• Outside of resurrecting songs we’ve all forgotten about and starting dance challenges that would stress Kaffy of all people, TikTok is also famous for its many hacks. From kitchen to fashion, people on that clock app come up with new shit to hack every day. 

    So as a 30+ TikToker, I decided to try out and rank some of the app’s most popular hacks. Here’s what I found out. 

    Putting toasted bread in your mouth to avoid crying when cutting onions 

    @eitan

    Even though my eyes weren’t crying, I am still 100% sure this is fake! 😂 What do you think?!? #food #foodhack #5minutecrafts

    ♬ original sound – Eitan Bernath

    This hack is as stupid as it sounds. Why toasted bread? Why not regular bread? Either way, just like me, you’ll still end up crying hot tears because onions don’t send your daddy. 

    Making pancakes with an air fryer 

    @thismumcooks

    Airfryer Pancakes – well done @Currys for a great marketing post but at least tell us all it doesn’t work at the end 😉😉😂 #food #thismumcooks #pancakes #pancakeday #egg #airfyer #airfryerrecipes #currys #pancakehack #recipes #easyrecipes #homemade #hack #trick #justforfun

    ♬ Cooking Time – ZydSounds

    I’m ready to fight the woman who started this trend, but most importantly, I’m ready to fight myself. After seeing several videos where this hack didn’t work, I still used my hard-earned money to buy ingredients and attempt this disaster. Anyway, because we don’t waste food where I’m from, I ate it like that. You won’t get pancakes, but you’ll sha get something. 

    This “too good to be true” hack for washing oily containers 

    Like TLC once said, “Stick to the rivers and the lakes that you’re used to.” There’s a reason why we use kitchen sponges and foams to wash plates. Maybe the oil in the overseas is different because this hack didn’t work at all. 

    Separating the yolk from egg whites with your hands 

    https://www.tiktok.com/@bdkfltclothing/video/7011049180244249882?q=separate%20egg%20yolk%20from%20egg%20whites%20garlic&t=1680611574591

    I’ve tried this three times and failed every time. So unless your name is “Harry Potter” or “The Boy Who Lived”, I suggest you ignore this kitchen hack and keep it moving. 

    Expanding your shoe to a totally different size 

    @eitan

    Even though my eyes weren’t crying, I am still 100% sure this is fake! 😂 What do you think?!? #food #foodhack #5minutecrafts

    ♬ original sound – Eitan Bernath

    So this woman gave seven hacks and only putting your shoe in the freezer worked. But when you think about it, is it healthy? Why should anyone put their shoes in the freezer? Instead, I suggest you do what Nigerian mothers taught us: buy shoes that are four times your size, so you can wear them until the day of rapture. 

    Quiz: If You Can Complete These, You’ve Spent Too Much Time on TikTok

    Reverse cuffs for when your trousers are too long 

    This hack works, but like that bridge Desmond Elliot commissioned in Surulere, it won’t last. 

    It’s a temporary fix to a problem that could easily be solved by a quick visit to your tailor. 

    Overnight oats without hot water 

    Making overnight oats with my fridge has become a part of my everyday life now, and I love it. Don’t be surprised if these oats taste different. It doesn’t mean they don’t slap, because they do. 

    Packing a ton of clothes in your box without ripping the zipper

    Packing just got easier. Now, the only thing you have to worry about is the cost of flight tickets. 

    Applying moisturizer before you apply retinol, to avoid irritation 

    Retinol is one of the greatest skincare ingredients ever. But they’re as dangerous as they’re effective. As someone whose skin turned to a peeling iron sponge during my first month of using retinol, this sandwich method makes sure my skin still looks moisturised and healthy while the retinol does it work. TikTok skincare influencers snapped with this one for real. 

    Hiding apps on your iPhone 

    https://www.tiktok.com/@derickstechhub/video/7156165388131257605?q=how%20to%20hide%20apps%20on%20iPhone%20&t=1680609214146

    As a young Nigerian, this hack is a life saver. I’ve been stopped a lot of times and forced to make transfers to police officers for just breathing, but now, I can hide my bank apps, so they can’t make me open it to see how much money I have. Love it. 

