Last week, a Vanguard columnist wrote on his page about how Omotola
said she sometimes gets tempted to cheat on her husband, a story she
later denied on twitter, saying she never granted Vanguard the
interview. The same reporter who made published the story last week, now
has a new angle to it, insisting Omotola granted the interview and
there was indeed no need for denial. Continue below…
Let me start first by saying that I am humbled by the popularity of
this column, only six weeks after it made its debut. I am told, and this
has been verified by random Google search, that this column has been
culled and appropriated by practically every social media platform
including leading bloggers all over the world.
One of such bloggers called me, to say she has been eagerly awaiting
my column every Sunday, and updates on my blog, EkereteUdoh.com, so she
would be the first to post my stories. I must say that I am flattered.
Last week, I published on this page, excerpts of an interview that
Omotola Jalade Ekeinde granted my New York-based newspaper, The
Diasporan Star, in December 2009, and also on my blog. The interview,
though done some years ago, was still relevant. (the kind of interviews
that have no time-limit or currency). The story has become a hit on
social media and some other newspapers here. The popular blogger,
BellaNaija, culled the story, and a day after, Omotola, through the same
BellaNaija, denied ever granting the interview to Sunday Vanguard. She,
however, did not deny that the said interview did take place and that
some other excerpts of the same interview were published in The Diaspora
Star, which she had read when it was first published.
Since her denial, there has been a feeding frenzy on the social
media, with some misguided fellows thinking that the interview did not
take place and I am offended by this. The notion that I, Ekerete Udoh,
one of the pioneers of this genre of journalism in Nigeria, a man who
God has used to promote and project Nigerian pop culture and its
practitioners both in Nigeria and in the Diaspora, would publish an
interview that was not properly conducted is, to say the least, stupid,
puerile and utterly objectionable and I AM MAD AS HELL!
Let me, for the records, state that the said interview took place in
Omotola’s HOLIDAY INN, hotel room in Yonkers, New York. Since 2008, I
have been the publisher of The Diasporan Star newspaper, easily and
without sounding immodest, the most popular newspaper that projects and
promotes Nigerian, nay African, pop culture, politics and our way of
life in the United States. The newspaper, to the glory of God, has grown
in stature and reviewed by such newspapers as The New York Daily News,
Post, among others.
In 2010, when the Queen of Daytime Television, Oprah Winfrey, did a
segment on her show on Nollywood and Bollywood, and wanted background
information on Nollywood and its stars, it was my newspaper – The
Diasporan Star – that she turned to. Her production outfit, HARPO,
contacted us, and we provided the background information she used in the
segment where Genevieve Nnaji was called ‘The Julia Roberts of Africa.’
Because of the impact my newspaper has made in the United States, I
was honored by the New York State Senate in 2012 for ‘Outstanding
Community Service’, an event where CNN’s Anderson Cooper was also
honoured. I have been invited to address students on African pop culture
and politics at many institutions in the United States among them the
New School of Social Research in New York City, a top school that has as
its president, the former Nebraska senator and former Democratic Party
presidential aspirant, Bob Kerry.
My newspaper has been media partners to a number of campaigns in the
U.S, including the Obama/Biden Campaign Organisation, where we canvassed
support for the African-Diaspora community for the ticket. Ours,
therefore, has been a credible medium, and I hold, very dearly, my over
20 years of storied journalism career.
Now, this is the fact of the story. I first met Omotola in 2008 or
thereabout, when her then manager – Jim Bass – asked me to help promote
her in North America. Omotola had a musical performance at Lehman
College, the Bronx, as part of an event that was put together by former
beauty queen and Nollywood actress, Regina Askia. Because I was her big
fan and was proud of what she was doing, I agreed to help promote her in
the media. Since then, Omotola and I struck a very professional
relationship.
In 2009, during another of her visits to New York for the premier of
an HIV/AIDS movie produced by Nollywood actress and producer, Chisom, I
helped alongside her then manager, Bass, to organise a meet-and-greet
session for her at the popular Nigerian watering hole – Tropical Grill, a
restaurant and lounge – located about ten minutes away from JFK
Airport, and has played host to many prominent Nigerians including
former President Obasanjo. My friend, Ms. Bola Jawo, the owner of that
restaurant, agreed to give us the hall free, to host Omotola. Jawo can
authenticate this.
Private life
At the event, Omotola was so impressed by the huge turnout of fans
and our friendship deepened. It was at that event that I asked her for
an interview that was going to be different – where emphasis was going
to be placed on her private life, her marriage and other angles that the
media had not explored. She told me exultantly, “Thank God, this is
going to be different form all those generic questionnaires I have been
used to, from Nigerian journalists”.
The next day, in the company of my two daughters, Ekaete Bukola and
Uduak Temitope Udoh, respectively, (my daughters, Ekaete, who has
already graduated from college and will be starting her law school in
the spring 2015, and Uduak, who is a freshman in college, are Omotola’s
fans and had told me they will not forgive me if I didn’t take them
along to see their idol). I drove to Yonkers – a distance of about 30
minutes from New York City – and the said interview took place right
there in her room at the Holiday Inn. It was a meeting of two friends
and I remember her even jokingly telling me not to take pictures because
she just woke up and “looked a mess”. We all laughed and told her she
was as beautiful as ever.
Since then, I have done other stories on Omotola and she has
regularly sought my help to tamp down negative situations that arose
about her.
