Minutes after the online release of the Nigerian version of Rick Ross’ “Hold me Back”
video, Nigerians on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube have since rained
curses and insults on the rapper for his audacity at showing Nigeria in
its poorest and most ghetto form. The video starts with commentary about
the Biafra war and then launches into a series of clips shot at
different poor areas of Lagos State with scores of Nigerians chanting
along the chorus with him. There is even a clip of Rick Ross handing
dollar bills to poor children who race through the dirty slum waters to
grab a note as he races off in his speed boat.
Some comments:
- Rick Ross is a hot mess
- Rick Ross is just trying to paint a negative picture about Nigeria. We’re not monkeys over here.
- Do you think tourists would ever think of going to
Nigeria if Rick Ross keeps deceiving the world with a horrible video
like this? This video is giving Nigeria a bad image.
Why all the negative sentiments from Nigerians for the video’s Nigerian version?
As a proud Nigerian, I believe my fellow Nigerians would agree when I
say we HATE being depicted as hungry, malnourished, poverty striken and
dirt poor even though it is the reality of most Nigerians. (Over 80%
by many estimates).
Now by Nigerians of course, I mean wealthy/middle class Nigerians who
make up the bulk of those online. They were privileged enough to get an
education and live above the poverty that has enslaved most Nigerians.
They live in a bubble that knows close to nothing about this Nigeria
that Rick Ross speaks about and it is absolutely despicable that he
would choose to focus on only this version of Nigeria because it is
unrecognizable to them. What of the country’s wealthy areas in many
parts of Lagos, or its overpriced hotels and fast rising estates? Or its
polished, refined and globally aware party going, Afropolitan elites?
Or even just the fact that the nation is private jet loving, with its
purported rank as one of its fastest growing markets globally? Or the
many things that makes Nigeria Africa’s luxury loving, indulgent and
wealthy big brother?
Now imagine some of the kids Rick Ross depicted in the video coming
on YouTube to watch the video and seeing the self conscious comments and
complaints by Nigerians. They would probably have confused looks on
their faces wondering what the fuss is all about especially since the
shots he put up were candid and real…or are Nigerians trying to say they
don’t want the world to know where they live or what Nigerian slums
look like even though that’s where most people live?
Rick Ross is advertently/inadvertently awakening already held
stereotypes about many African countries as war torn and hunger stricken
but what it should remind us is that it isn’t exactly fair as Africans
to expect the world to hide the realities African elites find as
shameful.
It is true that there are ghettos and slums everywhere in the world
but unfortunately most of the continent is still degenerate – slum life
is not a minority problem but a majority problem. Thankfully, with
rising economic fundamentals in many African economies, this reality is
changing, Nigeria is leading this reality with its ever accelerating GDP
growth numbers but is the wealth circulating fast enough to reduce slum
life and poverty so that it is no longer the reality of majority of
Nigerians?
Perhaps what I and my fellow Nigerians should work towards not
covering up our shame but embracing the nation in all its contradictory
glory. While Rick Ross glamorizes poverty in Nigeria maybe most Nigerian
artistes can for a start abandon foreign locations and shoot the
glamorous shots Nigerians speak about at home as a start or will the
shots not be glamorous enough by global standards?
Let us all tell ourselves some hard truths and instead of being
ashamed and insecure work towards building a continent we can all be
proud of, only then will videos like Rick Ross’ Hold me back not matter.
What Rick Ross’ “Hold Me Back” Video Tells The World About Nigeria
Tags:
0 comments: