Tuesday, November 30, 2010
The Untold Truth about Nollywood: Separating the fact from the fiction
The Untold Truth about Nollywood: Separating the fact from the fiction
Presently the Nigerian movie industry popularly known as Nollywood is no longer the second largest movie industry in the world as reported by UNESCO in 2009. The UNESCO report was based on statistics of the quantity of home videos produced in Nigeria when Nollywood was at its peak in the late 1990s and early 2000s before rampant piracy and the economic downturn changed the fortunes of Nollywood and left most of the stakeholders in dire straits.
Genevieve Nnaji is the most popular Nollywood star
In fact, we can now count the movies produced in 2010 on our fingertips, because things have fallen apart and people are no longer at ease in Nollywood.
The worst hit have been the English speaking practitioners dominated by Igbos, but the more down-to-earth and better organized Yoruba practitioners have managed to weather the storm, while the other producers of videos in Edo, Hausa, Efik and Ibibio have been doing their best in spite of their own professional inadequacies.
There are those who are the Real McCoy of the Nigerian film industry like the foremost Nigerian filmmaker Dr. Ola Balogun, Tunde Kelani, Femi Lasode, the Adesanya brothers, Mahmood Ali-Balogun, Mildred Owoh,Tade Ogidan, Francis Onwuchie, The Amatas. Femi Odugbemi, Kunle Afolayan who is bearing the mantle of the legacy of his father Adeyemi Afolayan, aka “Ade Love”, Joe Brown, Didi Chika, Joe Brown, Lucky Onyekachi Ejim, Gugu Michaels, Faruk Lasaki, Chike Ibekwe, Mark Kusare, Kenneth Gyang and the new kids on the block Niyi Akinmolayan and Chineze Anyaene whose first features Kajola and Ijé The Journey who are outstanding indicators of the future of the Nigerian film industry. They often prefer to disassociate themselves from the popular videographers of Nollywood. The other Real McCoy can be found in the heart and soul of Nollywood, such as the accomplished Lancelot Imasuen, Teco Benson, the ambitious team of Emem Isong and Desmond Elliot and those in the same league with them who have been producing good movies in videos.
The troubles in Nollywood
“Nollywood habours lots of greedy producers.”
~ Kate Henshaw-Nuttal, Sunday Punch, August 1, 2010.
Notable pioneers of Nollywood such as Ejike Asiegbu, Madu Chikwendu, Paul, Justus Esiri, Olu Jacobs, Prince Jide Kosoko, Pete Edochie, Glory Young, Ngozi Ezeonu, Joke Silva-Jacobs, Rachel Oniga, Kate Henshaw-Nuttal, Zeb Ejiro, Chico Ejiro, Kingsley Ogoro, Lancelot Imasuen, Teco Benson, Emem Isong, Shan George, Genevieve Nnaji, Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde, Jim Iyke, Ramsey Noah, Riita Dominic and other members in the same League have been busy trying their best to rejuvenate the ingenuity of the heyday of Nollywood. But there are those who have resorted to dirty partisan politics contrary to professional ethics.
Home videos of Nollywood movies are sold on the street and often pirated
Yes, desperate times call for desperate measures, but going bonkers will only worsen the situation. Frustration often pushes people to acts of desperation in the struggle for survival or trying to catch up with the Joneses. The critical state of Nollywood is also bringing out the best and the worst characters of the principal practitioners and other stakeholders as shown by the petty squabbles in the guilds. The squabbles of the opposing camps and factions of those at loggerheads have left the troubled guilds in disarray and opportunists are fishing in the troubled waters.
One of them is fond of contesting for the bragging rights over celluloid filmmakers in Nigeria. He boasts that he has shot 18 celluloid films. But not a single one has ever qualified for screening at the Cannes Film Festival where other African filmmakers have proved their mettle competing and winning highly coveted laurels among the best in the world. Making dozens of substandard movies that are the best examples in mediocrity is nothing to brag about and talking bollocks from Lagos to Abuja. How many of the films have made the list of the best films by Africans? How many of them have won awards at major film festivals in the world? And now he is the chairman of an international film festival? I wonder why Nigerians like celebrating mediocrity. What a comedy of errors.
Many of them were taking sides in partisan politics as they supported the gubernatorial quest of Prof. Chukwuma Soludo, the former governor of the apex bank and were disgraced when he lost. And now they have rushed to endorse President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan to contest in the presidential election in 2011. Then he has promised to give $200 million to the entertainment industry after listening to the pleas of Mr. Ben Murray-Bruce at the 30th Anniversary of Silverbird Group on November 6, 2010. But a promise remains a promise until fulfilled.
