Big Brother
Africa:
Debasing
Self For A
Fee
By Ugochukwu
Ejinkeonye
scruples2006@yahoo.com
Recently,
Big
Brother
Africa (BBA2)
Reality Show
ended in
South Africa
amidst much
din, slimy
scandals and
lingering
controversies,
and the only
coherent
statement it
was able to
make was
that in this
our very
unfortunate
and bankrupt
age, money
has acquired
an even
greater and
awesome
powers, and
its capacity
to compel
otherwise
rational
human beings
to gleefully
part ways
with every
bit of their
honour and
dignity, be
disdainful
all
considerations
for decency
and
self-esteem,
and
enthusiastically
indulge in
several
nauseating,
self-debasing
acts, has
exceeded
what anyone
had thought
was possible
in decent
society.
I am not a
fan of the
Big Brother
nonsense,
and all such
shows, like
beauty
pageants,
where people
are paid and
cheered on
to throw
their honour
and dignity
as human
beings to
the dogs, to
satisfy the
depraved
taste of
irredeemable
voyeurs. In
fact, if
there were
no generous
reports
about these
events in
the media,
which one
occasionally
glanced
through, I
may never
have known
that
anything
like BBA2
ever took
place. But I
am a
grateful
that I read
some of
those
reports,
because, it
would never
have
occurred to
me that some
murky-hearted
fellows,
with excess
cash to
spend, could
go all out
to turn
their fellow
human beings
into a
little less
than
animals,
confined in
some
glorified
human zoo,
where the
most
depraved
among them
could go as
wild and
immoral as
he or she
could, to
dishonour
and make a
very big
fool of
himself or
herself,
before
millions of
TV viewers
in Africa
and beyond,
in order to
earn $100,
000.
While this
lure of
lucre
endures, do
these
fellows ever
stop to
think that
the footage
of their
disgraceful
outing in
South Africa
would
survive
tomorrow,
and that
they would
have
children and
grandchildren
whose
sensibilities
would be
perpetually
assaulted by
the awful
pornographic
footages
they were
gleefully
producing in
their blind
rush for
$100,000?
According to
reports, the
Housemates
took their
bathe
together
during what
they called
“Shower
Hour,”
and while
the boys
stripped to
their
boxers, the
girls bared
everything,
not just
before the
boys whom
they had
never met
until they
were
selected and
confined in
the Big
Brother zoo,
but, also,
millions of
viewers out
there, which
may have
included
kids from
their
households
and
neighborhoods!
(Forget the
age-restriction
crap).
Imagine the
kid brothers
and sisters
or tender
nephews and
nieces of
the
Housemates
seeing their
big aunties
they once
held in high
esteem
flaunting
their stark
nudity on
the screen
with every
brazenness
and
shamelessness.
What in the
name of all
that is
decent and
noble can we
possibly
call this?
Well, some
of the
girls,
however,
occasionally
bathed with
their
underpants
on, and only
bared their
chests, but
that, no
doubt, did
not diminish
the grave
obscenity
the whole
thing still
constituted.
Now how
would these
clearly
bird-brained
fortune
hunters
rejoin and
face the
same society
before whom
they had
shamelessly
and grossly
cheapened
themselves,
by flaunting
the pride of
their
womanhood
before every
willing eye?
Should
even $1billion
dollars be
enough to
compel
anyone to do
this?
Indeed,
Feminists
and Women
Rights
activists
would never
protest this
clear
debasement
of the
woman,
because this
is not the
kind of
advocacy
that
attracts
grants. This
should not
be
surprising
to anyone
because it
is still
from the
same cabal
that
prosecutes
these
obscene
shows that
the major
bulk of
sponsorships
flow.
Although
virtually
everything
about BBA
was
horrible,
revolting
and
scandalous,
a consensus
exists that
the most
horrible
scandal it
yielded, now
popularly
known as “fingergate,”
reportedly,
took place
on Saturday,
27 October
2007. I
first read
about it on
Nigerians In
America,
in an
article
by Ms.
