Category: Entertainment

  • Most of my clients think I’m fronting  for my parents—Construction firm’s  Founder/ MD Oyin Adeyemi

    Most of my clients think I’m fronting for my parents—Construction firm’s Founder/ MD Oyin Adeyemi

    Oyin Adeyemi’s name may not resonate like many others in the nation’s economic sector, but her entrepreneurial exploits readily qualify her as one of the most adventurous women the nation can boast of. Her impact in the investment portfolio market, construction, real estate and international trade is as real as daylight. In this interview with KAYODE ALFRED, the Founder and Managing Director of Still Earth Limited, a construction company, relives her journey from grass to grace.

    In the Beginning

    An old head on young shoulders! That is a description that aptly fits Oyin Adeyemi’s personality. One only has to engage her in a short conversation to come to terms with her confidence and composure. She might not compete favourably in terms of age in a socio-economic sphere that is replete with geriatric goons. Yet, she has come of age in Nigeria’s business terrain so much so that she rubs shoulders with the high and mighty in the polity. But her rise to entrepreneurial heights was strewn with twists and turns.

    Having acquired a degree that fetched her a banking job in Abuja, Oyin settled in as fast as practicable. Within her, she knew she was not cut out for a career in such a regimented job. A few years later, she dumped her banking job. Oyin’s restless nature meant that she was always willing to test new waters. She headed straight to Lagos with no specific mission, but one thing was on her mind: explore every opportunity that life might throw her way in the nation’s commercial nerve centre.

    Realising that life in the Centre of Excellence is lived at a frenetic pace, she decided to go into buying and selling of branded shirts. This, in her calculation, would afford her some new challenges. “I needed some other new but flexible challenges which could afford me the chance to complete my Master’s degree programme in Abuja and my MBA at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State. It was very Herculean having to combine my banking job with study,” she recalled.

    For Oyin, her ambition was as weighty as a featherless bird  no bird flies on its own; it needs feathers. Entrepreneurial aspirations are best achieved when funds back them up, but Oyin had no funds and therefore got stuck for days. She made a funny but bold move, which made no difference anyway. Oyin narrated her ordeal when she approached a senior officer at Julius Berger Nigeria Plc, with whom she had never had personal interaction before for a start-up capital.

    She said: “The only thing I knew about him was just his name. So, I went there on three occasions without seeing him. I could not see him at my first three attempts. I eventually saw him on my fourth trip. He was going out when I accosted him and explained my mission. He asked me how much I needed and I told him I needed N3 million. He was like: ‘Am I a bank? Where do you want me to get that from?’

    “He eventually asked me to come back with my business proposal. I scribbled some lines on one page and headed back the following day to submit it. That would begin another round of visits to the office week after week without seeing him again. I was so frequent in his office that I became friends with his secretary. After I had opened up to her on my mission, she mentioned franchise as an option I could explore. I got tired and stopped going there without being given a dime.”

    This unspoken rejection shook Oyin but only succeeded in cementing her resilience. She decided to start her trading business with the meager sum she had saved as a banking officer. She contacted a UK-based friend of hers to make some findings about the retail aspect of fashion business in the UK. Oyin was almost blown up with her friend’s findings.

    “He came up with an estimate of £250,000. I just laughed. I was looking for just N3 million and here was a friend talking about N70 million,” she said.  Undeterred, she sent all her meager savings to her UK-based friend to help her get as many shirts as the money could buy. The episode marked the beginning for her in business. She remained in the retail business of designer’s shirts for a while and then, according to her, “I started getting unsatisfied with the retail business. I had the urge within me to move on to something bigger things. So, I headed to London without any concrete plan.

    “While in London, I visited Haws and Curtis factory to enquire about the possibility of replicating their business model in Nigeria. They came up with some excuse that made it impossible. I came back home to focus on my Masters’ degree. That was how I wrapped up my first shot at business.”

     

    Academics meet politics

    Oyin’s quest for knowledge is insatiable. She might give up her retail business but she definitely would not give up her academic pursuit for anything. Her focus shifted fully to her Masters’ degree programme. Fortunately, her decision would bring her to the same table with kings and princes. Oyin was non-partisan but her interest in the politics of the country was glaring.

