” I was shocked and later shared with him how that came across as equating me to an object. I was mindblown that he didn’t understand how that was a problem, how you can draw a straight line from that kind of mindset to the general violence against women. 

    It’s like the majority of men don’t see women as human but as objects that exist solely for the pleasure of men.

    Do you think he saw you that way too?

    Not obviously, but there were things he did. 

    For example, I wasn’t sexually active at the time. I had a Pentecostal Christian upbringing, where I wasn’t allowed to wear trousers or earrings. Of course, sex was a big no. We’d make out sometimes but never go all the way. 

    One day, we’d gotten to the point of dry humping, and the next thing I heard was, “I put in just the tip.” I cried for an hour, I felt so betrayed. And the main problem was he didn’t even see how he’d violated me and taken advantage of my trust. He hadn’t even cared to seek consent because he had access to my body and felt entitled. That experience affected me so much, I had to get therapy to heal from it. 

    Have you had any healthy relationships with men?

    I honestly don’t think so because my next memorable relationship was long-distance and toxic as hell. 

    We met during NYSC in 2018 but didn’t date until after because we were both in relationships. After NYSC, he went back abroad and then asked me out sometime in 2020. I agreed to date him because he’d been a really good friend, and I thought he was a decent human being. 

    However, I shared my reservations about long-distance relationships beforehand. Big mistake, because he spent our entire three-month relationship using that as proof I didn’t really like him instead of that I, in fact, liked him enough to try with him! Suffice it to say, the relationship was one big emotional rollercoaster.

    Interview With Rollercoaster: “Now, Why Am I in It?”

    How so, please?

    He’d always play these mind games about how he knew I didn’t like him and was cheating on him with my ex, or just make negative assumptions about almost everything I said or didn’t say. 

    One time, I half-heartedly asked if he’d upgrade my iPhone 6 to a 7 or 8 — X was the latest grade at the time, so I wasn’t greedy. He just responded with a comment implying that that was why I really agreed to date him. 

    Wow

    Later, he asked to take a break because he was having domestic issues. I asked if there was any way I could support him, and he accused me of making what he was going through all about me. 

    Some weeks later, he messaged me saying I shouldn’t wait for him. Did he expect me to put my life on hold for him before? In retrospect, I realise he only initiated that relationship so he could get my nudes.

    No!

    Yes. He even texted me some months later asking if I could reshare them with him, that he’d mistakenly deleted all the ones I’d shared. I spent the whole of COVID year recovering from him.

    Men are what?

    Is it the one I had a situation-ship with later in 2020, who kept talking about his ex, making comments like: “When the most beautiful person you’ve ever dated is now in someone else’s arms,” or “If his ex was single right now, he’d be with her.” It was particularly annoying because I’d asked him several times about it before and he lied and said he was over her. Of course, I eventually gained sense and left that one. 

    But guess what. He still gave me three missed calls last night (2023).

    What was the last straw for you with men?

    Sometime in September 2022, I met two guys on the same night out in South

    I don’t know which one showed me the most pepper, the insecure dog beater or this nonchalant guy. And not even at the same time o.

    Oh, dear. When you say “dog beater”

    I’ve truly seen it all. 

    So this guy walked up to me while I was taking fresh air outside South, and started talking about how he was a hot shot who made clothes for celebs. We exchanged IG contacts, and later on, we started DMing. That’s how he started sending me Instagram posts of wigs I can choose from. Before I knew it, he was offering to buy me a phone and change my life. I told him to calm down; I didn’t want anything from him; we barely knew each other. He went off on me that “Am I trying to insinuate he had ulterior motives?”

    At some point, we agreed to go see a movie together, but when he picked me up, he said he wanted to take something from his “atelier”. He drove us to a self-contained apartment in Surulere, and I immediately knew that was where he lived. 

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why

    Uh oh

    There was this other guy watching a football match. I sat on the one sofa available, right next to a bed. He sat beside me, and that was how the idea of seeing a movie flew out the window. He just kept asking me things like, “What would ₦500k do for me right now?” “Send me your account number, I’ll wire you ₦1m.” It was a lot. 

    Then, he took my hand and placed it on his crotch. 

    Ah

    I jumped up and knew I had to get out of that situation. He stood up too and walked into another room that must’ve been his kitchen. Next thing, I heard this loud keening that sounded almost human until I realised it was a dog.

    What was wrong with the dog?

    I peeked in through the slightly open door and saw this dog chained to a table. 

    First of all, the room was dirty. Then, the dog must’ve been white originally, but its fur was brownish and matted. It just looked so sad. Meanwhile, this guy was screaming at it and started hitting the poor thing. Oh my God. He came back out, and I asked what the problem was. He said, “I just bought this stupid thing because I thought it was cool. Didn’t know I’d have to be cleaning piss and shit.”

    Someone needs to rescue that poor dog!

    I know. 

    I just hightailed it out of there. I told him I needed to get something to eat, and he offered to drive me to this shawarma guy near my house. From there, I said he didn’t have to wait with me for it to be ready. As soon as he drove away, I blocked him. FAST. 

    Even on the way there, it was road rage galore. I was like, if I even make the mistake of dating this person, he’d beat me.

    God, abeg. 

    And the other guy?

    That one was both better and worse.

    It’s giving wedding vows

    DFKM. 

    He also chatted me up at South that night, and said I was his exact spec. But then, we ended up in a situation-ship because I wasn’t looking for a relationship anyway. At first, I didn’t mind because the sex was good, but he was so nonchalant. 

    How did he expose himself?

    I made the mistake of messaging my friend that he was someone I couldn’t even have intelligent conversations with. He saw the message and was offended. I felt bad so I apologised, but he ended up using that as a weapon against me later. 

    Also, we’d always meet up at my house because he lived with his parents. I’d cook for him, or order food or snacks for us, but not once did he ever think to bring me anything on his way. Not food or a little present, nothing. 

    So you broke up the entanglement?

    No. Not at first. The sex was good.

    But then, in April 2023, I started having severe anxiety over a job I was about to start, with responsibilities I didn’t feel completely confident I could deliver on, so I shared my concerns with him. That led to me opening up that I wished he’d be more sensitive and caring. Then I asked for a break because I wanted to be celibate.

    His response?

    I was just saying all that because I wanted a full relationship with him. Apparently, I was trying to guilt-trip him into committing. Then he brought up how I’d already told my friends he was unintelligent, so why did I suddenly want to date him? 

    I was disappointed, annoyed and done with the whole thing. We haven’t spoken since.

    So what now?

    Nothing. I’ve completely given up on dating men. 

    I don’t think men and women think the same way at all, and I’m exhausted from trying to find common ground with one. Maybe if a man came correct, is a kind and decent human being to me, I’d change my mind. I want someone who’d make a real effort to want to be in my life.

    These days, I’ve been exploring relationships with women, and it’s been a lot healthier for me. Women have been a lot kinder to me.

    But have you always been bisexual or is this because of your toxic experiences with men?

    I’ve always been bisexual, but I didn’t realise it until 2021 when I started to truly experience life outside the confines of Christianity.

    I’ve always liked women and found some of them attractive in a sexual way. But I’d usually write it off as a girl crush. I’d been socialised never to pursue such an interest, so I never did.

    What changed in that regard?

    In 2022, it just occurred to me to explore it fully. 

    One day, a friend convinced me to open a Bumble account, and I filled in “everyone” when they asked what gender I was interested in. Shortly after, I met a woman on there, and we became friends. Recently, we’ve started talking more romantically, and she makes me feel good. 

    Most of my friends are queer. I have maybe three straight friends in total, so it’s nothing new to me. Just last week, I attended a queer speed dating event, and that was the first time I’ve put myself out there as someone interested in queer relationships. It was such a wholesome experience.

    I love it for you

    There’s something the girl I met on Bumble told me once. She said, “It’s okay if, at the end of this journey, you realise you’re straight. But at least, you’ll know.” That’s where I am right now, but I know for sure I won’t find out I’m not straight.

    I’m curious how you know for sure 

    Even sex with women is better because men are selfish in that department too. The women I’ve been with always ask how you’re doing, and mutual pleasure is considered. I’ve never got that feeling with men.

    Never?

    In the beginning, they’re all “heart eyes”. But once you give them small space, they start moving mad. It seems no man has loved me enough to make the effort to be a decent human being to me.

    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women-like content, click here

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  • Super Falcons Fly Above Mistreatment As 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup Begins

    The Nigerian national women’s football team, a.k.a the Super Falcons will play their first match at the FIFA’s 2023 Women’s World Cup, against Canada on July 21. Despite being underpaid and having little conversations around the team, the Super Falcons continue to thrive and stay relevant, ranking 45th out of 181.

    The Super Falcons became popular in 1999 when they reached the quarter-final (knocked out by Brazil, 3-4) of the FIFA Women’s World Cup competition hosted by the United States of America. Their earned achievements have positioned them as Africa’s most successful international women’s team and a staple in women’s national football. They won eleven out of thirteen Women’s African Cup of Nations (first edition in 1991, latest in 2018) and remain one of the seven teams that always qualify for the tournament since it kicked off in 1991.

    The Super Falcons are in this year’s (2023) World Cup, a first of its kind; hosted by two countries: Australia and New Zealand. with team members in  high spirits reminiscent of their 1999 history. The 2023 squad, headed by coach Randy Waldrum, boasts of twenty-five players including superstars like  Chiamaka Nnadozie, Oluwatosin Demehin, Azeezat Oshoala, Glory Ogbonna and Onome Ebi; who’s making her sixth appearance at the World Cup.

    In this year’s competition, Nigeria sits in Group B with the event’s co-host Australia, the Republic of Ireland and Canada. Apart from Ireland, the rest aren’t strangers to Nigeria’s team.  In 1995 the Falcons played a 3-3 draw with Canada, lost 1-0 to them in 2011 while the Australians whooped us two goals to nil at the 2015 FIFA World Cup.This time, we hope the Falcons take no prisoners.

    While some are optimistic for the team to surpass all expectations, others think they’re on a decline and possibly can’t recreate 1999’s squad which is considered Nigeria’s best till date. But it’s important to note these women’s zeal to represent Nigeria at any given time, even though they don’t receive half as much accolades as they deserve from the Nigerian Football Federation and the general public. The Falcons get no sponsorships, low investments. Most of them have to rely on the stipends the federation pays.

    True to the nature of Falcons, the players threatened a sit-in protest at the 2019’s World Cup, due to unpaid salaries and bonuses. During that period, one of the players, Desire Oparanozie, who made a statement about the inequality between men’s and women’s pay, was criminally relieved of her captaincy by the NFF and has been sidelined in the team. On July 6, 2023, news broke that the Falcons are planning to boycott their first game at the World Cup because the NFF had cut their bonuses again. It first happened in 2004, then in 2007, 2016 and 2022.

    These are some of the problems Nigerian female footballers face while battling lack of national support. Still, this women’s squad is proudly matching and ready to take on competitors; starting July 21st with Canada. We’re rooting for the Falcons and looking forward to seeing them in their rich green jersey with vibrant hairstyles, dancing steps, superior speed and swift-raptor skills.

    READ: Nigerian Musicians Aren’t Playing; They’re on the Biggest Sports Stages Now

  • What She Said: I Would Kill to Start My Life Over

    Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it’ll amaze you how similar all our experiences are. Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here.

    Photo by Tony James-Andersson

    What’s your earliest memory of regretting a decision?

    Deciding not to go with my mum on a “trip” when I was seven. She never came back. Living with my dad and his next wife wasn’t great. I often felt neglected.

    Did you ever see your mother again?

    No, I didn’t. 

    The story is that she relocated to somewhere in Europe — most of my people say Greece — and was never heard from again. I’ve thought about her every day since then, but I don’t know why I never tried to look for her. Of course, for most of my youth, it was hard to communicate with people who weren’t in direct contact. There were no cell phones or social media. 

    Now, she’d be over 80 or dead. But I’ve always longed for that maternal love and wondered why she left or if she ever regretted leaving me.

    What was life like growing up without her?

    It was a blur. I don’t remember much of it, just that I never felt loved. 

    I was the first and only child of my parents. My father went on to have five children with my stepmother, so they and their needs always came first. And being much older than them, I often had to take care of them like a nanny would, only I never got paid for my work. I cooked for them and cleaned up after them for much of my childhood. 

    Going to secondary school at age 12 came as a relief because I was sent to a boarding school in Benin City, which was some distance from Warri, where my family lived.

    RELATED: What She Said: Growing Up around Juju Made Me a Stronger Christian

    Do you ever wonder why they sent you far away?

    Not really. All my cousins went to the same school, so I was happy my father did the same for me. FGGC Benin City was one of the best unity schools in the South back in the day. We used to compete with Queens College. 

    My time there was my first real experience of being happy. I had such a great time connecting with other girls there, and because my cousins were seniors, I was always treated well. I also spent most holidays with a family friend who lived in Benin. 

    When it became time for university was when all that joy crashed for a while.

    What happened?

    I clashed with my father over what course to study. 

    He wanted me to be an accountant like him, but I’d loved making art and sculptures while in boarding school. I wanted to go study creative arts at the then Bendel State University. But he claimed he couldn’t afford it and wanted me to go to the College of Education in Abraka since I wanted to study art. The school was like a Government Teachers’ Training College, so I immediately knew he had no intention of letting me study what I wanted. 

    That’s how I didn’t end up going to school until three years later after. This was when the school in Abraka became part of Bendel State University. 

    What did you do in the meantime?

    I was 18, and my father just let me be, as long as he didn’t have to give me money. I stayed with my family friend in Benin for some time before returning to Warri to take a secretarial course in 1980. That was where I met and fell in love with a handsome young man, one of the part-time trainers. We were married within a year, with my father’s full blessings. 

    I’m guessing that delayed your return to school further?

    Partly, but once all the fanfare of the wedding was over, my husband was the driving force behind my return. I was just 19, but even though he was much older than me, he was also quite young at 27. So we decided we wouldn’t rush into having children and instead focus on my education and him properly establishing his fishery business. My father had given him some capital to expand it at some point.

    How did school go? 

    I started university in 1982 when I was just about to turn 21. I ended up studying art education and history, which wasn’t bad. But that shifted my focus from making art to teaching it. At the time, I didn’t notice my focus was shifting, but seeing how two of my secondary school peers have made great strides with their art, I regret not staying my course. 

    I’m sure many can relate to that

    I also didn’t have a great time studying in Abraka. Students there were much different than the ones I was used to in Warri and Benin; they weren’t nearly as studious and always made fun of me for being uptight. I could never really fit in, especially since I didn’t live on campus. Right after my graduation in 1985, I got pregnant and decided to keep it, so I shared the news with my husband.

    Sounds like there were past pregnancies you decided not to keep?

    Yes. I’d been pregnant twice before, but I didn’t want to derail my education further. My husband still doesn’t know about them.

    So abortions were a thing in the 80s?

    Of course, but they’ve never been done in the open. I went to a clinic on both occasions, but everything was very hush-hush.

    But I don’t think abortions should be encouraged because I still feel guilty about the ones I had. I feel selfish that I chose myself; I didn’t want to be “inconvenienced”. But the truth is, if I went back in time, I’d still make that decision. 

    Actually, I just wouldn’t have married so early.

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why

    Why not?

