Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the wordpress-seo domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/bcm/src/dev/www/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121
Wedding | Zikoko!
  • 7 Types of People You’ll Need on Your Bridal Train

    Your wedding is a very special day in your life and the people you surround yourself with on that day and the days leading to it are very important. When choosing your bridal train, you’ll need planners, jokesters, and everything in between to make sure your day goes smoothly. Here are the types of people you’ll need as you walk down the aisle.

    The bestie

    They probably know you better than you know yourself and would ensure you have everything you need, when needed throughout the day.

    The laid-back one

    People are going to try you on your special day. Someone will try and rush you while you get read, a vendor might act like there’s bomb in their head, and a million other things might try and stress you, which is why you need someone on your bridal train that is laid back and chill, so they can remind you to breathe and pass that stress to the planner or fighter in the group.

    [ad]

    The planner

    They know what’s supposed to happen, when, and how it’s supposed to happen. They’ll most likely spend half their time dealing with annoying vendors or the actual wedding planner and making sure your special day goes on without a hitch.

    READ: Zikoko’s Favourite Nigerian Celebrity Weddings of All Time

    The fighter

    While the planner would have a more diplomatic method of handling any issues that may arise on your big day, the fighter won’t. They’ll most likely stand guard beside you through the day and stare daggers into anyone that tries to upset you through the day.

    The party animal

    You’ll need someone who knows how to have the time of their life so you can remember to have fun on your special day.

    The wannabe photographer

    You’ve hired a photographer and a videographer, but this bridesmaid would still pull out their phone to record every move you make throughout the day.

    The comedian

    This person fancies themselves a comedian, so if things get a little tense, you can always trust them to lighten the mood with a joke or two.

    ALSO READ: What Really Happens at a Nigerian Bachelorette Party

  • QUIZ: Which Artist Will Perform at Your Wedding?

    Take the quiz:

  • Zikoko’s Favourite Nigerian Celebrity Weddings of All Time

    People find love, get engaged, and vow before God, family, and friends to stick with their partners until the end of their lives. It’s a big vow, so it makes sense that most people make a big show of it, and these Nigerian celebrities are no different.

    From Annie Idibia and Tuface’s destination wedding to Veekee James and Femi Atere’s 4-day celebrations, here are our favorite celebrations of love (in no particular order).

    Banky W and Adesua Etomi

    Photo credit: BellaNaija

    Shortly after their debut as an on-screen couple in Kemi Adetiba’s 2016 The Wedding Party, Banky, and Susu popped out with an engagement and introduction.

    The couple finally tied the knot in November 2017 and had everyone following their wedding hashtag, #Baad17, just to get a glimpse of the bride and groom in their gorgeous outfits on their special day.

    Made Kuti and Inedoye Onyenso

    Photo credit: Nairaland

    We were all minding our business on a hot Wednesday morning when Made Kuti, and Inedoye’s gorgeous faces filled our timelines. As though their combined beauty and love weren’t enough, the groom’s mum – Funke Kuti – and her friends decided to show up and show out and almost had half the internet crashing the event.

    Adekunle Gold and Simi

    Photo credit: BellaNaija

    After years of watching us ship the love of his life with Falz because of the small chemistry they shared, Adekunle Gold and Simi tied the knot in January 2022. It was an intimate ceremony, and they only shared a glimpse of their special day with us, but they looked incredibly in love and happy.

    RECOMMENDED: QUIZ: How Many Guests Will Attend Your Wedding?

    Veekee James and Femi Atere

    Photo credit: WithinNigeria

    Veekee James and Femi Atere found love and decided to paint Lagos and its inhabitants red. People keep shouting that it was a 4-day affair, but did they stop to consider that maybe THE couple didn’t want to squeeze all their ceremonies into one day? Perhaps they wanted the whole world to see their ten outfits over those four days and know that their love is not just an anyhow kind of love.

    Annie Idibia and Tuface

    Photo credit: Mandynews

    Before everyone was trending wedding hashtags and attending celebrity weddings via Instagram Live and Snapchat, we were attending Annie Idibia and Tuface’s wedding via television.

    In 2013, the long-term couple said their vows before friends, family, and their online in-laws at the Jumeirah beach resort in Dubai.

    Tee-Billz and Tiwa Savage

    Photo credit: LoveweddingsNG

    This couple may have called it quits, but their wedding would forever live rent-free in our heads. 

    A custom iPhone with the couple’s initials, Toolz DJing, a car gift from Don Jazzy, and doves being released after the vows. Tee-Billz and Tiwa Savage had the most exclusive fairytale destination wedding in 2014. If they could tell us who their planner was, that’d be great.

    Davido and Chioma 

    Photo credit: BellaNaijaWeddings

    We were promised an #Assurance2020 but got a #Chivido2024, and it couldn’t have been better. Davido and Chioma Rowland were traditionally married in a big AF wedding on June 25, 2024. There were so many people willing to celebrate the couple’s love that we’re low-key surprised the venue could take them all.

    READ: Real Lovers Know These Are the Best Love Songs Davido Has Ever Made

    Kemi Adetiba and Oscar Heman-Ackah

    Photo credit: Oscar Heman-Ackah via Instagram

    The king of boys popped out with her boo, Ghananian-Nigerian music executive, creative entrepreneur, and media solutionist Oscar Heman-Ackah, and got traditionally married in 2022. Half of Nollywood was in attendance at the ceremony, and it was a perfect blend of the couple’s multi-cultural backgrounds.

  • How To Plan a Wedding in Tinubu’s Economy, According to Wedding Planners

    We’d tell you to forget about marriage and focus on yourself in this messy economy, but you people have carried love on your head like gala sellers in traffic.

    Did you see the number of couples that got engaged in December?

    Not everyone will marry someone that can remove you from this country.So we spoke to two wedding planners, and they shared a few tips on planning a wedding in Tinubu’s Nigeria.

    “Elope, run away.” – Ope

    Just like our dear president did, we suggest you also hit the ground running. Take your partner’s hand  and run away from all unnecessary spending into your nearest registry. You’ll need to pick up some important documents and two witnesses on the way, but it’s a lot better than paying through your teeth to entertain your village people, including your mother’s friend who once watched her beat shege out of you.

    “Cut your coat according to your clothes. You don’t have to do all the fancy, big things.” – Lauretta

    With the way the costs of things are flying through the roof every second, you might end up with a doll’s vest. But the love of your life is all you need to have a great time at your wedding, right? Take a long, hard look at your account balance and plan with what you have there.

    “Don’t go for the popular, do something that’s uniquely you.” – Ope

    Instead of going for what everyone else is doing, like buying a dress worth millions or renting out the biggest hall, you can have the wedding in your father’s backyard, wear something from your closet. The most important thing, though, is that your wedding feels very much like you.

    “Use the people you know. Do something small and intimate.” – Ope

    Not only does a small, intimate wedding save money, but it also ensures your special day is free of drama. No one wins if, during the reception, your best man plays videos of you catching ass. Or your ex-girlfriend plants seeds of doubt in your bride’s head. You might think we’re lying, but The Wedding Party’s Dozie knows what we’re talking about.

    “Invite the people you’re actually friends with.” – Lauretta

    If that includes the akara seller at your junction and your misunderstood boss, so be it. Just make sure the people you’re sharing your day with are worth it and won’t do anything that might cause you grief on your special day.

    “If you’re doing your wedding at the end of the year, it’s going to be more expensive.” – Ope

    Once Zenith Bank puts up Christmas decorations and people start singing off-key about Jingle Bells, just know the price of everything has tripled, and your wedding will cost a whole lot more. Pick a good time for your wedding. It could be the beginning or middle of the year when there isn’t a holiday fighting with the economy to see who can take you out first.

    “Make trade-offs and spend the most on what matters to you and your partner.” – Ope

    Image source: chopscentral via X

    It’s your special day, so it only makes sense you spend on things that’ll make you and your partner happy, even if that means splurging on decoration or having a small chop platter with only puff puff and mosa.

  • Love Life: I Reported Her to Our Manager, Now We’re Married

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

    The subjects of this Love Life are Blessing* and Tunde* who are both 30. They tell us about meeting through work, two failed proposal attempts and how Tunde pulled what he considers the “greatest scam of all time” by making sure they got married on their shared birthday.

    Did you know you had the same birthday before you met?  

    Blessing: Well, I did. 

    Tunde: Because she was stalking me.

    Blessing: I was doing my job. On December 31st, 2018, my line manager told me to review the CV of a guy who came highly recommended. His birthday was on his CV, and it was the same as mine. So I checked his name on social media to see what he looked like. In his profile picture, he was wearing a waistcoat, looking like a good boy. 

    Tunde: I don’t even own a waistcoat. What are you saying?

    Blessing: I even forgot about it until February 2019 when he started working in the office. I remember the first day I saw him. He was wearing a blue shirt with grey pants, and I said to myself, “Who is this brother?” He looked like such a church boy. I smiled at him, and we had a chat. 

    Tunde: Abi, you fell in love at first sight? 

    Blessing: Lai lai. I did not at all. 

    Tunde: You won’t sweeten this story to make your life great? Anyways, now that you’ve said your own, let me say my own version. 

    Blessing: My version is the truth, and all you need to know. 

    Tunde: When you were talking, I didn’t interrupt you. So let me say my own o. 

    Oya, Tunde, speak your truth

    Tunde: They gave her my CV, and she was blown away so she decided to check me out online. When she saw I was a fine boy, she knew she had to work with me. That’s when she started recommending me to the manager. 

    Blessing: That’s a very big lie. 

    Tunde: But our coworker said you fought for me to join the team.

    Blessing: Your CV was impressive, and I did look for you on social media, but only because of the birthday thing. I didn’t give a shit if they hired you or not. I just needed to get the work done. 

    Tunde: We ended up working in the same team and reported to the same manager. Our manager told me you fought for me. 

    Blessing: You won’t talk about how you saw my big bumbum and became confused?

    Tunde: Who told you that one?
    Blessing: Your friends did. 

    Tunde: I remember seeing her for the first time in the office, dark-skinned with her big bum and tiny waist. I was like wow. When I got back home, I had to tell my friends the women in my new office had yansh. 

    What was working together like? 

    Blessing: We sat together at work, and I like to believe we were friendly towards each other. 

    Tunde: In the office, she’d act as if she cares, but when I travel to the North for work, she’d never text to check in on me. I even had a word with our manager about working in a team of people who don’t care about each other. Blessing never called to ask how my trip went even though she knew I had to travel to all these dangerous places. 

    It’s giving JSS 2. Why did you report her to the manager?

    Blessing: LMAO. He wanted me to talk to him, but instead of meeting me as a man, he went to report me to “Big Uncle” manager. 

    Tunde: It’s not like I reported her. I had a review of culture meeting with the manager in April. Because I typically travelled alone — the company couldn’t afford to send more people — I felt like the team didn’t really have my back. Hers was even more hurtful because we sat together in the office, and she was always tickling me. Then when I travelled, she wouldn’t even bother to find out if I was dead or alive. 

    Blessing: Sorry nau.

    Tunde: Can you imagine. Four years later is when you’re apologising. 

    Blessing: We weren’t that close then. He was a great seatmate, I won’t lie, but I just didn’t care so much. 

    How did you progress to being friends? 

    Blessing: After the manager told me what Tunde said, I started checking up on him. We worked more closely together, and he was fun.

    Tunde: And funny. I’m a funny guy. 

    Blessing: Somewhat funny. He thinks he’s very funny.

    Tunde: Not somewhat. No “I think”.

    Blessing: He’s a gbef, and it’s his gbefness that makes me laugh.

    Tunde: That’s being funny. Do you laugh? Exactly. The thing is that because I’m a funny and fun guy, she couldn’t get enough. She’d call me around 6 a.m. to find out if I was going to the office. 

    Blessing: That was later when I started liking your big head. Nonsense.

    Tunde: Same thing. 

    Blessing: Please, let’s stick to the questions. 

    And you both realised it was more than friendship when? 

    Blessing: After we’d built a solid foundation of friendship in June. We searched for places together while he was getting an apartment. We even used to visit each other on some weekends. It was easy for us to bond beyond the office environment. We also used to come to the office together with one of our colleagues. The three of us would meet at a designated point, so we were in each other’s faces a lot. I started to get these mosquito feeling in my stomach whenever I got a text from him or saw his face.

    Tunde: It’s me that’s mosquito feeling? 

    Blessing: Not you; the feelings. 

    Tunde: What happened to butterflies? Why mosquito? 

    Blessing: It started as mosquitos then moved to butterflies. Now, it’s elephants in my tummy. 

    Tunde: It’s not even cute animals you’re mentioning. 

    The feeling solidified in August 2019 when she started having issues with a lecturer we can’t really talk about. I didn’t want to see her hurt, so it really hit me that I wanted to take care of her. 

    RELATED: Love Life: Our Friendship Means More to Us Than Our Love

    When did you decide to do something about the mosquitoes in your tummy? 

    Blessing: I had a boyfriend at the time. We started dating a couple of days before Tunde joined the company, but along the line, we started having issues. The guy and I broke up in October 2019, then Tunde and I started having relationship-type conversations. 

    Tunde: After she broke up with her boyfriend, she started seeking for me. 

    Blessing: Oh God. 

    Tunde: One Saturday in November, I went to see her, and as I was about to leave, I just started gazing at her. 

    Blessing: I feel like if anyone had carried scissors to cut that tension, the scissors would’ve broken. 

    Tunde: I wanted to kiss her, but I didn’t want to do it first because I’m a bad guy. 

    Blessing: So I did it. 

    Tunde: She told me to come back and kissed me. I knew I would die there. We became kissing coworkers, or co-kissers, if you will. 

    Blessing: He’d come to the office and there’d be tension. We both knew if it weren’t an office, we’d tear each other apart. But we’re great work partners, so we put all our emotions aside to make sure we got work done. 

    Tunde: I want to believe the tension helped us with work. We’d want to finish as quickly as possible so we could focus on other matters. I asked her out twice, but she turned me down because she needed time to think after just coming out of a relationship. But when our office closed for the year on December 19, she came over to my place and we spent Detty December together. On the 29th, I asked her for the third time to go out with me. We were in bed together; she said yes. 

    Blessing: Changed my mind because Detty December made me realise I enjoyed spending so much time with him.

    Didn’t your office have a no-dating policy? 

    Tunde: If anything, our office encouraged it. Everybody dated everybody there. 

    Blessing: It even produced three married couples.

    Tunde: Twice, someone introduced a coworker to their friend or family member, and they got married. 

    Company or dating site? God, abeg 

    Blessing: Dating and working together was great because we got to spend a lot of time together. 

    Tunde: In January 2020, she returned to her place, but honestly, she spent more time at mine than hers. 

    In February, COVID-19 happened, and we spent the lockdown together at my house. I stayed in an estate in GRA at the time and we had 24/7 electricity. Her place in Somolu didn’t, so it made sense for her to work from my house. The first couple of weeks were really good. We didn’t have any problems, and it stayed that way until we found out her dad didn’t like me. Her parents were really attached to her ex-boyfriend. They thought he was a responsible guy who’d eventually marry their daughter. 

    Blessing: Then we broke up for no actual reason. And they thought Tunde was this bad boy who was turning my head. 

    Tunde: Her dad reached out to her in late March to find out how she was doing. She said she was spending the lockdown at home, but he found out his unmarried daughter was living with the same guy he already thought  was turning his daughter’s brain. That’s when all hell broke loose. He’s an influential man, so he started threatening to reach out to some top police officers. That’s how our life went from peace and quiet to chaos and confusion. 

    I was so scared, I had to call my dad and tell him about the girlfriend he didn’t know about. He told me I had to return Blessing to her place so I can get her father’s blessing for the relationship. But it was in the thick of the lockdown, so we had to walk all the way from Ogudu to Bariga before we could see a car to take us to Somolu. 

    Even Fitfam people don’t do like that 

    Blessing: When he dropped me off at my place, I had to let my parents know I was back so they could stop all the police talk. But I didn’t want to let him go, so he stayed with me for about a week. 

    Tunde: I loved he,r and she was really unhappy. I didn’t want to just leave her like that. 

    Blessing: When he left, he stayed alone for like a week before I went back to his place. 

    Does that mean you resolved the problem with Blessing’s dad? 

    Blessing: Not really. There was no light or water in my place, and I needed both to work. My parents live in Edo state, so it’s not like I could go there. They just weren’t seeing that the most sensible decision was to stay in his place and work from there. 

    Since they didn’t agree to see it that way, I just went back to his place and lied to them that I was still at mine. There was no way I’d endure the lockdown period without light, water and my man. We lived together for a couple of months till he had to move from the mainland to the island for his MBA. 

    Tunde: I resigned from the company to do my MBA in January 2021. It was a residency program, so I had to leave her at home and move. It was the first time we had to go long periods without seeing each other. So it was catastrophic initially. She was home alone while I was in school doing this high-intensity programme that sometimes had me studying until 3 a.m. I’ll be too tired to speak to her on the phone, and she couldn’t come visit, so we barely spoke. 

    RELATED: Love Life: We Make it Work Despite the Distance

    How did you get through it? 

    Tunde: This is the part that made me believe our love was meant to be. A couple of weeks after I started the program, she got a job in an office really close to my postgraduate school. Sometimes, when they gave us lunch in school, I’d take some to her. But that wasn’t enough; we had to get creative. 

    Blessing: I started sneaking into his room sometimes.

    Ah? How? 

    Tunde: There were loopholes in the school’s rules, and we exploited that. I won’t go into specifics because I don’t want to give the current students expo. 

    Blessing: I’d sneak from his room to work and then slip back into his room. It was adorable. 

    Towards the end of 2020, he stylishly asked what I thought of getting married. I freaked out about it because I thought it was too soon. He wanted to meet my parents, and luckily for us, my younger sister was getting married to one of his best friends. They did their introduction in the village and he was part of the wedding party, so he used it as an opportunity to meet my dad. 

    Tunde: I always knew her dad would like me. The problem was just that he didn’t know me. So before I went to their place in Edo state to see him face-to-face, I wanted to have a conversation with him over the phone to tell him my mind. I told him I was a responsible man, doing my MBA, and was interested in marrying his daughter. After that conversation, we didn’t speak again until her sister’s introduction in May.

    How did the meeting go?

    Tunde: Do you want to tell them how scared you were? 

    Blessing: I was shaking. My parents can be quite strict, so I didn’t know what to expect. But he came with his friends, and it went well. He became their sweetheart, although it took my mum a bit longer to warm up to him. She was extremely careful because she didn’t want me to go into the wrong hands. It took Tunde, my dad, sisters and even me talking to my mum for her to warm up to him. Now, they’re besties. 

    RELATED: Love Life: I’m Scared to Tell My Parents About Him

    Let’s talk about the marriage proposal

    Tunde: I proposed a few weeks before the official introduction between our two families in August. The proposal was funny because I had to change the venue a couple of times. 

    The first proposal was to happen at the beach in July. I’d planned with my colleagues to use them as a decoy. I’d tell her my office was having a “bring your partner” beach event. That way, she’d have to dress up and gbam! Proposal. Blessing and I stayed in a small studio apartment, and we never hide things from each other. We take all our calls on speaker, and we know each other’s passwords. With my colleagues in on it, they’d know to slip the plan in so it would seem legit. 

    Unfortunately, the Saturday I’d planned to propose, I couldn’t get the logistics right, so I moved it to the next Saturday. However, I didn’t tell my colleagues. When they called during the week, they started asking how the proposal went. She was right there so the proposal couldn’t happen again. 

    Oya, proposal number two 

    Tunde: I was planning to propose to her during our annual office retreat. You were allowed to bring your partner and even kids for the week-long retreat. It was at a really nice hotel, and the aesthetics would’ve been perfect for a proposal. Unfortunately, our Chief of Staff changed the rules and said she couldn’t come because I hadn’t proposed yet. I couldn’t tell her I planned on proposing there because I’d just joined the company and didn’t want it to be weird. 

    The date for our introduction was getting closer, and I wanted to propose before then. But I knew it would be difficult to get her to dress up without looking for a ridiculous excuse, so I had to do the ridiculous. I reached out to a not-so-close friend of mine and got him to invite us to a fake event. Then, I told my neighbours I wanted to propose to her in their apartment. They were in love with the idea. They left their apartment for us so I could get it all set up. I called my friend’s sister to help me out with balloons and everything. 

    While all of this planning was going on, Blessing and I were arguing. Why? Because I kept having to take my calls outside so she couldn’t hear what was going on. While she was accusing me of talking to other women, I was planning her proposal. 