    She said: “I have always been interested in Nigeria’s politics; that is why my first degree was in Political Science. But one defining moment of my interest in politics was when I produced a document of manifestoes with some input from a friend. I worked on the document with one thing in mind: I wanted the document to reflect the mind of a presidential aspirant; one that would interest anyone interested in presiding over the affairs of Nigeria.

    “I met Alhaji Abubakar Atiku and I got drafted into his campaign organisation as a member of the Strategy Team. This afforded me the opportunity to see things beyond the surface, as I had to sit with very brilliant minds that made up the team. We moved round the country and met with all the peoples of Nigeria, selling Atiku Abubakar’s candidacy to them. It was an eye-opening experience.

    “Atiku is a brilliant guy who knows his onions. His depth of knowledge put him above his peers. With an Atiku presidency, I strongly believe Nigeria will be better for it. He is one politician with a true national outlook. He is pan-Nigerian in all ramifications. At the end of the day, we all witnessed how things turned out.

    “The high wire politics that derailed the whole effort broke me and almost made me lose confidence in the system. But this is our country and one cannot afford to give up. Corruption has eaten so deep into the Nigerian system. As knowledgeable as an average Nigerian is, if they were truly in the know of some of the things that happen beneath the surface, actually, there would have been revolution a long time ago.

    “We are too contented with our situation in Nigeria. We make little of very big and complicated issues. I think that is why corruption still thrives in Nigeria. When sentiments replace value in any given society, it robs us of people with great vision or ideas at the helm of affairs.”

    Joining the big league

    Playing a major role in Atiku campaign opened Oyin’s eyes to wider opportunities. So, after taking a break from the scene, she came back stronger in 2012 and registered Still Earth Limited, which is a construction company that has governments at all tiers and multinationals as clients.

    In her appraisal of how far Still Earth has come, Oyin says: “I am grateful to God for opening my eyes to some opportunities and backing me up with resources needed to explore them. The journey has been very challenging but it has been worth the while.

    “Our success is hinged on our passion to achieve our company’s goals and objectives. It boils down to our team and the corporate values and culture we uphold at Still Earth Limited. We have in place a board of directors comprising veterans who are passionate about Still Earth Limited. They always bring their experience and expertise to bear.

    “Our management team is peopled by technocrats whose professionalism can compete with global standards. I thing I have been lucky with having the right people with me all the way. Our clients have also been a part of our huge success. Most of the state governors we work with award us contracts based on their determination to improve the welfare of the people in the state and also to improve their standards of living.”

     

    Huge personality in petite frame

    Unassuming, petite and beautiful are the words that come to mind after an encounter with Oyin Adeyemi for the first time. Her approachable mien is subsumed in a physical frame that belies her success in a terrain dominated by the stern and the seasoned. The saying that ‘good things come in small packages’ finds expression in Oyin, today, she manages a giant construction company whose annual turnover runs into billions of naira; a status some people still find difficult to believe.

    Speaking about her strength, she said: “I have a determined attitude to life. I am very detailed and I never take anything for granted. I am very passionate about life. Many of my first time guests are always overwhelmed with the thought that this edifice (referring to the office) cannot be run by this young lady. So it is an everyday occurrence. Most of the governors I work with always go away with the impression that I am a daughter of the owner of this company. So, I have had to always prove my mettle to most of them.

    “But the perception is becoming better these days. All I need to get them to key into the reality of my life is to spend 30 minutes with them. Anyone I engage for 30 minutes leaves with the impression that I know what I am doing.”

    Prodded to explain how it feels when her petite physical outlook is focused on at clients’ first encounters with her, her response brings her humility to the fore, unlike many of her peers who herald their arrival on the big scene with ostentatious displays.

    She said: “Really, it’s been like that for some time and I’ve got used to it. In the end, all of these now are advantage because it plays up our efforts as a company rather than the person behind it. In other way round, confidentiality is key to data. And in a country where name-dropping is common and people think they must be seen on the pages of newspapers frolicking with governors or ministers, I have chosen to be different. It is strictly business for me.”