What matters most is providing a proper infrastructure for the film industry, because presently there is none. We don’t even know if the practitioners pay taxes.
Azuh Amatus of the Daily Sun said there is no longer sanity in Nollywood, because all that has been bastardized.
Amatus is right, because the various guilds have no administrative polices comparable to best practices in more organized film industries like in South Africa and Egypt. The Actors Guild of Nigeria (AGN) simply collects a membership fee from anyone who claims to be an actor even if the person has never acted in any movie. Presently, the AGN is in disarray as two actors are fighting over the titular leadership of the guild. One of them who has a degree in engineering said he is more qualified than the rival who has only a diploma in theatre arts. The AGN is dominated and manipulated by the English speaking actors who are mostly from the Igbo tribe while the non-English speaking actors belong to another professional body. Membership of the professional body of the Yoruba actors is by apprenticeship. An apprentice pays more than N2, 000 (two thousand naira) for registration, but in most cases, the apprentices don’t get paid until after three years. There is no insurance or any gratuity. And they do not pay taxes on their various artistes fees from acting in the numerous movies churned out regularly.
There is nothing like an insurance policy in Nollywood. The practitioners and production companies are not insured. No insurance in case a studio is razed or an actor has an accident.
The Nigerian Film Corporation (NFC) and the National Film and Video Censors Board (NFVCB) are functioning, but is it not troubling that a billion naira industry has no insurance and does not pay tax?
~ By Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima,
Tuesday, August 10, 2010.
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Mouka meets with top Nigerian bloggers and journalists
L-R: Mr. Youseff Edgar, Head of Production, Mouka Limited, Jude Abonu, Head of Commercial Mouka Limited and Mrs. Peju Adebajo, Managing Director/CEO Mouka Limited at the Media Parley to announce the End of year activities held at the Head Office yesterday.
Mrs. Peju Adebajo, the Managing Director/CEO was delighted to meet the bloggers and journalists she described as fellow stakeholders and partners in progress in the task of nation building. She told them the outstanding success story of Mouka Limited since 1972 when the company began operations.
“Our success has been largely due to the commitment and dedication of our numerous employees over the last four decades and our loyal customer base, and vast distributors’ network. Our numerous awards and industry recognitions also showcase the fact that we are a caring business, fully committed to the economic, social and environmental wellbeing of our dear country,” Mrs. Adebajo said.
.L-R: Mr. Jude Abonu, Head of Commercial Mouka Limited, Mrs. Peju Adebajo, Managing Director/CEO Mouka Limited and Mr. Benson Osieme, Chief Financial Officer, Mouka Limited at the Media Parley held at the Head Office yesterday.
Mouka was the first foam company in Nigeria to get its laboratory certified to International Standards Organization ISO9001 in 1999.
Mouka is really giving back to the society in various ways. To practice its slogan of adding comfort to life, Mouka launched the 15 minutes interactive Comfort Zone, a weekly pan-Nigerian radio programme broadcast by many stations nationwide. Listeners share their personal experiences of comfort and the joys of using Mouka mattresses, pillows, etc.
There are sales promotion and distributor awards and rewards for dedicated customers such as the Mouka Point-Man promotion and the Mouka Winstanta. The company is also introducing Mouka Model Shops to boost customer care by giving customers a loving shopping experience at every Mouka Distributor’s shop in Nigeria.
From Left: Mrs. Peju Adebajo, Managing Director/CEO Mouka Limited exchanging pleasantries with some Bloggers at the Breakfast session with Bloggers at Mouka Head Office yesterday.
Notable Nigerian bloggers at the event were Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima of 24/7 Nigeria and Nigerians Report, popular Nigerian blogger and social entrepreneur Deolu Akinyemi was represented by Seun Lana who has her own blog PROCESS on WordPress, Biola Kazeem of Brandwork Nigeria and Bella Naija sent a representative named Chike.
They were taken on a tour of the Mouka production facility by the Production Manager Olubiyi Odunayo and other senior executives.
The event was coordinated by The Quadrant Company
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Chinua Achebe Celebrates 80th Birthday
The most celebrated Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe marked his 80th birthday on November 16.
The literary achievements of Achebe have made him one of the most outstanding humans on earth and his historical novel Things Fall Apart rated as one of the best novels of all time.
He has won more laurels than any African writer and he is the only Nigerian writer with over 30 honorary doctorate degrees. The only significant laurel he is yet to win is the highly coveted Nobel Prize for Literature.