    LMAO

    Tunde: I got a lot of our friends and family involved. On the day of the “dinner” my friend invited us to, I told my neighbours to call me and ask me to come over. They’re a married couple with a two-year-old and were like a big brother and sister to us. So them calling one or both of us over wasn’t new. 

    When I got to the apartment, I called to tell her it was both of us they wanted to see, and she should get ready so we could go from there straight to the “event”. When she got there, I was on my knees with all our friends around and music playing. 

    Blessing: And I laughed so much. When my younger sister got proposed to, she laughed as well, and I was wondering what was wrong with her. It got to my turn, and there I was. Seeing him in his turtleneck, down on one knee with all the balloons, it just looked really funny. I’m not sure I heard anything he said. I just said yes, and he put the ring on my finger. 

    Did anything change once you got engaged? 

    Blessing: Not really. We still remained the cool and adventurous couple.

    Tunde: Maybe our mentality changed. We had to start saving for a house and planning a wedding, so we had all those things at the back of our mind. 

    What was the wedding planning like? 

    Blessing: It was actually cool, not as hectic as I thought it would be. Since my sister got married in August, we had a template to work with. 

    Tunde: We did elevate the template though because our wedding was the bomb. 

    Birthday wedding? 

    Tunde: Look, let me tell you. I’ve pulled the greatest scam in history. Now, instead of celebrating our birthday and anniversary separately, I can lump it together and give one gift. People will read about me. Children will write stories about me. I’m making history.

    Blessing: It’s not like I objected to the idea of getting married on our birthday. Plus, he’s making all this mouth about not buying gifts, but this man is a liar. Since we entered February 2023, he’s been buying me gifts every day. 

    We got married on our birthday because he just thought it was adorable. Now, it’s a story he tells everyone once they mistakenly ask. It doesn’t help that we have the same loc hairstyle. When people see us, they mistake us for siblings then he launches into the “born on the same day and married on the same day” speech. 

    What’s married life like? 

    Blessing: We’re a lot more conscious about building long-term wealth, not just for both of us, but our families are involved now. 

    Tunde: When you get married, you think you’re getting married to one person, but it’s actually a village. You now have to consider family members when doing certain things. We kept trying to figure things out individually, so we argued a lot at first. Like three months in, we realised how important talking to each other about things is. We’d sit up in the middle of the night and cry about stuff. 

    Something else that’s helped our relationship over time is the foundation of friendship. I may be upset with Blessing my babe, but Blessing my friend and I will sit down and talk. 

    On a scale of 1-10, what’ll you rate your love life? 

    Blessing: I’ll rate it a 9. The 1 is because of the possibility of us being more than this. There’s a lot of room for improvement. 

    Tunde: I disagree for the same reasons. Since she said there’s a lot of room for improvement, I’ll rate it a 1. Shebi it’s you that’s looking for room? The 1 means there’s plenty of room for you. 

    Blessing: That room you’re talking about, it’s like you’ll go and collect it outside o, because I don’t understand. 

    Tunde: But for real, I’ll say a 9 as well. We don’t fight, and it’s not because we don’t have growing tension about things, it’s just that we quickly communicate it. It’s been butterflies since we started dating. I feel pretty good about us. 

    RELATED: Love Life: I Found the Love of My Life on Tinder

  • How to Get Your Sugar Mummy to Pay for Your Wedding

    There comes a time in a sugar baby’s life when they realise they need to settle down and get married… to someone their age. Since weddings are expensive, and you don’t have the funds, here’s how to convince your sugar mummy to pay for everything. 

    Make her the chief bridesmaid 

    She’ll have a sense of duty to the event, and her purse will overflow. Plus, if she’s playing such a big role in the wedding, her rich friends would come too, and that means more money for you. 

    You had a dream

    Tell her you had a dream her life changed for the better after she sponsored your wedding. You can say you asked her for it as a favour, and when she refused, God used the bitterness in your heart to punish her. Nothing too extreme. Just say enough for her to agree to finance your entire wedding. 

    RELATED: 7 Important Qualities to Look Out for in a Sugar Mummy

    It’s a school project 

    You know how education keeps evolving? Well, your school gave you an assignment to throw a successful wedding plus reception. Tell her you’ll fail and drop out if she doesn’t finance it. If you’re not in school, you’re taking a new online course. 

    Her marriage inspired you 

    Not all sugar mummies are married, but if yours happens to be, then use it to your advantage. Her marriage is an inspiration and you want to know what marital bliss feels like. Sure, she’s cheating, but that doesn’t mean her marriage isn’t great. 

    If she’s not married, marry her

    The easiest way to get her to pay for your wedding is by making her the bride. Do you think she’ll let her wedding be done anyhow? Of course not. Wedding of the century. 

    RELATED: The Zikoko Guide to Finding a Nigerian Sugar Mummy 

    Or marry her child

    She’ll have no choice but to finance the entire wedding. It’s called strategic positioning. 

    Remind her that her reputation is at stake 

    People already associate you with her, so if you have a rubbish wedding, it’ll reflect poorly on her. There’ll be rumours about how she’s going broke and society will shun her. If your wedding isn’t grand, she might as well vanish from society. 

    Work overtime 

    Approach it from a business perspective. Show her a plan on how you’ll use your body to repay your debt. Work smarter, not harder. 

    RELATED: How to Get a Sugar Mummy Before You’re Old Enough to Be a Sugar Daddy

    Starting tomorrow (January 31st, 2023)
  • 8 Ways To Ensure Your Nigerian Parents Accept Your Small Wedding Idea

    If you tell your parents you want a small wedding and they accept it without any drama, I’m sorry to be the one to break it to you: you’re not a Nigerian. Your parents are clearly from another country and have refused to give you your original passport. 

    Nigerian parents see their children’s weddings as an opportunity to invite their friends, enemies, exes, colleagues, and even strangers to the biggest party ever.

    If you’re fighting with your parents over the size of your wedding, we have the perfect winning formula.

    Elope

    What’re a few motherly tears compared to the embarrassment of having to dance in front of one thousand people? Last last, everyone will forgive you and you’ll do thanksgiving in your family church.

    Surprise them with the wedding

    Tell the seven family members and three friends who you want to be at the wedding that you have a surprise event for them and that they should dress nice. When they enter the hall, they’ll see you and your partner on the altar.

    Tell them you had a dream

    Use their own methods against them. Tell them that in your dream, there were more than 30 people at the wedding, and it turned into an orgy that then turned into a massacre, and everyone died, and the devil stole everyone’s souls. 

    Be a disgrace to the family

    Nobody wants to carry a disgraceful child on their chest. Here are a list of ways you can disgrace your parents:

    • As a man, lock your hair or grow a full beard 
    • As a woman, get pregnant before marriage
    • Fail out of school after people have started calling you “D’Law”

    Do one of the above, and your parents won’t even attend your wedding, talkless of bringing the entire village. 

    Marry someone they don’t approve of

    You want to marry a proper bad bitch, a man who isn’t so wealthy or someone outside your tribe. They’ll attend the wedding for sure, but they won’t invite their friends to witness the abomination.

    Do a destination wedding

    Tell your parents they can invite anyone in the world, but the wedding is in Bali. Let’s see if uncle Gbenga and his 17 children will show up in this economy. 

    Print the wrong date on your IV

    If daddy and mummy have coconut heads and decide to invite the whole world, even after all your begging, no wahala. Just put the wrong date on the invitation card. The ones that’ll make it will make it. The ones that can’t, won’t. But you can be sure the crowd won’t be plenty like that. 

    Don’t get married

    You can’t have a crowded wedding if you don’t have a wedding at all. 


    How Do You Plan a Lagos Wedding on a Budget?

  • 11 Sure Ways to Get Your Man to Cry on Your Wedding Day

    Is your man really in love with you if he doesn’t burst into tears as you walk down the aisle? The answer is no, obviously. So here are 11 things you can do to make your groom cry on your wedding day. 

    Find people to beat him 

    If he can’t cry on his own, he clearly deserves beating. Get one or two guys to “pay him a visit” the night before the wedding. And then make sure they’re invited to the wedding, so whenever he looks round the hall and sees them, he’s reminded of the terror. 

    Leave him at the altar

    Wait until they ask you if you take him as your lawfully wedded husband, then sprint out of the venue. While he’s devastated, thinking of what went wrong, he’ll start tearing up. Make sure you hide somewhere close sha, and the moment you see him crying, you can start walking back down the aisle. Just tell him you had to pee or something.

    Cheat on him the day before 

    You could do it the day before or even earlier. Find his best man and hook up with him. If your husband loves you, he’ll forgive you. Because what’s love without a bit of forgiveness? 

    Put aboniki in his handkerchief

    You’d need to work with his best man for this one. Just add a lirru bit of aboniki to his handkerchief and plan with the event centre to turn off the air conditioner 20 minutes before you come in. He’ll have no other option but to wipe his face, no? 

    Tell him you’re pregnant 

    Whether he’ll cry tears of joy or anguish and sorrow entirely depends on him. Your own is that he must cry. 

    Invite all his side chicks 

    Get a room and invite all his exes, sneakily links, side pieces and work wives. He’ll start crying when he sees them because he’s reminded of all the fun memories he had as a single man. 

    Call him the wrong name 

    For more effect, call him the name of one of your exes — or even his best man. You won’t even need to tell him to start crying.

    Marry someone else

    The aim is for you to make your man cry on “your” wedding day. Nobody says he has to be the one you’re getting married to. 

    Slap him while he reads his vows 

    The violent take it by force. So, trust us, it works. 

    Wear his club jersey

    If there’s anything we know, it’s that men are in a toxic relationship with their football clubs. No matter how often they complain that the club is trying to end their lives, they stay loyal. So ditch your white wedding dress and just go in their club jersey. They’ll either cry because they think it’s a sweet gesture or because it’s giving them PTSD from all their betting slips that cut, FPL formations that got ruined and all the banter the club made them suffer. 

    Beg him

    Before you finish trying all these things, call your partner aside and beg them not to disgrace you. Even if it’s one small tear, they should cry it and put your haters to shame.

