#BBNaija: Television As Madness
#BBNaija: Television As Madness
April 11, 2017
BY REUBEN ABATI
What a relief! So, the Big Brother Naija reality television
programme is finally over. It ended Sunday evening with 23-year old Efe Michael
Ejemba, University of Jos graduate of Economics and singer winning the N25
million including a Sport utility vehicle at stake, with 57.6% of the votes
from over 24 million voters across Africa. Warri, where Efe’s family lives,
erupted in excitement. At the Multichoice viewing centre in Ikeja, Lagos, where
Katung Aduwak took charge so brilliantly, there was a similar eruption of
incandescent joy. I was relieved because for about 70 days, the Big Brother
Naija show was a big distraction, crass capitalism at its most cynical edge, a
source of unmanageable madness in homes and on the streets. Now that it is
over, it is time for some honest frank talk for the attention of all
stakeholders involved.
Let me start with the lessons, on a positive note, before
delivering the blows. Lesson one: In a very instructive manner, the Big Brother
Naija reality television show promoted the ideas of choice and people power at
the heart of democracy. Televised across Africa, the viewers had the final say
in determining who stayed in the house or left during eviction moments on
Sundays. The votes were collated, audited and confirmed by Deloitte, a firm of
auditors and thus, the viewer as the voter determined the outcomes. In that
regard, a reality show of that sort promoted a consciousness of democracy,
choice and influence and it further explained why the people from Nigeria to
Cape Agulhas all the way up to the Mediterranean sea took fierce ownership of
the programme. In a continent where power is the ultimate aphrodisiac and every
access to power, fame and influence is seen as an opportunity to oppress and
demean, whatever is done to promote a consciousness of choice and the civil
society is laudable. Multichoice, thanks.
Lesson Two: in every business concept, perseverance pays.
Multichoice has been running its Big Brother Naija and Big Brother Africa
concepts for a number of years. Apparently, this year’s Big Brother Naija has
been the most impactful, the most profitable and probably also, the most
exciting. In one week, over 11 million persons voted to determine the eviction.
In the final week of the programme, over 24 million persons voted – that is
more than the total number of persons who voted in the Nigerian Presidential
election in 2015. This year, Multichoice has made more money from the Big
Brother franchise than it has ever done. The programme was sponsored by
PayPorte, and with all the voting, and the money spent on recharge cards, Big
Brother and Multichoice are the biggest winners. In the end, it is all about
business and profit. Everybody has been used. In business, once you have a
good, attractive product and you can capture the market, you can fool everybody
and make profit. Multichoice, weh done – in Falz, the bad guy’s voice.
Lesson three: humility pays. At the end of the day, in the
last week of the programme, the decision by the viewing public was a moral,
sentimental one. The biggest star of the programme was, I don’t know what you
think, TBOSS (real name: Tokunbo Idowu), half Nigerian, half-Romanian. She
dominated the space with her Jezebelic antics, even got some of the male
participants ousted by entrapping and outsmarting them with her sexual wiles.
She projected herself as a sex object, the ultimate manipulator, the champion
Delilah of the Big Brother Africa series. She even made a joke of the entire
Big Brother concept by saying she didn’t need the money and if she won, she
would spend it in two weeks to pay off debts, and in any case, she had men
hitting on her, offering to take her on a ride in their private jets. She played
the role of a female barracuda.
Given her looks and talents, she would have been a perfect
winner. She would have looked good on the billboards. But she lost because of
her arrogance. Attitude is everything: this is the lesson of TBOSS’s disgrace
and humiliation. When she was sent out of the House as the second runner up,
the viewing centre in Ikeja, Lagos, including Kemen whose nemesis she was,
danced in joy. “They are taunting me?” she asked Ebuka, the anchor. No,
sweetheart, they were making a far more serious statement about you. The
melodramatic ending of Big Brother Naija 2017 is its only redeeming outcome.
Bisola, the first runner up does not even have a degree but she showed talent
and resolve, even if her whorish flirtation with Thin Tall Tony is so cheap and
self-denigrating. Her One-Nigeria consolation prize is something big she should
take seriously.
Efe won because of his humility. He is considered the poorest
and the most needy of the contestants. Patrons of the programme chose to vote
for the contestant who looked and sounded like he would need the money and the
opportunity. They gave him a chance in life, although the organizers must
ensure that going forward, the show does not become a poverty alleviation
scheme. Bisola came second because she too looked like she needed help. Debbie
Rise and Marvis also made the finals, but that was meant to be a great
compliment to their good conduct, but they didn’t have enough support to make
it to the top. TBOSS is the main star who lost. I hope she was taken out of
South Africa with a private jet or maybe a submarine! Beauty is not everything,
baby.
Lesson four: Marketing helps. Branding is everything.
Propaganda is profitable. Packaging is nice. Big Brother Naija is nothing but
marketing, branding, propaganda, and packaging. A reality show is supposed to
be nothing but reality, virtual reality as it happens, but let no one deceive
you, everything that happened in the 70 days of BBNaija was packaged, marketed,
carefully branded and manipulated. Ebuka, the Big Brother, thumbs up, the
scenic designers, kudos, the content developers, three hearty cheers,
Multichoice, you guys are the smartest capitalists around, well done! The
finale was a bit overdone though, dragged out, over-delayed. Tiwa Savage (hey
baby, watch that growing fat around your waist and thigh), Tuface (thanks
TuBaba but next time tell Annie to twerk for us- what was that!). In all, the
power of television was well advertised.
Now the hard knocks: I rate the theatre high but I consider
the whole show a sham, a 419 manipulative effort by a corporate agency, long
overdue for an ethical review and scrutiny, a bad influence on corporate
ethics. The owners of the programme are just a bunch of insultive, manipulative
and exploitative capitalists, feeding on public need for distraction and the
negligence of the authorities. Big Brother Naija 2017 is something that should
never happen again in the shape we have seen. If Multichoice as a corporate
investor wants to make a contribution to Nigeria, it must find ways of doing so
in more meaningful forms.
Reality shows have become an established form on television,
but whereas there are reality shows that promote talent, music, human
capability and genius, enhanced relationships, and intellect, Multichoice, through
its Big Brother Naija and Big Brother Africa franchises seems committed to the
promotion of base values, chiefly adultery, prostitution, love of money, nudity
and sex. What just ended as Big Brother Naija 2017 was nothing other than the
corralling of some human beings into a zoo, pressured to behave like nothing
but animals. The organizers made money devaluing other human beings.
Multichoice and Payporte, the sponsors, turned alcohol and pornography into
legitimate sport.
TBOSS and the other girls kissed and got groped by the boys
on live television putting their upbringing to shame. TBOSS, who claimed she
didn’t need the money even exposed her breasts on live television more than
once. I have seen better breasts TBOSS. I am not too sure those private jet
owners will be excited by your fluffy, South-looking, slightly bigger than
mangoes breasts. If the same men see bigger assets, I mean, those interesting
Ojiakor-like ones that look like papayas, pineapples and watermelons, they will
not send private jets, they will deploy submarines and fighter jets! And that
‘s why you got N500k in the end, way back behind Bisola with her hard facial
features, and Efe whose victory is based on poverty logistics and appeal. But I
have no doubt that TBOSS will end up doing better in the larger, outside market
than the other finalists, because even those who did not vote for her, know in
their hearts that she represents the message of the programme.
It is a wrong message and that is why Big Brother Naija drew
more audience in Southern Nigeria than in the North. In the last week of the
programme,, every town in Southern Nigeria was seized by the #BBNaija fever.
Prayers were offered in churches for Efe. One lady threatened to commit suicide
if Efe did not win. Another one said she would not stop crying until Efe won.
Nollywood stars declared support for housemates. There was Team Bisola, Team
Efe, EfeNation, TBOSSNation, TeamDebbieRise (small), TeamMarvis (even smaller).
There were public processions even in universities. We were told how to vote.
Twitter was on fire. What I saw was nothing but sheer madness. T-shirts were
printed. One musician turned his personal car into a billboard. Nigeria became
a mad house because of one reality television show. It looked like mass hypnotism
at work.
But it should not be allowed to happen again. BBNaija should
not be hosted and staged in South Africa as has been the case. Multichoice,
Payporte and their partners made crazy money and got brand promotion off the
back and sweat of Nigerians. Do the maths; we got peanuts in return. We were
told BBNaija could not be staged in Nigeria due to electricity problems so the
studio had to be in South Africa. And the Nigerian government looked the other
way. Wawu! All the billions that the South Africans are running away with,
after giving our boy a Kia SUV and some N25m, who is going to collect the Value
Added Tax on that? Nigeria or South Africa? See the real Gobbe! All the staff
who worked on the programme with extremely marginal exception were South Africans.
Where were the Nigerians? Abi, Lobatan oh.
The Nigerian government must assert itself. Nobody henceforth
must brand anything involving primary production, Nigerian off Nigerian soil.
We can’t get far by wearing made-in-Nigerian clothes on Mondays and Wednesdays,
turning the country into an extension of Nollywood, but we can gain a lot by
insisting that economic production and profit based on Nigerian talent and
resource must have significant Nigerian content.
Congratulations Efe; the grace of God is forever sufficient, but sorry Nigeria.
Congratulations Efe; the grace of God is forever sufficient, but sorry Nigeria.
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