Yes, because history, culture, upbringing, education, and individual personality don't matter. Everyone in a massive group must think exactly the same way. Brilliant analysis. 😂
😭😭 "My crush is Michael B. Jordan" is normal celebrity-crush talk. The real shocker is that Mr Eazi said his celebrity crush is his own wife. Brother came to the podcast with husband points maxed out. Omo😭😭
Lack of gratitude and disrespect irks my soul!!!
How do you tell your ostrich-looking celebrity husband who sacrifices his life for you to his face on a podcas that your crush is M B Jordon just after he calls you his celebrity crush!!!
@taiwo_junzi 😂😂 The funniest part is people are more offended than Mr Eazi himself. My guy was sitting there smiling while the internet has already filed three divorce petitions on his behalf.
The "but I don't care about looks" part is what people are missing. She wasn't comparing the two men; she was explaining that attraction might catch your eye, but character, compatibility, and love are what determine who you marry.
Make una free this couple ahbeg
The funny thing is that you're arguing against stereotypes while using another stereotype to make your point. Not every Nigerian man fits the picture you've painted.
The average Nigerian man who married the poorest of the poor also knows his wife’s celebrity crush’s full names.
I also think that because Mr Eazi was and is honestly very fine without Otedola’s money, the disrespect has little to do with the economic status of the woman’s parent and more to do with Eazi’s being a mumu just like the average Nigerian man!!!
@bulabacute@MkoTheComedian This is my last comment. Intelligence is shown by the quality of your arguments, not the volume of your insults. Thanks for proving my point. Have a good day.
@bulabacute@MkoTheComedian equal. Yet despite those barriers, Black innovators have helped shape computing, telecommunications, software, and the internet.
The real question isn't why one group has more famous names in a field; it's why some groups had greater access to the resources needed to succeed*
@bulabacute@MkoTheComedian Calling Black people "monkeys" says more about your prejudice than about reality. The fact that many famous tech founders are white doesn't mean Black people haven't made major contributions to technology. History, access to education, capital, and opportunity have never been*
@bulabacute@MkoTheComedian U think Black Americans were only focused on entertainment, then who built and advanced technologies used by millions? People like Mark Dean, Roy Clay Sr., Marian Croak, and many others made major contributions to computing, telecommunications, and software. Just to mention few.
@oluwatxsinn@freshprinzo Baba, person use him gle 63s carry me for 5 minutes journey and him play this song inside bro, behold as I reach my junction to come down tears begin drop like say nah bike carry me him come ask me waitin happen why I dey cry? I say I dey get eye problem inside inside cool AC 🤣
@bulabacute@MkoTheComedian Black Americans have made major contributions to science, technology, business, medicine, politics, and education. The real discussion should be about expanding opportunities in all fields, not blaming an entire culture for systemic challenge. But go on🤡
@bulabacute@MkoTheComedian You're oversimplifying a much more complex issue. Entertainment and rap culture didn't "enslave" Black Americans; they became prominent because they were among the few industries where many Black people were given opportunities and could build influence. At the same time*