@AmoNtombi@davido You see this scene ππΎββοΈππΎββοΈππΎββοΈ this is when I felt like throwing a shoe at the TV screenπ€£π€£π€£ he loved the chaos.
100M streamsβ¦ wow π€
Grateful to everyone listening, supporting, reposting, singing every word and believing in me from day one. This is bigger than me.
Big love to Iyke Elvis for producing this amazing beat and Marley Jason for co-writing this record with me. We made something special together.
100 million streams and weβre only getting started. Thank you β€οΈ
I watched Elsa Majimbo rise right in front of me during the pandemic. As someone with a keen eye for influence, media manipulation, power dynamics, global structures, and hidden networks, I saw exactly how it happened. People were empty, locked down... fed controlled narratives, and desperate for anything real. Her crisp-munching, glasses-on comedy was pure authenticity in a moment when the world needed laughter. She blew up organically because she filled that psychological void perfectly... the same way Jerusalema or any viral moment did back then.
But then she got ahead of herself. She shifted from creating engagement to chasing dominance in influence and fashion. It was no longer about making people laugh and connecting... she wanted to be seen as a superstar, a model, and a serious player, forcing her way into spaces that required real power structures behind them. She didnβt have the networks, the institutional backing, the aspirational pull, or the strategic patience to support that move. Thatβs not the lane that built her.
Naomi Campbell, an absolute institution with 30 plus years in the game, someone who deeply understands media, influence, the real networks operating behind the scenes, and the darker currents that run through them, tried to bring her in and open doors. Naomi was riding Elsaβs wave but also offering genuine access. When she saw how naive Elsa was and that she didnβt understand the game at all, she dropped her. Elsa got angry and tried to blast Naomi publicly. Big mistake.
Naomi is untouchable in this arena. Elsa messed up badly. She betrayed the very authenticity and the people who uplifted her in the first place. Now sheβs pretty, but nobodyβs aspiring to her look enough for designers to pay top dollar. Sheβs hit rock bottom with unrealized potential. I believe sheβll try coming back to the crisps and glasses, but you canβt run the same trick twice after youβve shown the game and turned on those who helped you.
The whole saga is a clear lesson in social psychology, media influence, pandemic-era power dynamics, and the fragility of viral fame... when the world is hungry and empty, authenticity wins fast. But trying to flip that into dominance without the right structures, support, self-awareness, or long-term vision... It collapses. Stay in your lane, protect your core, or watch it all fade.