Showbiz
10 Reasons Nigerian Idol Season 10 Is the Most Iconic Season
For years, Nigerian Idol has given us unforgettable voices, breakout stars, and moments that have become part of pop culture history. But Season 10? It’s on another level entirely. From bold performances to boundary-pushing creativity, this season has raised the bar on every level.
Here’s why Nigerian Idol Season 10 is the most iconic yet:
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A Star-Studded Judging Panel
With Ric Hassani, Iyanya, and Omawumi at the helm, contestants are getting top-tier feedback from industry powerhouses who know exactly what it takes to succeed. Together, they reflect the diversity and depth of Nigeria’s music scene, offering contestants real insight and fans authentic, engaging commentary.
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Guest Judges Bringing the Spice
This season’s lineup of guest judges has been nothing short of brilliant, adding a fresh wave of excitement and unpredictability to the competition. From industry icons to contemporary stars, each guest brought their A-game, offering sharp critiques and meaningful insights that kept both contestants and viewers fully engaged.
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The Contestants Are Next-Level
This year’s contestants didn’t come to play. Each singer has brought something unique, from soulful storytelling to daring vocal runs. Week after week, they have proven they are not just talented singers but full-fledged performers in the making.
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Musical Themes That Reflect Our World
From Blockbuster Night and Naija Music Night to Classic throwbacks, each theme has tested vocal range, performance versatility, and emotional delivery, and the contestants have risen to every occasion.
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A Production Glow-Up
The stage design, lighting, wardrobe, and sound have all been elevated this season. Each episode feels cinematic, with aesthetics that heighten the drama and magic of every performance.
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Emotional Highs and Lows That Hit Hard
From heartfelt contestant stories to emotional eliminations, Season 10 has been a rollercoaster. We have seen contestants cry on stage, receive surprise hugs from their families, and earn standing ovations that left everyone in awe, including viewers at home.
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Social Media Is Buzzing
Nigerian Idol Season 10 is dominating online conversations every Sunday. The conversations around each episode are massive, from viral clips on TikTok to trending moments on X and YouTube. The fandoms are real, loud, and loyal.
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Performances That Feel Like Concerts
This year’s talent pool has been exceptional, bold, expressive, and competitive. With live bands, backup dancers, stunning visuals, and slick choreography, some of these performances wouldn’t look out of place on the main stage of a music award show.
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Ik Osakioduwa — The People’s Host
Ik’s experience shines through every episode. He balances humour with heart, knows how to comfort a teary contestant, and can flip the energy with one witty line. His presence anchors the show and makes every reveal, especially eliminations, feel both intense and human.
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You Can Feel the Stakes
There’s something different about this season; you can feel the hunger of the contestants. They are more focused, the judges are more invested, and the fans are more vocal than ever. Nigerian Idol won’t only crown a winner but shape the next generation of stars.
Do not forget to keep your favorite contestant in the competition by voting on the Africa Magic website at www.dstv.com/africamagic/en-
Catch Nigerian Idol every Sunday at 7 PM on Africa Magic Showcase (DStv Ch. 151, GOtv Ch. 8), Africa Magic Family (DStv Ch. 154, GOtv Ch. 7), or stream live on GOtv & DStv Stream apps and also on Showmax. Stay plugged in because GOtv has got you covered from now until July 31st. Simply reconnect or renew your subscription and enjoy an automatic upgrade to a higher bouquet at no extra cost.
Showbiz
Stripped: What Happens When Men Can’t Keep It All Together
In a world where men are expected to have it all figured out, be strong, provide, and never fall apart, Stripped shows the reality that many don’t talk about.
A new drama series premiered on Africa Magic Showcase on Sunday. The limited series brings together a strong lineup of Nollywood stars, including Daniel Etim Effiong, Efa Iwara, Kunle Remi, Ian Wordi, and Mofe Duncan, in a story that dives deep into the pressures men face behind closed doors.
Stripped follows five friends whose lives are slowly unravelling. From career setbacks to relationship struggles and financial pressure, each man is pushed to the edge in different ways. In a desperate attempt to regain control, they take an unexpected path, stepping into the world of stripping at an upscale club.
Daniel Etim Effiong plays Kel, a former marketing executive now juggling survival and responsibility, while Mofe Duncan (Bolaji) battles to keep his business afloat. Efa Iwara stars as a music video director forced to confront a complicated personal life, Ian Wordi plays a conflicted architect, and a youth pastor caught between duty and desire, while Kunle Remi brings to life a determined hustler trying to rewrite his family’s story.