Nigerians Report wishes Pa Chinua Achebe Happy 80th Birthday and many more happy returns of the day.
THE LISTED WORKS OF CHINUA ACHEBE:
Novels
Things Fall Apart (1958)
No Longer at Ease (1960)
Arrow of God (1964)
A Man of the People (1966)
Anthills of the Savannah (1987)
Short Stories
"Marriage Is A Private Affair" (1952)
"Dead Men's Path" (1953)
The Sacrificial Egg and Other Stories (1953)
"Civil Peace" (1971)
Girls at War and Other Stories (1973)
African Short Stories (editor, with C.L. Innes) (1985)
Heinemann Book of Contemporary African Short Stories (editor, with C.L. Innes) (1992)
The Voter
Poetry
Beware, Soul-Brother, and Other Poems (1971) (published in the US as Christmas at Biafra, and Other Poems, 1973)
Don't let him die: An anthology of memorial poems for Christopher Okigbo (editor, with Dubem Okafor) (1978)
Another Africa (1998)
Collected Poems Carcanet Press (2005)
Refugee Mother And Child
Vultures
Essays, Criticism and Political Commentary
The Novelist as Teacher (1965)
An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad's "Heart of Darkness" (1975)
Morning Yet on Creation Day (1975)
The Trouble With Nigeria (1984)
Hopes and Impediments (1988)
Home and Exile (2000)
Education of a British protected Child (October 6, 2009)
“The Igbo and their Perception of God, Human Beings and Creation,” (2010) (forthcoming)
Children's Books
Chike and the River (1966)
How the Leopard Got His Claws (with John Iroaganachi) (1972)
The Flute (1975)
The Drum (1978)
You can buy any one the books by Chinua Achebe from AMAZON.
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Super Falcons of Nigeria Win 7th African Women’s Championship
Last Sunday the awesome Super Falcons of Nigeria won the 7th African Women’s Championship, in South Africa by beating defending champions Equatorial Guinea’s Nzalang Nacional 4-2 in a dramatic final.
Nigeria: Mabo Wants Cash Reward for Victorious Falcons
AllAfrica.com -
Nigeria: Victorious Falcons Arrive Amid Arik Air Praises - AllAfrica.com
Victorious Super Falcons get heroes welcome - NEXT
Nigeria Daily Independent - SuperSport.com
Friday, November 12, 2010
The Genocide in the Congo
© 2010 Marcus Bleasdale/VII
The humanitarian emergency in the DRC should interest you. Genocide is going in the Congo and we are still here dining and wining where hundreds of thousands of our fellow Africans are being raped, maimed and massacred by demonic soldiers and rebels on rampage in the DRC and CAR.
Kindly click on the following link to Read the full report.
Nigeria to Host Annual Meeting of the Common Fund for Commodities November 23-24 in Abuja
11 Nov 2010 18:54 Africa/Lagos
Nigeria to Host Annual Meeting of the Common Fund for Commodities November 23-24 in Abuja
ABUJA, November 11, 2010/African Press Organization (APO)/ -- Nigeria to Host Annual Meeting of the Common Fund for Commodities November 23-24 in Abuja
WHO: The Government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Common Fund for Commodities (CFC).
WHAT: 22nd Annual Governing Council Meeting 2010
WHEN: 23-24 November 2010.
WHERE: Nicon Luxury Hotel, Abuja.
BACKGROUND: The Common Fund for Commodities, an international financial institution established by the United Nations, will hold its 22nd Annual Governing Council Meeting 2010 in Abuja, at the official invitation of the Government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
Nigeria is one of the founding members of the Common Fund in 1989. Last year, CFC marked its 20th year anniversary and Nigeria requested to host this year's annual meeting in Abuja, as part of the country's 50th Independence Anniversary activities. The Governing Council is the highest decision-making body within the institutional structure of the Amsterdam-based Common Fund, which finances commodity development projects for smallholder farmers, as well as small and medium sized enterprises in commodity production, processing and trade in developing and least developed countries.
Senior officials in the Federal Ministry of Commerce and Industry are coordinating the hosting activities and arrangements for the meeting and His Excellency, Vice President Namadi Sambo is expected to open the meeting, on behalf of the host country.
The Common Fund has financed a range of important commodity development projects in the country, and throughout the West Africa region. Furthermore, CFC has been a contributing partner in Nigeria's commodities sector, as the country gradually has concentrated more in 2 developing the non-oil sector of its economy.
As a member-country, Nigeria has played a key role in the Fund's regional cooperation initiatives that have had positive outcomes in employment generation, food security and poverty eradication; while enabling local commodity producers to become integrated in the global economy and increasing the asset base, especially for smallholder producers.