     

    Shattering the glass ceiling

    Hers is a combination of assorted traits and virtues not easily come by in a society artificially designed to relegate women to the background. Playing it big in Nigeria’s construction and engineering industry is no leisure, especially when one considers the fact that the industry is under the firm grip of men of clout and humongous war chest.

    Oyin readily agrees that hers is a male-dominated industry. In fact, it is believed in some quarters that the industry is controlled by a mafia which one has to contend with to be able to make an impact. The odds against Oyin Adeyemi appears even more daunting when one juxtaposes her lean frame with the tough sector in which she has been able to carve a niche for herself. She sits atop StillEarth Limited, a company whose strength and focus centres around construction, real estate and project finance.

    Coming across a lady of Oyindamola’s relatively young age making waves in such a competitive sector, one is naturally curious to know how she shattered the glass ceiling and wangled her way to the top.

    “It is true that our system is skewed in favour of some. It is also fair to say that Nigeria is one big market for almost all types of business as long as you get your act right. A little planning and a little forethought can go a long way in ensuring success,” she said.

     

    State of the nation

    Oyin’s versatility goes beyond business. Her grasp of development politics is enthralling. That she is disenchanted with the political system in Nigeria and Africa in general is accentuated in her vociferous opinion about the system. She is of the opinion that there is no limit to Nigeria’s potentials if they are well harnessed. But she is also quick to point out the plagues bedeviling the polity.

    She said: “There are some challenges that still bedevil our political climate: impunity, abuse of power, low quality of political debate and discourse, and the likes. However, despite these challenges, I have a strong belief that the character of our politics and the quality of democratic governance in Nigeria can only improve. Indeed, some of the critical challenges sometimes create salutary developments that deepen democracy.

    “I give a few instances. In the run up to the 2007 general elections, when the mechanism for internal party democracy in the ruling PDP was constrained and various forms of obstacles were created at the highest level of the then government to prevent Vice President Atiku Abubakar from having an opportunity to run for the presidency on the platform of PDP and AC, it took judicial intervention, up to the highest court in the land, to clear him, and he indeed ran for the Presidency on the platform of a different party from the one on which he was elected Vice President. His courage and efforts have since created precedents that are now being enjoyed by others. So the country’s politics is better for it.

    “The case of Governor Amaechi is also a watershed with respect to party nomination process. The failed impeachment of the Nasarawa governor by a House of Assembly dominated by members of an opposing party is also instructive. Comparing this situation with the impeachment of Governor Balarabe Musa of Kaduna State in the Second Republic will confirm that though the situations are similar, the outcome is different because the people of Nasarawa came out to defend the mandate given to their governor and were not prepared to let it go on some flimsy charges by the House of Assembly.

    “Thirdly, the electorate is increasingly getting more aware, vigilant and determined to exercise their voting rights and defend the outcome as demonstrated in the recent governorship election in Osun State. It also shows that they will reward performance and fidelity to electoral promises. On the whole, there is increasing consciousness to raise the bar for measuring performance in office while the citizens demand for greater accountability and transparency.

    “I must mention two other things with regard to political parties. The historic formation of APC from a successful merger of three opposition political parties and a faction of the fourth one was unprecedented and is a positive development. As I said earlier, what was an unpleasant development gave birth to an unintended but clearly desirable outcome. Despite some teething challenges, the country now has a truly national and formidable opposition party and an alternative to PDP. The contest in the general elections, especially for the central government, is expected to be robust.

    “One should therefore view the just released APC guidelines for the primaries to elect candidates for elective positions as a very positive development. The guidelines have broadened the electoral college that party members at various levels, with substantial majority coming from the ward level participating in decision to elect the flag bearers. For instance, the electoral college to elect the party’s presidential flag bearer will comprise members from each of about 8,000 wards in the country. This means that, if faithfully implementedand I have no doubt that this will be the casepopular candidates will emerge. This will help the candidates and the party at the general elections as the grassroots base is solid.

    “But also important is that this mechanism that strengthens the internal party democracy will be emulated by other parties, resulting in the parties fielding their most popular and hopefully best quality candidates, thus giving the electorate wider choices of good materials to choose from at the general elections. Democracy will benefit and the quality of governance will certainly be enhanced.