    FOLLOW IT UP: How to Make a Man Cry in Bed  

  • These 10 Wedding Gift Ideas Won’t Betray Your Sapa Status

    It’s the end of the year, AKA wedding season, and everyone plus their entire family is getting married. First off, how are you people funding weddings in this economy

    That’s their business, TBH. But if your friends are getting married, it means you have to attend weddings and give them gifts. In other words, money is leaving your account. How do you manage this without showing your poverty or going bankrupt? Your pocket will thank us for these ten gift ideas.

    Your mother’s pots

    Every Nigerian mother has a bottomless store of ancient kitchen utensils. Just take one and give the couple.

    Handkerchief

    Ever been to a wedding where the groom starts crying profusely at the sight of his bride? Your gift will definitely be the most thoughtful one.

    Rent

    Don’t shout yet. We don’t mean pay their rent. You can save them rent by offering to have them live with you instead. Three of you may go hungry, but a gift is a gift.

    Prayer

    Like our Sunday school teachers drilled into our heads, prayer is the master key. If they’re creative with it, they can take your prayer to mean car keys, house keys, etc. You get the drift.

    Relationship advice

    Everyone knows the best relationship advice comes from single people, so go ahead and gift them from your wealth of breakfast experience.

    Spoons

    We all know spoons are the first to get lost in a Nigerian home. You’re looking out for them and making sure they never have to eat rice with their hands.

    Mug set

    If you can’t afford the customised ones, just get ordinary white mugs and use a marker to write “His” and “Hers” on them. Too much sense.

    Image source: Rae Dunn


    RELATED: 10 Ways to Make Sure You Never Receive a Bad Birthday Gift


    Aso-ebi

    Aso-ebi is already your ticket to attending the wedding. But in this economy, buying the aso-ebi is also equal to gifting the couple. We don’t make the rules.

    Your partner

    Hear us out. You’d be helping them keep their marriage spicy right off the bat. Sounds like a great gift to us.

    Money

    As long as you put the money in an unlabelled envelope and just squeeze it into their hands, they won’t know you’re the one who gifted them ₦2k.


    NEXT READ: 8 Married Nigerians Share the Biggest Regrets From Their Wedding

  • If You Notice Any of These Things, Your Partner is Getting Married

    Relationships are full of surprises. But what if your boo has a boo that they’re getting married to and it’s not you? Check for these signs so they don’t catch you offside.

    They become sweeter than usual

    Once this starts to happen, it’s either they’re doing send-forth for you, or they’re trying to ease their guilt. Once they start being sweet in a way that’s out of character, jazz up.

    They’re buying you gifts more often

    It’s just consolation for the breakfast you’re about to receive. Think of them as your severance.

    They start ghosting you for extended periods of time

    Maybe they’re having some alone time with the love of their life. Or today’s their family introduction. Whichever one it is, you’re not in the picture.

    They don’t talk about marriage with you

    Obviously, they’re already planning to escape the relationship with somebody else. Open your eyes and ask for their hand in marriage straight up. They’ll probably serve you breakfast, but at least you won’t be caught off-guard.


    RELATED: 5 Nigerian Women Share Why They Regret Getting Married


    They talk about marriage all the time

    Let me just tell you; you’re their unofficial wedding planner. They’re basically using your ideas and imagination to plan their own wedding but you’re smiling at the thought of your opening dance. 

    They start getting strange calls

    Once they start getting calls from unknown numbers and the conversations sound serious, it’s obviously people calling them for stuff they need for their wedding. They’ll tell you it’s a work call but you should know better.

    Their friends start calling you “our wife” or “our husband”

    You’re definitely not their wife or husband. Pack your things and run, my friend. Because in two weeks, you’ll see these people on the internet posing as groomsmen or bridesmaids at your partner’s wedding and you won’t be there. Don’t lose guard.


    NEXT READ: 6 Nigerian Women Share The Best Thing About Being Married


  • 7 Extremely Unique Places to Propose

    Do you feel like your proposal options are limited? Well, they’re not. To prove that here are seven unique places you can propose, to spice up your prenuptials. 

    Cemetery 

    Who needs living witnesses when you can have dead ones? 

    Filling station

    Since there’s always a crowd, you won’t need to drag your family and friends here. They might even congratulate you with free 25 litres of fuel. 

    Wedding 

    It could be your wedding or another person’s. Either way, it’s a great way to save resources because after you propose, you can just use someone’s leftover wedding

    RELATED: If He Does Any of These 9 Things He’s About to Propose to You

    Another person’s proposal 

    They’ve already set up everything you might need, so why not? 

    Hospital 

    Just in case the person you’re proposing to faints from excitement. No need to be rushing them to the hospital. 

    Traffic 

    As a Nigerian, you already spend the bulk of your life in traffic. So why not? 

    Bedroom 

    If the possibility of them saying no is high, do it in your room to avoid public disgrace.  

    RELATED: 6 Interesting Places to Hide the Engagement Ring Before You Propose

  • Creative Outfit Ideas We’d Like to See at Weddings

    The long, flowy dresses and suits are nice, but this is 2022. It’s getting boring. We’ve seen crochet wedding dresses recently, and we’re excited about it. Here are other things we’d like to see couples wear this year. 

    Armour 

    If you’re getting married in the church, we don’t see why you should wear anything other than armour. Yes, we’re talking the whole steel breast-plated, shield-wielding fit. Full armour of God energy? Let’s have it.

    Mini skirts and ashawo shorts 

    It’s your big day, so your goal should be to leave an impression. What better way to channel your main character energy than with the one outfit that makes you feel the most sexy? 


    Other options: 7 Ways to Spot People Who Have Main Character Energy


    Matching T-shirts 

    Because why should the “his and hers” and “I can’t breathe without you” T-shirts stop at the engagement photoshoots? 

    Clown outfit

    Just because you need to dress the part. You didn’t just fall in love; you went on to plan happily ever after in this economy. Mtcheww, two clowns. 

    Pant trousers  

    Yes, we want to see both bride and groom wearing pants in the house. E for equality. 

    White garments 

    Because wedding gowns are clichéd. Also, white signifies purity, and even though you’re both unrepentant fornicators, you can at least fake it until you start believing it. 

    Nothing 

    Wouldn’t it be nice just to be free? You’re always talking about how stressful wearing clothes are, so please just go as you are. Adam and Eve did it, so why can’t you? 


    ALSO READ: Beach Fashions: 6 Hacks to Make You Look More Fashionable at the Beach

  • What Really Happens at a Nigerian Bachelorette Party

    We’ve seen so many movies and books feature bachelorette parties, but what actually goes on during these parties? These five Nigerian women share with us what really went on at the parties.

    “Sisterhood and friendship”

    At the first bachelorette party I attended, the bride didn’t even know it was happening. We had it a week before the wedding and told her it was just a girls’ day out. After lunch, we whisked her away to the Airbnb we had booked. There, we played a mini drinking game where we asked each other questions and they had to chug alcohol when they got the answers wrong. When we were all sufficiently buzzed, we got dressed and went to the karaoke bar to drink some more and sing all our favourite songs off-key. 

    The next day, we ordered junk food and ate until we almost couldn’t walk. We did each other’s hair, painted our nails, and shared our skincare routines. Then, we all talked about our relationships, shared our problems, and gave each other advice. It was beautiful and we all didn’t want it to end. When we had to leave, we cried. There was a lot of hugging, weeping, and promises to never let marriage change us. Three years and two more weddings later, I think we’ve gotten the hang of it. 

    -Yinka 

    “Debauchery and iniquity”

    My friends have always been wild people, so when one of us announced she was getting married, I suspected the bachelorette party might end in someone getting arrested. The plan featured a lot of alcohol, drugs, and clubbing. The bachelorette party was on Friday night and the wedding was the next afternoon. We wanted to hit as many clubs as possible that night because we didn’t know the next time we’d be able to hang out like that again. Marriage changes people and we knew it was going to change us. 

    The first club we went to was a strip club owned by a friend, so we reserved seats and everything. He said it was his small gift to the bride-to-be. He also gave us some money and told us to go crazy. That crazy? We went it. I can’t count how many drinks we consumed that night, but it must have been a lot because the bride-to-be and chief bridesmaid were kissing each other a lot. We didn’t think much about it because we all know they used to hook up sometimes.  

    We dragged ourselves to two other clubs that night and it was just us drinking, getting high, and flirting with each other. The bride and chief bridesmaid were both naked on the bed, and I was topless on the floor with our other friend naked beside me. The two other girls were in their rooms, struggling to wake up. We went to bed around 4 in the morning, but we were woken up by the hair stylist and makeup artist around 6. a.m. so we could start getting ready for the wedding. 

    We got to that wedding hungover, and I could swear that the tears in the bride’s eyes were from the bright lights that gave her a headache. But it made for an “awwn” spectacle, so we ran with it.

    -Alice  

    RELATED: 6 Nigerians Share Their Worst Drinking Experience 

    “I made friends”

    The first bachelorette party I attended was my cousin’s. There were some girls in the bridal train I was meeting for the first time and I liked how we were able to click instantly. 

    We first tried practising our dance routine for the traditional and white weddings, but once we realised we were doing rubbish, we stopped. That’s when we started playing games like Never Have I Ever. 

    At the hotel we stayed at, there was a pool so we went there to continue the party. There was a lot of food, dancing, and talking. When we left the pool, we couldn’t sleep, so we continued to gist upstairs. We eventually went to bed around 3. a.m. but had to wake up at 5. a.m. to start getting ready for the wedding. The girls and I are still friends and they may even be my asoebi girls at my wedding.

    -Amina 

    “It can be anything you want it to be”

    My friend’s bachelorette party was a bit different because it was held with the groom and groomsmen as well. The bride and groom felt like since the bridesmaids and groomsmen hadn’t had a chance to get to know each other properly, the best place for it to happen would be at a party, with overflowing alcohol.  

    I learnt two very important things that day. The first was that grown men and women still play Truth or Dare, and the second is that my friends don’t have shame. 

    The party happened at one of the groomsmen’s houses because the bride and groom wanted it to have a homely feel, but the homeliness left when we started playing Truth or Dare. When the game started getting a bit too intense, we broke off into different groups to just do whatever we wanted. Some played charades, others played Jenga and I had a threesome with the bride and groom. 

    I think that the whole point of a bachelorette party is to be able to do whatever you want with friends. 

    -Bimbo

    RELATED: 7 Nigerian Women Talk Threesomes

    “Marriage counselling 2.0”

    The bride is very religious, so the bachelorette party mainly constituted of other married women giving her advice on how to handle certain things in her marriage. Even when we played games, the questions we asked her were centered around her relationship with the man she was marrying. 

