I
speak often about culture. It is my favourite topic. I speak often, and
passionately about the cultures that define our nation, and how many of those
behaviours appear to be at the root of our national decline.
By
this I don’t mean who we are more than I mean what we have become: the
attitudes, prejudice, stereotypes and behaviours we have learnt as we have
tried to survive corruption, military dictatorship and several civil and other
wars.
One
of those cultural anoles is the arrogant dismissal of the
past. It has never ceased to amaze how every time someone wants to do something
new in Nigeria, they start by dismissing what everyone else there has done
before they. You hear ‘Oh, TV was rubbish! Oh radio was bad! Gosh, what have
our advertisers been doing?”
There
is also the epidemic of people – especially younger people – declaring that
‘XYZ has never been done before’, or ‘this is the first time this is being done
in Nigeria’ or ‘I am finally going to do this right.”
I
grew up hearing this from peers, but years after it hasn’t ceased to shocked
me. This pervasive sense of disdain, of disrespect can only come from the
collapse of perspective and the absence of history as an imperative.
And
that is why Nigeria is stuck in a vicious cycle in many areas – without the
benefit of history, of institutional memory, of learning what we did well and
what we did not, of not knowing where the rain began to beat us, how can we
know how to do better, what to stand on, where to begin to build? If we do not
know where we are coming from, how on earth can we know where we are going to?
Surely
the same gaps in knowledge that make young musicians feel that they are first
to reach massive international audiences, and deal massive global
collaborations in a country where everyone from King Sunny Ade to MajekFashek
to, of course Fela Anikulapo-Kuti have been there, done that, have the t-shirt,
threw it away, bought a new one and then rocked it for years. We have a history
so rich by success, by victory, by massive accomplishment in the media and
creative industries.
That’s
not just something I say, that’s the philosophy that underlines our work – a
deep humility and abiding appreciation for the history of our country, for the
leaders who worked under extremely difficult circumstances, at a time when very
few people understood the media, at a time when it was yet emerging, to build
this industry that we have now.
But
then maybe it’s because many of us in RED grew up on ‘I am Prince Jide Sokoya,
the only son of the soil and by the grace of God, the youngest millionaire in
the whole universe’, on Nigerian content, and therefore we have an understanding
of what makes it special, of why what our forebears did was special.
Up
until this moment, I remember I felt in the public relations activation of
OnyekaOnwenu and King Sunny Ade preaching the message of birth control, I
remember how perplexed my young mind was that every show on TV had on its
credits Peter Igho and Grace Egbagbe, I grew up interesting in knowing how my
former boss Levi Ajuonuma did that magic where he spoke to the camera and
everyone watching felt he was talking to you directly.
I
think of the genius of the Bagco Super Sack ad and how viral it went before
many of us knew what viral meant, or the forever standard that the ‘MKO is our
man’ ad from Rosabel set those 22 years ago. I grew up in awe of these
creators.
And
I see all of them here today, and my heart swells with pride, with excitement,
with joy, with love, with reverence, with awe.
We
are truly standing, this generation, on the shoulders of giants.
You,
our mentors and forbears, icons and legends, across television, radio, print,
public relations, advertising, are those giants.
For
sure, older people bear some culpability for the Nigeria that we have today,
but you won’t find many of those ones in this room today.
You
are a different breed, truly worth celebrating. You inspired this young boy in
Ijeshatedo who grew up on the columns of Helen Ovbiagele and Mike Awoyinka, and
watched Frank Olize every Sunday night. Who looked longingly at
Insight when he was in Secondary School and wanted to join that company as soon
as he was out. You inspired a generation.
You
made it possible for us to dream, you made it possible for us to imagine as far
as our passions could take us, you took the path less travelled at a time when
your peers chose the usual and the convention – banks, politics, oil. You
created something truly special.
You
know, in a country where most awards are given to politicians, to billionaires,
to corporate fat cats, and to anyone who can pay money for it, some of our
honourees here were shocked when call we called them:“Why are you doing
this?”
The
underlying question obviously was: In Nigeria, why would anyone do something so
obviously not for financial gain?
The
answer is simple, and this is the simple answer truly: it is a
decision of the heart and not of the head, driven by gratitude rather than
balance sheets. Our hearts wanted to do this. Our souls wanted to do this. Our
very beings wanted to do this.
We
wanted to say thank you. For courage, for chutzpah, for character, for
creativity, for depth. Thank you for passion, for ambition, for purpose.
So tonight, we thank you. Red
Media Africa thanks you. Nigeria thanks you. I thank you.
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