    It wasn’t strange to marry at 18-22 in those days, but in hindsight, I’m glad that trend is less commonplace today. The reason is I felt ill-equipped for the responsibilities of being a wife for the longest time, and I’m sure many of my peers who married as teenagers felt the same. Taking care of the house and the needs of another adult can take a toll on a woman’s sense of self. I never had time for myself outside school and homemaking in those early years — no leisure activities, no hobbies, few friends who reduced in number as the years passed.

    Did it ever get better?

    Well, after I got my education degree, I was pregnant, and all of a sudden, my husband was talking about relocating to Germany. 

    He’d gotten an opportunity to study for a master’s there, and he was allowed to bring his family with him. I taught art in a state secondary school for seven months before we moved in 1986. I had my son two months later. I didn’t even do NYSC. 

    Raising him in a completely new environment like that was hell. Especially when my husband moved to England alone the next year, right after he’d gotten his master’s.

    Ah. But why?

    For better work opportunities. But this time, he couldn’t move with his family because he left without getting a concrete job first. He just used his Schengen visa to travel. I don’t know how he did it, but long story short, he was gone for the next 30 years.

    Ahh. And you couldn’t join him at any point?

    Neither of us ever got a good enough job, so we just didn’t have the resources for us (me and our son) to join him. I gave birth in Germany, so our son was a citizen and had a kinderreisepass, which came with privileges that were only valid in Germany and some other European countries at that time. 

    Even though this also made him an EU citizen with rights in the UK pre-Brexit, my husband was convinced it wouldn’t make much difference as Europeans were often harassed for being immigrants too. For some reason, it took him ten years to get a permanent residency in the UK. I later heard that it shouldn’t have taken him more than five years.

    And what was life like without him for 30 years?

    I always say I never got to experience married life because we went from me being busy with school, to relocating and readjusting to a new continent where he was mostly working or in classes, to living apart. So I didn’t feel like I missed much, only it would’ve helped to be supported in raising a child. 

    My son’s toddler years were particularly hellish for me. My husband sent money for rent when he could, but I still had to work as a shop attendant for three years to augment and pay for food and heating. Later, I started babysitting for most of the African mums in my area who could afford the extra expense, and that helped a lot. 

    Communication with my husband was few and far between, so I very much felt like a single mum. It was cold and lonely.

    What happened after he finally got his permanent residency?

    We started planning to join him. But soon, the conversation shifted to “We can’t uproot David* [our son] now. It’ll affect his education and psychology.” At the time, I agreed. Our boy was just becoming a teenager and had really immersed himself in the local community. It felt cruel to uproot him at that time. 

    So the plan became to wait till it was time for him to go to college, which was an entire seven to eight years in the future.

    Wow

    During that time, my husband visited at least once a year and stayed for two to four weeks, usually in the summer. But he never really re-integrated into our family unit. Our son still treats him like an uncle. 

    In 2002, our son was done with secondary school, but I was no longer interested in moving to the UK. He also wasn’t in a hurry to go to college, so he took a gap year before entering Zurich. From there, he built a life for himself and moved on. 

    I’m actually happy because he’s now living my dream of making art. He has a home gallery for his glass mosaic pieces and an agency that represents him in Europe. I couldn’t be more proud.

    What about you?

    Much of my adult life was spent being a professional nanny and babysitter just to pay for the basics and save for my son’s college funds. Between 1990 and 2000, I took several courses and got certificates that allowed me to run the business formally. I absolutely didn’t want to rely on whatever plan his father may or may not have had.

    After my son left and found his own way, I went to college myself and got an MA in education. My husband and I have been estranged since at least 2009. I’ve been working in academia since the MA, and I’m currently on my way to getting a professorship. 

    That sounds amazing

    My life doesn’t look to be ending badly, but I’d kill to start over. 

    I’d study art and be a visual artist. I’d marry at a more mature age. I’d marry someone I can have proper conversations about the trajectory of our family and be part of the decision-making process. I’d have at least four children, and hopefully, raise them in a healthier environment.

    Maybe then, I wouldn’t feel so alone and like I’ve wasted my life?

    Or maybe, I’d even go with my mother when she asked, but who knows how that would’ve ended.

    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women-like content, click here

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  • Let’s Go to a Fast Food Joint With ₦1k

    Chicken Republic’s Refuel meal was a lifesaver and Nigerians won’t forget Domino’s Smallie offering anything soon. With less than 1k, you can comfortably walk into these fast food joints and have a meal on a budget.

    Understandably, these budget-friendly offerings have had to double in price to meet the harsh economic realities of the moment. However,  we’ve checked and 1k will still get you something nice in some fast-food chains.

    Big wings meal | 650

    Let’s Go to a Fast Food Joint With ₦1k

    Source: Instagram (@mrbiggsnigeria)

    Might look too good to be true but we aren’t capping. With just 650, you can treat yourself to a meal of rice/spaghetti and a big chunk of chicken. You’ll also have change for water and keke fare.

    Where to get it: Mr Biggs

    Eggstar meal | 500

    Let’s Go to a Fast Food Joint With ₦1k

    Source: Instagram (@chickenrepublic)

    This offering caused drama online when it was introduced, but yes, something for the days when sapa strikes hard. With 500, you get a plate of white rice, stew and one hard-boiled egg.

    Where to get it: Chicken Republic

    Refuel meal | 1k

    Let’s Go to a Fast Food Joint With ₦1k

    Source: Instagram (@chickenrepublic)

    The price has gone up from what we used to know, but it’s a relief that the famous refuel meal still holds it down at 1k. You get a plate of fried or jollof rice and one piece of soulfully spiced chicken.

    Where to get it: Chicken Republic

    Bunma Meal | 650

    Source: TFC

    Egg is really that guy because look at him coming through for everyone. With 650 you get a plate of fried rice or jollof or spag, and one sauced egg.

    Where to get it: Tastee Fried Chicken

    Money saver meal | 900

    Let’s Go to a Fast Food Joint With ₦1k

    Source: Instagram (@tantalizersng)

    Again, 1k comes through for the boys and girlies and it doesn’t matter if you’re on the mainland or the island. This fast food offering comes with a plate of jollof or fried rice at just 900.

    Where to get it: Tantalizers

    Combo meal moi-moi | 950

    Source: Instagram (@mamacassngr)

    Forget what they say about the bricklayer’s meal, this combo will come through for you on days when you want to stay filled up. With 950, you get one moi-moi, a loaf of bread and a bottle of Coca-Cola.

    Where to get it: MamaCass

    Domino’s Jollof | 900

    Source: Eat.Drink.Lagos

    1k might no longer get you Domino’s Smallie pizza but you can at least have some jollof rice to quench your hunger.

    Where to get it: Domino’s Pizza

  • What She Said: I Married the Man My Pastor Chose, and It Failed

    Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it’ll amaze you how similar all our experiences are. Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here.

    Please, tell me everything that led to your pastor arranging your marriage

    It was in 1993. I was a committed worker in a popular church that was a haven for people looking for miracles during the late 80s/early 90s when revivals were extremely popular in Nigeria. 

    At 37, I was doing well for myself. I was a senior manager at a bank, my two younger brothers lived with me, and I comfortably provided for all of us. The only thing was I was unmarried. While I wasn’t particularly unhappy, especially at that stage in my life, people around me took it up as a prayer point. 

    And because I was really active in church for many years, my pastor kept promising I’d marry soon. 

    How did he make this happen?

    It was during one of our special services on June 13, 1993. I’ll never forget it because it was the day after we went out in our numbers to vote for Abiola. My pastor was leading a prayer session, after which he called out to the congregation for all the single people to stand up. After some more prayer, he started picking those who stood up in twos — a man, a woman, a man, a woman, like that — and telling them, “That’s your husband. That’s your wife”. 

    He got to me and paired me with someone, one of those men who didn’t always come to church but often donated large sums. He was a typical Lagos society man from one of the elite Yoruba families. Our pastor prophesied that God had anointed us to be man and wife, and all that remained was for us to wed.

    And just like that, you married the man?

    Yes. 

    The wedding happened in November of that same year. We tried to court while meeting each other’s families and planning the wedding, but we hardly had time to breathe between work and social activities. He was a widower who already had two kids around age ten. But I wasn’t too concerned about taking care of them because I knew I could afford hired help even if he wasn’t willing to. 

    There was a bit of friction between families because I’m Igbo. But my pastor was well-known and loved then. So it was a thing of joy and honour that he’d personally anointed our wedding, and everyone did their best to behave.

    How was the wedding?

    It was a huge society wedding; the talk of town. I look back on it now with both longing and disgust because it was big and beautiful yet we barely knew each other. How were we able to go through with it? Why did anyone allow it to happen? My parents were late at the time, otherwise, I’m sure my mother would’ve never allowed it.

    What happened after the wedding?

    Around a month in, I knew we weren’t compatible because he expected me to be this domestic wife and was passive-aggressive about me quitting my job. But I kept going because I believed it was the will of God for us to be together.

    RELATED: What She Said: I Love Jesus, But I’m a Closet Lesbian

    Why do I feel like you stopped believing this soon after?

    He stopped attending our church in the third month of our marriage, and I found out he was really a Muslim. He only went to a few of my pastor’s services because of his popular ministry which drew a large crowd. It was more of a political move; my ex-husband is an active member of a well-known political party.

    He was completely uninterested in Christianity and often made fun of it, using my eagerness to marry him because my pastor said so as a reason. He told me he’d just wanted someone submissive to stay home and take care of his children.

    What was it like after hearing his true thoughts and intentions?

    For a while, it was just disappointing. 

    During our courtship, he gave me the impression that he was excited to marry me. He’d tell me how beautiful I was, how he admired the way I’d preserved my beauty and also built a respectable career. He’d even compare me to his mum who was a formidable woman in society then. She was a well-known fabric merchant, an enterprising woman who raised her four children alone after her husband died early. Everyone knew her story, and I always felt good that he held me in the same esteem.

    Hearing his true thoughts months into our marriage shattered that impression and even confused me. But what really made me angry was how he started interfering with my work and undermining my career.

    What was the last straw for you in that regard?

    I was up for a huge promotion that would’ve made me jump from general manager to acting senior general manager because the sitting SGM left suddenly. It wasn’t official yet, but I got to know about it and made the mistake of sharing the news with him. 

    This man then spoke to one of the executive directors of the bank, who was one of his drinking partners. The gossip that came back to me was that my husband didn’t think I was ready for the role since I was just getting used to my new role as his wife, and I wasn’t even focusing enough on the children. 

    No!

    Those were the kind of ridiculous statements men could boldly make in those days and actually be taken seriously. That’s how I was bypassed, and the role was given to a guy who’d just become general manager some months before. Less than a year later, they confirmed him as senior general manager. 

    I’d started second-guessing myself because of the sudden change of management’s mind, but because things don’t stay secret within a bank for long, I got to know that the order came from my husband, who wasn’t even involved in the bank professionally. After that, we had our first real fight where he got physical. This was about five months in.

    Physical, how?

    I was ranting, screaming at him around the house because I was livid. He suddenly charged at me and punched me in the stomach. I remember exactly how it happened; his face and eyes were so scary in that moment, and I couldn’t recognise him. 

    Right after, he left the house and didn’t come back till the next week, filled with apologies. The punch hurt so much, I just called in sick that week and laid in bed, crying.

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why

    When did you decide to leave him?

    Maybe not immediately after that punch, but before long, I started considering it. I wasn’t comfortable in the house. 

    Although he never hit me again, there were little things that made it clear we weren’t in a partnership and I was just a visitor. Like, we’d be in the TV room having a casual conversation, but once something more sensitive — something about his close friends or financials — came up, he’d just get nasty and tell me off. 

    It was always a sharp statement like, “That’s none of your business” or “What kind of question is that?” And he never thought there was anything wrong with his snide comments. He could just continue on with the casual conversation like nothing ever happened. 

    Did he ask about your own business?

    Not really, but he often interfered. 

    He always tried to convince me to sign over my properties to him. I didn’t understand why I’d want to do that. Also, he had so many properties of his own; why did he want mine too? His logic was he was my husband, and so, they were legally his anyway. And that he’d be better at protecting them than I could.

    Interesting

    One time, he planned a vacation for only himself and his children. When I asked about it, he claimed he’d just gotten used to being a single dad. I was so hurt, I stubbornly didn’t follow them to travel, but maybe I should’ve. I don’t know. I just couldn’t handle the process it seemed we needed to actually be a real couple. I also hadn’t fully forgiven him for meddling in the career I worked so hard to build. 

    So quietly, day after day, I considered leaving. It was only shame about what people would say, how our pastor would feel, that made me hesitate for so long. I wanted to help my pastor save face, to not show the world that he, that God, had failed. Then one day, I realised the pastor himself was a politician.

    A what? How did you discover this?

    I started meeting him at more and more social outings I attended with my ex-husband from time to time. These were exclusive society events only big politicians — the most wealthy, decadent ones — and powerful people in the corporate world attended. 

    And there he would be, looking just as ostentatious as them. The more I met him at these things, the less he sat well with me. The whole thing just seemed like one big joke. And that exposure actually made my faith falter for some time.

    What did you do in the end?

    Exactly two weeks to our first wedding anniversary, I woke up one morning. And instead of getting ready for work, I packed my most important belongings and moved back to my house, where luckily, my brothers were still keeping things up for me. They were shocked to see me because I didn’t warn them ahead, but I told them not to ask me any questions. They never have, till today.

    How did your ex react to this move?

    He never came for me, if that’s what you’re asking. He never called my house or office. It was as if I was never in his life even. Two years later, he sent his lawyers over with divorce papers.

    RELATED: What She Said: I Was Twice Divorced at 28 and Happier Than Ever

    Wow

    I honestly don’t understand why he even went through with the wedding. He really didn’t need me in his life, so why waste my time? I don’t know. He could’ve just asked if I was interested in leaving my career to fully rely on him as a homemaker beforehand. I would’ve said no and saved him the trouble. 

    And he wouldn’t have found it hard to find a willing woman, him being such a well-positioned man.

    Right? Did you ever ask him why?

    Yes, and his response was, “What kind of question is that?” Haha. 

    It’s good that I had that experience in my life. It was an interesting one and adds colour to my mostly career-related life. But I feel so much more satisfied outside the marriage that I’m inclined to think it’s not compulsory for everyone to marry. I don’t feel I’m missing anything. 

    If there’s one thing I miss from the marriage though, it’s his children. Oh, they were lovely. So well-adjusted and grounded. He did a good job raising them on his own, I give him that. I honestly regret not having my own kids. That’s the only thing I’d say I regret, family-wise, not marriage.

    Not to sound rude. But why did you never marry in your 20s or early 30s, like most people do?

    It just happened; you don’t plan for these things. Or perhaps, other people plan, and that’s why it works out for them. It’s possible.

    For me, I was dating a man for five and a half years from when I was about 28, and I was sure he was the one I’d marry. When we were finally ready for a wedding, he jilted and relocated to America a week after family introductions. I just noticed his house phone was no longer going through, and he’d quit at his own bank.

    Ahh. Did you ever see him again?

    No. But he called me from over there a month later, saying he’d won a US visa lottery and didn’t want to have to get me involved and possibly complicate the relocation process. Someone he would’ve married in some months if he hadn’t gotten the visa? Anyway, he asked me to forgive him, and by the next year, I heard he’d married someone else.

    I’m so sorry

    I was heartbroken. I felt betrayed. But I didn’t dwell on it. My work helped me pull through, and I never got into another serious relationship until my ill-fated marriage.

    If you could go back in time, would you still marry your ex-husband the way you did?

    Knowing what I know now, why would I? It was a waste of time. I gained nothing from it if not experience. But luckily, I lost nothing from it too.

    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women-like content, click here

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

  • 100 Hours Completed: Hilda Baci on the Journey to Breaking a Culinary World Record

    Update: On Monday, May 15, 2023, Hilda Baci successfully cooked for 100 hours (with an hour-long break every 12 hours). Guinness World Records hasn’t officially confirmed it, but Nigerians have already crowned the chef a record-breaker, after surpassing Lata Tondon’s 88+ hour record and setting a new one.

    Here’s what Hilda Baci shared with us just a week before she embarked on her viral cook-a-thon:

    What goes into preparing to enter the Guinness Book of World Records?

    A lot of work and a strong team. 

    It took me five years to be ready for this attempt. The record I selected — the longest cooking marathon — had just been broken when I reached out to Guinness World Records in 2018, so they said I had to wait a couple of years first. 

    How does one decide to beat a world record? Walk me through the stages of audacity

    I was 21 when I first considered it seriously, but I didn’t have much of a platform. I was working 9-to-5 at a fashion retail company and didn’t have the resources to pull off such a huge project. 

    But I’m quite ambitious. That’s how I got into acting, presenting cooking TV shows and a talent show — MTN Yello Star 2020 — while working full-time in my early 20s. I go after the biggest possible projects to challenge myself to be the great person I’ve dreamt of becoming. 

    The Guinness World Record is something we heard and spoke about in awe as kids. It’s just one of those things that get brought up in schools once in a while. I’d always tell myself I’d do something to get myself in the book one day. 

    As I got serious about my cooking career, I revisited that dream and thought, “Why don’t I try to achieve it this way?”

    What was it like hosting your own cooking show on TV?

    It was fun and rewarding, but also stressful trying to get guests on board. I had to reach out to and DM celebrities all the time and a lot of them would just not respond. But that helped me build my networking and communication skills. 

    All my work experience before going full-time into my own business still helps me a lot. I worked almost round the clock cooking for a breakfast company for some years while I worked in TV, and that helps me handle my staff now. I’d wake up at 3 a.m. every day, running around between the two jobs and the market till late at night. It really brought out the hustler in me. I also met my current head of procurement at the breakfast company.

    What challenges have you faced in your journey so far?

    I’m still not taken seriously in the Nigerian food industry because I’m a young woman and unmarried. Many times, brands and the general audience don’t consider me a serious option because of the way I look. I want people to look beyond my appearance and know I put a lot of effort into my craft and business. 

    I want to be like Anthony Bourdain, a renowned chef who also established himself as a visionary in other creative fields: architecture, culture, fashion, journalism. I want people to respect me in that way. That’s part of why I want to break this record. At 21 though, it wasn’t God’s time yet because I didn’t have anyone who believed in the idea enough to help me plan it out. 

    What changed this year?

    Over the years, I’d discussed breaking the cooking marathon record with many people, including the owner of the TV station that aired my cooking show on DSTV. But I didn’t find the right person until I talked to Nowe Isibor, one of my former cooking students, in November 2022. And everything just clicked. 

    She bought into it and brought the external ginger I needed. She became the project coordinator, building the team we now have around it.

    Do you just write to Guinness that you’re ready to break a world record?

    The Guinness World Records website is open to anyone from any country; there’s even a section for kids. After Nowe got on board, we went back to the website, filled out the form and submitted it for approval. I applied a couple of times before they approved because it’s similar to applying for a job or school admission; acceptance isn’t automatic. 

    They eventually emailed us the guidelines and set up my dashboard. After my cook-a-thon, I’ll have to send them video evidence. Their team will assess and then update my dashboard to say I’d either broken the record or failed.

    Source: Premium Times

    To break the current record, you have to cook for four days. What’s the plan for that?

    I’ll prepare about 80 recipes, but they’ll be repetitive. I could make Jollof six times in 24 hours. 80% of the recipes will be Nigerian cuisine. I’ll be making many different types of soups, porridge, rice and pasta. It’ll be a public event that people can RSVP to attend and eat as much as they can. 

    Sounds expensive

    YES. It’s cost a lot just to get all the ingredients. It’s a very expensive dream, but I believe in it. All the food preparation will be a lot of work, but the guidelines allow me to have assistants to prep for me — wash, peel, chop, open seasonings — but not do anything related to the pot and fire. 

    I feel like running my restaurant hands-on and my Jollof face-off experience of 2021 is great preparation for this new challenge.

    Yes. Please, tell me about going against Ghanaian chefs and solidifying our bragging rights as the country with the best Jollof

    The face-off was interesting but terrifying because what if I didn’t win? Nigerians would’ve come for me. 

    So this happened around the time I opened My Food by Hilda. A couple of chefs were nominated by the public for the face-off to decide the best Jollof once and for all. About ten of us with the highest nominations had to submit a plate of Jollof to prove who was worthy to rep Naija. The organisers selected me, and that’s how I got to be the representative. 

    Source: News Wire

    And what’s the recipe for an international competition-winning jollof? How did you win? 

    I was intentional about how I prepared each of the ingredients. I made sure my beef stock was rich and well-sauced, I used a lot of fresh tomatoes and peppers and a good tomato paste brand, I let it burn a bit too because that’s part of the spice. 

    Then I had a lot of sides, from stewed turkey to coleslaw to moimoi to a special green sauce. But I actually didn’t serve the moimoi because I realised it was a Nigerian thing. I didn’t want the blind judges to tell I was the Nigerian rep and let bias win.

    Smart move. How has the experience prepared you for this next-level cook-a-thon?

    Cooking under pressure, especially for a long time is quite exhausting. I knew I had to spend the last week resting a lot, which is what I did. I’ll need all my strength to cook non-stop for four days. But last last, I enjoy cooking, so I hope I’ll have fun with it.

    When and how did you discover this love for cooking?

    It’s something I’ve always enjoyed doing. The first meal I ever cooked myself was Jollof spaghetti when I was in Primary Four. It was so nice, my mum asked me to make it again. But I goofed. I was seven years old, and it was too much pressure.

    Cooking was never my ambition, but it followed me. I’ve always been the best cook in any space. I made the best fried rice in my Home Economics class in senior secondary school. And in university, my schoolmates would pay me to cook, then take the food to their boyfriends, pretending they made it themselves. 

    Who was your first cooking inspiration?

    My mum. She’s always been big on experience when it comes to food. As a child, it was important for her to make sure we enjoyed the food almost too much. She didn’t mind spending all her money on a meal or killing herself in the kitchen. That influences how I prepare food for my clients today. Everything is made with love and that intentionality. 

    You’re from Akwa Ibom, and women from that part of Nigeria are often expected to be amazing cooks. What do you think of that expectation?

    I’ve never had a negative reaction to it. I just know it’s not true. However, because I myself have always been good at it, I feel no pressure when I get that from people.

    Did you ever train to cook, or is this entirely raw talent and passion?

    I’ve never had formal cooking training. My work is powered by vibes and the Holy Spirit. But I’ll probably train one day, mainly because I teach people. I’ll probably reach a point where I want to learn more so I have more to offer my students.

    Is there any meal you hate preparing? 

    Ekpankukwo. It’s delicious, and I make it well, but it’s a lot of work. With so many different ingredients — seafood, spices, the cocoyam — to prepare in a special way, it’s almost a full day’s work. I never look forward to making it.

    If you could eat one thing for the rest of your life, what would it be?

    Easy, rice. I’d eat rice in its different versions every day. But if I had to pick one type, native rice.

    You could become the face of Nigerian cuisine globally if your cook-a-thon succeeds. What would you do with that platform and visibility?

    I love the sound of that. 

    I’ll make a conscious effort to propagate Nigerian recipes across the globe. Nigerian food is so good and works with many palates. So I want it to be a staple in international cuisine just like French or Italian.

    RECOMMENDED NEXT READ: The Ultimate 30+ Guide to Understanding Nigerian Pop Culture

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  • Talk True: Are Toilet Infections Actually a Thing?

    Talk True is a limited Zikoko medical myth-busting series. With each episode, we’ll talk to medical professionals about commonly misunderstood health issues to get actual facts.


    If you paid close attention the first time you heard the term “toilet infection”, there’s a high possibility it was in a danfo. It probably involved someone standing in one corner of the bus selling pills they swore were the solution to all your life’s problems. 

    Sigh

    If it wasn’t a danfo, it was one of those loud voices that repeatedly thundered from hidden speakers in the market urging you to buy “Dr Iguedo’s Goko Cleanser” to clear the million toilet infections in your system. If you asked the danfo entrepreneur or the cleanser marketers about what the symptoms of toilet infections are, their responses would range from “itching in the vaginal area” to “watery smelly discharge” and even “infertility”.

    But are toilet infections really a thing? What state must your toilet be in to “infect” you? Itohan, a general medicine practitioner, speaks on this. 

    What’s a toilet infection?

    “Toilet infection is a layman — and often misleading — term for vaginitis,” Itohan says. 

    Google-trained doctors be like…

    Vaginitis (or vaginal infection) is an inflammation of the vagina that may result in itching, unusual discharge and pain. It is usually caused by either one/or a combination of a bacterial or fungal infection, a change in the normal balance of vaginal bacteria, a sexually transmitted infection (like Trichomoniasis) or even menopause. And it’s actually a common medical condition.

    “About one-third of women — especially those in the reproductive age — will have vaginitis at one point or another.”

    But is it gotten from toilets?

    The list of probable causes above doesn’t mention toilets, but I ask Itohan to be sure.

    “No. It’s definitely not. A dirty toilet doesn’t lead to a vaginal infection. To know what might be causing inflammation, it’s important to look at the symptoms and more likely causes.

    When due to a fungal infection, vaginal inflammation is caused by an overgrowth of yeast (a fungus called Candida). This type of vaginitis is called a yeast infection or vaginal candidiasis and is characterised by intense itching around the vulva, a burning sensation after sex or urination, thick white cottage-cheese-like discharge and general soreness.

    Another type of vaginitis is bacterial vaginosis, and it’s typically a result of an imbalance in the normal vaginal bacteria due to factors like douching or unprotected sex with a new partner. The difference here is, this type usually comes with an abnormal offensive odour. Some people don’t even experience itching or any symptoms with bacterial vaginosis.”

    While Itohan insists dirty-toilets-causing-infections are a myth, she admits irritants can upset the vaginal environment and cause vaginitis.

    “We call this type non-infectious vaginitis, and it’s often caused by an irritation or allergic reaction. Some people will start to itch when they come in contact with chemicals from perfumed soaps, detergents or tissues. This is why your doctor will always advise you to clean the vulva with water and mild soap. Vulva, not vagina, please. That’s another recipe for bacterial imbalance.”

    And definitely don’t do this:

    Generalising can be dangerous

    As someone who’s seen several cases of vaginitis, Itohan understands the dangers of blanketing every symptom as a “toilet infection”.

    “Most people attribute every itch or discomfort they feel to yeast or some toilet infection and just use boric acid to relieve the itching. But you need to know the actual cause if you want long-term relief. 

    Imagine treating vaginitis caused by trichomoniasis, a sexually transmitted infection, with boric acid (which treats yeast infections). You’d get temporary relief but left untreated, trichomoniasis can last years and cause complications like premature delivery in pregnant women and poses an increased risk for cervical cancer.”


    ALSO READ: After Surviving Cervical Cancer, I Just Want Peace


    Should you be worried?

    Even though vaginitis may be concerning, it’s not something to be too worried about.

    “Whatever the cause of vaginitis is, it’s usually treatable. It’s nothing to be ashamed of. Don’t be scared to visit your doctor. It’s ten times better than relying on what Aunty A from Instagram said she used to treat hers.”

    Know your body, babes

    The first step to properly detecting and managing vaginitis is knowing your body well enough to observe when something’s off.

    “Every woman has some form of vaginal discharge and smell. The discharge tends to change in consistency and quantity throughout the menstrual cycle. When you’re in tune with your vaginal health, you’d know when there’s a different odour.

    For example, yeast infections are probably the most common type of vaginitis (after bacterial vaginosis), and it tends to reoccur in most ladies. A babe who’s had it before and is self-aware knows to watch out for factors that increase the risk, such as using antibiotics and birth control pills which may disrupt normal vagina flora, hormonal changes due to the menstrual cycle or pregnancy, or any condition that causes a weakened immune system. Again, most types of vaginitis are highly treatable.”

    On treatment

    Itohan emphasises that treatment is relatively simple and accessible, but the right diagnosis is key.

    “Once a diagnosis is made by your doctor or healthcare provider, treatment will typically involve over-the-counter pills, creams or suppositories. A yeast infection requires antifungal medications, while antibiotics are the go-to for bacterial vaginosis. See why proper diagnosis is important?”

    Preventing vaginitis is also very possible, and mainly requires some lifestyle changes.

    “Avoid douching like a plague. Please don’t steam your vagina to make it ‘tight’. It may destroy naturally occurring bacteria in the vagina and lead to an infection. Avoid scented tampons or soaps. Change out of wet clothing as soon as you can. Clean your sex toys after every use. Use water-based lubricants, and of course, use protection with new sexual partners.”

    If you have recurring vaginitis, please visit a doctor or healthcare provider.


    NEXT READ: Why Women’s Nipples Hurt, According to Marion

  • What She Said: I’ve Lost Over ₦1m Trying to Be an Influencer

    Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it’ll amaze you how similar all our experiences are. Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here.

    Photo by Ron Lach

    What made you decide to be an influencer?

    My love for fashion and pop culture. I looked up to American celebrities as a child. And for as long as I can remember, I’ve always wanted to be a star, but I never knew how to go about it. Unfortunately, neither did anyone else around me — not my family or friends. None of us had any knowledge of the Nigerian entertainment industry or what one had to do to get into it. 

    I only heard a bit about how people were doing it around 2015 when companies like Mavin and EbonyLife became really active. And at first, I wasn’t sure if I should go into music or movies. I also didn’t believe well enough in my talents in those lines.

    How did influencing come in?

    2017 came, and I became more aware of people who were getting a lot of recognition on Instagram for basically being stylish and pretty. I was those two things, so it just clicked that I should try that. But I didn’t really do anything about it until two years later when I graduated from secondary school. I wanted to get the perfect phone, makeup and hair first, and my parents promised me everything only after I finished school with a good result.

    In the meantime, I’d planned out all the content I wanted to make. I had a little lookbook with a plan for the aesthetic I’ll go for. I had everything creative down, but did I plan how I’d promote or make money? Nope. 

    I started creating content on IG as soon as I got into uni in September 2018. I’d do my own makeup, copying stuff I saw on Pinterest, then take cute selfies and post with captions I took days to come up with. Alongside “Outfit of the Day” posts, I posted every other day.

    Fame, here you come?

    I was getting like 30 likes and two comments for months until I got frustrated. “What were other people doing?” was the question that kept me up at night my entire 100 level.