    There were food and drinks, but no alcohol, and it was very disappointing, to say the least. When I was invited, I was hoping for a slumber party type of vibe where we did our hair and made our nails. Instead, what I got was marriage counselling 2.0.

    -Adaeze

    [donation]

  • QUIZ: Can You Stay on Budget for a ₦1.5 Million Wedding?

    Congrats, you just got engaged! You’ve got the date, the ring, the partner and a ₦1.5 million budget. Do you think you can stick to it?

  • QUIZ: Plan a Wedding and We’ll Tell You What Ethnic Group to Marry From

    Do you want to know the ethnic group your partner should be from? Plan a wedding, and we’ll tell you.

  • 6 Ways Your Nigerian Wedding Can Seriously Go Wrong

    We’ve shared a first timer’s guide to attending a Nigerian wedding in case you’re new to the Owambe lifestyle. If on the other hand, you’re the one wedding please pray these 6 things don’t happen.

    They can seriously ruin your matrimonial plans.

    1. If your caterer decides to be a witch

    Never underestimatetbe power of a Nigerian caterer to ruin your wedding. Never, ever.

    2. If you have been deceiving people’s children

    You have finished deceiving your three side lovers that they’re the absolute loves of your life. Now, you want to get married in peace? You lie!

    3. If you don’t share souvenirs

    Ehn? After buying Aso-ebi 25k, you will leave people empty-handed? You want to see crazy. Share something, even if it’s a roll of tissue

    4. If you don’t share Jellof, small chops or Amala

    Is it even an Owambe if small chops or Jellof rice isn’t on the menu? Mama Rasheeda literally skipped meals just so she can eat four plates of Amala. So come correct.

    5. If you hire a mad DJ

    Imagine expecting a playlist containing classic wedding bops, only for the DJ to play a recording of their last sexcapade… To the hearing of all your 500 guests. Ah.

    6. If you hire an anyhow photographer

    Beautiful moments at your wedding are documented so you can revisit and cherish the memories. Videos of that you-may-kiss-the-bride moment nko? Sweet. But everything can go wrong if the person you hire for the job does anyhow.

    In the spirit of Nigerian weddings and the culture surrounding it, bCODE will be rewarding a Nigerian couple will full video and photography coverage of their wedding ceremony.

    How to Win: ​

    • Create a 1minute clip telling about your love story.​
    • Upload on social media using the hashtag #HavaianasOWAMbe​
    • Tag @shopthebcode​ on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter.

    Submission of entries starts on Saturday August 1st and ends September 11th, 2021.​

    Voting of shortlisted entries commences on 11th of September, 2021. ​Couples with the most engagement will be entered in a raffle and a winner picked.

  • How To Get Married Without Letting People Know

    Are you looking to get married to your sweetheart without losing the love of your life? You can do it. Just follow everything we say in this article. We will tell you what to post, what to wear, and how to act. Don’t worry, nobody will catch you.

    Here’s what to do:

    1. Post one person publicly, but date another one secretly.

    That way, when news of your wedding leaks, people can defend you by saying, “Ahan, no oh. S/he was dating this person and they were posting each other publicly.” Before they realise the real truth, you go don born like two children.

    2. Don’t throw a wedding party.

    Clearly, that goes without saying. If there’s no evidence of a wedding party, then what will they use as proof? And if you throw a wedding party, don’t fret. Do the following things:

    3. Post a photo of yourself in your outfit and caption it: “Groomsman duties.” Or, “Maid of honour things. Showing up for my best gal.”

    Nobody go know say na you dey do the do.

    4. Tweet/post the following things:

    funke-akindele-a-whole-mood | Zikoko!

    a. “Having a small event with friends and family.”

    b. “Not me planning to lose my virginity again tonight.”

    c. “Damn, I look good today.”

    d. “If you are in love with me, this is your last chance.”

    e. “This place has fine men/women. I’m leaving here with one of them.”

    f. “Not me being overdressed for a church event.”

    g. “What a day.”

    h. “The DJ at this wedding is lit oh. Ahan.”

    i. “Trust nobody.”

    j. “Why are these people throwing confetti on me ffs?”

    5. Be a Yoruba man.

    If you are a Yoruba man, getting married without letting people know is your speciality. You don’t need any tips from us. Keep doing the things you do, Femi. May your reign last long, and may your empire never crumble.

    6. Be an Igbo woman.

    Although, as an Igbo woman, people will eventually know you got married. It’s just the person who was planning to get married to you before that will find out later when news of your marriage to someone else pops up. Anyway, keep going to your hometown, babes. We see you.

    Read next: 11 Ways To Win The Heart Of An Igbo Woman

    7. As for the rest of you, follow our advice oh.

    Zikoko is showing you the way. Follow who know road.

    [donation]

  • QUIZ: Create A Groomsman Outfit, And We’ll Guess How Many Hearts You’ve Broken

    Have you broken a lot of hearts or are they always breaking yours? Create a groomsman outfit and we’ll tell you what we think.

  • 3 Nigerian Women Talk About Being Bridesmaids

    Everybody knows that Nigerian weddings are an experience. Aside from smoky jollof rice and the bride’s dress, one thing that keeps the wedding going is the bridesmaids — running from one corner to the other, making sure everyone is happy. In this article, three Nigerian women talk about being bridesmaids. 

    Labake, 30

    My cousin asked me to be her maid of honour because she had two best friends and couldn’t pick one. Her best friends hated the idea, and by extension, developed an aversion for me. 

    It was my duty to find dresses for the bridesmaids. I found some nice ones online from China and everyone liked them when I sent pictures, but when they arrived, it was a different story. Mine needed a little adjustment to fit right but the other bridesmaids complained that theirs were either too short or too big. The best friends were irritated — they sent messages and voice notes expressing displeasure. They said they had to get different dresses. I offered the company’s number and even asked them to try tailors but they said they wanted their money back. Of course, that wasn’t possible, so they continued shouting. Curses were flying around. Our mothers had to get involved to try to calm them down. The bride kicked them off the bridal train at the end of the day. 

    They attended the wedding as guests and were giving me side eyes. My cousin has a kid now and she and her friends are still in touch but the friendship is not what it used to be. 

    Ibukun, 25 

    I was my sister’s chief bridesmaid. I didn’t even know what my job was. I cried through the entire wedding because my best friend was getting married. Her friend had to swing into action when everyone realised I was useless.  She made sure my sister ate and helped her change outfits. I tried to give a speech but tears didn’t let me. I know I’m not doing bridesmaids work again sha. 

    Princess, 24 

    Last year, one of my closest friends told me I couldn’t be part of her bridal train because I am too short. I accepted it in good faith, but a few weeks to the wedding day, after some of her bridesmaids had cancelled,  she asked if I could be her chief bridesmaid. 

    On the day of the wedding, she asked me to step back because one of her taller friends was available. I was so hurt. I gave her my gift and went home. We stopped being friends after that. 

    Subscribe to our newsletter here.

    QUIZ: How Will Your Wedding Be?

    Take this quiz to find out.

  • QUIZ: Where Will You Get Married?

    Will you get married at the beach or not at all? Take this quiz and we’ll tell you.

  • 10 Things To Be Prepared For When Planning A Wedding In Nigeria

    Weddings are a big deal in this part of the world and everyone looks forward to having a perfect day. Here are a few things to know before planning your perfect day.

    1.Your parent’s friends will outnumber yours.

    Nigerian parents know the whole world. No matter what you say to them, Nigerian parents will still invite the uncles and aunties you’ve never met before. Just give them that day for your peace of mind.

    2.Your caterer can move mad and carry your food to another event center.

    I didn’t make this up, I’ve seen it happen.

    3.Your tailor can mess up a day to the wedding.

    No one can be trusted in Nigeria especially tailors e.g. Make sure you threaten your tailor with police so they know you are not joking.

    4.The event center can turn off the gen while you are dancing.

    You’ll be doing gbese and the next thing you’ll know is the gen has gone off. Even if it means bringing your own gen from home, just be one step ahead. 

    5. Your bridal train will definitely get stuck in traffic.

    Especially in Lagos. Just arrange jets to transport you and your bridesmaids to the venue. Or better still, have someone who can control brooms as part of your bridesmaids.

    6. Your partner’s other family can show up unannounced.

    His wife may show up at the venue unannounced. Just go on with the wedding and attend to her when the party’s over.

    7. Your partner sef might not show up.

    If you are getting married to a Yoruba man, we can’t assure you that he’ll show up. Not that he doesn’t want to marry you, it’s possible he forgot.

    8.The caterer will definitely steal your food.

    Also, not making this up, I’ve seen it happen. The caterer can steal your food and lie that food didn’t go round. Make sure you have a small cooler of food for yourself.

    9.You can even oversleep and end up forgetting your wedding.

    People who love sleep more than anything know this isn’t impossible. The stress of this country can make you oversleep sef.

    10.You can decide to not get married again.

    It’s on your wedding day you’ll realize all the things you don’t like about your partner. God forbid this one happens to you sha. 

    When planning weddings, anything can happen, just make sure you stay one step ahead. 

    We have said our own

  • QUIZ: Can We Guess What Colour Your Aso-Ebi Will Be?

    Are you even Nigerian if Aso-Ebi is not on your wedding list? Let’s guess what colour yours might be.

    Start the quiz.

    QUIZ: Who Will You Marry?

    Find out who you’ll marry now o. God no go shame you.

  • QUIZ: How Will Your Wedding Be?

    Nigerians love weddings and they usually have so many expectations. Will yours be how you pictured it to be? Take this quiz to find out.

  • 5 Nigerian Women Talk About Their Wedding Day

    Have you ever wondered how a bride feels about her wedding day? Well, these five Nigerian women shared their wedding day experience with us.

    Abike, 30

    I loved it, and it wasn’t the typical Nigerian wedding. There were less than 80 people in attendance, and we didn’t do any traditional ceremony. My pastor joined us at a restaurant, and we served lunch to our guests after. There wasn’t even an MC. My husband and I were out of the venue by around 4pm. The only thing, I would change about the day would be videography. I would have spent more money on that.

