Adanna ohakim biography template
I know I carried last on this one but when I was told about Adanna and David I was like "who dem be?"...I had no clue, till I searched for them on YouTube...gosh! They are too cute together! I love the videos of them dancing together...so adorable.
Their videos went viral and they have thousands of followers on Instagram: over 30, 000 and over 10, 000 on YouTube...I guess we all love them!
Adanna Ohakim and David Steineker tied the knot on Saturday 1st March in Germany. Their traditional wedding held Dec. 28th in Mbano, Imo State.
Adanna is the daughter of former Imo State Governor Ikedim Ohakim, and she has an identical twin sister, Adanma...I love twins.
Who do you think has the best moves? I think David...see how he's just shaking his waist.
Love them!
Cedi N Naira "My Baby" dance video - AdannaDavidDavido "Gobe" dance video - AdannaDavid
Iyanya feat. Flavour "Jombolo" dance video - AdannaDavid
The Rise and Rise of Nigeria’s New Online Video Celebs
Ayodeji Rotinwa
They are everywhere now: on mobile phones, handheld devices, laptops and even your trusty old desktop. Videos have become an essential part of pop culture and for Generation Z- the kids born with the tech-gene, sharing videos of the things they love, hate or love to hate, has become almost as important as breathing. The result? The evolution of a new species of celebrities- influential and trendsetting non-hollywood types, whose appeal lies not in a notorious family name or the allure of a leaked sex tape, but in content that’s both fascinating and relevant.
Comedian and video producer, Felix Kjellberg is one example. A few years ago, his name rang no bells outside his native Sweden. By December 2015, however, his “Let’s Play” commentaries and vlogs on gaming channel PewDiePie had earned him over 44 million subscribers worldwide, making him the most subscribed user on YouTube. PewDiePie also appeared at the top of Forbes’ October 2015 list of the richest YouTube stars with a reported $12 million earned in 2015!
Not known for cooling its heels while the grass grows under its feet, Nigeria has cottoned on to the power of the YouTube “influencer”. Just like the global trend, the country has witnessed the rise of YouTube stars, with channels courted by brands, and viewed by a steadily growing number of loyal subscribers eager for more comedy and satire or just interested in the back story on someone else’s daily life.
Here’s a look at ten Nigerian YouTube stars and why they have become the nation’s sweethearts Emmanuella Samuel (MarkAngelComedy) Comedy is huge on YouTube, but there’s a young Nigerian comedienne who is taking the platform by storm.
Six year old Emmanuella is the star of MarkAngelComedy- one of Nigeria’s top-rankedYouTube users, with over 280 thousand subscribers and views regularly exceeding 3 million. Each MarkAngel video features Emmanuella doing or saying something utterly Rate the pronunciation difficulty of adanna Very easy Easy Moderate Difficult Very difficult Thanks for your vote! 266 ratings rating ratings This past June, when BellaNaija ran the story of Rotimi Williams, a 35-year old enterpreneur who owns the second largest rice farm in Nigeria, the comments were positive, calling the story inspirational, that is, until someone mentioned that Rotimi is President Obasanjo’s son-in-law. The tone of the comments changed from there. Somebody wrote, “Abeg I don’t like this story anymore; ain’t nothing wrong in saying a Lil truth. If OBJ is your father in-law, then he has his hands on it”-–reflecting our preference for rag-to-riches tales. The credit went to OBJ despite the fact that in the interview Rotimi said that he learned all about rice farming from Google by downloading every article he could find on rice production, consuming it and then practicing it in the fields. Children who have rich or famous parents live in their parents’ shadows. Besides the expectation that they fill their parents’ often big shoes, rich and famous kids also have the unenviable task of proving that their success is the result of their own accomplishments and not crumbs from their parents’ tables. Except they take unusual measures to prove, and always remind people, that they are smart in their own right, they are rarely given credit, however hard they work. Take Joe Hill, son of famed horror writerStephen King, for example, When Joe first started his writing career, he concealed his identity from publishers and editors, wrote under a pseudonym, and collected his own shares of rejection letters. Reflecting back he said, “I had to know that if someone bought one of my stories they’d bought it for the right reasons – that it is a good story – and not because of who my dad is.” Only after Hill had published more than twenty short stories under the pseudonym, won a bundle of awards and seen his debut novel reach number eight on the New York Times best Learn how to pronounce adanna
adanna
Anne Mmeje: In Defense of Rich Kids – They Work As Hard As the Rest of Us