• For Creators Spotlight, we spoke to Bahati Imaan Beauvais, the name behind YungNollywood. She is a young Nigerian living in Toronto and Lagos, who is very passionate about the old and new Nollywood scene. With 51.9k followers on Instagram and 35.8k followers on Twitter, Imman has created content that has proven to be timeless and relatable. We spoke to her about her creative process, her love of old Nollywood aesthetics, and how she keeps coming up with these memes we can’t stop sharing around.

    Can you tell me a bit about the creation of Yungnollywood?

    It was created in February 2018. I was into Nollywood before anyone thought it was cool, maybe because they kind of look like me and I liked that.

    I had been watching and collecting content for years but the idea of posting everything on one page didn’t come to mind until I saw Nollybabes. My best friends sent it to me and asked me to join because I already had so much content but they were going in a different direction so I decided to start my page. I decided to call it Yung Nollywood because it’s kind of like ‘young money’. After all, I’m a big Barb. So, it’s old Nollywood but when they were young, that tied up nicely.

    (For the 30+, young money was an imprint of cash records founded by Lil Wayne and Nicki Minaj was managed by them. A Barb is a huge Nicki Minaj Stan/fan)

    I get that. Zikoko has a whole new/old Nollywood section on our memes page. Before the interview, you mentioned something about being a sagittarius moon and that’s why you have no structure, so how do you organize your daily posts?

    I don’t, none of my posts are structured. I wake up in the morning and I’m like, how do I feel today? Collecting content is something I do for fun. It’s work, but I’m always relaxed. I collect random things that I find interesting from movies I’d seen before, or I’ll wake up in the morning, go through what I already have, and post. It’s just instinct I guess.

    Why is it important for you to document memes?

    I have a whole lot of reasons why creating these memes are important. For one, I’ve always been one of those TV children —  I didn’t go out a lot. I also have a lot of random knowledge about the media. I am Nigerian and I find Nollywood interesting, but Nigerians don’t talk about it or promote it enough, even though it’s the second-largest industry. We make fun of it and criticize it harshly. I want people to accept that this is our style of film and it’s cool.

    I guess it’s important for me to push my culture to the world. I am a big believer in the fact that everyone should be Nigerian.

    Hmm, that’s interesting…

    How do you come up with captions for each meme?

    It is inspired by movies I watch, some captions are based on how I feel at the time or what’s happening in the world or actual lines from the movies, sometimes I change one word from their lines to make it look better. I am an English major so I am good at description.For example, “homosexual defiance.” I just like words.

    Can you give me an estimate amount of memes you’ve created?

    I have no idea about the amount. I see memes shared sometimes on the timeline and I’m like “I don’t remember making that” but it’s a lot, I produce a lot but I could check someday.

    You say “Me” a lot, so I’m going to assume there is no team?

    No, not right now. For content production there is no team, I produce all the content. This year though, I plan to invite people if they want, but it’s just me for now.

    What aspect of meme creation do you enjoy the most?

    I like it when I do the astrology memes because I have to think and because it’s like a puzzle. I enjoy those a lot.

    How did you decide on your brands voice?

    It’s all mine. it wasn’t deliberate at all but it works.

    How sustainable is your line of work? Do you plan on monetizing it?

    I never think about the future. I want to have a yungnollywood festival because I am a big kid, it’ll be fun, with candy floss and bouncing castles, it’ll be a festival that travels.

    The first one, of course, would be in Lagos and then my next biggest market is London.Then a bodega, but besides that, I’d like to do something with the actresses. I don’t know what yet.

    I have a movie coming out soon and I’m going to do a lot of personal content on yungnollywood’s page this year. I also have a short film on my website.

    A bodega?

    Yeah, just a random shop with an old local tv screen showing Nollywood shows.

    Is Zikoko invited to any of these things?

    Of course.

    Did you try reaching out to any of the actresses though?

    I have not, I’ve gotten feedback from a few icons but nothing on business. Not till I figure out what I want to do, but in due time.

    Did you ever feel the need to stop creating at any point?

    Yeah, right now.

    I am taking an indefinite break. I went through a major loss in my friend group so I’ve been a bit low.

    I have never taken a break,  I am very sensitive mentally, so I get exhausted sometimes. For now, I am taking the time to figure out what I want to do with my brand.

    So sorry for your loss. You mentioned the festival and the bodega but what’s next for Yungnollywood?

    Probably a film. Something for the actual young actors, not just the people we see on our screens all the time.

    To find out more about the work Yungnollywood is doing, check out their website.

  • A week ago Unilag students resumed school virtually after a year of ghosting, radio silence and of course ASSU’s ever changing resumption date, which happened not once, not twice, but thousands.

    What she said!

    I am a 400 level student in this great university studying mass communication and here’s what my first week of virtual learning was like.