    ALSO READ: Warning Signs You’re Dating an Upcoming TikToker

  • Public relations is invaluable to businesses and individuals for numerous reasons. Whether you want to get the word out about a new product or attract the right kind of press, high-quality PR can help make that happen. 

    With many modern influencers and brands looking to elevate their status on social media, it may seem like PR is old-school. 

    In reality, that could not be further from the truth—if you are chasing that elusive blue tick, PR may be precisely what you need to get your brand and face in front of the right people to make that happen.

    PR agencies enable coverage on top news sites

    As you go through the verification process, one of the first things social media employees will probably check is your presence outside of the platform. 

    While that blue tick conveys a certain level of status, the primary intention behind the verification system is to ensure that you are who you say you are—and not someone else pretending to be you.

    Coverage on PR news sites provides that additional level of fame outside of your platform of choice, helping social media platforms understand why you are worthy of verification. 

    PR can help you make your face or brand visible, demonstrating why it is important to award you with verification.

    With the right PR, you can ensure that your brand and presence are legitimate and visible beyond the constraints of a specific platform or service. The use of PR gets your name out to a broader audience and makes you more of a household name instead of just another influencer or digital brand. The more PR you generate, the better it is for your credibility.

    Could Baden Bower become the best PR agency to get verified on social media?

    Baden Bower obtains exposure through its patented placement technology, which searches the globe for outlets that will enable the firm to print favorable stories about companies and brands.

    Baden Bower is believed by many to be one of the top-rated PR firms in the nation for one principle: getting amazing media coverage for every client, guaranteed. 

    Their clients are entrepreneurs, thought leaders, writers, marketers, and creatives with a passion for building effective campaigns that yield results. 

    The company shares that the first steps are the hardest if you are starting from scratch with social media for a brand. But with the proper news stories in highly respected global news publications, it can be easier than you think to cut down on the lengthy-time frame between account creation and social media verification

    With a good PR campaign, getting your brand in front of the right people can mean faster, more effective growth.

  • There’s nothing the Nigerian Police Force cannot do. Sure, they can protect you as it says in their job description, but they can also be your worst enemy. They can make up crimes that don’t exist at (illegal) checkpoints, or they can go on Twitter to post safety tips for your benefit.

    These safety tips on how to navigate Nigeria come directly from the Police:

    “Never use car stickers that say where you work, especially if you have a prestigious job.”

    Vehicles are only made for hilarious inscriptions.

    “Never share pictures of your kids in their school uniforms or badges. Protect your kids!”

    Useful safety tips from the Nigerian Police Force

    Unless you’re sure your kids can protect themselves, of course.

    “When you attend parties, don’t let the band get you so high that you start spraying money. Use an envelope.”

    Stop showing off.

    “Don’t be the one that tries to empty the ATM machine by making large withdrawals. You don’t need 50k in your wallet to feel like a man.”

    Useful safety tips from the Nigerian Police Force

    Seriously, stop showing off. Hot kidnappers in your area are waiting to hook up.

    “Always delete your bank transaction notifications, especially SMS. You really can memorise your bank balance…shred your POS/ATM receipts.”

    To be honest, this is sound advice to protect yourself against criminals and police officers at checkpoints.

    ALSO READ: 5 “Normal Things” The Nigerian Police Can Arrest You For

    “Don’t go jogging while it’s dark, you really should be smarter than that. If you can, get someone trusted as company.”

    Useful safety tips from the Nigerian Police Force

    It can either mean potential kidnappers will be discouraged, or you’ll at least have company in captivity.

    “Always lock your doors, even if you’re only going out to switch off your generator.”

    Useful safety tips from the Nigerian Police Force

    Don’t leave room for all the weapons fashioned against you to prosper.

    “NEVER NEVER, NEVER EVER WEAR YOUR ID card outside your workplace. No one needs to know where you work.”

