
Lolo
She recently had her say via her social media page, and fans have been reacting.
According to her, she recently saw a video where a young boy solicited young girls to expose themselves on camera, and she was very shocked to see most of the ladies complying with the request.
Lolo added that we thought we had seen everything with the Gen Z generation, but the Gen Alpha might do worse.
Her words, “I am not happy today at all. I saw a video on TikTok where a young boy in a dingy place asked girls to flash their breasts on TikTok, and I saw different girls doing it. Not one, not two, not three girls flashing their naked breasts on TikTok and people are watching. It made me wonder what is happening and I was told it’s a challenge.
What do we need to happen? We’re already seeing girls getting raped and killed everyday, assaulted and abused and yet our young children aren’t having sense enough to stay modest.
You have the audacity to flash your breasts to thousands of people on tiktok, even if they were paying you..we need to stop this! Where are our parents and caregivers? We thought we had seen everything with gen Z! But what this gen Alpha would do! As a mother, I am unhappy because I saw it with my two eyes ! This has to stop.”
WOW.
Nollywood is a sobriquet that originally referred to the Nigerian film industry. The origin of the term dates back to the early 2000s, traced to an article in The New York Times. Due to the history of evolving meanings and contexts, there is no clear or agreed-upon definition for the term, which has made it a subject to several controversies.
The origin of the term “Nollywood” remains unclear; Jonathan Haynes traced the earliest usage of the word to a 2002 article by Matt Steinglass in the New York Times, where it was used to describe Nigerian cinema.
Charles Igwe noted that Norimitsu Onishi also used the name in a September 2002 article he wrote for the New York Times. The term continues to be used in the media to refer to the Nigerian film industry, with its definition later assumed to be a portmanteau of the words “Nigeria” and “Hollywood”, the American major film hub.
Film-making in Nigeria is divided largely along regional, and marginally ethnic and religious lines. Thus, there are distinct film industries – each seeking to portray the concern of the particular section and ethnicity it represents. However, there is the English-language film industry which is a melting pot for filmmaking and filmmakers from most of the regional industries.