Owerri, Imo State |
Although
2013 is still on, would you rate the eleven months that have almost gone as
great for Imo State in the area of entertainment?
For
an upcoming artiste who probably dropped two singles this year with couple of
air play, he would say it has been a great year, but for those who are waiting
on the Lord for a label to look their way, it has been like other years.
For
a young girl and another young man who were probably known by their friends
alone, but now walks into the Government House as Ada and Opara Imo, it has
been a great year, but for others who never saw that gate because the governor
that knew them is now residing somewhere in Abuja, God is supposed to reverse
the year.
I
once told the tale of a growing city in the area of entertainment; I unveiled
our strengths and weakness, yet skipping the heart of it.
In
2013, the rain fell for the good, the bad and the ugly. While it filled the
cups and drums of some who lacked water, it washed away the tears of others and
also pulled off the roofs of some others.
Simply
say 2013 was fair and unfair
Before
2013, and in some parts of 2013, there was an office called Bureau for
Entertainment in Imo State, ran by comedian Uche Ogbuagu who was allegedly
reffered to as the Special Assistant to the Imo State governor on Entertainment
and Propaganda; an office which never existed since the government of Rochas
Okorocha took over in 2011.
Uche
Ogbuagu claimed to be the highest authority in Imo State entertainment or
better say in Imo State entertainment politics. Many criticized his actions on
granting approval to most major events in the state while his power clashed
with the likes Buchi George and Emma Duru.
The
duo, Buchi George and Emma Duru ran their entertainment empires as well, and
they would never agree with Mr Ogbuagu for any reason. This unhealthy
competition for supremacy paralyzed so many activities in the state and because
of it, some events were never approved.
In
my opinion, if he was ever appointed as an adviser to the governor, it is
either he never got close to the governor or he never offered any advice to the
governor because his tenure brought not even a single change to the
entertainers on the streets aside fellow praise singers in the government
house.
I
am still surprised that with the so called entertainment gurus our governor has
in the government house, the only entertainment event the state government
could organize in a whole year was the so called Ada and Opara Imo, a pageant
most considered as ‘the normal government thing’.
Rivers
and Cross Rivers States disturb my ears with news and jingles of their state
carnival and I am yet to hear such in a state that is considered as the
hub of entertainment in South East; while Buchi George might still hold out his
hands for the N34m the state is owing him for organizing Imo State Carnival in
2011, nothing has been said about the 2013 edition.
Governor
Okorocha might think he is the King Solomon of Imo State by not finding a
single entertainer based in the state fit for any appointment as well as making
the office Special Adviser on Entertainment a history, but soon the bell will
ring and the Douglas House will be calling for praise singers who will compose
her 2015 anthem.
We
will all be watching
Bringing
in people who just parade the government house and leave when their
appointments are terminated might be ideal in his style, but he should remember
this simple saying “Na who wear shoe, know where e de pain am”. Failure to support
entertainers whose numbers are growing daily in their various genres will
surely cost him or anyone that would be running in his stead come 2015. To the
best of my knowledge based on the political awareness in the state, any last
minute change will be seen as mere ‘politricking’. Money will be spent
but no vote will be cast in his direction.
Before
2013, I never heard of PMAN until a certain day, the name resurrected from
nowhere, revealing what many never knew.
PMAN
had been in existence in the state, and just like a student that failed a
course in the university, they carried-over the problems at the national level
to the state, having two factions that will never agree.
While
one faction was having meetings with grassroot artistes; promising these
voiceless artistes things that would change their lives when actualized, the
other faction was holding award night, honouring politicians and their likes
for achievement that are best known to them.
What
is the meaning of PMAN? Performing Musician Employee Association of Nigeria.
Maybe the employee justifies why those running the affairs of the association
are artistes who were last seen on stage more than a decade ago.
This
is just like a father heading a youth association, I must say that PMAN has
been a shame in the state and anyone parading himself as the leader of the
association should ask himself what he has achieved for artistes in the state
and not just the few followers that accompany him to courtesy calls.
Has
PMAN given the artiste on the street a single hope? None hope that I know
about.
Have
the leaders of PMAN enriched themselves?
Yet
their sufferings will not be taken for granted.
These
days, artistes have no one to look up to, no role model and everyone is
scattered like power blown in the wind.
Imo
Sate is one place people with zero IQ in entertainment run the affairs in what
will determine the future of many youths in the state.
Being
50 years does not mean one knows it all; wisdom comes with experience and not
with age.
For
those in the media who have cared less about the ‘locals’, you need to
think again. We prefer to promote made men, who do not need promotions, sending
indigenous entertainers to the trash cans.
All
you need to do is visit a burial ceremony by the Anglican Church, listen to
that popular hymn that says you’ll be remembered by only the things you
have done.
This
is one reason many people still call the late Hot 99.5 FM presenter, Raymond
Ayuba a legend. He believed in talent and lived by that code and today, his
efforts have brought many to limelight.
DJs
will have their own strokes to receive aside few that will make the roll call.
I listened to an Enugu State based DJ playing in a wedding ceremony in
community and he never played a song by any other artistes aside those from
Enugu State. Which DJ can brag of playing 20% of songs that are made here in
Imo State? Again, only a few will make the roll call. These songs will never be
played, yet when an artiste pays a DJ in the state it will never be an artiste
from Port Harcourt, but those from the state. Why take money and not render the
services?
Dear
artiste and producer, you are busy calling these other people names for not
looking into your matter, what have you done for yourself? Your best
discussions are criticisms, back-biting and looking for a way to pull the other
person down. You’ll never accept that a colleague has moved to the next level,
so you make his fans to still see him as that ordinary guy.
Remember
thus, a child who says his father is crazy should ask his biology teacher for
the list of hereditary traits in man. Helping someone up the ladder will never
be a stupid thing to do, unless we wish to be busy playing ‘game of throne’,
and it will never helps anyone.
The
government, her agents and leaders of these associations that decide the fate
of entertainers should stop seeing entertainment as something that is more of
side attraction, but understand that the future of many young Imolites are
being toiled with.
They
love to shake hands with achievers whom they have contributed nothing to their
success, they would love to splash lands, cars and scholarship to make the
world see them as angels, but I know that one day a courageous winner will
emerge and when he will be called to this lips service reception, he will
openly reject it and tell them he has no reason to celebrate with people who
never cared about his days of struggle but only wants to identify with his
success.
More
should be invested in making heroes, instead of splashing much more in the
celebration of these self made heroes.
Imo
entertainment industry can never be that better if we keep enriching outsiders
calling our people local entertainers. The musicians, models, comedians, and
those in the movie world need to given attention; we all need to work it out
together next year.
Chinedu Hardy Nwadike writes from
Owerri, Imo State.
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