When in 2011, a picture surfaced on the internet showing a man with
his hands firmly grabbing her butt, and it sparked a media frenzy on the
state of her marriage, with most accusing her of cheating on her
husband, it was me and my news paper, that she ran to, to help debunk
that story. Not only did she grant me an interview, she also made me
speak with her husband, who had stoutly defended her. That interview
finally put a lid on that brewing mess and it is all over the social
media. I reproduce below, that interview and her confirmation of the
initial 2009 interview that she purportedly denied was ever granted. The
Diasporan Star edition of May 2011 reported the story.
“In our last edition, we did a cover story which was titled, `Omotola
in the eye of the storm! Husband angry over butt-grabbing photo at the
Grammys…Why she apologized.’
The story centered around the rumors then spreading all over the
world about the state of marriage of Omotola – by far, one of the most
visible and popular stars in the Nollywood firmament – following a
butt-grabbing incident by her escort at the 2011 Grammy Awards in Los
Angeles, an event that had Omotola, as the first Nollywood star to ever
walk the Red Carpet at the star-studded event.
The picture had elicited wild rumors and innuendoes – with some
speculating that her relationship with the guy, whose hands was on her
backside, had more to it than meets the eye.
Some had openly stated she was playing games with her marital vows.
We had reported in the same article our inability to get Omotola to
state her own side of the story, since she was shooting a movie in
Ghana. We had, however, relied on close sources to piece together our
facts which provided the background to our story.
A few days after the story hit the newsstands, I received a call from
Omotola, who expressed the desire to finally speak on the issue. “I am
now going to use this platform to put this issue to rest once and for
all”, she said.
Omotola went on to add: “People have insinuated all kinds of things
and read numerous meaning to what was nothing but an innocuous picture
taken of me and a member of my new management team at the Grammys. The
picture was an innocent one, signifying nothing.
“I have been married to my husband for 15 years now, and I say this
loud and clear that I have never cheated on him, and would never do so
ever! Remember I said in an interview I granted you in 2009, that yes, I
have been tempted numerous times to violate my marital vows, but I have
always resisted the temptation to do anything that would bring dishonor
to my marriage and my children.
If I told you – as a popular actress – that we have not been tempted,
I would be lying to you. But should one sacrifice all what one has
built, nurtured and worked hard to establish just because you want to
indulge in some ill-motivated affair? No. I don’t believe in that. I
count myself blessed to have married a perfect gentleman, a man who has
supported me throughout my years in the industry, and is still there, as
a rock of Gibraltar. My husband is a rare find, and no amount of
temptation will ever make me cheat on him.
“So the notion or the rumor that my haters and nay-sayers have spread
to the effect that the guy at the Grammys was my boyfriend, is
ludicrous, to say the least! If I wanted to cheat on my husband, would I
do that in the open? Would I advertise my boyfriend for everyone to see
and at such a public function? Just analyze that logically – would that
be a commonsensical thing to do?
“This rumor is really a sick one and I’m offended. My husband is my
soul-mate and I will never soil or put that trust in jeopardy – no
matter what and the extent of the temptation. It is not worth it.” (At
this point, she handed the phone to her husband).
My wife is no flirt – Husband
It was obvious from the manner Mr. Ekeinde, pilot, sounded, that he
was pained and frustrated by all the unfounded rumours about his wife’s
glorious outing at the Grammys
“My brother, I am very proud of my wife’s accomplishments and I join
other well wishers and millions of her fans to toast her success. I’m a
little surprised that instead of Nigerians celebrating her appearance at
the Grammys and her being the first Nollywood star to walk the red
carpet, they are busy spreading tales and rumours that do not exist”’,
he said.
“Truth be told, I was not angry with my wife when I saw the picture.
Why should I be? I know who I married, how self-respecting she is and
also the nature of her industry. She is an actress for God’s sake, and
it is not out of place for actresses to appear in scenes that may look a
little out of place for a married person.
‘’The key thing is that my wife respects her marital status, and in
our 15-year-marriage, she has been the best woman any man could aspire
to have. In spite of her stardom, at home, she is my wife. She cooks for
me, takes care of the home and, above all, is a great mother to our
lovely children.
“I sincerely would implore her fans not to buy into rumours and
speculations about her marital life, because I, the husband, the one
that is lucky to have her as my wife, am so proud of her and I continue
to thank God for bringing her into my life. I could never have asked for
a better wife than her.”
Now, let me address the point she made that she did not grant an
interview to Sunday Vanguard. About six weeks ago, I became a columnist
in this newspaper.
And since one of the planks of this column rests on popular culture, I
have been publishing AUTHENTIC AND CREDIBLE interviews that I have had
with leading personalities over the years. There is no ethical kerfuffle
involved with this practice. A writer or journalist who did an
interview with a given subject can use same interview in any other
credible media platform of his choosing, as long as the said INTERVIEW
WAS PROPERLY CONDUCTED AND THE STORY IS REPORTED ACCURATELY.
That was what I did, with the Omotola story. She granted me an
interview, and I am now a columnist with Sunday Vanguard, a very
credible and easily one of the leading mainstream newspapers in Nigeria,
and I decided to use the story, with my byline boldly displayed, which
should suffice. Her story is not the first I had done along this line,
which, I may add, is a universally adopted practice by journalists all
over the world. Journalists are free to syndicate their stories in
whatever medium or platform they deem fit.
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