     

    The quintessential woman

    Oyin is task-focused. She is a competitive achiever and she is single. What is her take on womanhood and marriage? The following lines of thought would hint at Oyin’s emotional state: “A woman has all the strength, instinct and intuition to make the impossible possible. Businesses and homes now realise this and that’s why you find women on board the biggest and most successful organisations. Women are running the most successful businesses now too.

    “A happy woman in a home makes a happy home, although we still have a long way to go in empowering the girl child and even older women. It is very pertinent that everybody realises the importance of the well-being and happiness of women. The belief that a woman is only complete beside a man is rubbish. That she must remain in an unhappy union or marriage is dehumanising.

    “I believe that women should be given the chance to make the same choices in love as men. I believe that relationships should be monogamous, but they don’t have to last forever once the happiness and love fizzles. And this can happen for any reason. Then it’s time to move on. But by and large, women are really coming into their own now.”

  • Star The Winner Is: Roxy Oni close to N10m

    Star The Winner Is: Roxy Oni close to N10m

    As the maiden edition of Nigerian version of Star The Winner Is game show enters Episode 7, the show offers a unique experience, as contestants bring invincible vocal skills to the table.

    Expectedly, the ‘battle’ is getting keener, as contestants make attempts to move closer to the life-changing grand prize of N10million and a brand new car.

    Kelvin James, Blessing James, Damilare Anifowoshe, Roxy Oni, Ifu Ennada and Dehinde Okubajo, who made it to the Top 6 in that episode, rendered fascinating mixture of musical genres and exciting performances that initially appeared to give the jury a tough time.

    However, after putting the six contestants to test, Roxy Oni came tops, placing her a few steps closer to the grand prize.

    The 23-year-old contestant proved her mentle in the game show by defeating Fuji music contestant, Damilare Anifowoshe, to get to the final round of the episode, with a 95-6 votes from the 101- jury members.

    With a mesmerising performance of ‘I will survive’ by Gloria Gaynor, Roxy, as he is fondly called,  stole the show by beating her opponent, Dehinde Okubajo, in the final round, the latter going home empty-handed.

    The highlight of the night was an unusual performance from Fuji contestant, Damilare, who delivered a remix of Gongo Aso by 9ce to the utmost delight of the audience.

    The exciting thrill and suspense from Episode 7 continues, as the highly anticipated semifinal rounds draws close.

    Winning the episode makes Roxy Oni the 7th contestant to qualify for the semifinal round, joining Philip, Brenda, Happiness, Naomi, Rhema and Jahtell in the grand finale.

  • Gulder Ultimate Search increases contestants

    Gulder Ultimate Search increases contestants

    Two more entries have been added to this year’s contestants of the popular adventure reality show called Gulder Ultimate Search (GUS). This came as a surprise to two of the hopefuls, who had earlier been eliminated at the selection party at the weekend.

    The 18 contestants, who were lined up at the Ocean View ground, venue of the selection party, looked forward to 12 of them being selected, as it was the case last year. But there was excitement as two more aspirants were added to the selection, making 14 the number of the jungle-bound candidates.

    One of the additions, Samantha Appi, who was in tears, recounted how joyous she became, when the Managing Director, Nigerian Breweries, Nicholaas Vervelde, delivered the final message from the council of elders, saying: “Let all 14 go to the jungle.”

    “I was so sad initially. I thought it was over. I almost didn’t hear my name because my heart was pounding. I know that every year, it has always been 12 people, so when I didn’t hear my name, I thought it was over for me,” she said.

    The show begins in a couple of weeks at the Aguleri forest, in Anambra State, where in the end the last man or woman standing will get a cash prize of N10million and a brand new Sport Utility Vehicle (SUV).

    A spectacular aspect of Saturday’s night event was the presence of the10 past winners of the show: Ezugo Egwuagwu, Lucan Chambliss, Hector Jobarteh, Dominic Mudabai, Michael Nwachukwu, Uche Nwaezeapu, Oyekunle Oluwaremi, Christopher Okagbue, Paschal Eronmose and Dennis Okike, who ushered in the symbol of the 11th edition of the show, called The Cube.

    The final selection party was followed by the popular mobile club initiative called Gulder Club Ultimate (GCU), at the same venue.

