Just like last year which had Omawumi and Tee Billz beating up a photographer, and Burna Boy
violating a poor sales girl in Port Harcourt, This month alone has
thrown up two similar stories of celebrity cruelty and fallibility.
First was Monalisa Chinda,
who was dumped by her magazine editor due to a shitty payment
structure. This was the second editor that has left her budding
business, with similar complaints; the first too had grabbed his bags
and disappeared when his poor remuneration package wasn’t going to get
better. Emeka Ike came next. He was chased from his St. Nicholas College
in Magodo, Lagos, by a court of law. Why? Because him and his darling
wife were bad at management, and treated people like dirt. That’s why.
But
what comes next beats reasoning. The fans are still supportive of them!
A glance through social media platforms will see many Nigerians
offering their support to these celebrities, and worse, taking insulting
shots at their victims, who have decided to stand up for themselves,
and do the right thing. Why? Because they are our stars, they are our
darling screen idols. Their great works affect our lives, we listen to
their songs, laugh hard at their movies, and worship their every
utterance…and bad behavior.
Our loverboy, Emeka, has a heart of
gold, right? Just because he lights up our screens, he cannot be unfair
in his dealings with his fellow man. Monalisa Chinda is too pretty not
to offer a fair reward to her staff. Not her, not her pretty talented
and wealthy self. But we’re wrong. It’s utter nonsense to make a case
for them based on their talent and on-screen smiles. Was the law wrong
to punish and extract justice from Emeka Ikeh? No. The law, the same law
that has kept balance and earth and offers hope of justice to every
man, was right. It treated Emeka fairly, because he deserved it. He was
not a good person, He acted illegally, and hurt some people, so his
school was taken away from him.
When fan adoration, becomes blind
worship, and worse still, biased sentimental followership, then the
future looks bleak for the minds of free men. This is what the average
Nigerian fan has become; A blind, undiscerning, worshipper of glitter
and fake smiles. We support these people, even in their hour of
wickedness. I fear we are doomed.
Our celebrities our humans too.
They are subject to the very laws and behavioural patterns which the
next person too can exhibit. Many are good performers and charmers, but
just a few, a tiny handful of them, are truly good people. While we are
stunned by their talents and showmanship, let us not be hasty to give
them a stamp of human kindness and infallibility. They too are mere
mortals.
Think people, Think!
0 comments