WELCOME TO CRYSTAL RAINBOW’S BLOG: INSIGHTS... HISTORICAL EVENTS... ABADONED AND FORGOTTEN HISTORIES... UNFORGETTABLE INCIDENTS OF THE PAST...
Monday, 27 October 2014
Why We Can't Trust Our Entertainment Politicians
This is the season of politics in Nigeria. Come
2015, there shall be a new order of government
via the democratic polling system, and the
country will be led at various levels by a new raft
of optimistic politicians.
Any other period in history and this column will
not be concerned with the affairs of governance,
but this time, I write these words because
entertainment and politics have found a way to
become entangled. Not because the aspiring
leaders have called upon the influential singers,
actors and comedians to endorse their bids, no.
I, Joey Akan, pen these words because our singers
and actors, and comedians, have become
politicians in their own right. Choosing to let go of
their primary means of livelihood, and become
lords over us all. They have cast down the cloak of
humor, and masks of delightful service. Now they
aspire for the mantle of leadership.
An entertainment politician has one modus
operandi, this is how it goes. To win an election,
they need votes. They don’t possess the know-
how, experience and man-power to rig the
elections, so they are dependent on their fame,
popularity and strength of character (or charisma)
to lead them through. They want the world to be
fair, and the voting open, for them to have a shot.
To them, their main challenge lies in the primary
elections. They have to defeat their opponents at
the basic level and become worthy of carrying a
respectable party’s support to challenge for top
honours. Funding is never an issue. Any fool can
part with his money to support a star with an
ambition.
They are convincing, these people. They are good
with words, popular with the masses, and appear
sincere on the outside. What remains is the issue
of trust and belief in their motives for power. We
don’t trust these men and women from our
screens. Even the most innocent or friendly of
them all.
Julius Agwu » , Desmond Elliot, Kenny Saint
Best, Tony Tetuila, Kate Henshaw » , 9ice,
Kenneth Okonkwo, Bob Manuel Udokwu, and
others like them will have a mountain to climb,
and they have to. Politics and entertainment are
different fields that do not mix. Sure we love our
entertainers, but we aren’t sure of their plans and
ability to pull us through one of the most horrible
moments in our nation’s history. The terror in the
north, the threat of militancy and piracy in the
south, the seeds of Biafran secession have
sprouted again in the East.
We need people in all the levels of government
who can rise up to these challenges and make
them go away. Our entertainers are unconvincing
in that regard.
Deep down, the issue of distrust does not come
from their personality. It comes from their past
jobs. Entertainers in Nigeria and other parts of
the globe are generally not regarded as sound-
minded and real people. They are generalised as
‘showbiz types’; fake people who can never lead a
life of higher calling. Now they seek to do that, but
the (mis)perception of their job which is their
primary strength, also doubles as their Achilles
heel.
Also it does not help that the majority of
entertainers who seek to go into the government
are not currently successful. Tony Tetuila is
yesterday’s man » . 9ice has lost the musical
anointing long before he became Mr. Abolore
Akande. Kenny Saint Best » is also regarded as
uninspired and a struggling artiste. Bob Manuel
and Kenneth Okonkwo, also yesterday’s giants,
aren’t the most desirable actors on the block.
These people are seen as desperate and in need
of a route to survival, and politics is perceived as
their get-out-of-jail card.
Tony Tetuila did not help himself with his blonde
hair. What manner of man who seeks to serve
people of conservative stock would appear with
blonde hair on his campaign poster? What’s the
thought process behind that? Now he has altered
the hair colour to black, but the damage has been
done. In many quarters, it is irreparable.
As flashy as these entertainers come, they fail to
inspire a sense of warmth and security in all of us.
We love them, admire them, adore them, worship
them, and long to be in their world.
But trust them with affairs of state? That’s
another matter entirely.
BY Joey Akan
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Featured post
AFRICA: THE TRIBE CALLED “YORUBA” IN NIGERIA
RANDOM FACTS ABOUT YORÚBÀ THAT PUTS NIGERIA ON THE MAP💫 1.The richest estate in Nigeria is found in yorubaland 🤞. RANDOM FACTS ABOUT ...
-
The Kaduna State Government says it is concluding work on the establishment of a Judicial Commission of Inquiry into the massacre in Zaria b...
-
An intricate statue, carved out of steatite more than four thousand years ago, Priest-King (as the figure has come to be known) is among...
-
Barack Obama Sr., father of the 43rd President of the United States, was born in the Rachuonyo District, in the then British colony of Ken...
No comments:
Post a Comment