TRENDING
EPL: Why I am leaving Man City – Guardiola • Nasarawa LP faction distribute free governorship, senatorial forms to aspirants • Unity Cup: Zimbabwe holds first training ahead Super Eagles clash • Oyo suspends field trips, excursions as slain teacher laid to rest • Gombe hails corps members for bridging manpower gaps • ASUU Benin zone threatens industrial action over non-implementation of 2025 agreement • كيف عمل الاستعمار على تعميق التفرقة القبلية والعنصرية؟ • Riot Hits DR Congo Hospital As Ebola Response Angers Victims’ Families • Colleges of Education degree programme’ll reduce varsity admission pressure — NCCE • AFCON controversy ‘ll not change Senegal’s status as champions, says Ndiaye • Sakata la msaidizi wa Lissu lawaibua wadau, wataja suluhisho • BMONI and Mastercard Partner to Unlock Instant Card Access for Consumers in Nigeria • 2027: ADC begins governorship primaries in Rivers • Ebola Risk Upgraded To ‘Very High’ In DR Congo — WHO Chief • Digital transformation in trust services: Opportunities and risks • Afreximbank’s Q1 profit jumps 25% as trade finance demand lifts income • Court nullifies eNaira Ltd registration, awards N10m damages to CBN • How AI rewired Nigeria’s advertising industry and left a generation of creatives scrambling • NOUN produces over 65% of Nigeria’s graduate nurses—VC • AFCON 2027 Qualifiers: Don’t Underestimate Tanzania, Madagascar, Guinea-Bissau –Udeze Warns Eagles • EPL: Why I am leaving Man City – Guardiola • Nasarawa LP faction distribute free governorship, senatorial forms to aspirants • Unity Cup: Zimbabwe holds first training ahead Super Eagles clash • Oyo suspends field trips, excursions as slain teacher laid to rest • Gombe hails corps members for bridging manpower gaps • ASUU Benin zone threatens industrial action over non-implementation of 2025 agreement • كيف عمل الاستعمار على تعميق التفرقة القبلية والعنصرية؟ • Riot Hits DR Congo Hospital As Ebola Response Angers Victims’ Families • Colleges of Education degree programme’ll reduce varsity admission pressure — NCCE • AFCON controversy ‘ll not change Senegal’s status as champions, says Ndiaye • Sakata la msaidizi wa Lissu lawaibua wadau, wataja suluhisho • BMONI and Mastercard Partner to Unlock Instant Card Access for Consumers in Nigeria • 2027: ADC begins governorship primaries in Rivers • Ebola Risk Upgraded To ‘Very High’ In DR Congo — WHO Chief • Digital transformation in trust services: Opportunities and risks • Afreximbank’s Q1 profit jumps 25% as trade finance demand lifts income • Court nullifies eNaira Ltd registration, awards N10m damages to CBN • How AI rewired Nigeria’s advertising industry and left a generation of creatives scrambling • NOUN produces over 65% of Nigeria’s graduate nurses—VC • AFCON 2027 Qualifiers: Don’t Underestimate Tanzania, Madagascar, Guinea-Bissau –Udeze Warns Eagles
‘Scandal trends for days’ – Basketmouth faults society for amplifying failure
Back to Home

‘Scandal trends for days’ – Basketmouth faults society for amplifying failure

Vanguard Nigeria 1 day 2 mins read
‘Scandal trends for days’ – Basketmouth faults society for amplifying failure

By Enitan Abdultawab

Comedian and filmmaker Basketmouth has criticised what he described as the growing culture of rewarding controversy while ignoring excellence in society.

The entertainer, in a recent post shared on his Instagram page, accused some Nigerian blogs and media platforms of prioritising scandals and embarrassing moments over genuine achievements and hard work.

According to him, people who build businesses, create jobs, break barriers, or positively impact lives rarely receive the same attention given to controversies online.

“Some Nigerian bloggers have mastered the art of turning negativity into premium content. One scandal trends for days, but genuine excellence barely gets a headline,” he wrote.

Basketmouth lamented that society has gradually embraced mediocrity and outrage culture, questioning why success stories no longer generate the same excitement as public scandals.

“Somebody builds something remarkable, breaks barriers, creates jobs, sells out shows, changes lives – we get silence. But let there be one embarrassing moment and suddenly every platform becomes CNN,” he said.

The comedian further questioned when celebrating failure became normalised, warning that constantly amplifying downfall over achievement could discourage greatness and ambition.

“At some point, we have to ask ourselves: when did celebrating mediocrity become our culture? When was the last time brilliance trended the way controversy does? When did we stop applauding people for winning?” he added.

Basketmouth also stressed that a society obsessed with negativity risks raising generations that no longer value excellence, discipline, creativity, and consistency.

“A society that only amplifies failure slowly teaches people that greatness is irrelevant. And that’s dangerous,” he wrote.

Calling for a shift in priorities, the comedian urged Nigerians to return to celebrating innovation, hard work, and positive impact instead of focusing mainly on gossip, outrage, and public downfall.

“We need to normalise celebrating achievements, discipline, creativity, consistency, and hard work again. Not just gossip, outrage and downfalls,” he stated.

The post ‘Scandal trends for days’ – Basketmouth faults society for amplifying failure appeared first on Vanguard News.

This article was sourced from an external publication.

Share this article

Comments (0)

Want to join the discussion?

Sign in to post comments and engage with the community.

Be the first to comment!

Publications

View All

Tragedy

View All
AD
OneClick Africa Logo

Africa's premier digital hub for impactful news, entertainment, and business insights.

© 2026 OneClick Africa. All rights reserved.