For additional information, please visit www.common-fund.org .
The Common Fund for Commodities-www.common-fund.org- is a 106- member state international financial institution based in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. The Fund's specific mandate is to support developing countries that are commodity dependent to improve and diversify commodities production and trade.
CONTACT: Charles Jama—Communications Officer
Tel: +31 20 575 49 49 or 49 56 – - charles.jama@common-fund.org
IN ABUJA: Bolaji Oladimeji Kazeem—Tel: 08033254923 OR 07056419241
bolaji28@yahoo.com
NOTE TO EDITORS: Press interviews can be arranged in advance.
Source: The Common Fund for Commodities (CFC)
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Happy 30th Anniversary Silverbird Group of Nigeria!
Silverbird Group
Ben Murray-BRUCE
24/7 Nigeria wishes Silverbird Group happy 30th Anniversary and we are proud of the “Mr. Entertainment of Nigeria” Ben Murray-Bruce, the founder and Chairman of the Silverbird Group who is a fellow old boy of the Publisher/Editor of 24/7 Nigeria.
President Goodluck Jonathan of Nigeria is the Special Guest of Honour and joined hundreds of other invited guests at the New Convention Centre, Eko Hotel and Suites in Victoria Island, Lagos, and the venue of the 30th Anniversary celebration. Party on the Moon from the United States of America thrilled the audience minutes ago.
Silverbird brought the best African American musical acts to perform live in Nigeria from the early 1980s. Ben Murray-Bruce brought Kool & the Gang, Whispers, Shalamar, Dynasty, Lakeside and other popular acts. I was at The Gong Show in Fantasy Night Club where Majek Fajek and other popular musicians were discovered.
Silverbird is most famous for the celebrated Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria(MBGN) beauty pageant and discovered Miss. Darego Agbani who became the first black African Miss World in 2001.
Silverbird Group’s MBGN’s Darego Agbani crowned as Miss World in 2001.
Silverbird Group include Rhythm 93.7 FM stations, Silverbird TV network, Silverbird Cinemas in Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Zambia, Silverbird Galleria in Lagos, Showtime Mall in Port Harcourt, Silverbird Entertainment Centre (SEC) in Abuja, and other businesses in the conglomerate.
Congratulations Silverbird Group and May the Almighty God continue to bless and increase you 24/7.
Faithfully,
Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima
Publisher/CEO
International Digital Post Network (IDPN), LLC
Friday, November 5, 2010
24/7 Nigeria is it!
24/7 Nigeria is attracting more foreigners than Nigerians and their commendations are really overwhelming.
24/7 Nigeria brings the latest news and information on Nigeria to the rest of the world and reports the rest of the world to Nigeria.
I am happy I started this news and information website with the cooperation and support of my younger brother Clarke EkenediriChukwu Eke. You see the power in brothers supporting each other to make a positive impact in the world.
Go and start something great and positive today.
~ Ekenyerengozi Michael Chima
The Publisher/CEO
International Digital Post Network (IDPN)
Fast developing the largest Nigerian online news and information media network
Friday, October 15, 2010
Prof. Babs Fafunwa was a Great Educationist.
“It is true that I proposed the 6-3-3-4 system of education system in 1989. I don’t have any apology about it. Our problem is not the system but failure to implement what was recommended be-fore the cancellation.”
~ Prof Babatunde Fafunwa in response to President Goodluck Jonathan who blamed him for the failure of the 6-3-3-4 system of education.
The passing of one of the foremost Nigerian educationists Prof.Babatunde Fafunwa made headlines in the major newspapers and electronic news channels in Nigeria. He deserved all the eulogies, because Baba Fafunwa as is he was fondly called came, saw and conquered. He was the first Nigerian to receive a doctorate degree in Education. But he departed without seeing the fulfillment of his best wishes for Nigeria. He was a former minister of education and did his best to reform the underdeveloped education system in Nigeria. He would have been happier if every Nigerian child is given the excellent education he gave his own children who have proved to be worthy achievers and made him proud.
It is wrong for President Goodluck Jonathsan to blame Prof. Fafunwa for the systemic failure of the 6-3-3-4 system of education in Nigeria.
According to the National President of League of Muslim Proprietors' (LEAMPS), Engineer Ibraheem Abdulkareem, those championing the newly introduced Universal Basic Education (UBE) are responsible for collapse of the 6-3-3-4 system and not Prof. Babatunde Fafunwa.
Click here for more details.