    Adding glamour to the show was host Darey Art-Alade, comedian Gordons and music artiste Burna Boy.

    Tagged The Mission, organisers revealed that the second, third and fourth runners-up get N3 million, N2.5 million and N1.5 million respectively. Also, when evicted, each of the contestants will receive monies ranging from N1million to N1.5 million.

  • Why I quit Kennis Music, by Jaywon

    Why I quit Kennis Music, by Jaywon

    Contrary to speculations that Iledare Oluwajuwanlo, aka Jaywon, had left Kennis Music, owing to a disagreement with the label owners, the singer has said that there was no such thing, as his contract with the label merely expired. “I have moved on. My contract with Kennis Music has expired. My exit from Kennis Music was not on an ill note. I have moved on but we are cool.”

    When the rumour of his exit first broke, the This Year crooner denied the reports, including the one saying he had established his own label.

    The singer, who has just completed works on his latest single, also confirmed that he now owns a record label called Next World Music. “Currently, I’m the only music act on my label; but with time, we will sign others on,” he said.

    It will be recalled that Kennis Music introduced Jaywon to the music space few years back with the hit single, Filebe, which took the music industry by storm. Since then, the music act has grown to become one of the trending music acts. His last single, This Year, was equally successful.

  • Organisers acquire new venue for BBA

    Organisers acquire new venue for BBA

    There appears to be leeway for this year’s edition of the popular Big Brother Africa (BBA) show called the Hotshots edition, following the suspension of the programme, due to a fire incident on the property last Tuesday.

    In a statement made available yesterday, producers of the reality show, M-Net and Endemol, assured fans that the event would return soon, as a new venue had been acquired.

    “Following the devastating fire on September 2, at the Big Brother house in Johannesburg, M-Net and Endemol SA had spent the last 48 hours searching both locally and internationally for a venue in which to produce Season 9 of the highly popular Big Brother Africa reality show. After exploring all possible options, the team is delighted to announce that the show will go on as a venue has been found to get the show on air within the next month,” the statement read.

    This year’s show was meant to start penultimate Sunday, until the fire incident, which was said to have gutted about 56 cameras, the special one-sided glass panels and other state-of-the-art equipment.

    M-Net and Endemol said the sophistication of these equipment, coupled with logistics, were reasons for the slight delay in resuming the show.

    “A multitude of factors have had to be considered, including the complex technical requirements, logistics, technical crews and satellite link facilities, which have all formed part of the challenge. However, M-Net is delighted to assure all its Big Brother fans that their favourite reality show will launch soon and thanks to fans from across the continent for their support during the last few days,” the organisers explained.

  • Banned Singaporean filmmaker takes world premiere to Toronto

    Banned Singaporean filmmaker takes world premiere to Toronto

    Provocative Singaporean filmmaker Ken Kwek, whose last film project was banned in his homeland, staged a world premiere of his first feature film, Unlucky Plaza, at the opening of the prestigious Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), yesterday.

    Unlucky Plaza is a black comedy about a down-on-his-luck Filipino immigrant who takes a group of prominent Singaporeans hostage in an upscale home after being scammed by a mysterious femme fatale.

    The crime caper is Kwek’s follow-up to his acclaimed but controversial 2013 satirical anthology Sex. Violence. Family Values. The collection was featured at several international film festivals, but was banned by Singapore’s Board of Film Censors and by the Malaysian government.

    However, public outrage, along with worldwide news attention forced Singapore’s censors to reverse their decision, but only after compelling the filmmaker to edit parts of the film.

    Unlucky Plaza stars acclaimed Filipino actor Epy Quizon (Pinoy Sunday), Singapore’s Adrian Pang (The Blue Mansion) and stage and TV actress Judee Tan, here making her feature film debut. The film was written and directed by Kwek, who also served as a producer along with Leon Tong and Kat Goh.

    “After the ban on Sex.Violence.FamilyValues, I’m naturally diffident about the film being passed – or passed clean – by Singapore’s censors,” Kwek said, adding that, “There’s every chance the film will not be screened in my own country, which makes the screenings in Toronto even more special and encouraging. TIFF has gifted to me a sense of freedom as an artiste that I don’t enjoy back home.”

    Unlucky Plaza premiered at Scotiabank Theatre 13, and although no entry from Nigeria at the festival this year, additional screenings have been scheduled as part of the festival’s “Discovery” programme, which spotlights new and upcoming directors in world cinema. The film, along with 38 others will compete for The Discovery Award, chosen by members of the International Federation of Film Critics.

  • Stella Oduah’s business rots

    IT is no longer news that Stella Oduah, the controversial Minister of Aviation who was recently relieved of her job, is contemplating a seat at the Senate. What is not yet known is what will become of her company, Sea Petroleum and Gas Limited.

    The latest gist about SPG is that the company is gradually assuming a derelict status. SPG, one of the top players in the oil ‎sector before Stella took up a ministerial appointment from President Goodluck Jonathan, has become a shadow of itself. The corporate head office of the company in Lekki, Lagos, is now a far cry from what it used to be in the days Stella had enough time to manage its affairs.

    Abandoned trucks were seen all around the complex while the whole environment looked unkempt when Celeb Watch visited. If business activities are being conducted by SPG, they certainly are not done in that complex, as only a handful of people were seen around. The current state of the complex is attributed to Stella’s involvement in politics.

    While on national assignment, she reportedly entrusted some of her managers with the management of the company’s affairs, but from all indications, the handlers did not appear to have made the best of it. The popular expectation was that she would return to manage the company when she lost her ministerial appointment, but she has since been oiling her political machinery to find her way to the Senate in 2015.

  • The smiles return for Funke Agagu

    Without a shade of doubt, the past one year has been the hardest for Mrs. Olufunke Agagu, widow of former Governor of Ondo State, Dr. Olusegun Agagu. The woman left behind by the former Aviation Minister, who slumped and died on September 13, 2013, was distraught and inconsolable for months. But one year after her husband’s death, she is learning to smile again. She seems to have finally got over the shock and the gloom that pervaded her world after her husband’s death and the tragic plane crash that greeted the preparations for his burial.

    The misfortune that befell the former First Lady of Ondo State is one that has assumed the status of folklore. Agagu was hale, hearty and full of life a few hours before his death. Hence, nothing prepared the family for the politician’s sudden exit shortly after he reportedly attended a meeting with some of his associates.

    As if that was not enough bitter pill to swallow, his funeral was marred with a plane crash that claimed a few lives. It was an agonising experience for Funke who was not just another First Lady in her husband’s government but a friend and confidant of the ex-governor who had an enviable record in public service.

  • Leke Alder savours new marital life

    Behind every cloud, they say, there is a silver lining. That has become the lot of the founder of Alder Consulting, Leke Alder’s marriage. The public relations guru is enjoying the bliss of his new marriage, which was consummated about two years ago after he had parted ways with Lola, his wife of many years.

    It was a shattering experience when news filtered into the public that the highly disciplined technocrat had his marriage dissolved after some irreconcilable differences with Lola. Life was drudgery for several years before Leke remarried beautiful Morenike Poopola, in an exclusive ceremony in Lagos in September, 2012. Gladness has been the lot of the couple since they embraced each other.

    Leke, who once said he makes money by interpreting corporate dreams, has consulted on policy and politics at the highest level. His skill has seen him corner juicy jobs from federal agencies, state governments and multinational organisations.

  • New lease of life for Toru Ofili

    There is no gainsaying the fact that the present political season will serve as a springboard of revival for some people who have been dormant for years, just as it will usher others into political and social oblivion. For ebony beauty, Toru Ofili, a descendant of the popular political dynasty of the late Edward Jumbo, it is the season when dry bones would rise again.

    Toru is back on the scene with a kind of visibility unknown since her political benefactor and former governor of Rivers State, Dr. Peter Odili, left office in 2007. Madam Toru was appointed by ex-governor Peter Odili as Commissioner for Women Affairs on the strength of her awesome influence among the women folk. She was one of the most notable women in the eight years of Odili’s reign in Rivers State. But all that changed with the advent of the Rotimi Amaechi administration.

    With the political re-engineering going on in Rivers State, Ofili has aligned herself with the PDP as the women leader in the state.