    I started stalking other known influencers at the time, and I noticed they didn’t just take pictures, they went out, attended events and had a network. They all seemed to know each other and had their different circles. So I became obsessed with attending events they attended and meeting the micro-influencers at least.

    Were you able to?

    I had two major obstacles: most of the events were in Lagos, and my school was in Cotonou. Second: actually getting invites or paying for tickets.

    Getting invited as an unknown was practically impossible, so I started saving up most of my allowance to buy at least one event ticket every weekend — parties, festivals, product launches — and I’d register for free tickets where available. I’d skip school from Thursday to travel to Lagos till Sunday, and squat with one of my friends who was in Unilag.

    The goal was to get there, meet people and take lots of good-quality photos. So I also had to spend on new outfits every time and do my makeup and hair well. I’d starve all week just to be able to afford it all. But at least, that helped me maintain my figure. Plus, all the travelling back and forth and walking up and down at the events was perfect exercise.

    God, abeg

    I did that my whole 200 level — the 2020 pandemic was another setback, though — and took really good pictures that got much better engagement online, especially when I tagged and interacted with organisers and some famous or semi-famous guests. But nothing impressive happened. I was getting noticed but not as someone important enough to get PR boxes, which I later found out micro-influencers were getting lots of. Also, there was so much gatekeeping. 

    These other influencers would recognise me offline, laugh and gist for some minutes, even dance with me. Then online they’d ghost. Others would talk to me online but shut down once I start asking how they’re doing it. I get it; I’m not entitled to their trade secrets. But a little help wouldn’t have hurt. I had to take matters into my own hands.

    I’m scared. What did you do, please?

    Aggressive digging. I searched for influencers I admired and scrolled all the way down to their first couple of posts — most of them don’t delete these — to get some hints on how they started.

    There was a particular girl I really liked, maybe because she graduated from my uni. One of her earlier posts was a photo of her with a green sash that showed she’d come second in a pageant. I searched the pageant and saw it was IG-based and a few other successful micro-influencers had participated in it.

    Without thinking twice, I paid the sign-up fee for the 2021 edition. The experience was my first taste of financial exploitation and online bullying.

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why

    I’m so sorry. Please explain

    First of all, the organiser, a woman, was quite mean. And the participants, both past and present, had to be submissive to her like she was our master, all while she outwardly preached feminism and women empowerment.

    Also, she boasted that she helped young women feel confident in whatever body type. Meanwhile, in the background, she constantly emotionally abused us and made us feel stupid. Then there was the part where she’d boast that she’d made many influencers when all she did was run a popularity contest after which she’d use the winners to promote her pageant brand and get huge brand deals. The only thing the winners gain is the small cash prize, a tiara and some subpar lifestyle products.

    But I also suffered from my own ambition. To win or place second to eighth, each contestant needs to get people to follow the pageant’s IG page then like their photo on the page. By the time I’d gotten my family, friends and most of my miserly 3k followers to do this, I hadn’t even scratched the surface of the kind of engagement some other participants were getting.

    Tears. What happened in the end?

    The organiser said we could pay her to boost our post on her page. But she was charging ten times what Meta would charge. I ended up sending her ₦100k for this, but it didn’t make much difference. At least, five girls had 20k likes while I still struggled with 5k. 

    Then some people started DMing me that they saw I was participating in the pageant and could help me get up to 20k or even 30k likes. I started thinking maybe that’s how the other girls were getting ahead — they had money. So I chose who I thought was the most legit option and paid him ₦50k at first then another ₦100k. All from money I made modeling for fashion and photography brands in school.

    He didn’t do anything.

    Ah

    Not a single like. 

    Instead, he kept saying he hadn’t received the money. And me too, I’d go back and forth to my bank to complain until I paid him another ₦150k, while the bank “sorted out a reversal”. After one story or the other sha, he still didn’t do anything. My bank came back to report that the first transfer went through, and it suddenly dawned on me that I’d lost ₦300k to a scammer. I was so angry with myself for being so stupid.

    On top of that, trolls were on my pageant post calling me ugly in many creative ways. When the voting period ended, of course, I didn’t place any position. My mental health took a dip during that period. I even found out that the organiser slotted a girl in 8th position when she only had about 7k likes — there were people with up to 15k that didn’t place. The same girl became front and centre at all the promotional events.

    I sense fraud

    Honestly, it was frustrating, after all the money I’d lost. 

    But the experience made me realise I could cough out such large amounts when needed. Meanwhile, I was scrimping on things like camera and props for my content. I worked more modeling jobs and saved my pay and allowance from my parents for about three months to buy a vlogging camera. At this point, content creation was veering towards videos, so it was a good move. 

    My 300-level results came in and my scores were demoralising. I lied to my parents that the pandemic and lockdown made everything “confusing”. When they gave me my final year school fees, I took it and rented a self-con in Yaba, near my Unilag friends. I used the remaining to buy hair and makeup and lived on the allowance they were still sending. The good thing about schooling in Cotonou was that they never visited.

    So you dropped out? Weren’t you afraid of the risks?

    No. I was studying accounting; I wasn’t ever going to be an accountant.

    At the start of 2022, someone reached out to me that he’d like to manage me. I had just under 4k followers at this point and was still getting maybe 200 likes on average after Meta ruined IG’s algorithm. So I was basically still paying to attend people’s events and create content for them for free. This is why I jumped at the opportunity to be managed by someone who, hopefully, knew what I didn’t know about the industry.

    Please, tell me he was legit

    I probably shouldn’t have jumped at the first person who offered me a management deal. 

    He sent me a whole plan of what he’d do for me, and it all looked so exciting and legit. But I had to pay him either ₦1m or ₦750k in advance, depending on the package. So I spoke with my dad, who’s always been supportive of my creative side — he’s the only reason I had the slightest second thought about dropping out of uni. I told him I needed money for another camera.

    He said he’d loan me the ₦750k, but I’d have to pay it back in installments for the next year. It was his way of making sure I didn’t just blow it on trivial things. Before I sent it to my new manager, I made sure I met with him in a public place. We had a meeting, he came with two other people on his team, and they presented the plan to me again. I loved everything I saw, so I sent the money and signed a contract.

    Don’t leave us in suspense!

    They didn’t lie. I did everything they had planned for me. I got to work with a couple of known and not-so-known brands, created content, got a few PR boxes (finally).

    But?

    But I didn’t have any control over the content I created, which they posted on the brands’ pages. I got no credit. They never tagged me, so I never got any traffic to my own page. They also paid me peanuts. I’m sure my manager was getting millions, but the highest I ever got on a job was ₦100k. 

    Unfortunately, I have no proof of exactly what he made off me. And the team was deliberate about keeping their content creators separate from each other. So we won’t hang up against him, I guess.

    My contract was for a year, so it ended in February (2023). I used most of the money I made to pay my father back because I couldn’t complain to him, especially since I’ve not even figured out how to tell him, come June, that I dropped out.

    You’ve taken many huge risks, but “fortune favours the bold”. Have you figured out your next move yet?

    This might sound crazy, but I have more hope than ever that I’ll soon break through in this influencing thing. I’ve learnt a lot, my content creation game is now fire, and I can only fail so many times, right? 

    Except those motivational speakers and “Take risk and succeed” preachers are all liars.

    No, it doesn’t sound crazy 

    RECOMMENDED: What She Said: I Was Twice Divorced at 28 and Happier Than Ever

    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women-like content, click here

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

  • Beyond 2023 Elections, Zikoko Citizen Dey for You

    Hi there, my name is Muhammed Akinyemi, the Editor-in-Chief of Zikoko Citizen, and I have some important news for you. 

    Citizen is a publication – unlike any other – that aims to help you easily understand politics, policy, and governance — and take action. All you need to do is follow us while we follow the news.

    If you followed us during the National (February 25, 2023) and State (March 18, 2023) elections, you’d recall how expansive our coverage was and how easy it was to get the news at your doorstep. 

    We achieved that on the web through general news coverage and our web series like The Nigerian Voter (a series where Nigerians shared their voting experiences), Navigating Nigeria (for residential Nigerians on how to explore Nigeria safely), Wait First (where we fact-check stories on a scale of fresh tomato to cold zobo), and our Game of Votes weekly newsletter (subscribe here if you haven’t).

    We brought the news to you on social media via Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, WhatsApp, and Facebook.

    We reached more than five million people during the elections and are not about to stop. Let me introduce you to our post-election phase.

    What’s new

    Three things:

    1. Everyday Citizens

    During the build-up to the elections, we asked ourselves one question: how are policies and politics affecting and changing the lives of everyday Nigerians? We introduced Everyday People (now Everyday Citizens) to find answers. 

    We spoke to people often snubbed by the media except as vox-pop entertainment: these northern traders talking about the voting process in Lagos, this plumber explaining why it’s important to vote without sentiments, or this reality check on if Nigerians still remember election day.

    Elections are over, but governance, policies and politics never stop. That’s why we are rebranding the flagship as Everyday Citizens and giving the microphone and camera to you, the everyday Nigerian, to tell us how policies —like the naira swap— affect you.

    No matter where you are in Nigeria or the world, you’ll soon be able to share your experience on Everyday Citizens. Follow us on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube  and watch out for the series officially launching Monday, April 17, 2023, airing on Mondays at 1 p.m. and Fridays at 6 p.m, Nigerian time.

    Remember to follow and turn on post notifications for Zikoko Citizen on your favourite social media platforms. .

    1. Citizen History

    Our history as a country is filled with events that could provide clarity on who we are and the things that happen today. Unfortunately, history is not popular in primary and secondary school education. Most of us have to rely on stories told by parents, books we read and snippets on the internet to find the truth of our past. 

    That’s about to change. 

    Starting Tuesday, Tuesday, April 18, 2023, we’ll bring you history lessons to your fingertips. Stories like the one where we spotlighted the first Nigerian female senator or dug deep into Operation Wetie, the beef that triggered Nigeria’s first military coup. 

    Every week, on Tuesdays, Citizen History will take you back in time and help you draw connections between Nigeria yesterday and Nigeria today.

    Join us today on Twitter Spaces as we launch the web series:

    Follow us as we follow history. 

    1. Citizen 60 Seconds

    As someone who grew up in front of the news, watching hourly updates from 6 p.m. until 10 p.m., I know how annoying it feels when the news just won’t end.

    Citizen’s 60 Seconds is our antidote to unending news coverage. In exactly 60 seconds – not more – we will tell you essential news without the time-wasting fluff.

    Follow us on Instagram now so you don’t miss out when we launch on Wednesday, April 19, 2023. Catch 60 seconds on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 4 p.m. Nigerian time.

    What’s leaving?

    We did many things with The Nigerian Voter series: we interviewed an Internally Displaced Person who was keen to vote, a student at the cusp of disenfranchisement, and a Nigerian who thinks voting is a sin, among several others. 

    But the flagship has played its part, and as elections wind down, it is winding down with it. 

    However, we are not killing coverage of the elections. You can still read our daily coverage on the Citizen website and Game of Votes (you should subscribe).

    What’s Staying?

    Our series, Navigating Nigeria, Wait First, and Abroad Life (what it means to be Nigerian, japa edition), are all staying, because they provide valuable insights to you.

    We are taking the spotlight from politicians and returning them to you. We are back to asking how their policies affect you and why you should participate in governance. 

    We will be telling you what steps to take when you’re a victim of revenge porn, explaining things like interim government, what new Acts mean for you, and how events like #EndSARS triggered Nigeria’s biggest japa wave in the last five years.

    Follow us as we follow the news.

    At Zikoko Citizen, we promise to always cover politics, policies, and governance while telling you why you should care. Let us do the heavy lifting of following the news while you follow us for the breakdown.

  • What She Said: I’ve Given up on Teaching in Nigeria

    Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it’ll amaze you how similar all our experiences are. Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here.

    This week’s #ZikokoWhatSheSaid subject is a 31-year-old Nigerian woman who has seen shege as a teacher trying to make a change. She talks about deciding to pursue the profession NYSC forced on her, being bullied by students in a private school and considering teaching in South Korea instead.

    Photo by cottonbro studio

    How long have you been a teacher?

    Four years and a few months now. Although I studied history and international relations in uni, I thought I’d change the world by teaching the leaders of tomorrow.

    What inspired this interest?

    NYSC. In 2017, I was posted to a private school in Ogbomoso. To my surprise, it was just as run down as I would’ve expected a government school to be. The whole school had five teachers, and the 100+ children were learning nothing. The management was unserious, the classroom facilities were poor, there were barely any teaching aids or books, and there were no computers. The parents of the students were just getting by. They didn’t know how to hold the management accountable.

    The state of the school made me so scared about the quality of people we were pushing out into society as the next generation. I was sad, angry, and I wanted to do something about it.

    What did you do?

    I decided I’d teach and gain enough skills, experience, and eventually, the funds to either start my own school or an education-focused NGO. At first, I thought I’d enter the civil service so I could help at a more universal level. But I discovered early the amount of politics it took to even get into the system. I also needed to earn enough to actually make a living.

    RELATED: What She Said: I’ll Run For Office in 2027

    Do private schools pay better?

    Well, they’re easier to gain employment with. I got my first job easily because the school management was even surprised I’d want to work for them given my credentials — I graduated with a first class from a top private university. Even my friends and family were shocked; everyone thought I was making a big mistake. But I honestly couldn’t sleep well at night knowing most children were getting poor education even though they were attending school. I just felt so worked up about it; it’s not something I can readily explain.

    What was your experience at this first job?

    I was given a wake-up call very quickly. 

    It was a private secondary school in Yaba, and I was a teacher’s assistant — I didn’t have a teaching license or certifications. I also needed to have taught the curriculum for a year before I could be a full teacher. My NYSC experience didn’t count even though I performed the responsibilities of a full teacher during that time. 

    From the beginning, I was constantly shut down when suggesting ideas to management. I wanted to push for a more empathetic approach to dealing with the students. But in hindsight, I can see how having a newbie act like she knows it all in just over a year of being a teacher could be annoying. 

    How did they react?

    One day, the school administrator sat me down and said, “Look, we like how you’re trying to make everything nice and good-looking, but we didn’t hire you for rebranding work. There’s no room for that here. The parents are barely able to pay school fees, you’re talking of giving their children special treatment.” I was mum. 

    This was seven months in. I left the next month, but I grew up a little. I wasn’t going to make a change overnight. I’ll probably never even make a change.

    Don’t say that. What kept you going then?

    Everyone involved was so resistant to change. And the truth is I didn’t know what I was doing. What did I really have to offer? Just good intentions?

    But stubbornness was what kept me going. I needed to prove myself and everyone wrong. Also, I truly cared about these students. I wanted them to get the type of education I got in this same Naija. It’s unfair that a greater majority of Nigerians don’t have access to a basic standard of education because of their parents’ financial circumstances.

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why

    True. So what happened next?

    After staying home for about three months, I got a job at a better quality school. But believe me when I say the parents were paying a lot of money — not as much as popular elite schools, but it was a lot — for just fine wall painting and uniform. Their children were learning nothing. The teachers were nonchalant, using handwritten teaching guides that were at least a decade old. 

    If most parents knew how ill-prepared their children were to compete in the future world of works, they’d be shocked.

    Were you at least able to make a difference there?

    Yes and no. I stayed for about two and a half years, and I was able to get through to members of management to some extent. I was moved into administration and operations six months in, only taking special classes in speaking and diction once or twice a week. As deputy administrator, I was able to enforce annual review of the teachers’ notes to make sure they stay relevant. The teachers resented me for this. 

