Connect with us

ENTERTAINMENT

Kiss Daniel’s Lawyer Reveals Shocking Details On Legal Battle With G-Worldwide

Published

on

One Year Later, Kiss Daniel Sets To Release New Single

The face-off between Kiss Daniel and his old label is getting messier as the singer’s legal counsel revealed more shocking details on the circumstance surrounding the termination of Kiss’ contract with G-worldwide.

According to Kiss Daniel’s lawyers ‘L & A Legal consultants’, 

Kiss Daniel did not walk out of his contract. He only terminated it as he is permitted to do under the contract. Is it now a sin for a party to exercise a right expressly conferred on him by law/contract? Is it the fault of Kiss Daniel that the contract has a termination clause that allows Kiss Daniel to terminate the contract? We should bear in mind that the contract was drafted by G-Worldwide Entertainment. Kiss Daniel scrupulously followed the provision of the contract. It is unfortunate that people are mixing this case up with that of other artists running away from a contract they signed. No! This is different. This is a case of an Artist insisting that the contract signed by the parties must be obeyed and enforced. Kiss Daniel is firm believer in rule of law and due process. This was why it was Kiss Daniel that went to court first. People should not confuse a case of properly terminated contract with cases of ill-advised artists who angrily walked out of their contract without following the laid down procedure under their contracts. Kiss Daniel’s case is a well thought out act. It is an exercise of right granted to him by the contract between him and his label. What do people want from Nigerian artist? If they don’t employ lawyers, people criticize them. Now that Kiss Daniel has employed one of the best I.P. law firm in Nigeria with a Professor of I.P. and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), people are still calling him names for acting in accordance with his contract! When Artist don’t obey or assert their rights under their contracts, people abused them, yet the same people are abusing Kiss Daniel for obeying and enforcing the Termination Clause provided in his contract! Na wa o. This is not a Kiss Daniel’s fight alone. This is a fight for all Nigerian artists except we are saying only artists must obey and comply with contract but record label are free to do as they wish?

Finance:

Why is G-Worldwide afraid to grant Kiss Daniel unrestricted access to his account and books as provided by the contract? The whole relationship between a record label and an artist is about making money and sharing it. Finance and money is the crux of the matter. G-Worldwide did not sign Kiss Daniel because they love his face. They signed him because they think he can make money for them. And there is nothing wrong with that as long as they play by the rules. The only offence commented by Kiss Daniel was his effrontery/impudence by daring to ask his record label to render account! Kiss Daniel through his lawyer L & A – Legal Consultant appointed a firm of Chartered Accountant to inspect and audit G-Worldwide Entertainments books and account in respect of Kiss Daniel’s project as provided by the contract between the parties. Immediately the request was made, all hell was let loose. Why will a Record Label be afraid to allow their Artist to inspect their books of record? Especially, when the contract between the parties was drafted by the same record label and the contract contains a clause which specifically provided that the Record Label shall keep all accounts and shall allow the Artist or his representative unrestricted access to inspect and make copies of the records. See clause 7 of the contract between the parties which provide;

“Company shall maintain proper accounting books and or records at its principal office, in relation to revenue generated, or expenditure expended in the course of the performance of this Agreement. Such books and or records shall include, but shall not be limited to, any documents or records which evidence the receipt and or disbursements of royalties and other monies generated in the course of the performance of the Agreement. 

The Artist shall, at any time during the term of this Agreement and upon prior written notice to Company, Artist or his/her designated representative shall gain unrestricted access to inspect the books and records of the Company relating to this Agreement and shall be entitled to make copies thereof.”

Based on above, Kiss Daniel’s lawyer wrote to G-Worldwide on the 18th of July 2017 saying thus:

“This is to inform you that in accordance with the Recording Contract between the parties, our client wishes to send his Accountants (WYZE Associates) to inspect/audit his accounts with your client.

Kindly confirm your convenient date from next week when the Accountants can come in for the inspection/audit.”

Of course they failed/refused to respond to the above email and only responded on the 25th of July 2017 (after several reminders) saying:

“I somehow missed your initial email. Apologies. I will discuss your request with my client and will revert with a response before CoB tomorrow.”

As usual, they failed to respond on the 26th of July 2017 as promised and Kiss Daniel’s lawyers had to send another reminder by way of email and telephone call before they finally responded on the 1st of August 2017 saying:

“Regarding the date for the “audit”, can we agree on a date in late August or early September? An earlier date will not be ideal- Emperor Geezy is getting married on Saturday and will be unavailable for some time after the wedding (for obvious reasons).”

And Kiss Daniel’s lawyers responded by saying:

“It is our understanding that we are dealing with a company (G-World Entertainment Ltd) and not an individual. Therefore, the unavailability of Emperor Geezy would not affect the audit. Please note that the audit will only involve G World Accountants and our Accountants. Therefore, the presence of Emperor Geezy is not very important at this stage. In view of the above, we can schedule the audit to an earlier date. Kindly confirm when our Accountants can come for the audit within this week or next week.”

Is G-worldwide Entertainment Limited a proper record label? Is it a proper limited liability company? Or is it merely a one man show without corporate structure, office and supporting staff? Can anybody name the A & R officer of G-worldwide Entertainment Limited?

Anyway, G-worldwide Entertainments Limited responded by creating a new excuse when they stated thus in their email of 4th of August 2017:

“While the company is happy to assist your client’s accountants with their audit request, unfortunately due to ongoing activities involving the relevant company’s personnel, the time proposed by you will not be convenient for the company (whose assistance you require to carry out the audit).

In the circumstance, we suggest that we should agree on a day in the last week of August for the audit exercise. We will wait for you to propose a specific date during the said period for the audit.”

Even though it was clear to Kiss Daniel and his team that G-worldwide Entertainments Limited was trying to frustrate the inspection/audit, they went ahead to conceded to the end of the month proposed by G-worldwide Entertainments Limited and sent them a mail on the on the  7th of August 2017 saying:

“Our accountants will be available on 28th and 29th August 2017 for the audit. Kindly confirm that the dates. Also confirm your client’s address.”

Again, G-worldwide Entertainments Limited failed/refused to confirm the dates for the inspection or the venue as requested and after several reminders they only on the 28th of August 2017, which is one of the dates fixed for the inspection and agreed to the 29th of August 2017 for the said inspection/audit. Thereby giving Kiss Daniel and his team less than 24 hours’ notice and which means the audit can only be done in one day instead of two dates proposed. Of course, any experience person knows that such audit can hardly be completed in one day. It was all a grand design to frustrate the audit.

Unfortunately, when the inspection/audit finally held, Kiss Daniel’s Accountant was denied unrestricted access to the “books/records” in clear breach of the unambiguous provisions of clause 7 of the Contract (as posted above). Kiss Daniel’s Accountant were surprised that Label did not come to the venue of the inspection/audit with any physical books, receipts, invoices e.t.c. but only brought a mere laptop! And even refused to allow Kiss Daniel’s Accountant to make a copy of the said “books/records” contrary to the contract. It was also discovered that the representative sent by G-worldwide Entertainment Limited and who brought the laptop is not an accountant and did not know anything about the transactions recorded in the laptop. He could not answer any of the questions/queries posted to him by Kiss Daniel’s Accountant.

