A Nigerian man, Nurudeen Azeez, reportedly refused to return an “accidental” transfer of N254,700, claiming he couldn’t send the money back because he owed PalmPay. 👀💸
However, after the sender obtained a court order, investigations allegedly revealed that he only owed PalmPay about N8,000 — not enough to justify withholding the funds.
Further checks reportedly showed that the remaining money had been moved to an OPay account linked to the name “Ayomide Adam Azeez.” 😳
The incident has sparked reactions online, with many debating whether keeping an erroneous transfer is theft or survival instinct in today’s economy.
What would you do if someone mistakenly sent money to your account? 🤔👇🏾
Yoruba might just give Swahili a run for its money in terms of popularity soon!!! Shout out to @SCIENCE IN YORUBA.. mo feran alaye yin lorin isokale osupa. #moonlanding
Just because you manage have one hit song, you started talking nonsense and disrespecting the OGs in the industry. That’s not even the issue right now. Call this number 08104014014. His name is Deolu, tell him Rayo gave you the number and he will direct you. You’re going to oke-owa junction in Ijebu Ode. He will teach you vulcanizer work don’t worry about the payment I’ll take care of it.
Rema being called a "One-Hit Wonder" isn't far from the truth, performance wise he's doing well by racking up streams, selling out stadiums, and making appearances in different continents; But when it comes to quality songs, virality doesn't make a hit song, nor does charting help.
For example, a lot of people consider Ozeba to be a hit song, which clearly it's not. Unfortunately a lot of artistes including the a-lists don't have more than 3 to 4 hit songs.
For context, Wizkid hasn't really dropped a hit song since Ojuelegba, Davido's last was FEM, and Kizz Daniel's being Buga (respectfully). This doesn't mean they haven't produced catchy songs since then.
A hit song is one that can stand the test of time, uplift/inspire, speak to the audience, and most importantly, be a cultural reset or leave a great impact by being associated with something important in its time of release. Nowadays good instrumentals and catchy melodies or tunes overshadow bad lyrics and once it is popular the song is called a hit track.
Many of the songs called hits today, won't survive the 90s and the eras before that when songwriting was taken seriously. No offense.
CARTER EFE is having the biggest stream tonight not because of talent alone, but because he chose a level of shamelessness that cuts through the noise. In today’s attention economy, outrage, boldness and controversy travel faster than modesty.
The internet doesn’t always reward dignity but it rewards visibility. Being shameless, in this sense, means dropping fear of judgment and leaning fully into whatever keeps people watching, talking and sharing. It’s uncomfortable, sometimes embarrassing, but it pays. Algorithms don’t measure morals, they measure engagement.
When people argue, laugh, criticize or mock, the numbers still climb. This is the type of shameless that converts clout into streams and streams into money. Love it or hate it, it proves one thing: attention, not approval, is the real currency online.
Hope y’all get it.
If u like, let ₦150m enter your account & u run to buy Osapa London house.
Relax. Wealth no dey chase clout.
Buy a Camry (₦9m).
Buy 3 bank stocks (₦45m).
Lock ₦70m in MMMF at 17% (₦992k monthly).
Buy land (₦26m).
Ur future self go kneel down thank u.
Class dismissed.