    No one needs to know you’re a pornography historian or whatever it is you do.

    “Be accountable to your spouse or parents, let someone know where you are at every point.”

    “I’m on my way to the strip club. Tell the children I’ll be home before dinner.”

    “As much as you can, don’t send kids alone on errands outside your house, they’re soft targets.”

    Useful safety tips from the Nigerian Police Force

    Again, ignore this advice only if the child can square up in a fight.

    ALSO READ: How to Become a Gun Owner in Nigeria

    “Don’t try to show that you are the richest in the neighbourhood by making large donations in your estate meetings, learn modesty.”

    Don’t do as the spirit leads. Resist the urge.

    “When you give, give with modesty and privately, and learn to say “I can’t spare that amount now.”

    The “Urgent 2k” industry won’t be happy with this message.

    “Don’t stay late in your office long after closing hours. That deadline work can be done later or at home if you wish.”

    Always be home early enough for the 7 o’clock news, unless you stay in Lagos.

    “Make safety the number one factor in your decision always!”

    Stay jiggy – Nigerian Police Force.

    “Mind what you post about yourself on social media.”

    Useful safety tips from the Nigerian Police Force

    How many times do you really need to tweet that your money grows like grass?

    ALSO READ: You Only Need Three Things at Nigerian Police Checkpoints

  • A Week in the Life is a weekly Zikoko series that explores the working-class struggles of Nigerians. It captures the very spirit of what it means to hustle in Nigeria and puts you in the shoes of the subject for a week.


    What’s it like managing the social media of a fintech company in Nigeria? Today, we explore A Week in the Life of Peace Obinani, a product marketing manager. She tells us about fighting fires while handling her company’s social media, quenching widespread rumours and managing a community of non-tech people who work in tech.

    SUNDAY

    I’m in church when a serious problem begins at work: account numbers are not working and credits are not reflecting on time. Withdrawals are being delayed by our payment processors and people are panicking. Ideally, it should not be much of a big deal because nothing is wrong with anyone’s money, but fintech is still in its formative years and Nigerians are still just learning to trust it. 

    I do my best alongside my team to manage our customers; it’s really difficult convincing a customer new to trusting apps on their phone with their money that their payment is being delayed for whatever reason. 

    Right there in church, I draft official statements and responses, and engage our audience to curb the mass panic, while the product team finds a solution and quickly pivots to another bank. I also post helpful Twitter threads on the company’s social media accounts.  

    I’ll spend the rest of the day letting people know about their new account numbers and reassuring them about the safety of their funds.

    Today is a lot but I wouldn’t have it any other way. Do I sometimes wish that perhaps, I could just switch off and do normal Sunday things? Maybe, but I don’t want an overly structured schedule. I’m fine with the chaos. People might say I’m a workaholic but I’m fully invested in everything I do and I really don’t want to be confined to strict daily routines.

    MONDAY

    No Nigerian fintech company ever wants to trend for the wrong reasons.  Anytime we start trending on Twitter, it leads to a chain reaction: people start asking, “Why is the company holding my money trending?” And before you know it, panic ensues.

    People are now used to seeing us trend, so they no longer panic as much — this makes my work a little easier.  There’s a lot of work overflowing from yesterday’s situation, so I’m trying my best to ensure things remain calm. 

    After work, I’m proud of my job today. I’ve always done social media, but in university, I thought I’d pursue a career in events production. I dreamt of producing a show for Beyonce and bringing her to Nigeria. I wanted to go to production school abroad and work on events like Coachella.

    In my final year of university, I was saving money for life after school and I used my current company’s savings app. But I didn’t know it was a big deal. It was when I got the opportunity to work as a social media manager in fintech that I realised how much of a gamechanger it would be.

    I’ve been doing events for 10 years, so when the time came for my company to organize marketing events offline, it was only natural that I’d transition from just social media management to full-on marketing.