Based on the above breaches (failure to allow unrestricted access and to make copies of the books of account as provided in clause 7 of the Record contract), Kiss Daniel’s lawyers gave G-worldwide Entertainment Limited 14 days’ notice to remedy the breach as provided by Clause 16 of the Contract and when they failed to do so within the 14days, the Artist through his lawyer proceeded to terminate the contract as provided in clause 14.2 of the contract, which provides that:

“Either party may terminate this contract by written notice to the other at any time if that other party:

commits a breach of this contract and, in the case of a breach capable of remedy, he fails to remedy the breach within fourteen (14) days of being required to do so in writing.”

Unfortunately, when Kiss Daniel’s lawyer gave G-worldwide Entertainments Limited notice of the breach on 11th and 19th of September 2017, G-worldwide Entertainments Limited failed and refused to cure and remedy the breach within the 14 days allowed by the contract and Kiss Daniel was forced to comply with the contract by terminating it as required by the contract.

This termination therefore was not only in obedience to law and the contract between the parties but was also a self defence by Kiss Daniel to prevent “baboon dey work, monkey dey chop”. Why is G-worldwide Entertainments Limited afraid of rendering accounts? Should Kiss Daniel continue to work under G-worldwide Entertainments Limited and receive whatever was giving to him without allowing his accountant to audit the books? Is it an offence for an artist to enforce the rights granted him by the contract drafted by the Record label? the laywer wrote.

Curled from: LIB

ENTERTAINMENT

Tems, Ayo Edebiri, Wizkid & More Nominated For The 56th NAACP Image Awards

Published

on

56th NAACP Image Awards: Tems, Ayo Edebiri, Wizkid nominated | fab.ng

The 56th NAACP Image Awards have unveiled their nominations. It highlights various exceptional talents. These talents include Nigerian stars Tems, Ayo Edebiri, Burna Boy, and Wizkid, alongside British Nigerian actress Cynthia Erivo.

The awards ceremony, set to take place on February 22nd, will be broadcast live on BET and CBS from the Pasadena Civic Center. It will celebrate “Our Stories, Our Culture, Our Excellence.”

Usher and Burna Boy received a nomination for “Outstanding Duo, Group or Collaboration (Contemporary)”. It was for their captivating song “Coming Home.”

Meanwhile, Wizkid earned a nod in the “Outstanding International Song” category for his soulful track “Piece of My Heart.”  The track features the talented Brent Faiyaz. Joining Wizkid in this category is Tems, recognized for her mesmerizing song “Love Me JeJe.”

Rising star Tyla received a well-deserved nomination for “Outstanding New Artist.” Also, Ayo Edebiri led the pack with an impressive five nominations.

Her nominations include “Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series,” showcasing her comedic prowess. Edebiri also garnered recognition for her exceptional voiceover work.

In the animated category, Disney+’s captivating series “Iwájú” received a nomination for “Outstanding Animated Series.” Further, this solidified the series in the realm of animated excellence.

See the full list of nominations for the 56th NAACP Image Awards below.

Entertainer of the Year Nominees 

  • Cynthia Erivo
  • Keke Palmer
  • Kendrick Lamar
  • Kevin Hart
  • Shannon Sharpe

Outstanding Social Media Personality of the Year Nominees

  • Kai Cenat
  • Keith Lee
  • RaeShanda Lias
  • Shirley Raines
  • Tony Baker

Motion Pictures Categories 

Outstanding Motion Picture

  • “Bad Boys: Ride or Die” (Sony Pictures)
  • “Bob Marley: One Love” (Paramount Pictures)
  • “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)
  • “The Six Triple Eight” (Netflix)
  • “Wicked” (Universal Pictures)

Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture

  • André Holland — “Exhibiting Forgiveness” (Roadside Attractions)
  • Colman Domingo — “Sing Sing” (A24)
  • John David Washington — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)
  • Kingsley Ben-Adir — “Bob Marley: One Love” (Paramount Pictures)
  • Martin Lawrence — “Bad Boys: Ride or Die” (Sony Pictures)

Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture

  • Cynthia Erivo — “Wicked” (Universal Pictures)
  • Kerry Washington — “The Six Triple Eight” (Netflix)
  • Lashana Lynch — “Bob Marley: One Love” (Paramount Pictures)
  • Lupita Nyong’o — “A Quiet Place: Day One” (Paramount Pictures)
  • Regina King — “Shirley” (Netflix)

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Motion Picture

  • Brian Tyree Henry — “The Fire Inside” (Amazon MGM Studios)
  • Corey Hawkins — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)
  • David Alan Grier — “The American Society of Magical Negroes” (Focus Features)
  • Denzel Washington — “Gladiator II” (Paramount Pictures)
  • Samuel L. Jackson — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture

  • Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor — “Exhibiting Forgiveness” (Roadside Attractions)
  • Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor — “Nickel Boys” (Orion Pictures/Amazon MGM Studios)
  • Danielle Deadwyler — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)
  • Ebony Obsidian — “The Six Triple Eight” (Netflix)
  • Lynn Whitfield — “Albany Road” (Faith Filmworks)

Outstanding Independent Motion Picture

  • “Albany Road” (Faith Filmworks)
  • “Exhibiting Forgiveness” (Roadside Attractions)
  • “Rob Peace” (Republic Pictures)
  • “Sing Sing” (A24)
  • “We Grown Now” (Sony Pictures Classics)

Outstanding International Motion Picture

  • “El lugar de la otra” (Netflix)
  • “Emilia Pérez” (Netflix)
  • “Memoir of a Snail” (IFC Films)
  • “The Seed of the Sacred Fig” (NEON)
  • “The Wall Street Boy, Kipkemboi” (ArtMattan Films)

Outstanding Breakthrough Performance in a Motion Picture

  • Brandon Wilson — “Nickel Boys” (Orion Pictures/Amazon MGM Studios)
  • Clarence Maclin — “Sing Sing” (A24)
  • Danielle Deadwyler — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)
  • Ebony Obsidian — “The Six Triple Eight” (Netflix)
  • Ryan Destiny — “The Fire Inside” (Amazon MGM Studios)

Outstanding Ensemble Cast in a Motion Picture

  • “Bob Marley: One Love” (Paramount Pictures)
  • “The Book of Clarence” (Sony Pictures)
  • “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)
  • “The Six Triple Eight” (Netflix)
  • “Wicked” (Universal Pictures)

Outstanding Animated Motion Picture

  • “Inside Out 2” (Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures)
  • “Kung Fu Panda 4” (DreamWorks Animation)
  • “Moana 2” (Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures)
  • “Piece by Piece” (Focus Features)
  • “The Wild Robot” (DreamWorks Animation)

Outstanding Character Voiceover Performance – Motion Picture

  • Aaron Pierre — “Mufasa: The Lion King” (Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures)
  • Anika Noni Rose — “Mufasa: The Lion King” (Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures)
  • Ayo Edebiri — “Inside Out 2” (Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures)
  • Blue Ivy Carter — “Mufasa: The Lion King” (Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures)
  • Lupita Nyong’o — “The Wild Robot” (DreamWorks Animation)