    To get the perfect day wasn’t easy, and a lot of fighting was involved. Our parents didn’t see why we wanted to get married this way. In their words, “why the secrecy?” Almost 6 years later, and my mum is still sad we didn’t do a traditional engagement. There’s also always that awkward extended family member talking about how we didn’t do it the right way.

    Amaka, 34

    My wedding was 5 years ago, but thinking about it always gets me upset. Especially when I remember the insufficient food and drinks and poor organization, no thanks to the in-laws. I wish I had invested in a wedding planner.

    A wedding planner would definitely have brought better organization, vendors, and provided advice on better management of funds. They also might have been able to convince my parents to step up a bit more. My folks had the money but they were trying not to flaunt their wealth because according to Igbo tradition, the white wedding is for the groom’s family. My parents were in charge of the traditional wedding, and that day was amazing. They went all out.

    Hi there! While you are here do you want to take a minute to sign up for HER’S weekly newsletter? There’ll be inside gist from this series and other fun stuff. It’ll only take 15 seconds. Yes I timed it.

    Binta, 26

    I think the traditional marriage was unnecessary. A white wedding outdoors with an officiating priest would have been fine. It also should not have taken the whole day. There was too much pressure around it, and I did not like it. Everyone wants to be invited to your wedding and when they’re not, they take offense. I would have preferred to get married with only my family and friends in a small undisclosed location.

    Jacinta, 26

    My elder sister got married two years before I did. She did her traditional, church wedding, and reception on the same day. It was a total disaster, so I swore I wouldn’t do the same. I had my family’s backing, but it was the first wedding in my husband’s family and my parents wanted to be accommodating. They agreed to have everything on the same day when my in-laws asked.

    The night before my wedding, I was at a tailor’s shop fixing my bridesmaids’ dresses. I made my hair, nails and any other bridal thing you can think of late into Friday, and this affected my bridal shower which started past 11. I barely slept for an hour at night. My traditional wedding was for 8 and at 6 my make up artist was nowhere to be found. The traditional ceremony was about an hour gone when I arrived. My church is very strict with time, and my service was for 10am. I had to change my traditional dresses in a toilet and change into my wedding dress all by myself in a cramped office under the judging eyes of my mother in law and different other people.

    The MC we paid thousands of naira did not show up, and so he sent someone else who was not very good. My father in laws best friend who was also the chairman took over the job of MC because he didn’t like the pace the MC was going. My in-laws then insisted that the reception ends at about 4 p.m. when our friends were just arriving. Also, the DJ did not show up because my father-in-law called him and he thought he was not needed anymore. My wedding was annoying and whenever I randomly remember it, I get upset. Everyone says the bride owns the wedding day, but that was not my reality. Mine belonged to my in-laws.

    Halima, 25

    My wedding day was so stressless for me. I had so much support from immediate, extended and even my husband’s family. I had nothing to worry about. All hands were on deck to make sure things went smoothly. All I had to do was smile and be happy. What stood out for me was how unbothered myself and my husband were. Our families really outdid themselves.

    For more stories about women doing women things, please click here

    [donation]


  • I Got Paid to Make Grooms Cry on Their Wedding Day

    As told to David Odunlami

    After I wrote the story about the guy who attended a church that was essentially a cult, my appetite for telling stories of everyday people and their most random experiences increased even more, and I decided to go out in search of these stories. I didn’t find anything. Well, not until my friend reached out to me and said she had a friend who, between 2017 and 2019, made a shit ton of money writing. 

    A lot of people make a shit ton of money writing, I thought. What made his experience special? 

    The answer: He was writing wedding vows for people.

    That caught my attention, so I contacted him, and we talked about how he went from being a regular UNILAG boy to making people cry at weddings.


    “I used to write on my WordPress blog a lot in 2017. It was mostly poetry. I would think of some cheesy lines, write them and publish them. The feedback I got was always fantastic. People would always talk about how great a writer I was and how my words moved them. Sometimes I’d get on Twitter, find one of my followers who was also a writer and do a joint project with them. Those were fun times, but I was broke. I was constantly looking for ways to turn my writing into money-making opportunities, and I wasn’t finding any. I was getting frustrated.

    Then one day, I got an email. At first, it sounded like one of my fans just being “extra” and sending their love, but I soon realised that this was different. The tone was different. This person was telling me she loved my body of work, but she was also advising me to try something I’d never heard about before: wedding vow writing. She sounded like she knew what she was saying and, at the end of the email, she asked for my phone number. I sent it to her. 

    About a week later, I got a call. The woman on the other end sounded like she could take away all my problems at the snap of a finger. I’d never heard such a beautiful Hausa accent before. You can hear money in people’s voices, you know. She was inquiring about my wedding vow writing services. Her sister had given her my number, and she wanted to meet to discuss plans on how I’d get it done for her. She was getting married soon. We made plans to meet up and set a date. 

    The meeting venue was the Lagos Oriental Hotel. I’d never been somewhere like that before, so I was anxious. My anxiety worsened when a front desk employee walked up to me, asked me for my name and took me to a reserved table. When I looked at the menu, I laughed. This place wasn’t for me. A few minutes later, the front desk employee came back and told me that whatever I wanted had already been paid for and that I should make my order. I didn’t want to overdo anything, so I ordered a glass of wine. I was early, so I had to wait a while.

    About 20 minutes later, my client arrived. She looked exactly the way she sounded. Let’s call her Maryam. Maryam was gorgeous, I can’t lie. I didn’t even mind that she pronounced my name wrong.  She spoke and moved with the grace of angels, but I digress. I had never done this before, but I’d planned for how the conversation was going to play out. It was simple: I’d ask them for information about their partner, record them speaking, and write something out of it. And that’s what I did. 

    She spoke for two hours. You could tell that she wanted to do something amazing. She told me why: her husband-to-be was a hopeless romantic, and she wasn’t. He loved public proclamations of love, and she didn’t know how to do any of those things. But she wanted to pull something off at the wedding that would blow his mind. I understood. 

    When we finished, she asked how much I charged and it was at that point I realised that that was the only thing I hadn’t thought about. So I panicked and said N50k. She laughed. I wanted to enter the ground. 

    “Do you want to pay now, or later?” I asked. 

    She wanted to pay now, so I gave her my account number. N100k. That’s how much she sent. And it wasn’t a mistake, Her reason: “You can’t put a price on creativity.”

    So I went back to UNILAG and took my friends out that night. I was rich. I spent the next week putting all my best efforts into delivering the best wedding vows I could. She needed me to deliver it in person, so we met at the same hotel again. By the first read, she was in love with it. I’d done a good job, but now I needed to finish the job. She needed me to teach her how to say it to convey the message the best way, so she got a room for me and we spent the whole weekend together in the hotel doing drama lessons. Best weekend of my life. 

    When that was done, she gave me an invitation to her wedding in Abuja and paid for my flight ticket. A black Prado picked me up at the airport.

    At the end of her speech, her husband was crying. Everyone was crying. And I sat in the back thinking, “I did this, and I love it.” It wasn’t about the money. It was about seeing people happy. 

    In the next two years, starting from Maryam’s circle of friends, I got referred over and over again. After some time, people started having me sign NDAs. I was charging between N150,000 and N200,000, and getting flown out for weddings.

    The first man that ever contacted me was extremely rude. I’d suspected that he was a jerk from the way he spoke to me on the phone, but I met with him anyway. When I told him to tell me about his partner, he flew into a rage, talking about how I was a young man who should have been doing better with his time than scamming people into paying me so much for just writing wedding vows. I was so confused. Till today, I wonder what he said at his wedding. 

    Maryam and I still stay in touch. Sometimes she randomly sends me money because she remembers her wedding and wants to appreciate me again. Sometimes she gives me writing jobs. I’m super glad I met her. 

    Referrals started dwindling as 2019 came to an end. By 2020, they were non-existent. I think the pandemic had something to do with. In any case though, I’m honoured to have brought a beautiful spark to so many marriages.”


  • 6 Nigerians Share Their Wildest Wedding Experience

    “I said yes to my best friend”, “We married in a pandemic”, “To forever”. Our social media timelines have been filled with news of people racing 2020 to get married, so we have asked wedding goers what the wildest things they have seen at weddings were. And this is what they said.

    1. Kawthar, 25

    There was this wedding I attended where the bride’s parents were divorced. At the reception, when it was time for the parents to dance together, the mother refused. Her friends tried to edge her on but she did not care o. The bride went to meet her, begging her to dance for a few minutes. It was so embarrassing.  When she eventually agreed to dance, she made sure she went with enough crowd to make the man feel unimportant. Her friends danced with her, sprayed her money, and everyone ignored the man. He eventually left the wedding. 

    1. Haawah, 22

    At this wedding I attended, the groom came with just friends and no relative. The bride’s father insisted on seeing the groom’s relative otherwise the wedding would not hold. The groom did not even beg, he just left with his friends. We sha collected free food and left too.

    1. Loveth, 24

    The groom was making passes at me. What made it troubling was that he was not even hiding it. He was beside his bride and making passes. I wonder what type of marriage they will have.

    1. Rasheedah, 23

    I attended a wedding with my aunt, and she was asking the waiter for food over and over. Eventually, the waiter shouted at her. I was so embarrassed, I had to leave.

    1. Ahmed, 24

    Dancing photographs. Apparently, the couple were abroad, but the ceremony was necessary for home-based fans. The photographs were treated with respect as if they were the couple themselves. It was funny.

    1. Iyanu, 20

    I attended a wedding with my dad, and he went to change the DJ because he wasn’t playing gospel music. Mind you, he was not a relative to either of the couple. I’ll forever be embarrassed. And yes, a new DJ with a gospel soundboard was brought in.

    Read also: 7 Ways To Collect Money From Your Stingy Uncle

  • 5 Nigerian Couples Talked To Us About Getting Married During The Pandemic

    COVID-19 threw a well-aimed spanner in everyone’s plans this year. Nobody escaped unscathed. Some of Miss Rona’s victims were people who wanted to tie the nuptial knot and spend the rest of their lives together. Instead, they found themselves donning Sanwoolu face masks.

    However, some brave couples decided to go ahead with their weddings. I wanted to know what it took to get married during the pandemic, so I reached out to a few people who said their vows despite the coronavirus.

    Mojola, 26

    We initially planned to get married on April 18 and it was supposed to be massive. We had paid everyone; the vendors, the venue, everything. When we tried to get refunds, all the vendors refused, saying we should let them know when we’re ready to do the wedding.