    Monday

    After a whole year of chanting “The student in me died in march” I was up by 6 am and excited to resume, even though I was panicking that I couldn’t log in to the portal, or that I’d low-key forgotten my matric number. I put my notepads by my pillow (you can see that I was ready) and went on my group chat, only to find out that no one could log in. Nothing pleases a student like collective discomfort: as long as it’s not just me, all is well.

    I was finally able to log in but then the site crashed. Wahala for who wan be serious student, or maybe I’m the one with bad luck. Classes were cancelled for the day and Unilag was trending on Twitter but as the devil will have it, one lecturer still managed in the midst of it all to give us an assignment. I had to double-check to see if I was offering that course and the answer was an annoying yes. I considered dropping it and generally dropping out in two seconds but decided against it in case my father could read my mind somehow. All in all, not a terrible first day.

    It was a terrible day.

    Tuesday

    The ginger I had the first day had died. I was up by 8, but for once I didn’t check Twitter first. I went on my class group chat and saw that my course advisor had sent out a message by 6 am.  Classes had been cancelled for the week, all we had to do was familiarise ourselves with the site. God bless God.

    People who could log in sent materials from the site and then creation of group chats for different courses began. God save us. Turns out that I registered for 8 courses. In a whole 400 level.

    One lecturer even started to hint at asking us to buy textbooks and do group assignments? Then someone stated that we had to download the materials from the site on our own because it counts as attendance. For 21 years, my life has been one big attendance register, make it stop.

    There was still no class thankfully and yes I know it’s supposed to be a lecture-free week but you don’t know my lecturers.

    Wednesday

    This day showed so much promise of laziness and then like a thief in the night — except it was 2 pm — one lecturer gave us a group assignment to be submitted the same day. I was going to ghost them but then I saw the kind of people that were in my group: they won’t add my matric number if I didn’t do anything. So, I waited for a bit and when no one did anything, I created a group chat and added all eight of them. Still, no one said anything, so I posted the assignment. All we had to do was summarize what we had learnt from the five topics we’d been taught before the “pakurumo”.

    I went offline and by the time I came back these scammers had appeared from nowhere and paired up in two’s for three topics, graciously leaving the longest two for me and one other unfortunate person. This is why I hate group projects. We sha got it done before 6 when we had to submit it. Not going to lie, it felt nice to learn something and even nicer to understand what I was summarizing — my school fees hadn’t wasted after all but I was also upset because ffs, allow me to be unserious.

    Thursday

    I’m not sure this day actually happened. We joined more group chats and got more materials but it was an otherwise boring day.

    Friday

    You know how there is always that one lecturer that will ruin your perfectly planned weekend? Yeah, that’s this man. His classes are annoying and his assignments are even more annoying. To show that he meant to destroy my plans, he appeared by 11 am — 11 is that moment in your day when the universe decides if it’ll be good or bad to you. He appeared with not one, but two assignments.

    He asked to be added to our main group chat and at first, my course rep was worried because the last time we did that, when he was done talking, someone said “Bye sir” and removed him.

    Someone almost sent this. Almost.

    We eventually created another group chat for his course and he explained his assignment.

    We have one week to submit this one *cries in Nkiru Sylvanus*. After that my course mates went back to posting links to their businesses, blogs, contests and a very long conversation I didn’t care to read through about the silhouette challenge. Besides the assignments, this week wasn’t all that bad (because it was horrible)

    I just want to fight my former roommate for telling me that 400 level is a breeze, she didn’t add that the breeze can knock your teeth out. Vivian, it’s on sight.


  • Whether you like memes or you don’t, you can’t lie that they make all your conversations better. From looking for the right meme that describes “Omo” or one that says “is Ashimolowo a bad bitch”, Here are five reasons why you need Zikoko’s meme site.

    1. African/Black-centred

    You can search for terms like “Amala” and all the different types of “Ehen” and you’d find the perfect meme for it. With over 5000 memes, we’ve got you covered.

    2.When you’re arguing and things go south

    For those numerous times on Twitter when you’re arguing with someone and you can’t type anymore because tears have clouded your eyes, instead of deactivating your account, just use our memes to save face. Best part? You won’t run out.

    3. Because you don’t have space on your phone

    Maybe if you upload all your memes on our site. instead of hoarding them on your phone, you’ll have space to store your pictures. Except you’re hmm, God no go shame us.

    4. We have the best content

    From Aki and pawpaw memes, Nollywood memes, gifs from your favorite music videos, and an interesting amount of pictures of your favorite politicians. Your meme game will become unbeatable.

    5. We know where you live and we will find you and put your spirit in a bottle 🙏🏾

    You better not attempt to mess with us.


  • There is a Patience Ozokwor meme for everybody, take this quiz to find out which one is yours.



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