Outstanding Short Form (Live Action)

  • “Chocolate with Sprinkles” (AFI)
  • “Definitely Not a Monster”
  • “If They Took Us Back”
  • “My Brother & Me” (MeowBark Films)
  • “Superman Doesn’t Steal”

Outstanding Short Form (Animated)

  • “if(fy)” (OTB/The Hidden Hand Studios)
  • “Nate & John” (Unity Animation Project, LLC)
  • “Peanut Headz: Black History Toonz ‘Jackie Robinson’” (Exhibit Treal Studios)
  • “Self” (Pixar Animation Studios)
  • “Walk in the Light” (419 Studios)

Outstanding Breakthrough Creative (Motion Picture)

  • David Fortune — “Color Book” (Tribeca Studios)
  • Malcolm Washington — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)
  • RaMell Ross — “Nickel Boys” (Orion Pictures/Amazon MGM Studios)
  • Titus Kaphar — “Exhibiting Forgiveness” (Roadside Attractions)
  • Zoë Kravitz — “Blink Twice” (Amazon MGM Studios)

Outstanding Youth Performance in a Motion Picture

  • Anthony B. Jenkins — “The Deliverance” (Netflix)
  • Blake Cameron James — “We Grown Now” (Sony Pictures Classics)
  • Jeremiah Daniels — “Color Book” (Tribeca Studios)
  • Percy Daggs IV — “Never Let Go” (Lionsgate)
  • Skylar Aleece Smith — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)

Outstanding Cinematography in a Motion Picture

  • Andrés Arochi — “Longlegs” (NEON)
  • Jomo Fray — “Nickel Boys” (Orion Pictures/Amazon MGM Studios)
  • Justin Derry — “She Taught Love” (Andscape)
  • Lachlan Milne — “Exhibiting Forgiveness” (Roadside Attractions)
  • Rob Hardy — “The Book of Clarence” (Sony Pictures)

Television and Streaming Categories  

Outstanding Comedy Series

  • “Abbott Elementary” (ABC)
  • “How to Die Alone” (Hulu)
  • “Poppa’s House” (CBS)
  • “The Neighborhood” (CBS)
  • “The Upshaws” (Netflix)

Outstanding Actor in a Comedy Series

  • Cedric The Entertainer — “The Neighborhood” (CBS)
  • Damon Wayans — “Poppa’s House” (CBS)
  • David Alan Grier — “St. Denis Medical” (NBC)
  • Delroy Lindo — “UnPrisoned” (Hulu)
  • Mike Epps — “The Upshaws” (Netflix)

Outstanding Actress in a Comedy Series

  • Ayo Edebiri — “The Bear” (FX/Hulu)
  • Kerry Washington — “UnPrisoned” (Hulu)
  • Natasha Rothwell — “How to Die Alone” (Hulu)
  • Quinta Brunson — “Abbott Elementary” (ABC)
  • Tichina Arnold — “The Neighborhood” (CBS)

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series

  • Damon Wayans Jr. — “Poppa’s House” (CBS)
  • Giancarlo Esposito — “The Gentlemen” (Netflix)
  • Kenan Thompson — “Saturday Night Live” (NBC)
  • Tyler James Williams — “Abbott Elementary” (ABC)
  • William Stanford Davis — “Abbott Elementary” (ABC)

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series

  • Danielle Pinnock — “Ghosts” (CBS)
  • Ego Nwodim — “Saturday Night Live” (NBC)
  • Janelle James — “Abbott Elementary” (ABC)
  • Sheryl Lee Ralph — “Abbott Elementary” (ABC)
  • Wanda Sykes — “The Upshaws” (Netflix)

Outstanding Drama Series

  • “9-1-1” (ABC)
  • “Bel-Air” (Peacock)
  • “Cross” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • “Found” (NBC)
  • “Reasonable Doubt” (Hulu)

Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series

  • Aldis Hodge — “Cross” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Donald Glover — “Mr. & Mrs. Smith” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Harold Perrineau — “From” (MGM+)
  • Jabari Banks — “Bel-Air” (Peacock)
  • Michael Rainey Jr. — “Power Book II: Ghost” (Starz)

Outstanding Actress in a Drama Series

  • Angela Bassett — “9-1-1” (ABC)
  • Emayatzy Corinealdi — “Reasonable Doubt” (Hulu)
  • Queen Latifah — “The Equalizer” (CBS)
  • Shanola Hampton — “Found” (NBC)
  • Zoe Saldaña — “Lioness” (Paramount+)

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series

  • Adrian Holmes — “Bel-Air” (Netflix)
  • Cliff “Method Man” Smith — “Power Book II: Ghost” (Starz)
  • Isaiah Mustafa — “Cross” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Jacob Latimore — “The Chi” (Paramount+)
  • Morris Chestnut — “Reasonable Doubt” (Hulu)

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series

  • Adjoa Andoh — “Bridgerton” (Netflix)
  • Coco Jones — “Bel-Air” (Peacock)
  • Golda Rosheuvel — “Bridgerton” (Netflix)
  • Lorraine Toussaint — “The Equalizer” (CBS)
  • Lynn Whitfield — “The Chi” (Paramount+)

Outstanding Limited Television (Series, Special or Movie)

  • “Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist” (Peacock)
  • “Genius: MLK/X” (National Geographic)
  • “Griselda” (Netflix)
  • “Rebel Ridge” (Netflix)
  • “The Madness” (Netflix)

Outstanding Actor in a Limited Television (Series, Special or Movie)

  • Aaron Pierre — “Rebel Ridge” (Netflix)
  • Colman Domingo — “The Madness” (Netflix)
  • Kelvin Harrison Jr. — “Genius: MLK/X” (National Geographic)
  • Kevin Hart — “Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist” (Peacock)
  • Laurence Fishburne — “Clipped” (FX/Hulu)

Outstanding Actress in a Limited Television (Series, Special or Movie)

  • Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor — “The Supremes at Earl’s All-You-Can-Eat” (Hulu/Searchlight Pictures)
  • Naturi Naughton — “Abducted at an HBCU: A Black Girl Missing Movie” (Lifetime)
  • Sanaa Lathan — “The Supremes at Earl’s All-You-Can-Eat” (Hulu/Searchlight Pictures)
  • Sofía Vergara — “Griselda” (Netflix)
  • Uzo Aduba — “The Supremes at Earl’s All-You-Can-Eat” (Hulu/Searchlight Pictures)

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Television (Series, Special or Movie)

  • Don Cheadle — “Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist” (Peacock)
  • Luke James — “Them: The Scare” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Ron Cephas Jones — “Genius: MLK/X” (National Geographic)
  • Samuel L. Jackson — “Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist” (Peacock)
  • Terrence Howard — “Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist” (Peacock)

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Television (Series, Special or Movie)