    Our parents were meant to sponsor most of the wedding. Nevertheless, my husband and I had spent more than 3 million already before the government announced the lockdown.

    We later decided to get married in a private registry ceremony. We still plan on having the ceremony later in the year, when everything has cleared up. Our families and friends are still on our necks to have a proper wedding ceremony, so that’s what we’re going to do. Besides, all our money cannot just go down the drain like that. So we’ll wait.

    Zipporah, 25 

    “My husband didn’t even get time off work. We got married during his break. Even during the wedding, he was replying to work emails.”

    We originally planned to get married in April and we had planned a huge ceremony. We already paid for everything; the hall, the caterer, the band. Everybody was ready for the wedding, flights had been booked from all over Nigeria, clothes had been sewn, everything was set.

    Then, the Federal Government announced the lockdown.

    We tried to get refunds from the vendors but you know you can’t get all your money back from Nigerian vendors. The venue and decoration guys still haven’t refunded any of the money till date.

    After waiting for a while, we decided to go ahead with the wedding in a much smaller way.We finally married on the 4th of June in a small ceremony. Because the state government hadn’t allowed places of worship to open fully yet, the pastor placed a 20-person limit on the ceremony. We didn’t even use microphones, just to avoid attention; police had been arresting whole weddings at the time.

    My husband didn’t even get time off work. We got married during his break. Even during the wedding, he was replying to work emails.

    Right after, we had a small reception for guests. The number of guests suddenly ballooned because tons of people in the area got wind of the wedding. Many of them were without work due to the pandemic so they came for the food. 

    This really increased the cost of the wedding. Added to the fact that the pandemic drove up the price of everything, it ended up being more expensive than a regular wedding.

    Muyiwa, 32

    I proposed sometime in November 2019 and planned our wedding for April 4. Two days to our wedding, the Lagos State Government imposed the lockdown.

    Of course, everything had been paid for, people had come into town and everyone was set. We waited to see how long the lockdown would last for. When there was no end in sight, we opted for a very lowkey wedding on May 27, which we had at my wife’s father’s house.

    There were only 20 people in attendance. Everyone was wearing a facemask, even in the wedding photos. Interestingly, we never planned to hold a reception for our original wedding. We were just going to go to church. So we didn’t pay any money to vendors or anything, lucky for us. 

    My wife is from Delta and you know how expensive Delta weddings are. We spent about 2.5m for the traditional wedding, and most of that was on feeding. The traditional wedding list from the bride’s family also took a bulk of the money. For the revised wedding, we spent less than 300k. We didn’t even have to spend on food. The smaller wedding was ideal for me because I personally don’t like being around crowds. God just worked it out for us and it was perfect. 

    Imade, 27

    This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Imade-1024x1024.jpg

    We set a date in April to allow ample time for his family, who lived in the US, to come down and prepare. Then COVID happened. We had no idea what to do. We didn’t know if or when we were going to do the wedding.

    Eventually, we decided to just get married anyway in July, when the lockdown was finally eased. His parents still couldn’t make it down because of the international travel ban. They were represented by his sister and uncle.

    We had our traditional wedding on the 1st of August. Every single person was wearing a mask. Even when we were dancing, people were coming to spray us one by one, not like you usually find at weddings, just so they could maintain social distancing.

    We couldn’t get much of the money back. Most of the vendors all insisted on taking a service charge out of the refund, mostly about 30%. And even at that, they are all saying they don’t have the money.

    There was no reception at our white wedding on the 8th of August. We just received church blessing and a small reception for friends who travelled and that was it. We had about 150 people in attendance in all.

    For our original wedding, we had spent about 10 million. For our scaled wedding, we ended up spending about 2.7 million, in all.

    Dami, 24

    “I’m the firstborn and he’s also his parent’s firstborn, so that wedding has to happen. Besides, we’ve already spent about 25 million. And I just want to dance on my wedding day, abeg.”

    We set our wedding for April 12 in Lagos and it was going to be huge. Unfortunately, our flight to Nigeria was canceled in March.

    We were supposed to have over 1300 guests in attendance. People had booked their flights to Nigeria from London. We haven’t even attempted to get refunds because we decided to wait till December or next year to have the wedding ceremony. 

    We already had a court wedding here in London. We had a few people as witnesses and that was it. 

    I’m the firstborn and he’s also his parent’s firstborn, so that wedding has to happen. Besides, we’ve already spent about N25 million. And I just want to dance on my wedding day, abeg. 

    You might be interested in “I Was Fired From Work While Sick”: Stories From Nigeria About Surviving Coronavirus

  • 9 Brilliant Money-Saving Wedding Tricks Nigerians Need To Try

    Shall we?

    1) Hold your wedding on a Monday morning.

    Let them choose between paid employment and begging for souvenirs.

    2) Make it a themed wedding.

    Tell them the theme is variety and you’d love for everyone to bring their native dish so that we can unite as one Nigeria. That way you don’t have to cook for anyone.

    3) Don’t invite one side of the family.

    Do a coin toss to see whose side of the family won’t be attending, that way you cut cost.

    4) Get married inside this pandemic.

    No crowd, no spending.

    5) Refuse gifts and accept only cash.

    Make sure this is before the wedding so part of this money can foot the cost of the wedding.

    6) Find another person getting married on the same day and share a hall.

    No need to thank us.

    7) Do court wedding and post pictures later on social media.

    Tell them it was impromptu if they ask why they were not invited.

    8) Pay someone to object when they ask people to speak or forever hold their peace.

    Make sure your bride slaps you, runs away, and you run after her. Bye bye suckers. That way you don’t spend on any party.

    9) Don’t get married.

    The ultimate hack.

  • QUIZ: Are You Ready To Get Married?

    Are you all set for marriage, or are you still figuring it out? Well, if you’re curious to know the answer, then this is the quiz for you. All you have to do is create your own ideal Nollywood wedding film, and we’ll tell you if you’re ready to say “I do”.

    Go ahead:

  • The Zikoko Guide To Deciding Whether Or Not To Buy Aso-Ebi

    The concept behind Aso-Ebi is great. Get all of your friends and family to show up and show out decked in the same ‘fit. But here’s a fun fact about buying Aso-Ebi, it’s cost. And you know what’s even worse? Most of the time you can’t say no to it.

    Still, you don’t have to buy every Amaka, Dami and Hauwa’s Aso-Ebi. Deciding whose to buy and who to say ‘thank you next’ to can be tricky, but I’m here to help.

    Have you spoken to the person in the last year?

    You might have been BFFs in primary school or secondary school, but if you haven’t spoken to the person in at least a year, you have no business buying their Aso-Ebi. You might have known what their favourite food, colour and musician were when you guys were 13, but you don’t even know their husband’s first name now and you want to spend your hard earned coins to buy their Aso-Ebi.

    How close are you?

    Do you know when’s a great time to assess just how important a friend is to you? When they ask you to buy their Aso-Ebi. Yes, you guys have gone for a couple of lunches together and are in one or two Whatsapp groups. But do you even know her middle name or where she works?

    How many friends do you have?

    Having a lot of friends is great. Especially during events like your birthday or your wedding. It’s not as great when ten of them decide to marry in two months and they all have Aso-Ebi for you to buy. It’s at that point you need to prioritize your friendships. Who forgot to call you on your last birthday? Who did you get into a fight with recently? It’s not like you are petty or you like to hold on to grudges, you just have to do what you need to do.

    Is it family?

    It’s easy to come up with excuses to not buy your friend’s Aso-Ebi, but it’s a whole lot harder with family. If it’s family you might just have no option but to buy it.

    If it’s family, how close are you?

    There’s family and there’s ‘family sha’. If the Aso-Ebi is for a first cousin you grew up seeing almost every holiday then, of course, you should buy it. If it’s for a fourth cousin removed, who you met once when you were ten years old and don’t even know what she currently looks like, save your money for the next Aso-Ebi gbese.

    Do you have the colour at home?

    If you are a veteran in this Aso-Ebi buying business, odds are you already have something like the fuchsia green and purple Aso-Ebi someone is trying to get you to buy. So if you have something that’s remotely close to the colour in your closet, you know what needs to be done. Save your coins.

    Do you have someone to share with?

    Let’s be honest if you are not the bride or the bride’s mother, nothing you are making out of the Aso-Ebi should need 6 yards. Find a mutual friend to split the cost with. Worst case scenario, if the material isn’t enough for what you want to sew, your tailor will help you add crepe to it.

    Do you have shame?

    Shamelessness is a powerful tool we should all have in our arsenal of emotions. Once you can’t be shamed the only times you’ll ever need to buy Aso-Ebi is when you really want to. When you are shameless no social media post subbing you or side eye for wearing something different to the wedding can move you.

    Are you going to have to borrow money to buy it?

    You’d think this would go without saying, but if you need to borrow money to buy anybody’s Aso-Ebi, including your best friend since you were a toddler. Don’t. Buy. It. Don’t offer to pay in instalments, don’t offer to pick it up on credit, just don’t buy it.

    Most importantly, how much is it?

    When it comes down to it, the most important determinant of whether or not you are going to buy that Aso-Ebi is how much it costs. Does it cost more than your monthly food and transport budget combined? Then nope. Does it cost more than the last really nice thing you bought for yourself? Then tell the bride no thank you.

    See I know Nigerians don’t know how to take no for an answer, especially when there’s no good reason behind it. So here are 15 excuses you can use to avoid buying Aso-Ebi, when you really don’t want to.

    ,
  • Nollywood has always depicted Nigerian society in different crazy ways, but nothing compares to how they depict exactly how Nigerian wives should behave. It’s amazing and highkey hilarious, honestly. Let me give you a few examples.

    These people will just be making marriage to be fearing somebody. Where’s the nearest convent, abeg?

    1. Marry as a virgin

    But on your wedding night, bust several moves. Shey the knowledge comes with the ring, at least for women? Men have to get their knowledge the more… manual way, obviously.

    2. Throw it down in the kitchen

    Looking like this, no less. If you’re not Martha Stewart mixed with The Kitchen Butterfly, are you even worth marrying? You will just push your husband into the hands of the next woman that can cook! Shey, it’s food cooked by someone else he came to use his life to eat.

    3. Get pregnant in the first few months.

    In fact, if you don’t get pregnant on your wedding night there must be something wrong. To Nollywood, any good wife will birth a son first, so act accordingly. It’s simply common sense and a little biology. Also, don’t forget to keep having babies till your husband can no longer afford them, but never ever add weight, look tired or complain.