Bolanle
Aduwo, a
screenwriter, broadcaster
and
producer.
Please
permit me to
quote her
account of
the obscene
incident:
“…Biggie
had provided
plenty of
booze
(undiluted,
Russian
vodka) and
what
resulted was
an incident
that will
definitely
go down as
one of the
most
scandalous
moments in
Big Brother
history. The
housemates
became
crazed,
drunken
zombies and
engaged in
acts better
suited for a
porno movie.
The evening
eventually
ended in
what many
call a
possible
rape! Or how
do you
explain the
actions of
Richard, the
24-year-old
Tanzanian
film student
and the only
male
occupant of
the House
fondling and
‘fingering’
a comatose,
blind-drunk
Ofunneka, a
29-year-old
Medical
Assistant
from
Nigeria?…The
whole of
Africa saw
this girl’s
“privates”…
What
happened…
horrified
viewers as
Richard
lying
between the
two comatose
women,
undressed
them and
began to
fondle, kiss
and ‘finger’
both of
them!”
This
incident had
provoked
serious
outrage
across
Africa. A
Women Rights
group in
South Africa
had called
for the
footage of
the
incident,
only to
announce
later, after
viewing it,
that it
agreed with
MNET, that
what
happened
between
Richard and
Ofunneka was
consensual.
Nigeria’s
House of
Representatives,
groping for
some form of
self-redeeming
tasks, after
Ettehgate,
had also
waded into
the matter,
something I
had thought
was an
entirely
private
misadventure
between the
girl and the
South
African
prurient
millionaires.
But why does
it seem
Africa has
suddenly
awakened
from its
moral
slumber just
because fingergate
happened?
Well, if you
ask me, the
matter is
very simple:
Even if
there were
no “fingergate,”
all the
people who
participated
in BBA2 had
irremediably
soiled their
honour and
dignity?
What sort of
girls would
gleefully
strip
themselves
nude, to
bathe, not
only in the
full gaze
boys, but
also before
more than
one million
TV viewers
across
Africa? (If
the boys
wore their
shorts and
the girls
chose to
bare
everything,
what kind of
statement
were they
making about
their
gender?)
Just the
other day,
while
gathering
materials
for this
piece, I
stumbled on
a blog where
a photograph
of Ofunneka
was posted
holding her
towel apart
and proudly
baring her
not
particularly
appealing
chest for
all to see!
So, even
without “fingergate,”
was that not
self-demeaning
enough?
On Monday, I
visited a
website,
www.ofunneka.com,
where all
sorts of
hate posts
were heaped
on the
doorsteps of
“Richard the
rapist,” who
“stole the
crown.” All
sorts of
stories were
dredged up
to rubbish
the
Tanzanian,
as if he did
not rubbish
himself
enough while
in the BBA
zoo. But
while
countless
sympathizers
were out
there
condemning
MNET for the
indecent
show and
calling for
Richard’s
head for
“sexually
abusing”
Ofunneka,
the
“innocent,
well-behaved,
but
stone-drunk
symbol of
decent
African
woman,” the
girl was at
the other
place
addressing a
press
conference,
apologizing
for what
happened and
dismissing
reports that
she was
raped.
Saturday
PUNCH
of
November 24,
2007, quotes
her as
saying: “I
will say
that I let
down my
guards a
little, but
then I am
human.”
I am
seriously
touched by
this girl’s
predicament.
It is
painful to
imagine that
she might
carry the
shame of her
disastrous
BBA
appearance
all her
life. It
must be
clear to her
now that
whoever
counseled
her into the
BBA folly
has done her
a grave
harm. The
most noble
job she must
engage
herself in
now would be
to always
dissuade any
other person
she
encounters
to avoid BBA
like a
plague
despite the
money.