  • Brandy Norwood — “Descendants: The Rise of Red” (Disney+)
  • Jayme Lawson — “Genius: MLK/X” (National Geographic)
  • Loretta Devine — “Terry McMillan Presents: Tempted By Love” (Lifetime)
  • Sanaa Lathan — “Young. Wild. Free.” (BET+)
  • Taraji P. Henson — “Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist” (Peacock)

Outstanding News/Information (Series or Special)

  • “Black Men’s Summit” (BET Media Group)
  • “Finding Your Roots with Henry Louis Gates, Jr.” (PBS)
  • “Laura Coates Live” (CNN)
  • “NewsNight with Abby Phillip” (CNN)
  • “The ReidOut” (MSNBC)

Outstanding Talk Series

  • “Hart to Heart” (Peacock)
  • “Sherri” (Syndicated)
  • “Tamron Hall Show” (Syndicated)
  • “The Jennifer Hudson Show” (Syndicated)
  • “The Shop” Season 7 (YouTube)

Outstanding Reality Program, Reality Competition or Game Show (Series)

  • “Celebrity Family Feud” (ABC)
  • “Password” (NBC)
  • “Rhythm + Flow” (Netflix)
  • “The Real Housewives of Potomac” (Bravo)
  • “Tia Mowry: My Next Act” (WeTV)

Outstanding Variety Show (Series or Special)

  • “BET Awards 2024” (BET Media Group)
  • “Deon Cole: Ok, Mister” (Netflix)
  • “Jamie Foxx: What Had Happened Was…” (Netflix)
  • “Katt Williams: Woke Foke” (Netflix)
  • “Saturday Night Live” (NBC)

Outstanding Children’s Program

  • “Craig of the Creek” (Cartoon Network)
  • “Descendants: The Rise of Red” (Disney+)
  • “Gracie’s Corner” (YouTube TV)
  • “Sesame Street” (Max)
  • “Snoopy Presents: Welcome Home, Franklin” (Apple TV+)

Outstanding Performance by a Youth (Series, Special, Television Movie or Limited Series)

  • Caleb Elijah — “Cross” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Graceyn Hollingsworth — “Gracie’s Corner” (YouTube TV)
  • Leah Sava Jeffries — “Percy Jackson and the Olympians” (Disney+)
  • Melody Hurd — “Cross” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • TJ Mixson — “The Madness” (Netflix)

Outstanding Host in a Talk or News/Information (Series or Special) – Individual or Ensemble

  • Abby Phillip — “NewsNight with Abby Phillip” (CNN)
  • Henry Louis Gates Jr. — “Finding Your Roots with Henry Louis Gates, Jr.” (PBS)
  • Jennifer Hudson — “The Jennifer Hudson” (Syndicated)
  • Joy Reid — “The Reidout” (MSNBC)
  • Sherri Shepherd — “Sherri” (Syndicated)

Outstanding Host in a Reality/Reality Competition, Game Show or Variety (Series or Special) –
Individual or Ensemble

  • Alfonso Ribeiro — “Dancing with the Stars” (ABC)
  • Keke Palmer — “Password” (NBC)
  • Nick Cannon — “The Masked Singer” (FOX)
  • Steve Harvey — “Celebrity Family Feud” (ABC)
  • Taraji P. Henson — “BET Awards 2024” (BET Media Group)

Outstanding Guest Performance

  • Ayo Edebiri — “Saturday Night Live” (NBC)
  • Cree Summer — “Abbott Elementary” (ABC)
  • Keegan-Michael Key — “Abbott Elementary” (ABC)
  • Marlon Wayans — “Bel-Air” (Peacock)
  • Maya Rudolph — “Saturday Night Live” (NBC)

Outstanding Animated Series

  • “Disney Jr.’s Ariel” (Disney Jr.)
  • “Everybody Still Hates Chris” (Comedy Central)
  • “Gracie’s Corner” (YouTube TV)
  • “Iwájú” (Disney+)
  • “Marvel’s Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur” (Disney Channel)

Outstanding Character Voiceover Performance (Television)

  • Angela Bassett — “Orion and the Dark” (Netflix)
  • Cree Summer — “Rugrats” (Nickelodeon)
  • Cree Summer — “The Legend of Vox Machina” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Dawnn Lewis — “Star Trek: Lower Decks” (Paramount+)
  • Keke Palmer — “The Second Best Hospital in the Galaxy” (Amazon Prime Video)

Outstanding Short Form Series or Special – Reality/Nonfiction/Documentary

  • “In the Margins” (PBS)
  • NCAA Basketball on CBS Sports (CBS)
  • “Roots of Resistance” (PBS)
  • “SC Featured” (ESPN)
  • “The Prince of Death Row Records “(YouTube TV)

Outstanding Breakthrough Creative (Television)

  • Ayo Edebiri — “The Bear” (FX/Hulu)
  • Diarra Kilpatrick — “Diarra From Detroit” (BET+)
  • Maurice Williams — “The Madness” (Netflix)
  • Thembi L. Banks — “Young. Wild. Free.” (BET+)
  • Vince Staples — “The Vince Staples Show” (Netflix)

Recording Categories

Outstanding New Artist

  • Doechii (Capitol Records/Top Dawg Entertainment)
  • Myles Smith (RCA Records/Sony Music Entertainment)
  • Samoht (Affective Music)
  • Shaboozey (American Dogwood/Empire)
  • Tyla (Epic Records)

Outstanding Male Artist

  • Chris Brown (RCA Records/Chris Brown Entertainment)
  • J. Cole (Dreamville/Interscope Records)
  • Kendrick Lamar (pgLang, under exclusive license to Interscope Records)
  • October London (Death Row Records/gamma.)
  • Usher (mega/gamma.)

Outstanding Female Artist

  • Beyoncé (Columbia Records/Parkwood Entertainment LLC)
  • Coco Jones (Def Jam Recordings)
  • Doechii (Capitol Records/Top Dawg Entertainment)
  • GloRilla (Collective Music Group/Interscope Records)
  • H.E.R. (RCA Records)

Outstanding Gospel/Christian Album

  • “Heart of a Human” — DOE (Life Room Label/RCA Inspiration)
  • “Live Breathe Fight” — Tamela Mann (Tillymann Music Group)
  • “Still Karen” — Karen Clark Sheard (Karew Records/Motown Gospel)
  • “Sunny Days” — Yolanda Adams (Epic Records)
  • “The Maverick Way Reimagined” — Maverick City Music (Tribl Records)

Outstanding International Song

  • “Close” — Skip Marley (Def Jam Recordings)
  • “Hmmm” — Chris Brown feat. Davido (RCA Records/Chris Brown Entertainment)
  • “Jump” — Tyla (Epic Records)
  • “Love Me JeJe” — Tems (RCA Records/Since ‘93)
  • “Piece of My Heart” — Wizkid feat. Brent Faiyaz (RCA Records/Sony Music International/Starboy Entertainment)

Outstanding Music Video/Visual Album

  • “Alright” — Victoria Monét (RCA Records/Lovett Music)
  • “Alter Ego (ALTERnate Version)” — Doechii, JT (Capitol Records/Top Dawg Entertainment)
  • “Boy Bye” — Chlöe (Columbia Records/Parkwood Entertainment LLC)
  • “Not Like Us” — Kendrick Lamar (pgLang, under exclusive license to Interscope Records)
  • “Yeah Glo!” — GloRilla (Collective Music Group/Interscope Records)

Outstanding Album

  • “Alligator Bites Never Heal” — Doechii (Epic Records)
  • “Cape Town to Cairo” — PJ Morton (Morton Records/EMPIRE)
  • “Coming Home” — USHER (mega/gamma.)
  • “Cowboy Carter” — Beyoncé (Columbia Records/Parkwood Entertainment LLC)
  • “Glorious” — GloRilla (Collective Music Group/Interscope Records)

Outstanding Soundtrack/Compilation Album

  • “Bob Marley: One Love (Soundtrack)” (Tuff Gong/Island Records)
  • “Genius: MLK/X (Songs from the Original Series)” (Hollywood Records)
  • “Reasonable Doubt (Season 2) (Original Soundtrack)” (Hollywood Records)
  • “The Book of Clarence (The Motion Picture Soundtrack)” (Geneva Club under exclusive license to Roc Nation Records, LLC)
  • “Wicked: The Soundtrack” (Republic Records)

Outstanding Gospel/Christian Song

  • “Church Doors” — Yolanda Adams (Epic Records)
  • “Do It Anyway” — Tasha Cobbs (TeeLee Records/Motown Gospel)
  • “God Problems (Not By Power)” — (Tribl Records)
  • “I Prayed for You (Said a Prayer)” MAJOR. — (NowThatsMAJOR/MNRK Music Group)
  • “Working for Me” — Tamela Mann (Tillymann Music Group)

Outstanding Jazz Album

  • “Creole Orchestra” — Etienne Charles (Culture Shock Music)
  • “Epic Cool” — Kirk Whalum (Artistry Music)
  • “Javon & Nikki Go to the Movies” — Javon Jackson and Nikki Giovanni (Solid Jackson Records)
  • “On Their Shoulders: An Organ Tribute” — Matthew Whitaker (MOCAT Records)
  • “Portrait” — Samara Joy (Verve Records)

Outstanding Soul/R&B Song

  • “16 CARRIAGES” — Beyoncé (Columbia Records/Parkwood Entertainment LLC)
  • “Here We Go (Uh Oh)” — Coco Jones (Def Jam Recordings)
  • “I Found You” — PJ Morton (Morton Records/EMPIRE)
  • “Residuals” — Chris Brown (RCA Records/Chris Brown Entertainment)
  • “Saturn” — SZA (RCA Records/Top Dawg Entertainment)

Outstanding Hip Hop/Rap Song

  • “Mamushi” — Megan Thee Stallion feat. Yuki Chiba (Hot Girl Productions LLC/Warner Music Group)
  • “Murdergram Deux” — LL Cool J feat. Eminem (Def Jam Recordings)
  • “Noid” — Tyler, the Creator (Columbia Records)
  • “Not Like Us” — Kendrick Lamar (pgLang, under exclusive license to Interscope Records)
  • “Yeah Glo!” — GloRilla (Collective Music Group/Interscope Records)

Outstanding Duo, Group or Collaboration (Traditional)

  • Adam Blackstone & Fantasia — “Summertime” (BASSic Black Entertainment Records/Anderson Music Group/EMPIRE)
  • Leela James feat. Kenyon Dixon — “Watcha Done Now” (Shesangz Music, Inc. under exclusive license to BMG Rights Management (US) LLC)
  • Maverick City Music feat. Miles Minnick — “God Problems (Not By Power)” (Tribl Records)
  • Muni Long & Mariah Carey — “Made for Me” (Supergiant Records/Def Jam Recordings)
  • Sounds of Blackness feat. Jamecia Bennett & Buddy McLain — “Thankful” (McLain Music, LLC)
Outstanding Duo, Group or Collaboration (Contemporary)
  • Flo & GloRilla — “In My Bag” (Island Records)
  • GloRilla feat. Kirk Franklin, Maverick City Music, Kierra Sheard, Chandler Moore — “RAIN DOWN
  • ON ME” (Collective Music Group/Interscope Records)
  • Usher & Burna Boy — “Coming Home” (mega/gamma.)
  • Victoria Monét feat. Usher — “SOS” (Sex on Sight) (RCA Records/Lovett Music)
  • Wizkid feat. Brent Faiyaz — “Piece of My Heart” (RCA Records/Lovett Music)

Outstanding Original Score for Television/Motion Picture

  • “Challengers (Original Score)” (Milan Records)
  • “Dune: Part Two (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)” (WaterTower Music)
  • “Star Wars: The Acolyte (Original Soundtrack)” (Walt Disney Records)
  • “The American Society of Magical Negroes (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)” (Back Lot Music)
  • “The Book of Clarence (Original Motion Picture Score)” (Milan Records)

Documentary Categories  

Outstanding Documentary (Film)

  • “Daughters” (Netflix)
  • “Frida” (Amazon MGM Studios)
  • “King of Kings: Chasing Edward Jones” (Freestyle Digital Media)
  • “Luther: Never Too Much” (Sony Music Entertainment/Sony Music Publishing/CNN Films)
  • “The Greatest Night in Pop” (Netflix)

Outstanding Documentary (Television)

  • “Black Barbie: A Documentary” (Netflix)
  • “Black Twitter: A People’s History” (Hulu)
  • “Gospel” (PBS)
  • “Simone Biles Rising” (Netflix)
  • “Sprint” (Netflix)

Outstanding Short Form Documentary (Film)

  • “Camille A. Brown: Giant Steps” (American Masters and Firelight Media)
  • “Danielle Scott: Ancestral Call” (American Masters and Firelight Media)
  • “How to Sue the Klan”
  • “Judging Juries”
  • “Silent Killer” (Kaila Love Jones Films)

Writing Categories  

Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series

  • Ashley Nicole Black — “Shrinking” – “Changing Patterns” (Apple TV+)
  • Brittani Nichols — “Abbott Elementary” – “Breakup” (ABC)
  • Crystal Jenkins — “No Good Deed” – “Letters of Intent” (Netflix)
  • Diarra Kilpatrick — “Diarra From Detroit” – “Chasing Ghosts” (BET+)
  • Jordan Temple — “Abbott Elementary” – “Smoking” (ABC)

Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series

  • Azia Squire — “Bridgerton” – “Tick Tock” (Netflix)
  • Ben Watkins — “Cross” – “Hero Complex” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Francesca Sloane, Donald Glover — “Mr. & Mrs. Smith” – “First Date” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Geetika Lizardi — “Bridgerton” – “Joining of Hands” (Netflix)
  • Lauren Gamble — “Bridgerton” – “Old Friends” (Netflix)
Outstanding Writing in a Television Movie or Special
  • Brandon Espy, Carl Reid — “Mr. Crocket” (Hulu)
  • Bree West, Chazitear — “A Wesley South African Christmas” (BET+)
  • Juel Taylor, Tony Rettenmaier, Thembi L. Banks — “Young. Wild. Free.” (BET+)
  • Rudy Mancuso, Dan Lagana — “Música” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • Tina Mabry, Gina Prince-Bythewood, Cee Marcellus — “The Supremes at Earl’s All-You-Can-Eat” (Hulu/Searchlight Pictures)

