Charles Novia Says Celebrities Live Fake Lifesyles And Tell Many Lies
Veteran actor and movie maker has totally taken on his new role of critic and hater.
The controversial actor has written another article titled
‘Flaunting it, faking it,’ in which he takes on celebrities for their
fake flashy lifestyle constantly flaunted on social media.
Charles Novia also showered praises on Tuface as the most humble celeb.
Read below: -
“Among the present crop of Nigerian musicians, I would vote for
Tuface Idibia as the most humble of the lot. His humility is well-known
by a lot of people as one of his greatest assets added to a very warm
and friendly disposition. Apart from his humility, one appreciable
virtue he has is his sense of modesty even when he is easily one of the
richest musicians in Nigeria. You don’t really see Tuface going on
instagram or other social networks to flaunt a new watch or new car or
some material possession. Not because he cannot afford them but because
he has sense of proprietary. (please continue…)
I had an informal conversation with him in Atlanta, USA in
October 2013 one evening when we were both hanging out with a bosom
friend and brother, Chris Ikpefua of Vogue Entertainment, USA and Tuface
told me something profound. I have known Tuface since 1997 when was a
member of the then duo-group, Plantation Boiz with Blackface and I was a
contract staff with the network service of the Nigerian Television
Authority. I was a Presenter of a youth programme on NTA Network then,
‘Youth Dimensions’ and I featured Tuface and Blackface for the first
time to a national audience, over 30 million strong. Tuface wistfully
took my mind back to that episode and kept regaling everyone with tales
of how ‘this man helped his career way back’. He was also effusive in
his praise about how I brought back and rehabilated Majek Fashek in 2005
back to the music scene, after Majek’s years in a self-imposed
wilderness. Personally, I was pleased at Tuface’s verbal obeisance to
me. In an industry of short memories, he knows where he has come from
and remains who he is even after getting to his destination.
Tuface then told me something profound and touching. ‘ You know
what? Sometimes I look back and remember how I started, who I started
with, the other musical groups we had when we started and the solo
artistes then. I look around now and for some reason God has made me
still relevant till now for close to twenty years in the music industry.
It humbles and chills me. I feel sad that most of my peers are not
where I am too. Artistes who struggled with us to build the music
industry to this level with their talent when there was no structure. I
feel very sad for them, Bros. I am also aware that many of the young and
even the established artistes look up to me as a role model of sorts.
If I screw up, they too might screw up. So, Bros, I went into
properties. Immediately I started buying houses, the others looking up
to me slowed down and began to invest in properties too. It made me
happy because they would have something to fall back to later in life.
Bros, I get properties but nor be wetin dem dey shout about.’
I was impressed by his sense of acumen and again modesty in
wealth. But Tuface is an exception and a cursory calculation of his
income from worldwide concerts and endorsements in the past decade
would show that he has made money impressively to explain his
commendable investments.
I wish I could say the same for the crop of Nigerian artistes
who love flaunting their material possessions for all to see. More often
than not, those things being flaunted are part of a hype culture. There
is a need to ‘belong’ and most of those acts, wracked by a poverty
mentality, believe a $300,000 designer wristwatch or an expensive car or
SUV are the yardstick to measure their wealth. No, they are not.
Maturity and moderation matters. A rich person does not need to tell the
world he or she is loaded. The world perceives it.
Our musicians and actresses deluding themselves on social
media with this flaunting fad are not being true to themselves. The
entertainment industry is a coterie community and the statistics of
income are not hidden. When you try to hoodwink the public that you
bought a house or a diamond watch just from the singing and prancing on
stage in an industry where CD sales are dropping, or that you bought
some house in Ikoyi just by being an unmarried actress when we all know
how much an actor is paid for a role, is stretching the story a bit too
far. Granted, these artistes might have other legitimate sources of
income but such sources are negligible in turnover.
One day, very soon, those wealthy shady barons and pimps using
the artistes in the industry as cannon fodder might just move to another
area of interest. And don’t get me wrong, how people make their money
is entirely their own business. What I am pissed about is the deception;
the whole stinking deception. These artistes hoodwinking the public
that they made their money through their art when there is more to it.
Others who are not in the entertainment sector make money through these
same avenues these artistes use but they don’t come out shouting about
it as such.
In essence, what I am saying here is; Guys, make una cool down.
Make your money as codedly as una don dey make am. Make your work dey
speak for you for one side and your money dey quietly answer you for the
other side.
The fake life and lies don dey too much for many of una. Shikena!”
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