In this
internet
age, it
should not
surprise her
that
countless
blogs would
spring up
tomorrow,
attracting
serious
traffic to
themselves
with
footages of
“fingergate”
and some of
her nude
pictures
from
Shower Hour
at the Big
Brother zoo.
A costly
mistake has
already been
made by
going to the
BBA house,
and a costly
price must
be paid.
But, if by
her own
painful
predicament,
other young
Africans are
able to
learn that
it is
practically
impossible
to safeguard
one’s honour
and dignity
in such a
morally
bankrupt
enclave like
BBA house,
created
solely to
promote
obscenity
and
depravity,
to service
the vulgar
tastes of
prurient men
and women,
she should
consider the
sacrifice
worthwhile.
Who is
even sure
that
“fingergate”
was not
scripted and
directed by
MNET, to
diminish her
rising
profile in
the media as
the symbol
of true
African
woman, which
would have
created
serious
problems for
MNET when
eventually
Richard was
declared
“winner”?
By Richard
“victory”,
what
statement
has MNET
succeeded in
making? That
it was
alright for
a man who
was married
to suddenly
“fall in
love” with
another
woman he had
just met on
a reality TV
show; engage
in open and
revolting
adulterous
acts with
this new
lover or
concubine on
satellite
TV, knowing
full well
that his
wife was at
home
watching;
and then
while in the
same bed
with his new
lover, he
engages in
wild sexual
acts with
yet another
woman, on
the same
bed! And
after it
all,
according to
a report in
Namibian
of October
29, 2007, he
excitedly
pronounces:
“I have seen
the rivers
and
mountains of
Big
Brother…I’m
going to
bump all the
women in BBA
house.” What
a vulgar
celebration
of hideous
conquests!
With all the
nauseating
exploits of
Richard’s,
which earned
him the
prize, what
MNET is
saying is
that for
anyone to
win the next
BBA
(assuming
this won’t
be the
last), he
must simply
become an
animal like
Richard,
because it
is only
animals that
win its
price; yes,
such a
person must
regard and
treat women
as mere
playthings.
Now the
point has
also been
regularly
made,
namely, why
watch BBA if
you know it
would offend
your mind?
Indeed,
amateur porn
channels and
websites
like BBA
abound, but
they do not
attract
generous
positive
reviews from
“serious”
newspapers
like BBA
does. MNET
can afford
to inflict
its violent
obscenity
only on
interested
viewers if
it could
check its
invasion of
our
newspaper
pages the
way it does.
Nor should
the
government
show more
than a
passing
interest in
shows like
BBA, as the
Nigerian
House
Assembly or
the Federal
Government
did
recently.
Now, I have
no problems
with the
Information
Minister,
Mr. John
Odey,
offering a
job to Miss
Ofunneka
Molokwu, as
he
reportedly
did the
other day,
if that
would
console her,
but he has
no right to
declare that
by appearing
on that
reprehensible
show, she
has
“represented
us well” and
has, today,
become “the
Heart of
Africa.”
No doubt, it
must be
clear to the
minister
that he was
speaking
himself, and
I insist
that he
makes this
clear
immediately.
In fact,
President
Umar Musa
Yar’Adua
must call
him to order
before he
uses the
stain of BBA
to further
rubbish his
ailing
regime. On
no account
must the
Federal
Government
appear to
endorse such
a horribly
obscene show
that has
offended
many decent
people in
Africa and
has even
been banned
by some
African
governments.
Mr. Odey,
since he had
excess time
to squander,
should have
merely
consoled the
girl,
assuaged her
pain over
the BBA
misadventure,
but more
importantly,
used that
opportunity
to urge
other
Nigerians
youths to
shun such
shows no
matter the
huge prize
money they
dangle, if
they do not
wish to
encounter
such
tragedies
like “fingergate.”
And I think
I am right.
----------------------------------------------------
Ugochukwu
Ejinkeonye
www.ugochukwu.blog.com