Outstanding Writing in a Motion Picture

  • Barry Jenkins — “The Fire Inside” (Amazon MGM Studios)
  • RaMell Ross, Joslyn Barnes — “Nickel Boys” (Orion Pictures/Amazon MGM Studios)
  • Steve McQueen — “Blitz” (Apple Original Films)
  • Titus Kaphar — “Exhibiting Forgiveness” (Roadside Attractions)
  • Virgil Williams, Malcolm Washington — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)

Directing Categories  

Outstanding Directing in a Comedy Series

  • Ayo Edebiri — “The Bear” – “Napkins” (FX/Hulu)
  • Bentley Kyle Evans — “Mind Your Business” – “The Reunion” (Bounce TV)
  • Robbie Countryman — “The Upshaws” – “Ain’t Broke” (Netflix)
  • Tiffany Johnson — “How to Die Alone” – “Trust No One” (Hulu)
  • William Smith — “The Vince Staples Show” – “Brown Family” (Netflix)

Outstanding Directing in a Drama Series

  • Carl Franklin — “Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story” – “Blame It on the Rain” (Netflix)
  • Marta Cunningham — “Genius: MLK/X” – “Protect Us” (National Geographic)
  • Marta Cunningham — “Genius: MLK/X” – “Who We Are” (National Geographic)
  • Paris Barclay — “Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story” – “Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?” (Netflix)
  • Rapman — “Supacell” – “Supacell” (Netflix)

Outstanding Directing in a Television Movie, Documentary, or Special

  • Kelley Kali — “Kemba” (BET+)
  • Marcelo Gama — “BET Awards 2024” (BET Media Group)
  • Shanta Fripp — “Black Men’s Summit” (BET Media Group)
  • Thembi L. Banks — “Young. Wild. Free” (BET+)
  • Tina Mabry — “The Supremes at Earl’s All-You-Can Eat” (Hulu/Searchlight Pictures)

Outstanding Directing in a Motion Picture

  • Jeymes Samuel — “The Book of Clarence” (Sony Pictures)
  • Malcolm Washington — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)
  • RaMell Ross — “Nickel Boys” (Orion Pictures/Amazon MGM Studios)
  • Reinaldo Marcus Green — “Bob Marley: One Love” (Paramount Pictures)
  • Steve McQueen — “Blitz” (Apple Original Films)

Outstanding Directing in a Documentary (Television or Motion Picture)

  • Bao Nguyen — “The Greatest Night in Pop” (Netflix)
  • Dawn Porter — “Luther: Never Too Much” (Sony Music Entertainment/Sony Music Publishing/CNN Films)
  • Deborah Riley Draper — “James Brown: Say It Loud” (A&E)
  • Jason Pollard, Sam Pollard — “Ol’ Dirty Bastard: A Tale of Two Dirtys” (A&E)
  • Nneka Onuorah — “Megan Thee Stallion: In Her Words” (Amazon Prime Video)

Literary Categories  

Outstanding Literary Work – Fiction

  • “A Love Song for Ricki Wilde” — Tia Williams (Grand Central Publishing – Hachette Book Group)
  • “Grown Woman” — Sarai Johnson (Harper – HarperCollins Publishers)
  • “Neighbors and Other Stories” — Diane Oliver, Tayari Jones (Foreword) (Grove Atlantic)
  • “One of Us Knows: A Thriller” — Alyssa Cole (William Morrow – HarperCollins Publishers)
  • “What You Leave Behind” — Wanda M. Morris (William Morrow – HarperCollins Publishers)

Outstanding Literary Work – Nonfiction

  • “A Passionate Mind in Relentless Pursuit: The Vision of Mary McLeod Bethune” — Noliwe Rooks (Penguin Press – Penguin Books)
  • “Love & Whiskey: The Remarkable True Story of Jack Daniel, His Master Distiller Nearest Green, and the Improbable Rise of Uncle Nearest” — Fawn Weaver (Melcher Media Inc.)
  • “Picturing Black History: Photographs and Stories that Changed the World” — Daniela Edmeier,
    Damarius Johnson, Nicholas B. Breyfogle and Steven Conn (Abrams Books – Harry N. Abrams)
  • “The 1619 Project: A Visual Experience” — Nikole Hannah-Jones and The New York Times Magazine (Clarkson Potter – Crown Publishing Group)
  • “The Jazzmen: How Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, and Count Basie Transformed America” — Larry Tye (Mariner Books – HarperCollins Publishers)

Outstanding Literary Work – Debut Author

  • “A Kind of Madness” — Uche Okonkwo (Tin House Books)
  • “AfroCentric Style: A Celebration of Blackness & Identity in Pop Culture” — Shirley Neal (HarperCollins Amistad)
  • “Grown Woman” — Sarai Johnson (Harper – HarperCollins Publishers)
  • “Masquerade” — O.O. Sangoyomi (Forge Books – Tor Publishing Group)
  • “Swift River” — Essie Chambers (Simon & Schuster)

Outstanding Literary Work – Biography/Autobiography

  • “Bits and Pieces: My Mother, My Brother, and Me” — Whoopi Goldberg (Blackstone Publishing)
  • “By the Time You Read This: The Space Between Cheslie’s Smile and Mental Illness” ― Her
    Story in Her Own Words — Cheslie Kryst and April Simpkins (Forefront Books)
  • “Do It Anyway: Don’t Give Up Before It Gets Good” — Tasha Cobbs Leonard, Sarah Jakes Roberts (Foreword) (WaterBrook – Penguin Random House)
  • “Lovely One: A Memoir” — Ketanji Brown Jackson (Random House)
  • “Medgar and Myrlie: Medgar Evers and the Love Story That Awakened America” — JoyAnn Reid (Mariner Books – HarperCollins Publishers)

Outstanding Literary Work – Instructional

  • “Black Joy Playbook: 30 Days of Intentionally Reclaiming Your Delight” — Tracey Michae’l Lewis-Giggets (Ink & Willow – Penguin Random House)
  • “I Did a New Thing: 30 Days to Living Free (A Feeding the Soul Book)” — Tabitha Brown (William Morrow – HarperCollins Publishers)
  • “Loving Your Black Neighbor as Yourself: A Guide to Closing the Space Between Us” — Chanté Griffin (WaterBrook – Penguin Random House)
  • “Radical Self-Care: Rituals for Inner Resilience” — Rebecca Moore (Author), Amberlee Green (Illustrator) (The Quarto Group/Leaping Hare Press)
  • “Wash Day: Passing on the Legacy, Rituals, and Love of Natural Hair” — Tomesha Faxio (Clarkson Potter – Crown Publishing Group)