    To be honest, I didn’t feel like I was making real lasting change because I was sure they’d ignore all my policies as soon as I leave the school, and they filled the role with someone more laid back. However, the changes I may or may not have made weren’t the most memorable thing about my stay in the school.

    What was?

    The bullying. I’m sure you think I’m referring to student on student, but no. I mean, students bullying teachers. It was rampant.

    RELATED: What She Said: My Friends Were My Bullies

    Please, tell

    The students had no regard for the teachers at all. This isn’t new to me as I saw it happen when I was in secondary school, but this was a whole other level — maybe because I was now on the receiving end. The senior students would talk down on teachers, make fun of them, and sometimes, humiliate them. And they were encouraged by the negligent school management and overindulgent parents. 

    When you say humiliate—

    One time, a teacher seized a student’s drink — La Casera — but later found out that the teenage boy had emptied the bottle before class and replaced it with urine.

    No way!

    Yes o. Then the other students started encouraging the poor man to drink it. He didn’t, but it wasn’t until when he got to the teacher’s hall that he discovered it was urine. Can you imagine?

    Another time, I was taking the non-academic speech and diction class when the whole session turned into a conversation about my marriage. A group of male students started verbally attacking me about my decision to use a Bible as a symbol of my marriage instead of an engagement ring. 

    They made it a whole thing about my husband being too poor to afford a ring. I was so triggered because it was a religious choice — my sect doesn’t believe in wedding rings, and we hardly wear jewelry. I was close to bursting into tears, so I had to rush out of the class. And these students started laughing. That day, I cried ehn.

    It was one of my few firsthand experiences. Don’t get me started on the female students. They were all so unruly.

    That honestly sounds traumatic. How did you stay there for more than a year?

    I couldn’t get another job early enough. But also, I didn’t want to ruin my CV with too many moves. I didn’t have to deal with the students directly so much though. I guess I could pretend it wasn’t happening, but the teacher turnover was staggering. When I finally left, I told the owner she had to do something to rein in the students and their parents. I don’t think anything will change there though, like almost everything else in this country.

    Hmm. So what was your next move?

    My family sponsored me to start taking standard teaching courses and certification exams to improve my qualifications. As an aftereffect of COVID, there was a huge demand for online schooling. I transitioned into giving tutorials for higher education early in 2021, preparing online students for JAMB, TOEFL and IELTS. In 2022, I registered with the British Council, so I now teach English to students all over the world, particularly Indians and other Asians.

    But what happened to your dream to improve the quality of secondary school education in Nigeria?

    It’s still there somewhere at the back of my mind, but I’ve partly given up on it. I’m disillusioned. The gravity of the problem is too much for me to even wrap my head around. My parents are visibly relieved. The plan now is to get a master’s in the education line in UK and work with NGOs there that focus on education in Sub-Saharan Africa. There are a couple of them.

    There’s a clashing possibility of moving to South Korea to teach English with my British passport. I’m ashamed to say this because of my initial declaration that I’m determined to make a change, but I’m entirely in love with the K-culture and the Korean government is on a recruiting spree for English language teachers, so why not help a society that’s actually willing to develop?

    Have you started working towards any of those plans?

    For sure. The UK master’s plan is the major reason I had to transition into freelance teaching. I’m earning a lot more now, enough to actually save for a UK education. And on top of that, I’m getting the kind of experience that will be useful in my statement of purpose application essay. The South Korea plan will work seamlessly once I get that UK degree.

    You mentioned being married. Is your partner making japa plans too?

    He’s a banker. Bankers and health workers are always the first to jump, so he’s way ahead of me on that. He was working on a move to Canada through PNP and Express Entry before we got married in 2020. COVID was a huge set back for him, but now, we’re putting the money together so he can come with me when I go for my master’s. The plan is for him to work full-time while I study and work part-time.

    So you’ll never go back to teaching in Nigeria?

    If I can help it, never. It’s the absolute worst. We need to check on our teachers o. I understand now why they do the barest minimum. They’re overworked, underpaid and get very little motivation. In private schools, their interests are belittled in favour of the rich students and their parents. I feel guilty most times because I’m privileged enough to choose to take a step back from that path, but most aren’t. They’re going through serious financial and psychological stress. 

    Then again, who isn’t seeing shege in Nigeria?

    Our leaders clearly aren’t. They are the ones showing it to us.

    READ THIS NEXT: What She Said: A Voice Told Me To Teach

    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women like content, click here

  • Refresh the Page, Zikoko 3.0 Just Landed

    Hello friends, it’s been a while.

    We heard your feedback, called our builders and designers, and worked on this for a year. And now, it’s finally ready. Zikoko has a new look and it’s fresher than agege bread from the akara woman on a Saturday morning at 9 a.m.

    It’s been seven years since Zikoko went live, and in that time, so much has happened. Young people have become more interested in politics and history, the influencer economy saw a boom once the Nigerian president picked up travel blogging, afrobeats was represented at the Grammies…

    Even Zikoko has seen some changes. We’ve influenced conversations around important, sometimes taboo topics through our flagships, broke the internet a few times, launched a new vertical called Zikoko Citizen, and now, we’ve redesigned our website.

    What’s new with our look?

    We wanted to make navigating our website more enjoyable for our audience. We’ve heard all the things you didn’t like about www.zikoko.com: you didn’t know what Stacks were, some of our pages loaded too slowly, and let’s not get into the hassle of finding that column you really like on a random afternoon. So, we moved things around.

    We started with the homepage

    Our homepage is now designed to help you discover what’s on Zikoko in a way that doesn’t overwhelm you. The navigation bar takes you straight to our categories. And for the fans, there’s a sidebar for flagships, so you have the option to go straight to that flagship you love.

    The first thing you’d probably notice on the page, however, are the labels. We have a section for what’s fresh out of the oven and what’s trending, what our partners want you to see, our flagship videos, and really, anything you might want to reach once you land on the site.

    Anything, like the Zikoko Categories

    You can find everything written or created for a category right on the same page.

    What does this mean? If you’re a fan of money conversations, you can find everything we do about money under the money category. From Naira Life to that quiz about how much you’ll find on the floor today, the Money category has everything. If we do a podcast about money, you’ll find it there. If we do a video on money, you’ll watch it there.

    Like videos

    Probably my favourite section. You can now find all Zikoko videos under Shows. It’s been optimised for streaming, which means you can easily find episodes and seasons of your favourite Zikoko show.
    Like newsletters? Love community? We got you.

    Interested in relationships? Join the SHIPS newsletter. Money? We recently redesigned the Money newsletter for you. Women’s stories? HER newsletter beckons. And for all the fun that Zikoko shares daily, Z! Daily is ready for your inbox. You can find what newsletter fits your needs easily

    All this, for an agenda

    It’s pretty simple what our agenda is.

    There’s so much we’ve been up to that you may have missed in the last two years.  We’ve launched flagship events, delved into platonic relationships with columns on friendships, dug into more money conversations with a career-building flagship, launched flagship videos like Astor vs Hassan, and built newsletter communities around our most-loved flagships.

    These formats, experiments, and conversations are to push our mandate, which remains to create smart and joyful content for young Africans everywhere. 

    And you can see it all on our brand new website.

    Welcome to a new season of Zikoko. There’s more coming.

  • “No One Understands Me Like You Do” — Love Letter From Jollof Rice to Fried Rice

    In the spirit of Valentine, we decided to give four foods the chance to write love letters to those they care about. This is Love Letters to Food.


    Dear Fried Rice, 

    We get pitted against each other a lot, so people don’t really know how close we are. You’re the best friend I can’t do without. They see us as two competitors always fighting about who’s superior, but it’s so crazy how people don’t see that all our fighting is just banter. Like when you drag me for dating chicken because no one else can stand my wahala. 

    Every time I’m down or feeling a bit of self-doubt because one restaurant or caterer didn’t cook me well, you never fail to remind me I’m a bad bitch, that countries all over the world fight about which version of me is the best, and Nigerian households cook me anytime they get the chance. I don’t think I can be in a bad mood for too long when I’m around you because you always know the right thing to say to make me feel better. Even when you’re not physically there, one phone call to you and I’m all good. I couldn’t ask for a better best friend and partner. 

    You always say all these amazing things about me, but have you met you? You’re sweet, the most exotic type of rice there is, and anybody who disagrees can kiss a burning pot. You’re so full of life — only you has carrots, green peas, spring onions, bell peppers, shrimps and more. That’s why you give people around you life, and that’s why you’re a celebratory meal. You may not be cooked often in Nigerian homes, but that’s because they save you for special occasions. You’re that special.

    I’m so glad we’re served together at most events. It has brought us closer than ever because we get to gist and gossip a lot. I love how we notice the same things; all we have to do is look at each other. I always have to hold myself from bursting out in laughter, and that’s what makes events fun for me. Whenever I’m served without you, it’s always boring because there’s no one to gist or make jokes with. All chicken knows how to do is complain that people don’t eat its bone in public. No one understands me like you do. 

    I can’t imagine what life would be like without you as my best friend. Who’d I complain to when one expensive restaurant adds too much curry to me? Remember the first time you met turkey, and he took you to a bukka for your first date? You thought turkey was one rich protein and that he was going to take you to an exotic fancy restaurant, only for you to end up in a bukka. It was such a hilarious experience. 

    Thank you for being the best friend any food could ask for, for staying by my side in the good times and bad. I love you, and I look forward to more chaotic times with you. 

    Happy Valentine’s Day, bestie.

    ALSO READ: “I Feel Seen Because of You” – Love Letter From Gizzard to Dodo

  • Which Trenches Food is the GOAT? We Ranked Them All

    Trenches food is the cheap food people buy off the streets or roadside restaurants. The people of Twitter go on and on about how it’s the best kind of food out there, and to be honest, I don’t disagree. BUT not all of it is great, and that’s why I’ve decided to rank the top ten trenches foods from “hell no” to “top-tier”. 

    Eko and milk

    Image credit: Kiki

    I’ve never had this, but I bet it tastes as unappealing as it looks. People who say they like this are lying. How can you eat something that looks so bland? 

    Spaghetti and Beans 

    Image credit: Bethsomediet

    I understand we’re talking about trenches food, but come on now, spaghetti and beans? Why did anybody think this would be a good combination? There’s no way this tastes good because the textures of both meals just don’t go together. The worst is rice, spaghetti and beans. You must be eating for eating sake if you eat that. 

    Yam and beans 

    Image credit:Veeluvstocook_ 

    What is it with mama put and adding beans anywhere it’s not needed? Is yam and stew not good enough? Eating two heavy meals together can’t be good for anybody. 

    Agege bread and butter

    Just bread and butter? No egg, beans, akara or even stew? It’s giving basic.

    Akara and pap 

    Image credit: Cookpad

    The best akara is the kind you buy from the mama down the road from your office at 7 a.m. before work starts. It’s straight out of the fire and goes perfectly with agege bread or pap hot enough to burn your throat. The bread is two days stale, and the pap is the kind they scoop with a big plastic cup. 

    Fried yam or potato with pepper sauce 

    Image credit: Lyndishes

    Whether you have it early in the morning, afternoon or at night, fried yam or potato with pepper sauce will always bang. Take note though, it must be served inside black nylon or newspaper. If they give it to you in a styrofoam plate, it won’t have the sweet trenches taste. 

    White rice and ofada sauce 

    Image credit: Nigerian food tv

    The rice has to come with ofada sauce that has enough pepper in it to make you cry, plenty of meat, two boiled eggs and five fingers of plantain.  

    White rice, stew and boiled egg

    The egg has to be soaked in the stew, and the stew must have enough oil to reduce your life span by eight years. If not, the food won’t slap. 

    Mai shayi bread and egg 

    I’m not sure whether it’s the excess oil or how they press the bread in the frying pan after putting the egg in the middle, but mai shayi agege bread and egg sandwich tastes like it dropped from heaven.  

    Ewa agoyin and agege bread 

    Nothing beats trenches ewa agoyin. A restaurant opened up and tried to sell it in fancy packaging. That didn’t work out because the trenches is part of ewa agoyin’s sauce. It’s best served in a styrofoam plate with the oil dripping into the black nylon and staining everywhere. 

    ALSO READ: Ranked! Lagos Traffic Food

    Brought to you by LOVE LIFE
  • 7 Superhuman Instincts Nigeria Forced You to Develop

    You can’t be a Nigerian and have only six senses; you’ll see shege. Here are some superhuman instincts we’ve all had to develop by force.

    Detecting an ATM that’ll swallow your card

    Inserting your card in any random ATM is an extreme sport because it may very well be the last time you’ll see it. So knowing when an ATM is about to act funny is an instinct you must develop as a Nigerian.

    Anticipating mad people while driving

    You’re most likely mad, so while driving on Nigerian roads, it’s only natural to expect that you’re with fellow mad people. You’re just one gbas-gbos away from cussing out someone’s mother on a good Friday morning.

    Spotting sweet cherry

    Haters will say there’s no such thing as sweet cherry. But hardcore Nigerians know they lie. There’s a way the cherry will look at you and you’ll know it can’t wait to be enjoyed.

    Safeguarding your phone in public

    You’ll be walking down the streets of Idumota market looking normal, but deep down, you’re holding on to your phone like your life depends on it.

    And your privates

    For men, stolen penises are a big worry, especially in public places. To protect your privates from being stolen in broad daylight, you learn to walk a certain way, so you can always sense its presence in the right place.

    Knowing who you can and cannot change it for

    In Nigeria, having sense is everything. That’s why the question, “Do you know who I am?” is important. It may be all that stands between you and the beating of a lifetime. 

    Calculating electricity

    If you’ve been in Nigeria long enough, you’ll know too much electricity is a bad omen. Imagine having electricity for 16 hours a day on a regular basis. You have to start calculating what to do with it because you know, once it goes off, you won’t see it again for a while.


    NEXT READ: 10 Superpowers Every Nigerian Parent Has


  • QUIZ: Which Stressful Nigerian Institution Are You?

    Do you move mad like Nigerian banks or have terrible mood swings like network providers?

  • The Association of Nigerian Witches Hold Their First Meeting of the Year

    It’s the second Tuesday of the month, when the association of Nigerian witches have their monthly meetings. At these meetings, they get updates on the goals set the previous month, address concerns and come up with new ways to cause chaos. These meetings are from 1 – 2 a.m., and there’s always plenty food involved. 

    The five heads of the association are Shege, Village People, Semo, Nigerian Aunties and Femi. They each handle special departments. 

    Shege: Good midnight, everyone. Welcome to the first monthly meeting of the ANW in the year 2023.

    *Everyone choruses “Good midnight”*

    Shege: On the agenda today, we have: 

    • Change of names 
    • Goals for the month 
    • Setbacks

    Village people: Femi, did you bring akara as I asked?

    Femi: No. I was busy with work.

    Village people: How does work affect you conjuring food? It would literally have taken five seconds. 

    Femi: No vex.

    Village people: I was really looking forward to…

    Shege: It’s enough! Village people, you like food too much. Eat what’s available; there are plenty of other options. Have you tried my spaghetti? 

    Anyway, moving on to the first item on the agenda. Change of names. What’s the problem?

    Semo: Why do I have to be called semo?

    Shege: Because people hate you so much, and everyone here is named after someone or something people hate. 

    Femi: Wait, so why am I called Femi?

    Village people: Are you really asking?  Femis are the most wicked among all the Yoruba men. Their method of heartbreak will leave you in tears for years. Out of five people, four have been served breakfast by a Femi. 

    Femi: Where are you getting these statistics? 

    Village people: Trust me, I know. 

    Semo: Okay, but Semo doesn’t get that much hate, so I think we should change my name.

    Femi: Is that a joke? Have you seen the way Semo is dragged on and offline? Bro, they call it trash and say it tastes like ass. 

    *Semo sighs*

    Nigerian aunties: But many Nigerian aunties are loved.

    Shege: How many? With all the fat-shaming, marriage pressure, condescending comments and never minding their businesses, who is loving them? The nice ones aren’t called Nigerian aunties. They’re either “rich auntie” or just “auntie”. 

    *Nigerian auntie rolls her eyes* 

    Shege: So we’re all good with names? 

    *Everyone mutters* 

    Shege: Good. On to the next. Goals for the month. Femi, over to you. 

    Femi: Okay so, Semo, your goal this month is to get more weddings to serve semo and other trash foods: fufu, white rice and stew, pap and hard ponmo. The goal is for people to be miserable at these weddings, especially those who weren’t invited. 

    Semo: How is this a way of torturing people?

    Femi: Nigerians like food and enjoyment. Once you ruin that for them, they’ll start shedding tears. Oh, add ogbono soup to the list. 

    Semo: Okay.

    Femi: Village people, your job this month is to make sure people don’t hear about their visas till just before they’re supposed to travel. 

    Village people: Why not just outrightly deny them the visa?

    Shege: That’s not fun or creative enough. When they’re waiting for the visa, and it hasn’t been denied yet, they’re overthinking, worrying, crying almost every day and barely sleeping. THAT’s how to be wicked to someone. 

    Village people: Oya, let’s do this. 

    Nigerian auntie: Shege, you sabi this thing well.

    Femi: Shege, you have three goals: 

    • Make sure people always have problems with their network
    • Make sure people’s bank apps frustrate them five times before working 
    • Drink up people’s data every two days. 

    Shege: Why is my own more than the others? 

    Femi: Have you heard your name? Shege. Your job is to constantly put people in extreme and unpleasant situations. Besides, you’re not doing it alone. You all have team members working. You can do this. 

    Shege: Na wa. Heavy is the head that wears the crown, I guess.  

    Femi: Nigerian auntie, I need you to get as many Gen Z children into trouble with their parents this month. Report every single thing they do, down to what they post on social media. We need them annoyed and frustrated.

    Nigerian auntie: Let’s goooo.

    Femi: And as for me, my job is to break as many Edo women’s hearts as possible. 

    Semo: Ah! Edo women? Is that even possible? 

    Shege: Even me, I’m afraid of Edo women. Their own wickedness pass our own sef

    Femi: It’s going to be tough, but no heartbreak is too big a challenge for Femi. 

    Shege: Can’t wait to hear about it at next month’s meeting. 

    Semo: Moving on. I’ll be addressing the setbacks. Our main setback is using manual brooms. They’re slow and barely work. We were supposed to buy electric brooms last month, but the dollar rate has gone so high, we can’t afford them. 

    Nigerian auntie: Honestly, Buhari is making things hard for us. 

    Femi: Please, make sure you vote during these elections o. Has everybody collected their PVCs?

    *Everyone choruses yes*

    Semo: Maybe next month we’ll be able to buy the electric brooms. 

    Village people: But even when we buy the brooms, where do we want to find fuel?  

    Semo: When the time comes, we’ll figure it out. 

    Shege: Okay, is there anything else we need to talk about?

    *Everyone choruses no*

    Shege: Alright then, the meeting is adjourned. Everyone fly back home fast before they notice you’re gone. 


    ALSO READ: How To Properly Deal With The Witches In Your Father’s House

  • This Artist Imagines Peace While Offering “Community Therapy”

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

    by Dorcas Bello, Bird Story Agency

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Creator Spotlight: Zonna on Creating Sustainable Art Through Tuft

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  • The Most Frustrating People to Be Out With When You Want to Have Fun  

    You’ve decided you want to go out to turn up. Good for you. But if you truly want to have a good time at whatever event you attend, don’t go out with any of these people because they’ll frustrate you one way or another. 

    Couples

    Go out with a couple, and you’ll regret it. All they know how to do is annoying PDAs and to exchange saliva any chance they get. I invited you out for drinks not a dry hump. 

    Ambiverts 

    At least with introverts, you know they prefer to stay home. Ambiverts have on and off days, and sometimes, they don’t even know they don’t want to be out until they’re actually out. God help you if you’re out with an ambivert on a day they want to stay in. They’ll annoy you by constantly acting like they’re being punished. They won’t even try to have fun;, they’ll sit in a corner and press their phones. Meanwhile, they’re the ones who asked to go with you. Chisom, we just got here; stop asking if we can leave. 

    9-5ers

    9-5ers are full-blown party animals. It’s like they channel all the stress from their work into energy for turn up. When you go out with them, you’ll be exhausted within one hour. If you’re out with bankers, architects or lawyers to be precise, just be ready to stay out till 5 a.m. They don’t know when to call it a night, even when they have work the following day.

    Lightweights 

    They never know their alcohol limits, so they end up drinking to stupor and misbehaving. Instead of shaking your ass on the dance floor, you’ll be taking care of somebody else’s child in the toilet.

    ALSO READ: The  Zikoko Guide to Drinking at a Party

    People who live with their parents 

    They’ll try to include you in one stressful lie or scheme so that they can be out. When they’re finally out, they’re paranoid about getting caught. Can’t even post them on your insta story in case one grand cousin’s sister’s daughter accidentally finds your page. Omo, Tunde, this isn’t what I signed up for. Then there are the ones with 9 p.m. curfews, who try to make you leave early too. You and who? Do I leave with your parents?

    People who live far away

    They always have to leave early because their house is far from civilisation. You sef should know better than to invite somebody from FESTAC out at night. If you want them to stay longer, you have to give them a place to sleep.

    Gym buffs

    Latest 7 p.m., they’re heading back home because they have to go to the gym the next morning. And while they’re out, they won’t eat or drink certain things because it’s not part of their diet. And they’ll judge you while you’re eating your shawarma and fries at 11 p.m. As if you’re on the diet with them. 

    Influencers

    All they want to do is record videos of every single thing that’s happening, all in the name of content. Instead of properly partying, they’re shooting “Come turn up with me on a Friday night” vlogs. If you give them the chance, they’ll carry tripod to the club. 

    Zikoko staff

    We’re not normal people. We’ll ask you to do weird things like mix vodka with jollof rice, then you’ll end up with diarrhoea at the club.  

    ALSO READ: All You Need to Know Before Attending a House Party in Nigeria

  • If You Don’t Have Money, Don’t Make These New Year’s Resolutions, Abeg 

    Yeah, it’s great to have New Year’s resolutions. But if you don’t have money, stay away from these particular ones. Simple.

    A skincare routine

    Your salary is ₦200k and your New Year’s resolution is to build a skincare routine? LOL. A good cleanser and moisturiser combo is at least ₦15k, and I’ve not even mentioned serum, sunscreen, face masks, etc. The worst part is these things come in tiny containers that don’t last more than two weeks. Just be ready to remove at least ₦50-100k from your account every month. 

    Move out of your parents’ house 

    Do you think people are moving back to their parents’ house because they miss their parents? Ask your friends who have moved out how they’re doing. 

    Become more fashionable

    Even if you say you’ll enter market and buy clothes, those ones too have started charging the same price as Instagram vendors. My good sis, just manage the clothes you have in your wardrobe for now. 

    Go out more

    If you’ve not figured out that outside is expensive, I don’t know what to tell you. The moment you step outside your house, the mighty spirit of billing will be waiting for you. If you plan to go out more this year, find a sponsor (AKA become a sugar baby). 

    Fall in love 

    If nobody told you, as someone who’s currently going through it, if you don’t have money, don’t enter a relationship. Are you ready to buy random “I love you” gifts, anniversary gifts, food, “Thinking about you” gifts, etc.? Davido knew what he was saying when he said, “When money enter, love is sweeter.”  

    ALSO READ: How to Enter a Relationship This 2023

    Diet 

    Okay, I get it, you want to eat healthier this year. But do you know how expensive fruits and vegetables are? I bought one apple for ₦200 the other day, and I almost cried. If it’s a protein diet you want, sorry to you. Egg is now ₦100. Imagine how much chicken would be? 

    Japa

    Even if you get a scholarship for tution, do you have the money to actually leave the country to attend the school? Flight is nothing less than ₦800k, and visa application fees are about ₦300k. Do I need to go on? But what Nigeria cannot do doesn’t exist, so it’ll probably still frustrate you into finding a way to leave. 

    Go to the gym 

    Gyms these days are coming up with new ways to collect money from people every chance they get. Either they’re increasing subscription fees or making up new ones out of nowhere.  Just work out in your house.

    ALSO READ: 9 Ridiculous Things Nigerian Men Shouldn’t Bring into 2023

  • The 7 Ghetto Struggles of Resuming the Gym After Taking a Long Break 

    You said “fuck the gym” because you wanted to do detty December. Now, the holiday is over and you have to face your demons AKA all the calories you gained in just two weeks. 

    If you’re resuming the fitness lifestyle after being away for a while, you can relate to these struggles.

    Locating the gym 

    There’s a high chance you won’t remember where your gym is. You can’t even text your fitness trainer because you deleted their number from your phone when they were sending you reminders to come to the gym during the holidays. 

    Soreness 

    The body pain you’ll feel after your first day back at the gym, ehn? For every part of the body you move, you’ll feel pain. Is this gym even worth it sef? 

    Remembering how to do the exercises 

    Your trainer will tell you to do a side jack knife, and your head will start to hurt. Is that a real exercise or not? What the hell are cable chops? Let’s not even go into how your form will be completely shit for the first two days. 

    Dieting 

    You’ve gotten used to eating whatever you want at whatever time you like, and now, your trainer tells you to go back to the life of eating vegetables, intermittent fasting and staying away from alcohol. How are you supposed to do that? 

    ALSO READ:  Eat These Delicious Foods And You Won’t Gain Weight. We Promise

    The stamina of a 70-year-old 

    You that they used to call “Treadmill Usain Bolt”. Two weeks away from the gym and you can’t even run at speed eight for ten minutes straight without panting like a dog in heat. 

    Making it to the gym

    You broke your daily routine of getting dressed and going to the gym. Now every day for the next two weeks, you’llspend a good 30 minutes convincing yourself why fitness is worth it. Your mates that aren’t going to the gym, did they die?  

    Tears 

    After drinking, eating and sleeping the entire holiday, you expect to have added weight (If you’re one of those people who can eat without adding weight, please leave this place, mscheeew). But even with the expectation, you’ll still shed a few tears when you see the number on the scale. Now, you regret eating that plate of jollof rice at 2 a.m. Also, you’ll cry out of frustration because the weight won’t go in one day.

    If you’re not a gym lover, here are All the Ways to Lose Weight Without Going to the Gym

  • The UK Japa Train Is Finally Here For Nigerian Teachers

    The japa trend has taken Nigeria by storm in the past couple of years, as students, families and professionals are fleeing the country for greener pastures. 

    According to the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, the number of international migrants from Nigeria in 2020 was about 1.7 million. With the recent announcement by the United Kingdom’s Department for Education, it looks like this figure will climb even higher in 2023. 

    What did the UK say?

    So, via a publication on their website, Nigeria was listed among the African and Asian countries whose citizens are eligible to apply for teaching jobs in the UK come 2023. 

    Japa UK Teachers Nigerian

    The other eligible countries are Ghana, Hong Kong, India, Jamaica, Singapore, South Africa, Ukraine and Zimbabwe. 

    The programme will begin on February 1, 2023, and applicants must have a Qualified Teacher Status (QTS) awarded to them by the Teaching Regulation Agency (TRA). The interesting thing about this process is you don’t need formal teaching training. What you’d need are: 

    • An English and Mathematics qualification the same standard as a grade 4 General Certificate of Secondary Education (GSCE). This is equivalent to a C in your West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) or National Examination Council (NECO) Certificate. 
    • A Bachelor’s degree
    • A minimum of two years teaching experience

    What does this mean for Nigeria?

    More brain drain

    This year, we witnessed the mass exodus of our health professionals leaving the country with an average ratio of one doctor to 10,000 patients. And with this opportunity, we may soon see this calamity replicated in our already dilapidated education system. Public schools are already overwhelmed with the number of students they have to deal with, and this situation may get even worse in the coming year.

    Japa UK Teachers Nigerian

    Poor quality of education

    If a brain drain happens in our education sector, it’ll do more than increase the ratio of educators to students. The quality of any education system depends on the quality of its intellectual pool. Last month, the registrar of the Teachers Registration Council of Nigeria noted that over 260 teachers migrated to Canada this year. If our number of qualified teachers continues to dwindle, it’ll eventually affect the quality of students produced.

    Retarded economic growth

    It’s important to remember that applicants for the UK teaching jobs don’t need formal teaching qualifications. However, they must have a Bachelor’s degree, meaning they’d be skilled in other areas. If we lose most of our skilled labour to migration, our economic and technological development will remain in the trenches. 

    Japa UK Teachers Nigerian

    A good way for the country to manage this situation would be to increase the incentives for the academic staff across all public schools, provide more job opportunities with attractive salaries for graduates, and make the work environment and culture more conducive. 

  • How to Know if a Song Has Crack In It

    Whenever people jam to a song, they say things like, “Omooo, *insert artist* put crack in this song!” This basically means the song is so good and addictive they want to keep going back for more.

    But how do you identify a song that has crack in it? Let me tell you: 

    If you play it 100 times in a row

    Once it becomes the only song you play for 30 minutes straight, it definitely has crack in it, cause you’re addicted. How else do you want to explain playing a song over 100 times and not getting sick of it?

    If you learn the lyrics after just one listen

    The crack in the music is what will make you learn the lyrics so damn fast and scream them at the top of your voice. 

    When you hear THAT producer’s tagline 

    The moment you hear a certain producer’s tagline at the beginning of the song, you already know the song has crack. You know the producer I’m talking about. 

    When you hear, “She tell me say”

    There’s something addictive about this line, and that’s why Wizkid says it so much. Whenever you hear the line, you know the song will bang. It’s Wizzy’s way of putting crack in the song. 

    When you make other people listen, and they instantly love it 

    Most times when you force other people to listen to your music, they’ll look at you with disgust and ask, “What nonsense are you playing?” But if you play a song, and they say, “Brooo, this is a jammm!” then the song has crack.

    When you’re willing to sell your kidney to hear the artist perform it live

    Only people who do crack will sell their properties to have more of it. That’s why you’d gladly sell your kidney to listen to the artist perform the song, because it has crack in it. 

    When you request for it any chance you get 

    Whether it’s at a party, funeral, friend’s house or car ride, you always request for the song to be played. You won’t allow anybody to rest until they play the song. 

    If Burna boy sang it 

    Did I lie? 