    I love being a product marketing manager, simplifying my company’s products in a way that’s easy to understand and making sure that as many people as possible know about us and grow to love us. I enjoy being at the centre of everything — I’m a dot-connector — a bridge across different departments and units: engineering, support, social media, legal, the product team, etc.

    TUESDAY

    I woke up at 10 a.m. today and there’s a bunch of messages and missed calls waiting for me. In my line of work, there’s no start time or stop time. It’s wake up and jump-start.

    But having to deal with Nigerians takes a lot of patience. As a people, we’re paranoid about money, so fintech is very sensitive and there are so many uncertainties. My life can be going nice and smooth, and then something just comes along and shakes my equilibrium; in a second, everything turns upside down.

    There are days when Nigeria conspires against me and everything moves mad. I do my best to explain. Sometimes the problem is not from us — there are other parties involved for things to run smoothly – sometimes it’s banks, other third parties or even CBN.. But people trust traditional banks more than fintech companies and are quick to point fingers at us when something goes wrong. 

    It’s very challenging having no clear work-life balance, but I find fulfilment from managing situations like these.

    WEDNESDAY

    Problems never end! Everything was going fine, and I took a short nap only to wake up minutes later to my phone blowing up. I get myself together and find out what’s going on: someone spread a rumour about a billion naira scam on social media, and now I’m back to firefighting.

    Rumours are dangerous for our line of work. It’s common for customers to aggravate an issue they’re experiencing. Because we play in a very low trust environment and the people peddling these rumours are somewhat influential, other people just run with it.

    Sometimes, I wonder about having a regular 9-5 job, but I’m not sure if it’s what I really want. I’m calm even when it gets overwhelming. I do this by continually monitoring everything, so I can quench the fire as soon as it starts, no matter how small. Even if someone texts at midnight to ask why they withdrew their ₦2k and haven’t received it, I can’t ignore it because in the morning, I may wake up to meet the internet on fire. You never know.

    THURSDAY

    After work today, I’m managing a community of non-tech people in tech called… Non-tech in Tech. It started as a joke: last year, I wanted to develop a personal brand, but I didn’t want to be one of those people who only tweeted the same thing every day. As a non-technical person working in fintech, I created a Twitter account to drag tech bros, catch cruise and connect with people in my field.

    The vision wasn’t entirely clear at first. But one day, I realised that many people looking to transition into tech believe the myth that one must be a developer to get jobs in tech companies. I decided to make Non-tech in Tech a community. I created a Slack channel and started posting jobs, courses and scholarship opportunities. People volunteered to help manage the community, and we have been growing ever since.

    FRIDAY

    All my friends and colleagues live close to me, so it’s easy to keep in touch outside of work. We’re having fun this weekend. It’s been a crazy week but we got through the challenges. 

    My colleagues know how to unwind! And we’ve found a way to have fun even though we’re always busy. We could be clubbing while pressing phone and solving problems at the same time, but we still find our way to have fun. We’re now used to the life.

    Today, we’re going to eat nkwobi and drink beer because, ladies and gentlemen: it’s the weekend!


    Check back every Tuesday by 9 a.m. for more “A Week in the Life” goodness, and if you would like to be featured or you know anyone who fits the profile, fill out this form.

  • They may have been funny at first, but Comrade memes have drawn criticism on the internet as symbols of bullying, misogyny and hate. What changed?

    When Comrade memes launched into Nigerian Twitter, it was hard to ignore the similarities between the green frog head — laughing with abnormally large teeth — and the now infamous Pepe the Frog. It’s pretty much Pepe’s smiling cousin.

    The comrade meme was mostly used in friendly football banter. But then it blew up, and even fun contests were made in true meme fashion. 

    So what changed?

    In December 2021, a Twitter user posted a screenshot outing a man who had sent her nude photos. She was trolled, harassed, bullied for exposing her harasser. Shortly after, she tweeted pictures of herself in a skimpy outfit, and in minutes, several comrade memes were edited onto her photos with lewd, insulting watermarks and caustic commentary.

    Over time, the meme became a mainstay in problematic engagement online: to derail a socially conscious topic, to shut down threads made by women decrying abuse or outing abusers, to “ratio” feminists who made tweets in defiance of the patriarchy. 

    Threads written by people of marginalised demographics are usually derailed by garish versions of the Comrade meme. Concerned users started to denounce the memes. 

    But how can you even hate a meme?

    Since the start of the internet, users have created — and reinvented — over-the-top images, footage and comics with the intent of making others laugh. And we get it. Memes make social media more bearable, breathe life into conversations and make context-perfect Whatsapp stickers. 

    Memes are an integral part of internet pop culture, but each wave is short-lived. They’re around until they’re no longer funny or until another meme takes its place. 

    The evolution of each meme is, however, unpredictable. Most memes are hilarious, engaging and versatile, but some eventually take on darker meaning, allowing people with harmful intentions to twist images into something sinister.

    Relax, it’s just cruise — but is it, though?

    To critique the comrade memes, we would have to critique meme culture. Do the memes have messages themselves? Do we stop using memes just because problematic demographics had adopted them for their unsavoury intents? What is it that makes certain memes align with controversy?

    In the age of the internet, information spreads instantly and the meanings of images change just as fast. The infamous Pepe meme, for example, started out as a lovable, calm comic and morphed into a tool for hate, toxicity, and alt-right rhetoric —  contrary to its creator’s intents.

    As fun as they may be, memes can be double-edged. The same things that make them fun can also make them vessels for the darker sides of the internet — corrosive humour, bigotry, bullying, sexual harassment, etc. These downsides are often overshadowed by how benign the memes appear — “Relax, it’s just a meme.” 

    So do we throw the comrade meme away?

    The transient nature of meme culture makes it impossible to predict its usage. However, attempting to understand — or even empathise with — the criticism of memes deemed problematic is what will steer helpful conversations forward.

    Much too often, marginalised groups are targeted by internet trolls armed with memes. If so many people hide behind a particular meme to make harassment seem agreeable due to humour, perhaps it is not a huge ask to pause and ask why? 

    Sometimes, we tend to focus on just the content we look at — just the photo, the gif, the videos, the Quote retweets on Twitter, the “coldness” of the ratio — rather than the very real people being affected by them.

    Memes aren’t going anywhere anytime soon. The Comrade will come and go. New ones — and their iterations — will dominate the internet. No one is saying don’t have fun. But at some point, we may need to pause and think beyond the pixels, the ratios, and the excitement — about how real people are being hurt unprovoked — and how our “cruise” may make that hurt worse.


  • Take this quiz to find out what social media platform you will blow on:

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    Select all the apps that are currently on your phone:

  • A Week In The Life” is a weekly Zikoko series that explores the working-class struggles of Nigerians. It captures the very spirit of what it means to hustle in Nigeria and puts you in the shoes of the subject for a week.


    The subject of today’s “A Week In The Life” is a social media influencer with over 100k followers on social media. They talk to us about remaining anonymous despite their fame, undercharging for their services and the anxiety that comes with the job.

    MONDAY:

    The first thought on my mind when I wake up today is that if I didn’t have to work to earn a living, I’d probably not be doing my day job. I only show up because of the money.

    Left to me, I’d spend my time living out my imaginations. Instead, I have to pretend like I’m normal and resume every day at a 9-5. During the day I’m the team lead at a digital media startup. At night, I’m a wildling on my personal account with over 100k followers on Twitter, [a little] less than 100k on Instagram and a newsletter with almost 10k subscribers. 

    My day job stresses me because of how professional it is. As someone with a wild imagination, I don’t find it fun. At work, I want to replicate ideas from the playbook of my personal account but every idea is met with “consider the brand image.” 

    Even on my personal account, when brands reach out, they like what they see but still always decide to play it safe. 

    Over time, this pushback has made my personal account the only place I can write the things I enjoy. I love the fact that my thoughts have a home and a receptive audience. What I don’t like is that it doesn’t generate enough money to survive and hence the need for a double life. 

    This afternoon I got a message that triggered me. Someone came to my DM telling me to always run my content by a team so I can know whether it’s good or bad. For someone who spends all day running content by people at my day job, I was like nope. I thought, “my personal account works because it’s 100% out of pocket and unfiltered me.” 

    Once I start running content by people, it’s no longer me. And if an idea doesn’t work, I’m going to blame myself for running it by another person. However, as a solo creator, I’m free to experiment as I like. 

    One of my biggest fears is getting to the point where I no longer recognize my work. With that resolve, I replied to the message: “thank you very much for the advice. I’ll look into it.”

    TUESDAY:

    No one knows what I look like. At least not the bulk of my followers; my day ones have seen my face. Initially, I decided to be anonymous because the more content I put out, the bigger my personal account got. And I was tired of people saying my face didn’t match my writing whenever they landed on my page, so I removed all my photos. However, over time, anonymity became a necessity for me. 

    At first, I realised I was insecure about my looks so I decided to grow into them without external influence. I didn’t want to post a picture and have people validate my looks. Next, I thought it was cool to be in the shadows on social media where everyone is constantly putting their face or business out there.

    The upside? On good days, like today, I have at least 20 people in my DM begging to know what I look like. People pleading and swearing, earnestly, on their parents’ lives that they won’t share my photos. My answer? “No, I’m not sending.” Although, listening to people beg is like doing drugs because of how intoxicating and powerful it feels. It also helps that I’m aware of the power I hold so I tease and draw out people’s curiosity as much as I can. Some days I’ll post a picture of just my hand or my legs. Other days, I’ll post a full photo of me but covered with a smiley or with my face blurred out. It’s so much fun! 

    The only downside of enjoying anonymity is that I don’t cash out. If someone with my level of influence who shows their face goes out, they’d receive favours I wouldn’t receive, mostly because they’re famous. But no one knows me. Even if I told them I was the person behind my account, they wouldn’t believe it. Therefore, I’d beg for things I ordinarily wouldn’t have to beg for if I showed my face. 

    However, the peace of mind from being anonymous is sufficient for me. There’s no pressure for me to keep up appearances or put on a show — and I love that for me. 

    WEDNESDAY:

    Today makes it three days since I last posted on my Twitter account. My mental health is shit, my anxiety is at an all-time high and my self-esteem is at the lowest. Yay. 

    As a creator with a large following, sooner or later the pressure gets to you. You’re always thinking about numbers: how many retweets did this post get, how many likes, how many quotes? Who shared it? Was it reposted on Instagram and WhatsApp statuses? This obsession puts pressure on you to create fun stuff for the audience so you rush your process. Then it doesn’t bang. Now the numbers are bad and you feel like shit because low numbers are bad for your brand’s business. It’s twice as bad because you can see how other creator’s content are banging in real-time. After a while, doubt starts to creep in. 

    But when your content bangs —my God! You feel unstoppable. God now help you that you’re on a roll. The type where you tweet the most random thing and it bangs. You quote a tweet and you get 4k retweets. Your reply to a tweet gets 2k likes. That kind of constant real-time validation and gratification is a drug you become addicted to. 

    As someone who has recently come down from that high,  the lows are dealing with me. I’m thinking about how my retweets gradually started reducing from 4,000 to 2,000 to 1,000 and then 500 on a good day. I think reality fully hit me when I got to 500. At that point, it was as if I was relocating from Banana Island to Ikorodu and that affected me badly.

    It has taken some affirmations to slowly climb out of it. Every day I remind myself that my worth as a human being is not tied to whether or not my tweets bang. Regardless of what happens, I’m still the same person. I’m still that talented person with room for growth. 

    In the long term,  I know this will pull me out of my mental and emotional chokehold. However, short term, my strategy is to keep avoiding my stressors — most especially Twitter. 

    THURSDAY:

    People always ask me if being an influencer is profitable. The answer is both yes and no. If you’re like me that charged two thousand naira for my first advert, you’re already doing it wrong. Mind you, I had 5,000 followers then. When I got to almost 10k followers I increased my rate to ₦10,000 for adverts. 

    Every time someone paid me I’d promise to deliver the best work of their life. Looking back, I realise that at every follower milestone I’d increase my rates but still did not make bank.

    It wasn’t until today that I realised the reason for my weird relationship with money. The pay at the first company I worked for was shitty so I thought I deserved shit. I was being paid around ₦50,000 to make 90 content items in a month. In my head, ₦10,000 per content item promotion was a good deal for me. And this is how I approached my rates as my follower count grew. 

    With money, I’m just reaching a point where I can charge the least I deserve, especially for someone at my level of influence. It has taken me months of talking with many people to see that I don’t deserve to earn shit.

    Later today, I’ll test out my new resolution on a client I’m talking to. I’m going to multiply my current rate by two. If I die, I die, but I’m no longer accepting rubbish. Thank you very much! 

    Influencing can be mad profitable if you maximise the opportunities you get. But it’s also short-lived. If you don’t reinvent yourself, another person will come up, do what you’re doing and take your spot. 

     FRIDAY:

    I finally posted on Twitter today. It wasn’t my best work but I’ll take it like that. I’m trying to show up regardless of how I feel. The more work I put out, the more I increase the probability of something clicking. 

    It’s just difficult shaking off the feeling that it’s been a while since my content surprised people and that’s messing with me. This weekend, I plan to explore new content formats, think up possible collaborations with fellow creatives, and maybe even consider publishing a book. 

    I hate how creativity can be so hard yet so simple, but I won’t give up. I’ll cry when I need to cry and laugh when it comes.

    I know that there’s potential in the business and I’m going to tap into it. One thing I know is that the first step to blowing is knowing your worth. A lot of people think I have money but I don’t because it has taken so long to realise my worth. If you see yourself as trash, this industry is not kind and will treat you accordingly. 

    Thankfully, things are changing for me. My goal right now is to earn enough from influencing gigs so I can quit my day job. If I play my cards right that day could come sooner than expected. Until then, my plan for today is to open Slack and dance to the tunes of my capitalist employer. 

    I can’t wait for today to end. 


    Check back every Tuesday by 9 am for more “A Week In The Life ” goodness, and if you would like to be featured or you know anyone who fits the profile, fill this form.

  • Will you meet the love of your life on Facebook, Twitter or even LinkedIn? Take this quiz to find out.

  • The Internet gives people a false sense of anonymity that makes everyone feel like they can act anyhow or say anything. Sometimes, moving mad like that will cause people to drag you from your nonexistent baby hairs. Here’s what to do if you’re caught in this situation.

    1. Write an apology in your notes app.

    You don’t even have to mean it, you just have to silence them for a bit and whatever you write should be interpreted to mean this;

    Wahala for who no dey use notes app

    2. Do a giveaway 

    It can be money, airtime, food, spa tickets. Anything to get back into their good graces. People on the internet can bribed like this.

    To err is human, to giveaway is divine. Especially in this economy 

    3. Rebrand 

    You can remember your roots and become a sky daddy stan, post motivational quotes, start selling green tea, become a football commentary account or you can go as far as becoming a comedy skit creator.

    You might just find your true calling

    4. Fight them

    Reply to every and anybody, even the people that are not talking to you. Fight them like you will gain money from it, ask your family members to come and fight for you, dash everybody insults since they wanna move mad.

    5. Ignore

    Just wait for everything to die down, they will have someone else to disturb in less than an hour. If you’re about that life you can even deactivate for a brief moment, or maybe not.

    6. Move silently

    For the next one month, resist the urge to drag someone else or misyarn lest they remind you of your own shortcoming and reopen the case file of your dragging.

    7. Get ready

    Another opportunity may arise for them to drag you again. Don’t let it catch you unawares, Start planning now. Save your strength for the rainy day.

    When all these fail, just do better abeg. Only Jesus is new every morning.