Outstanding Literary Work – Poetry

  • “Bluff: Poems” — Danez Smith (Graywolf Press)
  • “Good Dress” — Brittany Rogers (Tin House Books)
  • “Load in Nine Times: Poems” — Frank X Walker (Liveright Publishing – W.W. Norton & Company)
  • “Song of My Softening” — Omotara James (Alice James Books)
  • “This Is the Honey: An Anthology of Contemporary Black Poets” — Kwame Alexander (Little, Brown and Company)

Outstanding Literary Work – Children

  • “All I Need to Be” — Rachel Ricketts (Author), Tiffany Rose (Illustrator) with Luana Horry (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers)
  • “Cicely Tyson” — Renée Watson (Author), Sherry Shine (Illustrator) (Amistad Books for Young Readers)
  • “Crowning Glory: A Celebration of Black Hair” — Carole Boston Weatherford (Author), Ekua Holmes (Illustrator) (Candlewick Press)
  • “My Hair Is a Book” — Maisha Oso (Author), London Ladd (Illustrator) (HarperCollins Publishers)
  • “You Can Be a Good Friend (No Matter What!): A Lil TJ Book” — Taraji P. Henson (Author), Paul Kellam (Illustrator) (Zonderkidz – HarperCollins)

Outstanding Literary Work – Youth/Teens

  • “American Wings: Chicago’s Pioneering Black Aviators and the Race for Equality in the Sky” —
    Sherri L. Smith and Elizabeth Wein (G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers)
  • “Barracoon Adapted for Young Readers The Story of the Last Black Cargo” — Zora Neale Hurston, Ibram X. Kendi (Adapted by), Jazzmen Lee-Johnson (Illustrator) (Amistad Books for Young Readers)
  • “Black Star: The Door of No Return” — Kwame Alexander (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers)
  • “Brushed Between Cultures: A YA Coming of Age Novel Set in Brooklyn, New York” — Samarra St. Hilaire (Samarra St. Hilaire)
  • “Clutch Time: A Shot Clock Novel (Shot Clock, 2)” — Caron Butler and Justin A. Reynolds (HarperCollins Publishers)

Outstanding Graphic Novel

  • “Big Jim and the White Boy: An American Classic Reimagined” — David F. Walker and Marcus Kwame Anderson (Ten Speed Graphic – Penguin Random House)
  • “Black Defender: The Awakening” — Dr. David Washington, Mr. Zhengis Tasbolatov (Illustrator), Mr. Billy Blanks (Foreword) (Washington Comix)
  • “Gamerville” — Johnnie Christmas (HarperAlley – HarperCollins Publishers)
  • “Ghost Roast” — Shawneé Gibbs, Shawnelle Gibbs, Emily Cannon (Illustrator) (Versify – HarperCollins Publishers)
  • “Punk Rock Karaoke” — Bianca Xunise (Viking Books for Young Readers)

Podcast Categories  

Outstanding News and Information Podcast

  • “SundayCivics” (LJW Community Strategies)
  • “After the Uprising” (iHeartPodcasts, Double Asterisk)
  • “Into America: Uncounted Millions” (MSNBC)
  • “Native Land Pod” (iHeartPodcasts, Reasoned Choice Media)
  • “The Assignment with Audie Cornish” (CNN Audio)

Outstanding Lifestyle/Self–Help Podcast

  • “Balanced Black Girl” (Dear Media)
  • “Is This Going to Cause An Argument” (Seven14Seven Media)
  • “The R Spot with Iyanla” (Shondaland)
  • “Therapy for Black Girls” (iHeartPodcasts)
  • “We Don’t Always Agree with Ryan & Sterling” (ABF Creative & Indian Meadows Productions)

Outstanding Society and Culture Podcast

  • “Baby, This is Keke Palmer” (Wondery)
  • “Club Shay Shay” (Shay Shay Media & The Volume)
  • “Higher Learning with Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay” (The Ringer)
  • “We Don’t Always Agree with Ryan & Sterling” (ABF Creative & Indian Meadows Productions)
  • “What Now? with Trevor Noah” (Spotify Studios in partnership with Day Zero Productions and Fulwell 73)

Outstanding Sports, Arts and Entertainment Podcast

  • “Naked Sports with Cari Champion” (The Black Effect Podcast Network)
  • “Nightcap” (Shay Shay Media & The Volume)
  • “Questlove Supreme” (iHeartPodcasts)
  • “R&B Money Podcast” (R&B Money)
  • “Two Funny Mamas” (Mocha Podcasts Network)

Outstanding Podcast – Limited Series/Short Form

  • “About the Journey” (Marriott Bonvoy, AT WILL MEDIA & mntra)
  • “Squeezed with Yvette Nicole Brown” (Lemonda Media)
  • “Stranded” (Broadway Video)
  • “The Wonder of Stevie” (Audible, Higher Ground and Pineapple Street Studios)
  • “When We Win with Maya Rupert” (Lemonada Media)

Costume Design, Make-Up and Hairstyling Categories  

Outstanding Costume Design (Television or Film)

  • Ernesto Martinez — “Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist” (Peacock)
  • Megan Coates — “Shirley” (Netflix)
  • Gersha Phillips — “The Big Cigar” (Apple TV+)
  • Francine Jamison-Tanchuck — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)
  • Paul Tazewell — “Wicked” (Universal Pictures)

Outstanding Make-up (Television or Film)

  • Carol Rasheed — “Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist” (Peacock)
  • Debi Young — “Shirley” (Netflix)
  • Rebecca Lee — “Shōgun” (Netflix)
  • Matiki Anoff — “The Book of Clarence” (Sony Pictures)
  • Para Malden — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)

Outstanding Hairstyling (Television or Film)

  • Terry Hunt — “Bel-Air” (Peacock)
  • Lawrence Davis — “Fight Night: The Million Dollar Heist” (Peacock)
  • Nakoya Yancey — “Shirley” (Netflix)
  • Brian Badie — “The Penguin” (HBO/Max)
  • Andrea Mona Bowman — “The Piano Lesson” (Netflix)

Stunt Category  

Outstanding Stunt Ensemble (TV or Film)

  • “Cross” (Amazon Prime Video)
  • “Grotesquerie” (FX/Hulu)
  • “Rebel Ridge” (Netflix)
  • “Red One” (Amazon MGM Studios)
  • “Them: The Scare” (Amazon Prime Video)

Check out more updates here.

Continue Reading

ENTERTAINMENT

Iyabo Ojo Expresses Regret Over Advocating Mohbad’s Exhumation

Published

on

Iyabo Ojo regrets advocating Mohbad's exhumation | fab.ng

Nollywood actress Iyabo Ojo has publicly expressed regret for advocating for the exhumation of late singer Mohbad’s body during the investigation into his untimely death.

During a recent interview on the Talk to B Podcast, Iyabo revealed that her initial calls for exhumation were motivated by a fervent desire for justice and a need for clarity surrounding the circumstances of Mohbad’s passing.

At that time, she did not anticipate the prolonged and seemingly stagnant nature of the investigation.

The actress explained, 

“I wouldn’t have requested that Mohbad be exhumed if I knew his case would turn out this way. I just wanted Mohbad’s body exhumed so they could do the autopsy to find out the cause of his death; I did my best to be sure that everyone was investigated, but when they came up with different theories, DNA became more important to them.”

The sudden and unexpected death of Nigerian singer Mohbad on September 12, 2023, sent shockwaves through the nation and beyond, leaving many bewildered.

The circumstances surrounding his passing fueled widespread calls for a thorough investigation, particularly after his family hurriedly buried him less than two days later in a small casket.

Mohbad’s father, Joseph Aloba, explained the hasty burial by citing his son’s young age. Also, the burial site represented the only known property owned by his son.

Following the launch of investigations, authorities exhumed Mohbad’s body.

Subsequent investigations revealed that a quack nurse named Feyisayo Ogedengbe had administered a series of injections to the singer.

These injections, consisting of tetanus toxoid, paracetamol, and an antibiotic known as Cetrazone, triggered an immediate adverse reaction. This includes vomiting, goosebumps, and convulsions.

Mohbad was subsequently rushed to Perez Medcare Hospital for emergency medical attention, but tragically, he was pronounced dead upon arrival.

The hospital issued a statement confirming that Mohbad did not die within their facility. And that all resuscitation efforts proved unsuccessful.

Social media erupted with calls for justice, with prominent figures like Iyabo Ojo actively voicing their support for the cause.

However, nearly two years later, Mohbad remains unburied, leaving a lingering sense of uncertainty and frustration.

Check out more news updates here.

Continue Reading

ENTERTAINMENT

Rapper Ice Prince’s Baby Mama Calls Him Out For Neglecting Their Son

Published

on

Ice Prince called out by baby mama for neglecting their son | fab.ng

Nigerian rapper Panshak Zamani, widely known as Ice Prince, has been publicly accused of gross negligence towards the health and well-being of his son by his baby mama, Maimah.

Maimah, frustrated by years of inaction, took to Instagram to publicly address this ongoing issue. She claims it has persisted since their son, Jamal, was born twelve years ago.

In her candid post, Maimah revealed that Ice Prince, the 35-year-old hip-hop artist, callously suggested that their son could live at his family home in Jos if she was unable to provide adequate housing.

This insensitive remark followed her request for him to contribute half of her rent, given that their son resides with her.

Maimah further detailed Ice Prince’s apparent indifference towards their son’s health. She claimed that he would often delay seeking medical attention for Jamal.

He would wait for her to become agitated and use profanity before he would arrange for someone to take their son to the hospital during his illness.

Ice Prince and his baby mama celebrate their son's 4th birthday in 2016.

Adding to the gravity of the situation, Maimah disclosed that Jamal recently commenced a new school term without necessities. They include clean clothes, water, and provisions, despite being under his father’s care.

In her words,

“A child I raised for 12 years. I’ve left him for you, Panshak. Yet you neglect this boy emotionally, physically, and financially. We will all reap what we sow.”

She continued,

“I wanted this on record so everyone knows what kind of person you are. All that fake humility is a farce. You are a damaged, terrible person at your core. You have one child and you can’t do right by him.

“I took down my posts earlier because I got a call from someone I respect and wanted resolution, but this is beyond me. I just need Panshak to do the right thing.”

Check out more updates here.

Continue Reading

Latest

5 Things To Expect In Afrobeats In 2025 | fab.ng 5 Things To Expect In Afrobeats In 2025 | fab.ng
MUSIC1 week ago

5 Things To Expect In Afrobeats In 2025

Afrobeats is poised to reach unprecedented heights in 2025 as Nigerian music continues its remarkable global ascent. The genre’s explosive...

7 oldest countries in the world | fab.ng 7 oldest countries in the world | fab.ng
TRAVEL1 week ago

Here Are The 7 Most Ancient Countries On Earth

The oldest countries in the world stand as remarkable testaments to human civilisation, each containing landscapes and monuments that narrate...

Why self-reflection is more important than resolutions | fab.ng Why self-reflection is more important than resolutions | fab.ng
LIFESTYLE2 weeks ago

Why Self-Reflection Is More Important Than Resolutions

Millions of people embark on a yearly ritual: they sit down with a notebook and pen, eager to craft a...

Nollywood director Kemi Adetiba teases King of Boys 3 | fab.ng Nollywood director Kemi Adetiba teases King of Boys 3 | fab.ng
MOVIES2 weeks ago

Nollywood Director, Kemi Adetiba Teases King Of Boys 3

Nollywood director Kemi Adetiba has revealed that another instalment of King of Boys will be released on December 25, 2025....

John McEnroe says he can be commissioner tennis needs | fab.ng John McEnroe says he can be commissioner tennis needs | fab.ng
SPORTS2 weeks ago

John McEnroe Says He Can Be The Commissioner Tennis Needs Amid Doping Crisis

Recent doping controversies involving top players have not damaged tennis’s reputation, but John McEnroe believes that appointing a single commissioner...

Everybody Loves Jenifa Nollywood’s highest-grossing film | fab.ng Everybody Loves Jenifa Nollywood’s highest-grossing film | fab.ng
MOVIES2 weeks ago

“Everybody Loves Jenifa” Becomes Nollywood’s Highest-Grossing Film Of All Time

Nollywood filmmaker Funke Akindele has achieved a historic milestone with her latest film, “Everybody Loves Jenifa.” The film has officially...

Hidden Riches: FG to premiere TV series on mining sector | fab.ng Hidden Riches: FG to premiere TV series on mining sector | fab.ng
MOVIES2 weeks ago

FG To Premiere TV Series, “Hidden Riches” On Mining Sector On January 25

Nigeria’s Federal Government will launch an ambitious television drama series focused on the nation’s mining sector, premiering “Hidden Riches” on...

Watch Qing Madi Perform "Favourite Pyscho" Soulfully | fab.ng Watch Qing Madi Perform "Favourite Pyscho" Soulfully | fab.ng
FAB FRESH2 weeks ago

Qing Madi Delivers A Soulful Performance Of “Favourite Pyscho”

Rising Afro-RnB sensation Qing Madi launches into 2025 with a mesmerising performance on the prestigious COLOURS platform, showcasing her latest...

Taiwo Awoniyi’s Goal Lifts Nottingham Forest Past Wolves | fab.ng Taiwo Awoniyi’s Goal Lifts Nottingham Forest Past Wolves | fab.ng
SPORTS2 weeks ago

Taiwo Awoniyi’s First Goal Of The Season Seals Nottingham Forest’s Win Over Wolves

Taiwo Awoniyi made a triumphant return to Premier League action. He scored in stoppage time to help Nottingham Forest crush...

56th NAACP Image Awards: Tems, Ayo Edebiri, Wizkid nominated | fab.ng 56th NAACP Image Awards: Tems, Ayo Edebiri, Wizkid nominated | fab.ng
ENTERTAINMENT2 weeks ago

Tems, Ayo Edebiri, Wizkid & More Nominated For The 56th NAACP Image Awards

The 56th NAACP Image Awards have unveiled their nominations. It highlights various exceptional talents. These talents include Nigerian stars Tems,...

-Ad-

under40ceos-starting-a-business
under40ceos-starting-a-business

Trending