    If it’s from the trenches 

    Nobody can tell me anything. Trenches music definitely has crack in it. That’s why you see people pulling off their wigs and shoes to misbehave dance to it.

    ALSO READ: Don’t Play These Songs At Your Wedding If You Want Your Marriage to Last

  • Wizkid Makes History at the 2022 American Music Awards

    Wizkid has made history by becoming the first African to win an award at the 50th edition of the American Music Awards (AMAs).

    By Bird story agency

    Grammy award-winning singer, Wizkid, has made history. He is the first African to win an award at the American Music Awards (AMAs), held on November 20, 2022, at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles.

    Wizkid, who was not present at the ceremony, won the Favorite Afrobeats Artist award. This category was introduced earlier in the year, highlighting the global influence of Afrobeats on the international music scene.

    He bested fellow nominees, Burna Boy, CKay, Tems and Fireboy DML to win.

    The 32-year-old artist also won the Favourite R&B Song award for his collaboration with Tems on the hit song, Essence. He defeated Beyonce, Bruno Mars and SZA to clinch the award. Tems won Favorite Hip Hop Song for her contribution to Future’s Wait For U, which also features Canadian rapper, Drake.

    This feat comes days after Wizkid headlined New York City’s iconic Madison Square Garden in a sold-out show on November 16. Two days before, he’d joined Apple Music to perform at Roundhouse, London, to promote his latest album, More Love Less Ego, which was released on November 11.

    More Love Less Ego comes two years after his acclaimed album, Made in Lagos, the longest-charting Nigerian album of all time on the Billboard World Albums chart (50 weeks).

    AMA winners are voted entirely by fans. Nominees are based on key fan interactions — as reflected on the Billboard charts — including streaming, album and song sales, radio airplay and tour grosses. Measurements are tracked by Billboard and its data partner, Luminate, in the eligibility period of September 24, 2021 through September 22, 2022.

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    EDITOR’S PICK: Is “More Love, Less Ego” Wizkid’s Horniest Album? Here’s What We

  • Adeleke Has Done These Things In Two Days As Osun Governor

    When Ademola Adeleke beat the current governor, Gboyega Oyetola, in the Osun State governorship election in July 2022, it was clearly the beginning of a new era for the state. But no one can say they saw what’s currently happening in the state coming.

    Ademola Adeleke is the new governor of Osun State

    What happened next?

    Senator Adeleke was finally sworn in on November 27, 2022, as the sixth elected governor of Osun State. Hardly 24 hours in, he issued executive orders that have ruffled many feathers. Let’s take a look at the effect of his orders.

    Suspensions

    Adeleke ordered the immediate suspension of the Chairman of the Osun State Independent Electoral Commission, Segun Oladitan, and six other members of the commission. Adeleke didn’t like that there were many petitions against the officials for negligence of duty, abuse of office, absenteeism and financial impropriety. Who knew petitions could work so well in our part of the world?

    Unemployment

    A few weeks before Oyetola finished his tenure, he approved the appointment of 30 permanent secretaries into various ministries. Unfortunately, these appointments lasted only briefly as Adeleke completely nullified them.

    And even more unemployment

    The permanent secretaries were just some of the people appointed by Oyetola. The outgoing governor also mass employed 12,000 workers, but they couldn’t escape Adeleke’s executive order, as they were sacked.

    Ademola Adeleke is the new governor of Osun State

    Delayed monarchs

    It’s one thing when common people face the brunt of a new government and another when even royalty isn’t spared. Adeleke paused the recent appointments of three monarchs: Akirun of Ikirun, Oba Yinusa Akadiri; Aree of Iree, Oba Ademola Oluponle; and Owa of Igbajo, Oba Adegboyega Famodun. Oyetola approved their appointments, but Adeleke said their palaces will remain locked until he’s reviewed the process. 

    Why did Adeleke make these decisions?

    Adeleke believes Oyetola has been trying to sabotage his incoming government since he beat him in July. He described many of his post-election appointments as malicious because no provisions were made in the budget for their salaries. 

    Ademola Adeleke is the new governor of Osun State

    No one knows how the story will unfold, but it’s clear that even post-elections, Adeleke and Oyetola are still at odds with each other, and the common people are the ones suffering for it. 

  • Nigerian Food Boards That Should Exist 

    First, we saw a charcuterie board, and it was fine; cheese, crackers and fruits — it ate. Then TikTok people started making sushi boards, butter boards, etc, and it made me wonder, what if we had Nigerian food boards? Which one would bang? Well, I have thoughts. 

    Abacha board 

    I mean, come on, this is greatness waiting to happen. Each side of the board would have different toppings — ugba, garden eggs, fish and ponmo. Every bite would be a burst of flavours. This needs to happen yesterday, for my sanity. 


    RELATED: Is Abacha Overrated? 7 Nigerians Argue


    Swallow board 

    Imagine if you went to a restaurant to try some random soup, and a swallow board accompanied it. Sometimes, you’d want the softness of wheat  after eating pounded yam, or eba after a couple of spoons of amala. A little bit of everything at your fingertips, god, abeg.

    Plantain board 

    Do I even need to talk too much? As someone who recently saw the light in plantain, I say this should already exist. From good old fried plantain — it must be soft by the way — to plantain chips, unripe porridge, gizdodo, plantain and beans, the possibilities are endlessly sweet. 

    Assorted meat board 

    If you close your eyes, you can almost taste the beef and chicken suya, asun and Isi Ewu. Let your imagination run wild, and just sprinkle yaji pepper on top. I’d willingly break the bank for this instead of overpriced breakfast platters. 

    Puff-puff board 

    With chocolate-drizzled puff-puff and puff-puff sprinkled with pepper, every angle of the board would be a treat. We could experiment with puff-puff and stew. Puff-puff is bread that studied abroad, after all. 

    Old-school snacks board 

    Imagine pako and okin biscuits, baba dudu and co, all on one platter. All our childhood causes of toothache in one place sounds like bliss to me. 

    Rice board

    This board takes “There’s rice at home” to another level. One thing Nigerians are great at is making several different types of rice. Our Jollof slaps, vegetable rice is heavenly, and there’s even concoction rice for when sapa has you in a chokehold. Just imagine them spread out on a board. 


    READ ALSO: We Ranked 10 Nigerian Rice Meals From the Best to the Most Unnecessary

  • QUIZ: Which Old Nigerian Music Group Would You Fit Into?

    Mohits or Styl Plus? This quiz knows which old Nigerian music group you’d be perfect for.

  • Just Imagine: You’re in a Family Meeting Because You Were Caught Smoking Weed 

    You had the audacity to smoke weed in the house in which your Nigerian parents live, thinking you won’t be caught. Oh, what a fool. You don’t even know the Jamaican loud you’re smoking is smelling all over the entire house. Before you’re halfway done, your mother barges into your room. 

    Mother: “Chukwudi! What am I smelling? What is this you’re doing?” 

    She pounces on you and the half blunt you’re holding and gives you several slaps all over your body. She runs out to call your father while you try to get up from the floor. Your own don finish today. 

    After tears from your mother and shouts from your father, you’re now in the living room, where your parents have called a family meeting on top your head. In this meeting, you have: 

    -A distant uncle who likes to collect money from your father

    -An aunty who only comes over for food

    -Your father’s brother who aired you after you sent him your CV 

    -Your mother’s amebo friend who has no business being there

    Your siblings are also peeking from a corner. 

    Your parents are looking at you like this: 

    You’re seated in the middle, which you hate so much because all eyes are on you, making it hard to hide that you’re high as fuck. Your father starts pacing back and forth…

    Father: I can’t believe you, Chukwudi. You’re smoking marijuana? In my house, for that matter. How can you bring such shame to this family like this? Who taught you?

    Mother *with tears in her eyes*: Where did we go wrong, ehn, Chukwudi? What did we do to deserve this? 

    You have the urge to list everywhere they went wrong as parents. The weed is trying to push you to talk, but you hold yourself back. You won’t let the devil win.

    Father: After everything we’ve done for you, you want to throw your life away. You’re giving yourself to drugs. What else are you taking? Cocaine? Heroin? Codeine? Answer me, my friend! 

    You: Daddy, I’m not taking any other thing *You mumble*.

    Foodie aunty: You might as well take cocaine now. What’s the difference? I’m so disappointed in you, Chukwudi.

    You’re getting irritated. Who does this one think she is to be disappointed? The urge to talk is getting stronger. 

    Foodie aunty: You should know better than this, Chukwudi. I—

    Before you can stop yourself…

    You: Did you know better when you put laxatives in your husband’s food to make him shit for three days. All because you didn’t want him to hang out with his friends. Please, dear. 

    Everybody’s mouth is open in shock. Foodie aunty is wondering where you got this information from. Your father’s brother is holding himself from bursting out in laughter. 

    Mother: Chukwudi! 

    Foodie aunty: How can you say such a thing? Who told you this rubbish? 

    You: Aunty Dorcas, abeg I—

    Father: Come on will you shut up your dirty mouth there! Idiot!

    You: Daddy, don’t insult me, please. 

    Father: Or what will happen?

    You: I’ll tell mummy about how your Oha soup allergy is a lie. You just don’t like her own because she doesn’t cook it well. And that you go to Mama Apunanwu’s eatery every Wednesday and Friday to eat it.

     

    Mother: Ehn?!

    You: Mummy, whenever he tells you he’s working late, he’s at her restaurant, eating Oha soup and pounded yam with plenty of goat meat. 

    Father’s brother: Chukwudi, that’s enough! We’re here to discuss how you’ve decided to throw your life away by doing drugs. You have a good job and a family that loves you. Why are you doing this? It’s those friends you have, abi? 

    Mother’s amebo friend: It can’t be all his friends. My daughter is his friend, and I don’t know why he isn’t choosing to follow in her footsteps. Instead, he’s following the bad ones.  

    You: Are you talking about the daughter who’s my weed supplier? The one who puts weed in all sorts of foods? LMAO. What do you think her food business is all about? Why do you think it’s called “HIGHly Delicious”? She’s using food to get people high, let me just tell you.  

    Mother’s amebo friend: You’re a liar! 

    You: Okay now. Stay there. 

    Father: Chukwudi, you’re becoming a nuisance. What’s wrong with you this boy?

    You: Why is everyone making it seem like I’m the only “bad” one here? *points at the uncle he hasn’t seen in a long time* Uncle Mike’s child does yahoo and isn’t even successful at it. Uncle Mike is aware and even tries to help him scam people. 

    *PointS to mother’s amebo friend* Aunty and her husband used their children’s school fees to go to Dubai and form fake life with their friends. That’s why Chimezie has yet to enter uni; not because he’s waiting for his Canadian student visa like they’re telling everybody. 

    *Points to mother* Mummy was fired from her job three months ago because she used her oga’s toilet and clogged it with her poo. Every morning, she goes to Aunty Lola’s house to hide, then comes back when everybody has gone out. She leaves the house again at 6 p.m. and returns at 8, pretending she’s coming back from work tired. 

    Mother:

    Everyone looks stunned. 

    You: Everybody has the one they’re doing, but it’s me you want to attack. Biko, leave me alone. 

    *Stands up and walks out of the family meeting*

    ALSO READ: Just Imagine: Visiting a Nigerian Haunted House for Halloween

  • What She Said: I Never Imagined I’d Be Single at 40, but I Don’t Mind It

    Navigating life as a woman in the world today is interesting. From Nigeria to Timbuktu, it’ll amaze you how similar all our experiences are. Every Wednesday, women the world over will share their experiences on everything from sex to politics right here. 

    Photo by Christina Morillo

    This week’s #ZikokoWhatSheSaid subject is a 43-year-old Nigerian woman. She talks about finding peace after her mother’s death, living with two bipolar brothers and escaping toxicity through classic books and films.

    What makes you happy right now?

    My published books, blogs and fan fiction. I haven’t made much money from them, but getting readers’ feedback makes me feel better about my self-worth. My mum died a week before my 40th birthday and my mind closed off. I couldn’t function. It wasn’t just the shock of her death, I also felt she died disappointed in me. I’m her only child who didn’t give her grandchildren or get married. A lot was left unsaid between us.

    Like what?

    She wasn’t always fair to me. Islam teaches us to accept the will of Allah, but I wish I focused more on her counsel than worrying about criticism from her. My brother’s wife told me something that gave me some closure. She said they often discussed me when I was at work and my mother would say she was proud of me. I wish she’d said things like that to me. I miss her very much, and I still feel sad when I think of her.

    I’m sorry. How do you feel about not being married now?

    Well, I never imagined I’d be single at 40, but I don’t mind it at all. I don’t want to be under a man who will tell me what to do or I’d need permission from. As a single woman, I’m not pressured to meet a husband’s expectations. I’m my own person.

    What gives you this impression about marriage?

    I’ve personally not experienced many healthy ones. My brother and his family live with me, and he has bipolar disorder. He’s on medication, but he’s not easy to live with. I sympathise with his wife but get angry and frustrated during his episodes. I always have to remind myself he’s mentally ill, yet sometimes, I feel he uses it to justify his general selfishness and superiority over his wife especially. Most times, I avoid him so his antics won’t get me down, but she can’t.

    How do you manage your own mental health?

    I focus on my hobbies. I read and watch classics, and write mostly to tune out the negativity. Sometimes, I just go out. I considered therapy but decided not to because I’m terrified of the possibility of needing meds.

    RELATED: 6 Young Nigerians Talk About Mental Health Medication

    Why?

    I had panic attacks up until about 2010 because of my teaching job. I hid the attacks from my mum, who was already dealing with my younger brothers. Both of them are bipolar; I couldn’t add my issues. It was a horrible feeling, and I’m still prone to anxiety now and then. I don’t want a psychiatrist to detect it and say I should take meds. Then I’ll be unable to function without them. I want to be in control of my life without meds.

    Fair enough. What was it like growing up with two bipolar brothers?

    Their condition was undetected until they were both in university. But it’s not been easy. I never know when they might have an episode. The younger one takes his meds but won’t stop taking caffeine. He’s more bearable than the older one, but sometimes, he’s unreasonable. I resent the older one more because he’s done many things I can’t forgive him for. I generally try to avoid them.

    Tell me about the hobbies that help you tune out negativity

    I’ve loved classic books and films since I was a child. I have my late father to thank for that. He was a voracious reader who wanted his children to improve their vocabulary. He’d buy us books on our birthdays and let us read from his collection. Reading and writing fill me with fond memories of him.

    That must be nice

    He was still a strict father, though. Because of his temper and how he was set in his ways, I was afraid to cross him.

    Where did your love for classic films come in?

    As a child, NTA 5 aired BBC adaptations of classics like “Jane Eyre” (my favourite book), “Little Women” (my second favourite) and “Oliver Twist”. It made me love the classics even more. I also grew up watching great films like “The Sound of Music”, “The Thief of Baghdad” and “My Fair Lady”. 

    After reading about the history of motion pictures in an encyclopaedia in JSS 2, I wanted to watch all the films mentioned in it. Over the years, I’ve been able to. I especially enjoyed the film noirs. I love the feeling of entering another era, and it’s been helpful now when I need to escape. Today’s films, most of which are remakes of the classics, just don’t compare.

    RELATED: Nollywood Keeps Doing Remakes, So We Ranked Them From Best to Worst

    How did you transition to actually writing your own stuff?