    4. Never accuse your husband of cheating even if you catch him red handed.

    And if it’s paining you too much that your husband fell into the orifices of another woman, you need to apologise for not being enough and performing your duties to satisfaction. If he should continue, get your Bible or Quran and pray because it must be jazz.

    5. Be obedient.

    If your husband says ‘jump’, you better pack your breasts and start jumping.

    6. Always look good.

    Even if you’re just leaving the delivery room. As soon as that baby drops, the weight should drop too. In fact, leave that place with your baby, makeup and heels. After all, you don’t want to push him into the hands of another woman.

    7. Be more forgiving than Jesus.

    If your husband slaps you, just grab his collar, call him by his name and say “you slapped me?!” Then go ahead and insist that he kill you without delay. And when he should get on his knees, shed two tears and insist that the devil made him do it, forgive him. You’re a good wife.

    8. Clean the house like that’s what you were born to do.

    A Nigerian husband can only survive in the cleanest of homes and environments, so of course, it is your duty as a good wife to make that happen. The house must always be sparkling!

    9. Always always look sexy.

    But only in the house! So you can titillate his senses as you bend down to perform every little task. You have to stay on top of that sexy game!

    10. Don’t bother him unnecessarily. Even when you think it’s important, it’s not important to him.

    Even if you also have a job, you must always remember that your husband has had a long day, so you must never ask him to help around the house, help with the children, or even inconvenience him by falling sick. Don’t make him look outside the home for complete laziness.

    11. Respect his family. He doesn’t have to respect yours o but you must respect his family.

    Even if his younger siblings are younger than the last born of your family, you must always call them ‘sister’ or ‘brother’. Show that you have home training if you don’t want to go back to your father’s house that they weren’t chasing you from in the first place.

    12. You had better get out of bed first in the morning.

    You must never let your husband wake up after you. What kind of wife are you?! You should have been doing “one or two things” before he opens his eyes. This includes but is not limited to cooking, cleaning, and preparing the kids for school. You get up before him on weekends even, to handwash his underwear.

    13. Ensure food is always fresh and hot.

    Whether you have a job or not, all food your husband eats must be fresh and hot. Don’t ask me how you’re supposed to do that – I’m not married to your husband with you.

    14. Please what else did we leave out?

    Drop a comment below!
  • “Hello funke, I’m getting married and I’d like you to be on my bridal train” What? Me? Wow! I’m honoured. I can’t stop crying, wow I’m so happy.

    That’s the first type of bridesmaid you’d find at every wedding. The extremely emotional one.

    While Funke is crying, her friend is thinking of how she will meet Prince Charming at this wedding.

    “And I’m sure her husband has fine friends o. Jehovah this is my time. This is it”

    There’s also the bride’s best friend who is also her P.A throughout this wedding. This is the person who actually gets to decide who is on the bridal train.

    She’s the assistant bride, and if she doesn’t like you. Sorry, your bridesmaid benefit is canceled.

    You know those people you can never go shopping with because they never find anything they like? Yes, you will find them on the bridal train.

    If you like pick 15 different clothes,  they would not like anyone. “This dress is too big o, no no that’s too small, but the colours are too much, lets have that one, too its too dull”

    While the other bridesmaid is being dramatic with clothes. There’s one who just observes, because she has been on her bridesmaid duty for years.

    And she knows the dress everyone picks is what you will still wear. Whether you like it or not.

    There’s the bridesmaid who has suddenly taken the wedding planners job. She is everywhere and in everything.

    Except her actual bridesmaid duty.

    This persons only mission for the wedding is to catch the bouquet. So if they throw the bouquet and this next person doesn’t catch it.

    Let’s just say things won’t end well.

    There’s the one that’s friends with every and any one because she’s not bothered about husband or wife or dress or anything.

    She just want’s to pop bottles and party.

    The last person on this list is at this position because she is always late. For everything.

    “Wait where’s Toke? She’s not here yet”

    If you have ever been a bridesmaid. And you fall under any of these categories.

    You’re a real G.
  • The news of Banky W and Adesua Etomi’s engagement quite literally broke the Internet.

    It got all of us in our feels.

    Then he wrote a song for her and everyone thought it was absolutely beautiful.

    Now the video for that song is out and it is a guaranteed tear-jerker.

    See ehn, you wee cry…or at least feel like crying.

    Seriously, if you don’t have a boo before watching it, you’ll start to look for somebody to love.

    If you do have a boo, you’ll start to wonder why he isn’t romantic like this.

    If you have a boo but he’s also someone else’s boo, you’re on your own.

    If you’re a guy, you’ll start to cry because you know Bros Banky just set the bar veeery high.

    Really, you might want to grab a box of tissues or your mother’s wrapper before watching this one:

    We can’t wait to see more of Bubba and Susu, here are five reasons why:

    https://zikoko.com/list/5-reasons-why-we-cant-wait-for-the-wedding-party-2/
  • 1. So you threw the baddest owambe in Lagos for your wedding.

    As per, you had to leave the single life in grand style.

    2. But you didn’t know there were many people entering the marriage with you.

    Awon aunties and uncles.

    3. So you have to wear your trad to greet all of them after the wedding.

    Kneeling and greeting up and down!

    4. Instead of them to give you money to help the marriage, it’s only advice they have o!

    Let somebody see front abeg!

    5. When your mother-in-law comes to inspect your cooking pot only two days into the marriage.

    See wahala!

    6. When your aunties start praying for twins and triplets in your home.

    Who asked you, o?

    7. When it’s 3:30am and your wife isn’t up doing one or two things.

    Come and be going to your daddy’s house abeg!

    8. Your mother, when your wicked aunty from the village comes visiting.

    Blood of Jesus!

    9. You and bae, when single people tweet, “I think marriage is…”

    See these ones!

    10. You, when people start asking when you’ll get pregnant.

    Face your front!

    11. When people don’t add Mrs to your name:

    Put some ‘respek’ on my name!

    12. When you forgot to break up with your girlfriend before your wedding:

    Gbese!

    13. You, when your side chic sends you congratulations text with your wedding pictures:

    “Actually, it’s not really my wedding….”
  • We know plenty of you like owambe and weddings especially.

    And Nigerian weddings are never boring!

    This Nigerian guy and his wife took the game to another level when they danced to Yemi Alade’s ‘Johnny’.

    https://twitter.com/KdubSoSolid/status/807701102040780800

    We too want to get married so we can do ‘Couple’s Choreography’ like this!

  • Ladies, This Is The Complete Guide To Hooking Up With Man (Uber Edition)

    1. Ladies, let’s be honest; a lot of us are single and searching.

    2. Even though some of you like to pretend you’re in a relationship; but are you really your bae’s bae?

    3. But it appears Nigerian girls are taking this search-for-bae game to another level!

    4. Babes are now hooking up and getting married to rich and fine Uber drivers.

    5. They say some Uber drivers are actually very rich, and just do the job because they’re bored.

    6. First of all, we have to stop ordering normal Ubers; Uber Black is the way forward, so gather your savings.

    7. And we can’t even order the Uber to places like clubs- it has to be church, mosque, weddings, schools and other responsible-looking places like that.

    8. In fact, when the Uber arrives, you have to chook your pride in your pocket and sit in front so you can form conversation face to face.

    9. Remember to check the driver’s hand for a ring; in short, if he has a ring, just cancel the stupid trip!

    10. Let your home training shine brightly during the trip, so they know you’re wife material, 100 yards.

    11. And when they try to prove stubborn by not asking for your number after the trip, make sure you run to give them.

    12. By the time you order the 10th Uber, you would have met Prince Charming for sure!

    13. And you can tell your village people to die, because their plans have failed!

    Just visit Naija Single Girl for more advice. They are experts in this field.
  • 11 Times Nigerian Groomsmen Gave Us Too Much Life

    1. Just look at this formation, please.

    2. The blur effect here is perfect.

    3. Straight outta Ghana!

    4. Paul Okoye’s groomsmen.

    5. Dripping sauce!

    6. So very suave.

    7. Ghanaians know this business well!

    8. We’re so here for these cuties.

    9. Make way for the Yoruba demons, please.

    10. Absolutely love this color.

    11. See stepping though.

  • 1. If he sends you pizza and shawarma at work

    Even roasted corn and eba, all join!

    2. If he doesn’t flinch when you fart

    We heard some of you have broken up because of this!

    3. If he really listens and responds to all your senseless rantings

    He will even join you to be senseless!

    4. If he knows how to cook jollof

    Husband material, one million yards!

    5. If he takes you to mama on a regular

    P.S If she prays that you’ll find your husband, just carry your slippers nd run!

    6. And does he like your face with or without makeup?

    He loves the messy you sef!

    7. And does he genuinely care and support your career goals?

    He’s just here for your happiness.

    8. If he is truly the one guy who doesn’t lie

    We’re all so done with guys who lie.

    9. He also doesn’t see any qualms in buying you sanitary towels and other girl stuff

    No biggie!

    10. And if he’s not stingy at all!

    He wants to spend his last kobo on you.

    11. Plus he also tries to treat others nicely

    The best!
  • 8 Types Of Dancers You’ll See At Every Owambe

    1. The chair dancer

    They will never stand up, all their dancing will start and finish in the chair.

    2. The ‘point fingers’ dancer

    Their fingers do the talking dancing.

    3. The Moonwalker

    This one thinks he’s Micheal Jackson obviously.

    4. The one that is just here to shake the booty

    They will even use their bum bum to hit the wedding cake sef.

    5. The one that only dances when their favourite song comes on

    You won’t see them dance again after that.

    6. The Romeo and Juliet

    One cannot dance without the other.

    7. The old people trying to feel young

    8. The Komole dancer

  • 1. When you’ve not been married for up to one week and people are already looking at your stomach.

    2. When people start giving you rubbish advice about keeping a home.

    3. When family members start thinking your house is their house too.

    4. When people keep reminding you that your spouse will soon change.

    5. When you are smiling and happy and people tell you to “enjoy it while it lasts”.

    6. When people in your office start asking nosy questions, you’re like:

    7. When you can now say “don’t you know I’m a married woman”?

    8. The first time you have a fight with your new husband/wife, you’re like:

    9. When people are already asking you for relationship advice, you’re like: