• Osas Ighodaro
    John Ighodaro (Johnny Drille )
    Two Amazing Cousins

    Meet the Ighodaros — blood, talent, and pride in Edo roots.
    Johnny Drille blesses us with soulful sounds that echo deep heritage.
    Osas Ighodaro lights up the screen with grace, power, and global impact.

    From music stages to movie sets, they’re flying the Edo flag with excellence, culture, and pride.
    Let’s celebrate our own — where heritage meets global talent.

    #EdoNoDeyCarryLast 🙌🏾
    Osas Ighodaro John Ighodaro (Johnny Drille ) Two Amazing Cousins 👏 ❤️ 🌹 Meet the Ighodaros — blood, talent, and pride in Edo roots. 🎤 Johnny Drille blesses us with soulful sounds that echo deep heritage. 🎬 Osas Ighodaro lights up the screen with grace, power, and global impact. From music stages to movie sets, they’re flying the Edo flag with excellence, culture, and pride. Let’s celebrate our own — where heritage meets global talent. 💯👑 #EdoNoDeyCarryLast 🙌🏾
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·273 Views
  • Women has this to say about 'Tyler Perry’s new movie ‘Straw’ 🥹
    Women has this to say about 'Tyler Perry’s new movie ‘Straw’ 🥹‼️
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·249 Views
  • Aside from Acrimony where Taraji P. Henson played a lead role, STRAW is another movie she played a lead role, which will make you emotional.

    A fantastic movie, I must say, that explains the agony behind survival and motherhood.

    If you are a movie lover, kindly check STRAW out on Netflix, It was released some hours ago.
    Aside from Acrimony where Taraji P. Henson played a lead role, STRAW is another movie she played a lead role, which will make you emotional. A fantastic movie, I must say, that explains the agony behind survival and motherhood. If you are a movie lover, kindly check STRAW out on Netflix, It was released some hours ago.
    Like
    1
    · 0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·458 Views
  • Who has seen this "STRAW" movie on Netflix?
    Who has seen this "STRAW" movie on Netflix?
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·240 Views
  • SAD NEWS
    Ghanaian Actor and Filmmaker Lil Win says, he might never release his highly anticipated film IBRAHIM TRAORÉ cuz he was chased out by his landlord.. in his words

    ‘’ I paid the landlord 15,000 per day for our movie shoot but he still sacked me - Lilwin reveals biopic movie on Ibrahim Traore has been halted

    Lilwin was dropping GHC15,000 daily just to rent a location for his Ibrahim Traoré biopic.
    Everything was going well until a group of guys on motorbikes showed up and scattered the whole set.

    Things got messy, and the landlord, not wanting any wahala, asked Lilwin to pack out.

    Ghanaians and excuses na 5&6.. I mean can’t you get another house ?

    Anyways upon hearing this, many Ghanaians blame him for sharing graphics of the film even though it wasn’t ready..
    E bad eh
    SAD NEWS 🇬🇭😩 Ghanaian Actor and Filmmaker Lil Win says, he might never release his highly anticipated film IBRAHIM TRAORÉ cuz he was chased out by his landlord.. in his words 👇 ‘’ I paid the landlord 15,000 per day for our movie shoot but he still sacked me - Lilwin reveals biopic movie on Ibrahim Traore has been halted Lilwin was dropping GHC15,000 daily just to rent a location for his Ibrahim Traoré biopic. Everything was going well until a group of guys on motorbikes showed up and scattered the whole set. Things got messy, and the landlord, not wanting any wahala, asked Lilwin to pack out. Ghanaians and excuses na 5&6.. I mean can’t you get another house ? Anyways upon hearing this, many Ghanaians blame him for sharing graphics of the film even though it wasn’t ready.. E bad eh
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·777 Views
  • A reconstruction of the Ancient Benin Capital....
    It's time we take edo tourism to the next level, why don't we replicate Disney land with the old Benin Capital, more like an "Ancient Benin City" that will be open to tourist and movie producers.

    Edo has this potential and we can't afford to let it waste.

    Credit: Edocentric_x
    A reconstruction of the Ancient Benin Capital....😘 It's time we take edo tourism to the next level, why don't we replicate Disney land with the old Benin Capital, more like an "Ancient Benin City" that will be open to tourist and movie producers. Edo has this potential 💯 and we can't afford to let it waste.🤷‍♀️ Credit: Edocentric_x
    Like
    1
    · 0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·563 Views
  • “The $100 million we invested in Iroko TV was a mistake. If I had another opportunity, I would not do it again.”

    Jason Njoku shares his terrible, brutal experience running Iroko TV.

    Let's read him:

    STREAMING IN NIGERIA. DID THE MARKET WIN?

    Iroko’s first funding was in August 2011; our mandate was to build a large streaming business in Nigeria.

    Tiger Global believed that one of the largest growth areas would be online entertainment, and like most content, the winners would be local content in large domestic markets.

    They invested $200 million in Netflix back in 2010 and then invested in IVI in Russia, YY in China, Netmovies in Brazil, and us in Nigeria.

    With super-expensive data bundles and inelegant payment options (I remember waiting for Interswitch to enable us to integrate), our market took a while to mature. In most opportunities, you can be too early or too late; only in hindsight can you gauge when the best time to strike would be. iROKOtv was very early when we launched in 2011, but we were fortunate that there was a ready-made international market in the diaspora who were willing to pay and able to overcome any technical hurdles (payment/bandwidth/devices) to enable us to at least generate a sizable income.

    We actually waited until 2015 (four years post-launch), building the product, securing a sizable content library, and assembling a team to attempt to take on Nigeria and Africa. Between the revenues we generated and the venture capital we raised ($35 million) over the first ten years, we easily spent $100 million trying to win.

    But we weren’t winning; we weren’t really losing either. We were just there, in full survival mode, operating in the toughest conditions possible. Streaming, even domestically, is a scale game.

    Africa wasn’t immune to those costs. It’s incredibly expensive across marketing, content, delivery, and product platforms. Our largest, most serious competitors were Showmax, Netflix, Amazon, and Iflix. Collectively, they easily invested $1 billion or more from 2015 to 2023.

    During that period, we often had tense board meetings about why iROKOtv wasn’t succeeding; it was challenging to feel that all my hard work and dedication were constantly reduced to “you’re not doing enough”.

    We have been, and remain, the most aggressive in trying to distribute content across Nigeria—deploying hundreds of manned kiosks, teams of outbound contact centre agents, creating agency networks, adjusting our product to prioritise Android downloads, and pioneering peer-to-peer file sharing.

    At one point, it dawned on me, and I finally shot back in a board meeting: if iROKOtv was losing, could they point to someone who was beating us? In the startup world, that’s usually the outcome of underperformance.

    You are simply being out-executed by a better-capitalised or higher-performing startup. In this case, there simply wasn’t anything anyone could point to to establish that.

    So my simple assertion was that the market was winning. In 2019, we went out to fundraise; for the first time, we used a bank, Stanbic IBTP, to support that.

    We were looking for $10-20 million to keep pushing into and across Africa with our outbound, agency, and kiosk models.

    I believed my tales of survival would inspire the (primarily) PE investors that we were going to be the eventual winners in a brutal, long-fought civil streaming war. Instead, they all largely concluded that perhaps there was no market there, that the unit economics were simply not viable at any reasonable scale.

    What they were all interested in was the ROK content, TV channels, and distribution business. It was straightforward (fewer than 30 employees), had clear revenue recognition (billion-dollar paid TV platforms – DStv, Multichoice, SKY, etc., with 3-5 year contracts in non-local currencies), and was amassing a sizable IP library funded by the same paid TV platforms. Once we separated out ROK, it was clear where the value lay in Iroko. It represented 80% of revenues and 25% of costs. EBITA margins of 35-40% were achieved without even realising it.

    The outcome of that fundraise was the $25 million partial exit (Iroko sold her shares; Mrs Njoku remains a significant shareholder in the studio) to Vivendi/Canal+.

    We closed in July 2019.

    Before the end of 2019, we had distributed $5 million as a special dividend and were primed to take on the world.

    Then COVID-19 happened. Streaming temporarily boomed in the West (our North American business tripled in subscriber growth), while Nigeria closed borders and grappled with peculiar economic principles (devaluations, FX windows, etc.).

    The local market in Nigeria simply collapsed. We saw it and stubbornly decided to keep investing and doubling down until we were all tapped out, having burnt through most of the post-exit capital. To save iROKOtv, we considered crowdfunding, an AIM LSE listing (you could raise $10-30 million easily back then) with relatively little revenue but a strong narrative.

    In the end, we raised $1.1 million in convertible notes, then recapped the company a year later and paid it back.

    In 2023, we finally accepted there was no market for paid premium services and exited Nigeria. We haven’t processed any Naira payments there in almost two years.

    As I humbly survey the wreckage of the last 15 years of streaming in Nigeria and Africa, it’s clear our (then $2k GDP per capita) was too small to support even a $5/mo product. It’s clear this wasn’t even a question of capital.

    Showmax alone continues to pour tens, if not hundreds, of millions to make it work. But the global giants tapped out last year; their costs (content and marketing) were clearly unsustainably high, and their product needed to be localised to make sense and actually work; it’s just not how platforms sustainably scale.

    So I wasn’t surprised when either Amazon or Netflix rolled back their considerable investments in Nigeria. $5/mo is a luxury I doubt even 250k can reliably afford in Nigeria.

    You can see the impact of what GOtv and DStv are suffering at the hands of the market. It’s okay that we tried and failed. It’s okay that we accept the limitations in the domestic market we find ourselves in. Did it need $1B+ to figure this out?

    Absolutely not. I believe, with my newfound knowledge, that iROKOtv could have reached the same conclusions with $5-10 million versus the $100 million+ we ended up investing.

    In hindsight, streaming wasn’t the winning model for Nollywood in Nigeria. Content, channels, and distribution were.

    With the economics that business had in 2018, we could have shut down iROKOtv and her $5 million/year in losses and either listed it or just had a fantastically profitable business.

    But I was a believer and walked away from millions of dollars in personal liquidity to put it all in to build streaming in Africa.

    My lessons were expensive, and that’s why I am so consistent in telling founders not to over-raise.

    I am not surprised by the story of Obi from Kobo360; I lobbied him pre-$30m raise not to raise too much capital or later on to seek a merger with his nearest competitor whilst they were engaged in a brutal price war.

    The unit economics and payment cycles were brutal, and capital wasn’t going to dramatically change the market dynamics, and it appeared that no one was really going to win that market. It’s only with deep, lived, and expensive experience that I can glance at unit economics coldly and get a feel for whether, with the usual macro turbulence, a startup has a better chance at long-term success.

    Nigeria is currently a massive drag on the entire operating business of Multichoice. Their most recent H1 reports indicate.

    Reminder that this is the largest pay platform in Africa, which is currently being acquired in a $2.8B deal.
    “The $100 million we invested in Iroko TV was a mistake. If I had another opportunity, I would not do it again.” Jason Njoku shares his terrible, brutal experience running Iroko TV. Let's read him: STREAMING IN NIGERIA. DID THE MARKET WIN? Iroko’s first funding was in August 2011; our mandate was to build a large streaming business in Nigeria. Tiger Global believed that one of the largest growth areas would be online entertainment, and like most content, the winners would be local content in large domestic markets. They invested $200 million in Netflix back in 2010 and then invested in IVI in Russia, YY in China, Netmovies in Brazil, and us in Nigeria. With super-expensive data bundles and inelegant payment options (I remember waiting for Interswitch to enable us to integrate), our market took a while to mature. In most opportunities, you can be too early or too late; only in hindsight can you gauge when the best time to strike would be. iROKOtv was very early when we launched in 2011, but we were fortunate that there was a ready-made international market in the diaspora who were willing to pay and able to overcome any technical hurdles (payment/bandwidth/devices) to enable us to at least generate a sizable income. We actually waited until 2015 (four years post-launch), building the product, securing a sizable content library, and assembling a team to attempt to take on Nigeria and Africa. Between the revenues we generated and the venture capital we raised ($35 million) over the first ten years, we easily spent $100 million trying to win. But we weren’t winning; we weren’t really losing either. We were just there, in full survival mode, operating in the toughest conditions possible. Streaming, even domestically, is a scale game. Africa wasn’t immune to those costs. It’s incredibly expensive across marketing, content, delivery, and product platforms. Our largest, most serious competitors were Showmax, Netflix, Amazon, and Iflix. Collectively, they easily invested $1 billion or more from 2015 to 2023. During that period, we often had tense board meetings about why iROKOtv wasn’t succeeding; it was challenging to feel that all my hard work and dedication were constantly reduced to “you’re not doing enough”. We have been, and remain, the most aggressive in trying to distribute content across Nigeria—deploying hundreds of manned kiosks, teams of outbound contact centre agents, creating agency networks, adjusting our product to prioritise Android downloads, and pioneering peer-to-peer file sharing. At one point, it dawned on me, and I finally shot back in a board meeting: if iROKOtv was losing, could they point to someone who was beating us? In the startup world, that’s usually the outcome of underperformance. You are simply being out-executed by a better-capitalised or higher-performing startup. In this case, there simply wasn’t anything anyone could point to to establish that. So my simple assertion was that the market was winning. In 2019, we went out to fundraise; for the first time, we used a bank, Stanbic IBTP, to support that. We were looking for $10-20 million to keep pushing into and across Africa with our outbound, agency, and kiosk models. I believed my tales of survival would inspire the (primarily) PE investors that we were going to be the eventual winners in a brutal, long-fought civil streaming war. Instead, they all largely concluded that perhaps there was no market there, that the unit economics were simply not viable at any reasonable scale. What they were all interested in was the ROK content, TV channels, and distribution business. It was straightforward (fewer than 30 employees), had clear revenue recognition (billion-dollar paid TV platforms – DStv, Multichoice, SKY, etc., with 3-5 year contracts in non-local currencies), and was amassing a sizable IP library funded by the same paid TV platforms. Once we separated out ROK, it was clear where the value lay in Iroko. It represented 80% of revenues and 25% of costs. EBITA margins of 35-40% were achieved without even realising it. The outcome of that fundraise was the $25 million partial exit (Iroko sold her shares; Mrs Njoku remains a significant shareholder in the studio) to Vivendi/Canal+. We closed in July 2019. Before the end of 2019, we had distributed $5 million as a special dividend and were primed to take on the world. Then COVID-19 happened. Streaming temporarily boomed in the West (our North American business tripled in subscriber growth), while Nigeria closed borders and grappled with peculiar economic principles (devaluations, FX windows, etc.). The local market in Nigeria simply collapsed. We saw it and stubbornly decided to keep investing and doubling down until we were all tapped out, having burnt through most of the post-exit capital. To save iROKOtv, we considered crowdfunding, an AIM LSE listing (you could raise $10-30 million easily back then) with relatively little revenue but a strong narrative. In the end, we raised $1.1 million in convertible notes, then recapped the company a year later and paid it back. In 2023, we finally accepted there was no market for paid premium services and exited Nigeria. We haven’t processed any Naira payments there in almost two years. As I humbly survey the wreckage of the last 15 years of streaming in Nigeria and Africa, it’s clear our (then $2k GDP per capita) was too small to support even a $5/mo product. It’s clear this wasn’t even a question of capital. Showmax alone continues to pour tens, if not hundreds, of millions to make it work. But the global giants tapped out last year; their costs (content and marketing) were clearly unsustainably high, and their product needed to be localised to make sense and actually work; it’s just not how platforms sustainably scale. So I wasn’t surprised when either Amazon or Netflix rolled back their considerable investments in Nigeria. $5/mo is a luxury I doubt even 250k can reliably afford in Nigeria. You can see the impact of what GOtv and DStv are suffering at the hands of the market. It’s okay that we tried and failed. It’s okay that we accept the limitations in the domestic market we find ourselves in. Did it need $1B+ to figure this out? Absolutely not. I believe, with my newfound knowledge, that iROKOtv could have reached the same conclusions with $5-10 million versus the $100 million+ we ended up investing. In hindsight, streaming wasn’t the winning model for Nollywood in Nigeria. Content, channels, and distribution were. With the economics that business had in 2018, we could have shut down iROKOtv and her $5 million/year in losses and either listed it or just had a fantastically profitable business. But I was a believer and walked away from millions of dollars in personal liquidity to put it all in to build streaming in Africa. My lessons were expensive, and that’s why I am so consistent in telling founders not to over-raise. I am not surprised by the story of Obi from Kobo360; I lobbied him pre-$30m raise not to raise too much capital or later on to seek a merger with his nearest competitor whilst they were engaged in a brutal price war. The unit economics and payment cycles were brutal, and capital wasn’t going to dramatically change the market dynamics, and it appeared that no one was really going to win that market. It’s only with deep, lived, and expensive experience that I can glance at unit economics coldly and get a feel for whether, with the usual macro turbulence, a startup has a better chance at long-term success. Nigeria is currently a massive drag on the entire operating business of Multichoice. Their most recent H1 reports indicate. Reminder that this is the largest pay platform in Africa, which is currently being acquired in a $2.8B deal.
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·4K Views
  • Actors Guild Steps In Over Zubby Michael's Actions on Set

    The Actors Guild of Nigeria (AGN) has stepped in to investigate a recent incident on a movie set where actor Zubby Michael allegedly kicked his colleague Godwin Nnadiekwe, resulting in internal bleeding.

    Nollywood producer Stanley Ontop revealed that the AGN president, Emeka Rollas, has reached out to him and assured that the matter will be handled properly.

    He wrote;

    "I want to appreciate the president of Actors Guild Of Nigeria (AGN) sir Emeka Rollas emekarollas for calling me this morning; asking for the actors phone number, producer’s phone number, Director’s phone number and hospital name….He gave me the assurance that this matter will be handled properly. They are investigating the matter as we speak (AGN)…. Let’s wait and see AGN reaction to this video. All actors should be careful on set biko because you don’t know who is alive No actor deserve such act from his fellow actor AGN president pls this should be addressed properly to avert future occurrence :pray::pray: Get well soon bro @godwin_nnadiekwe"
    Actors Guild Steps In Over Zubby Michael's Actions on Set The Actors Guild of Nigeria (AGN) has stepped in to investigate a recent incident on a movie set where actor Zubby Michael allegedly kicked his colleague Godwin Nnadiekwe, resulting in internal bleeding. Nollywood producer Stanley Ontop revealed that the AGN president, Emeka Rollas, has reached out to him and assured that the matter will be handled properly. He wrote; "I want to appreciate the president of Actors Guild Of Nigeria (AGN) sir Emeka Rollas emekarollas for calling me this morning; asking for the actors phone number, producer’s phone number, Director’s phone number and hospital name….He gave me the assurance that this matter will be handled properly. They are investigating the matter as we speak (AGN)…. Let’s wait and see AGN reaction to this video. All actors should be careful on set biko because you don’t know who is alive No actor deserve such act from his fellow actor AGN president pls this should be addressed properly to avert future occurrence :pray::pray: Get well soon bro @godwin_nnadiekwe"
    1 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·961 Views
  • A masterwork of vision, voice, and craft, and the mind that made it happen.

    Best Movie (Proudly sponsored by Amstel Malta) : Freedom Way by Blessing Uzzi

    Best Director( Proudly sponsored by Martell) : Awam Amkpa for The Man Died

    At #AMVCA11, storytelling reached its summit.
    One dazzled, the other directed with purpose.
    Together, they created a cinematic legacy that devoured the screen.

    #AMVCA
    A masterwork of vision, voice, and craft, and the mind that made it happen. 🏆Best Movie (Proudly sponsored by Amstel Malta) : Freedom Way by Blessing Uzzi 🏆Best Director( Proudly sponsored by Martell) : Awam Amkpa for The Man Died At #AMVCA11, storytelling reached its summit. One dazzled, the other directed with purpose. Together, they created a cinematic legacy that devoured the screen. #AMVCA
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·2K Views
  • Nigeria’s movie legend send Easter pics....
    Nigeria’s movie legend send Easter pics....
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·997 Views
  • Every Nigerian Movie.
    Every Nigerian Movie.
    Like
    Lol
    2
    · 0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·1K Views
  • At a Movie Premier in Lagos last night, Iyabo Ojo announced Mercy Aigbe's two phones were stolen at the event🥹.
    At a Movie Premier in Lagos last night, Iyabo Ojo announced Mercy Aigbe's two phones were stolen at the event🥹.
    0 Commenti ·0 condivisioni ·2K Views
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