    The more books I read, and films I watched, the more I longed to create my own stories. But I didn’t consider actually writing until I started reading Enid Blyton’s books, my first inspiration to write children’s stories. I was about eight when my father bought one for me, “The Three Wishes, and other stories”. I think I was 15, when I first wrote anything. It was a three-stanza poem about the sea, and I sadly no longer have a copy. My first two books were published by Lantern Books. 

    How did that go?

    It’s not easy to write for kids because you have to learn what they like, how they think, and keep the language simple. I submitted a manuscript of ten children’s stories in 2003. They were published in 2006 as two separate books. I was so happy when the physical copies were placed in my hands. But my third book wasn’t published till late 2018.

    Have you written anything for film?

    My first attempt at a film script was when I was at Federal College of Education (FCE), Osiele, Abeokuta. I showed it to a friend, but while he said it was well-written, he thought it was controversial because it talked about cultism. I haven’t made a second attempt.

    Would you still offer it for adaptation to film one day?

    I pray so. It would the pinnacle of my writing career.

    And your romantic life so far?

    I’ve only been in three brief relationships, and they all happened when I was 19. In fact, I would hardly call them “relationships”. I’m ashamed of the first and third because I thought I was in love. The second, I knew, was real, but I was too immature to handle it well. I haven’t tried again since.

    I really don’t want to talk about it; all three were humiliating mistakes. I’ve forgotten the whole thing and moved on with my life, happily single.

    For more stories like this, check out our #WhatSheSaid and for more women like content, click here

    If you’d like to be my next subject on #WhatSheSaid, click here to tell me why

    NEXT READ: What She Said: I Need to Write to Be Alive

  • QUIZ: Which Nigerian Phrase Accurately Describes Your Life?

    Is your life God abeg or are you flourishing and unbothered?


    QUIZ: What’s the Colour of Your Problem?

  • This Nigerian Wants to Vote in 2023 but He Won’t Leave Germany

    The Nigerian Voter is a series that seeks to understand the motivations that drive the voting decisions of Nigerians — why they vote, how they pick their candidates, why some have never voted, and their wildest stories around elections.

    The subject of today’s The Nigerian Voter is Victor, a 32-year-old energy commodity market analyst in Berlin, Germany. He told us about his reasons for leaving the country, his views on diaspora voting, and many more.

    Why did you leave Nigeria? 

    I left in December 2020 because I won a scholarship to study renewable energy engineering in Berlin, Germany. I wasn’t ready to pass that up because I had worked hard for it for a long time. 

    Did you consider how leaving the country would affect your ability to vote?

    It’s actually not something I thought of at the time. All I knew was that I have a scholarship in Germany and I must go. The election was the furthest thing from my mind, especially since I’ve never voted in Nigeria.

    Why?

    I felt it was a pointless exercise when they’d just rig to get their preferred candidate in anyway. This was until 2020 when #EndSARS happened — people were killed, and so brutally too, without any warning, without any justification. I just felt that omo, we have to be more involved in our country’s politics. If we don’t make any efforts to change the politicians, they’ll stay there and they’ll continue to be more corrupt. This may be cliché, but the power is in our hands big time.

    If you were still in Nigeria, would you feel the need to vote in 2023? 

    Yes, because this is the most crucial point in time for Nigerians to vote. I still follow everything that goes on in the country. Half of the country is flooded and yet our leaders are travelling out. The naira is currently 800 to a dollar and yet the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has decided to redesign our notes. Nothing like a direction, nothing like a plan. Insecurity has engulfed the northern region — everything is going haywire. If we don’t vote right this time, Nigeria will fall as a republic in the next 10 years. Mark my words.

    What would you say every voter should consider before choosing a candidate? 

    Competence, but based on track record. 

    Let me use an example. Did you know that the Blueline project in Lagos, which was supposed to run from Mile 2 to somewhere on the island, has been under construction for 13 years? They started that project back in 2009 when I was in my second year of university. They’ve spent $1.5 billion on that project for only 27 km. Ethiopia which did the exact same project did theirs to cover 750km in less than six months. 

    The point I’m trying to make is, there’s a certain bare minimum of competence that Nigerian leaders must have, and we’re always forgetting that bare minimum. Someone who can leave a project hanging for 13 years and spend billions in public funds on this same project doesn’t deserve to be a leader. 

    What’s your favourite thing about Nigeria’s electoral system? 

    The adoption of the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS).

    Can you explain BVAS to me like I’m five years old?

    BVAS is more or less a machine used to verify voters using their Permanent Voters Card (PVC). It’s meant to know if you’re really a registered voter or not. 

    It’s my favorite thing because I can remember how things used to be with long manual authentication processes. The BVAS is a welcome change. 

    What do you dislike the most about Nigeria’s electoral system? 

    The non-inclusion of diaspora voting. Nigerians in the diaspora contribute a lot more to this country than average Nigerians realize. The diaspora remittance in 2020 — or was it 2021 — was over $20 billion. That’s a lot of money and it goes to show that every Nigerian outside the country has invested interest in this country. 

    I’ve lived in Germany, Switzerland, and Egypt, but Nigeria is the only place that qualifies as home. I’d do anything possible to go back home when I achieve what I want to achieve here. I know Nigerians here who are just waiting for the right atmosphere, and the right leadership so that they can go and invest all their resources there. I’d rather build my fatherland than build the land of colonialists. 

    Diasporans should have a say and their voices should be heard. If anyone at home needs urgent ₦2k, it’s us they’ll run to. 

    Look at Kenya, which has five foreign countries where diasporans can vote. It shouldn’t be rocket science. If you have an international passport, that’s a unique ID. A Nigerian in the diaspora should be able to go to the embassy in their country of residence and vote. Officials can collate the ballots and send them to Nigeria. But instead, we hear that we can’t vote. What’s so difficult there? 

    Who would you vote for?

    Peter Obi for president and Gbadebo Rhodes-Vivour for Lagos State governor.

    Do you plan on coming back in 2023 to vote for your candidates? 

    No. The benefit-to-cost ratio for me flying back to add one vote is too low when I can use the same funds to contribute to sensitisation that can mobilise more voters already on the ground.

    How do you plan to show your support for the candidates from abroad? 

    Through sensitisation by engaging with my sphere of influence — family and friends — and monetary contributions. 

    Generally, what would you change about Nigeria’s electoral system? 

    I’d ensure there’s no clause that excludes the deployment of BVAS, and also increase the scrutiny of INEC. We should deploy live and visual updates on the electoral process that every stakeholder can see in real-time.

    What are the qualities you want to see in Nigeria’s next president? 

    Competence, one with regard for merit and one with a profound connection with the masses.

  • African Animation Is on the Rise, and These 7 Shorts Prove It

    First, Nollywood to the world, then — to a much more explosive degree — Afrobeats. If the sheer amount of films submitted from across Africa, for screening at the just concluded Lagos International Festival of Animation (LIFANIMA) 2022, is anything to go by, animation could be next. 

    Let’s just say we predict that the global takeover of African animation is only a matter of time, and we’ve gathered our proof below.

    SIP

    My first impression of SIP was, “No way this isn’t a Pixar film.” Made in Nigeria by Magic Carpet Studios, it’s the story of a freelance artist stuck at his home workstation, struggling with endless deadlines and a coffee addiction — if this isn’t the most relatable plotline in the 2022 we live in. The only difference is the main character decides to be a better person, stop missing deadlines and, because he’s on a roll, break up with coffee. But coffee did not gree o. It came to life to literally force itself down the poor artist’s throat, and that’s how a whole fight between a man and his coffee started. SIP runs almost completely without dialogue, but at 11 minutes, it’s short, sweet and funny in a dark way.

    Malika – Warrior Queen

    Adapted from a comic book series of the same name, by YouNeek Studios, this animated film is so good we had to recommend it twice. Everything slaps, from the animation and colouring to sound effects and voice acting by faves like Adesua Etomi-Wellington and Deyemi Okanlawon. But the fight scenes, in particular, were well-choreographed. 

    Malika – Warrior Queen showcases Northern Nigerian culture in a powerful, modern light. Queen, and military commander, Malika is a compelling lead character who reminds one of the iconic Amina of Zaria. Her demeanour, strength and courage despite how young she is, will be especially inspiring to young African girls. When the end credits start rolling out, you’ll want to join the band of people furious at EbonyLife for not ordering a full season.

    Super Dad

    Another no-dialogue, highly-relatable animation short from Magic Carpet Studios, the graphics and everyday humour of Super Dad is reminiscent of popular western cartoons like Gumball and Loudhouse. It’s also interesting to watch a man take care of his baby, a role some believe to be entirely for women.

    RECOMMENDED: Just Imagine: We Made a K-pop Girl Group With Your Fave Nigerian Gen-Z Stars

    Halima’s Vote

    Adapted from a children’s book, Halima’s Vote delivers the message of “voting with a conscience” clearly. The visuals are simple but rather pleasant to watch, kinda like those Bible cartoons we watched as children. The conflict between Halima’s husband, the de facto leader (more like political thug) and the village is interesting, considering Halima is lowkey a progressive feminist. Watching her find her voice — while singing, of course — is deeply satisfying. Basement Animation Studios received funding from the MacArthur Foundation to make Halima’s Vote, but if you don’t stay for the good message, the songs in this Disney-esque musical should hold your attention.

    A Kalabanda Ate My Homework

    As the title implies, this is an extremely funny short film. Made in Uganda by Creatures Animation Studio, A Kalabanda Ate My Homework delivers clean and well-paced animation similar to 3D Nickelodeon cartoons like Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. While the story doesn’t exactly give room for context — I mean, what the heck is a “kalabanda”? — it manages to remain engaging till the end.

    League of Orishas

    Lovers of anime, this is for you. This animated series brings the Yoruba orishas to life, and what’s more amazing than being able to tell our ancient mythology in modern ways? League of Orishas is all about 3D orishas fighting different element-bending battles for different reasons. It reminds me of Dragonball but with less-quality graphics. Anthill Studios might have some way to go in terms of matching anime quality, but League of Orishas is an enjoyable watch still, and already has a second episode (looking at you, Malika – Warrior Queen).

    AMI

    From the maker of the eerie bird that raised Saro back to life in Kunle Afolayan’s Anikulapo, AMI is an animated film to watch. While the characters and world around them look like something out of Grand Theft Auto, it’s the animation of the car chases, in this action thriller set in Lagos’ political underbelly, that really impresses. AMI is a good-quality Yoruba film but fully animated. What’s not to love? 

    LOVED THAT? READ THIS: This Nigerian Cartoon Is So Awesome It Teaches Kids About Female Empowerment

  • This 48-Year-Old Market Woman Has Only Voted Once In Her Life

    The Nigerian Voter is a series that seeks to understand the motivations that drive the voting decisions of Nigerians — why they vote, how they pick their candidates, why some have never voted and their wildest stories around elections.

    For our pilot edition of The Nigerian Voter, Citizen discussed with Mama Ibeji*, a Nigerian woman, in her late 40s, who sells fabrics at Tejuosho Market, Lagos State. She told us about her voting experiences, preferred candidate, and the impact elections have had on her livelihood.

    For how long have you worked in the market now? What do you sell?

    I have worked there for over five years now. I sell crepe, chiffon, organza — clothing materials in general.

    Have you voted before? 

    This country ehn, there’s nothing that used to make me vote before. The only time I voted was in the “Sai Baba” (Muhammadu Buhari) period in 2015. I remember them sharing all these small bags of rice then and I thought Buhari would end all the nonsense that happened regarding Boko Haram and the Chibok girls at that time. I didn’t know his tenure would be worse than Jonathan’s own.

    Do you remember what the voting process was like in 2015?

    Hmmm, not so much o. I know that I went to Oke-Odo Primary School to vote because the place is located near my house. I stood under the sun for many hours, but I was able to vote before evening time. 

    Why didn’t you vote again after 2015?

    I didn’t because I was no longer interested. When I heard that Buhari was running for president again in 2019, I became disinterested in the whole affair of voting because I knew that Tinubu would help him win. It was best that I focused on my business.

    Hmm. How do you then feel about Tinubu running for president in 2023?

    He shouldn’t run at all. That one that his hands shake. He has not done anything for Lagos o, that one is not my president.

    How’s the election season affecting your business?

    With the state of the country right now, money is not in circulation. But I know that when elections come, candidates release money for campaigns. The market may change by then.

    Also, a lot of agberos (street touts) are on the streets in Tejuosho. They don’t want us to rest, with their consistent demands of owo da (where is their money?) They’re so eager to collect money that they didn’t work for. 

    What’s the money used for?

    The agberos say the money is for the government, for the local government. But some people also say that Tinubu also owns the money as well.

    How much do you pay?

    It depends. Sometimes we pay ₦1,000 every market day, and our market days fall on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.

    Hmm, that’s ₦3,000 every week?

    Yes o. Some people pay ₦3,000 per market day, it depends on the portion of space that each trader owns. 

    Who do you plan to vote for 2023, and why?

    If I’ll vote, it’s Peter Obi I’ll vote for. This present government has shown us shege — the dollar rises all the time and the market doesn’t have a steady price. Even buying goods for sale seems pointless because it’s highly unlikely that we would buy those goods for the same price tomorrow. And everything happened under APC. I’m tired.

  • Nigeria’s Doctor Shortage Crisis Is Worse Than You Think

    The japa wave out of Nigeria is making doctors become as scarce as uninterrupted power supply. Many doctors have seen the benefits of working overseas and refuse to stay and fight sapa in Nigeria

    Even though we can’t blame anyone for wanting to earn their daily $2k, the japa wave of doctors is really causing a serious problem for Nigerians.

    How bad is Nigeria’s doctor problem?

    Let’s break it down in numbers. 

    An estimated 217 million people live in Nigeria and they’re all likely to need medical attention at some point. According to the President of the Nigerian Medical Association (NMA), Uche Rowland, Nigeria currently has 24,000 doctors available. This means there’s one doctor available to treat 9,083 patients. 

    But according to the World Health Organization, a country should have a ratio of one doctor to 600 people for their medical needs. Going by this recommendation, Nigeria needs at least 363,000 additional doctors in the country.

    Excluding witch doctors

    According to Rowland, there are some states in the southern region where there’s only one doctor available to treat 30,000 patients. The situation is even worse in some northern states where there’s only one doctor available to 45,000 patients.

    He said, “In some rural areas, patients have to travel more than 30 kilometres from their abodes to get medical attention where available thus making access to healthcare a rarity.”

    Nigerian doctors are rushing for the door

    Even though Nigeria needs more doctors practicing in the country, the ones we already have are looking for work everywhere else. A 2017 survey by NOI Polls revealed that about 88% of medical doctors in Nigeria were seeking work opportunities abroad at the time. 

    In January 2022, the Medical and Dental Consultants Association of Nigeria (MDCAN) said more than 100 of its members left Nigeria within 24 months. A 2022 UK immigration report also showed that 13,609 Nigerian healthcare workers got working visas in the past year, making the country second only to India with 42,966 healthcare workers.

    Who will make it stop?

    Nigeria faces an existential crisis with the japa wave of doctors. As the country grows in population, more healthcare professionals are needed. The government needs to act fast with favourable policies that’ll make practicing in the country attractive to doctors. 

    We know our leaders can jump on a plane and run abroad for their medical needs but regular Nigerians deserve access to care too.