Their lives intersect when they are recruited by Yvonne, a sharp and calculated lounge owner, who introduces them to a world that challenges everything they thought they knew about themselves.
This series explores identity, pride, friendship, and the silent expectations placed on men. It also shines a light on the emotional weight many carry without saying a word, both vulnerability and moments of humour along the way.
With a strong supporting cast of equally complex female characters, the story unfolds across six episodes, building tension as secrets deepen and relationships are tested.
Watch Stripped on Africa Magic Showcase, available on GOtv Channel 8, with new episodes every Sunday at 8 PM.
To upgrade, subscribe, or reconnect, download the MyGOtv App or dial *288#. For catch-up and on-the-go viewing, download the GOtv Stream App and enjoy your favourite shows anytime, anywhere.
Showbiz
Don’t Just Watch, Decide: Final Days to Vote for AMVCA 12
As the countdown to the 12th edition of the Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards (AMVCA) draws closer, fans across Africa still have a chance to do more than just watch, they can decide.
Voting is officially in its final days, and this is the moment for audiences to show up for their favourite actors, filmmakers, and stories that have made an impact over the past year.
The AMVCA has always stood out as an award platform that gives viewers a choice, allowing fans directly influence who takes home some of the biggest honours on the night. From standout performances to fan-favourite productions, every vote contributes to shaping the final outcome.
Voting is quick, simple, and free. You can cast your vote via the official AMVCA website or through the myDStv and myGOtv apps. Simply log in or create an account, select your favourites across the categories, and submit. You can also vote multiple times across these platforms to increase your support.
Voting for AMVCA 12 closes on April 26, 2026, at 9:00 PM WAT, and once that window closes, that’s it, no extra time and no second chances.
A lot of people wait until the last minute and either forget or run into issues trying to vote at the same time as everyone else. It’s always better to get it done early.
The awards night will come, the winners will be announced, and conversations will happen again, but between now and then is the only time you actually get to influence the outcome.
So if there’s someone you’re rooting for, or a project you genuinely believe deserves it, this is the time to show up.
Don’t just watch how it plays out. Be part of the reason it plays out that way.
Showbiz
Taking Aspiring Filmmakers From the Classroom to Prime-Time
For many aspiring filmmakers, the ultimate culmination of their cinematic dreams is to be able to live through the art form they love.
Filmmakers don’t just want to make a film. They want to build a career doing it. To achieve that, they need training that equips them with industry-relevant skills of the highest standard.
For the MultiChoice Talent Factory (MTF), this understanding is integral to all of its programmes. Academy graduates are equipped with the precise skills required by their industry, empowering them to become prime-time TV professionals.
Since MTF is a MultiChoice initiative, its three academies – in Lusaka, Nairobi and Lagos – provide training in the specific, high-demand technical skills needed by the industry-leading content producer.
MultiChoice, a Canal+ company, is the largest producer of authentic, original content on the African continent. “Africa’s most-loved storyteller” produced 5 340 hours of world-class local content in 2025.
MTF students are trained to these exacting MultiChoice standards. This leaves them well placed to excel in the industry once they graduate.
And excel, they do. MTF graduates speak with pride of the success they have found since leaving the highly respected hub of African film and television training.
Technical skills
Actor, producer, writer and storyteller Myde Glover went on from MTF West Africa Academy to host film festivals and win Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards (AMVCAs).
He credits much of his success to the storytelling skills he learned at MTF, as well as the technical standards the MTF Academy sets.
“The storytelling skills I gained at MTF helped me become a better actor, producer and director. It helps me put the story first,” he says. “However, I was also taught the technical and delivery requirements for submitting projects to platforms like DStv, GOtv, and Showmax. I approach every project with those standards in mind, understanding that quality matters in every aspect.”
Glover says the three most important things for aspiring filmmakers to remember are teamwork, being open to constructive criticism, and staying focused on their goal.
“Strong collaboration improves the quality of any production, feedback helps you grow creatively, and focus ensures you see projects through without losing sight of why you started,” he says.
Lifetime network
Graduating from MTF provides filmmakers with a network that can last a lifetime. Alumni often hire each other as they evolve through their working lives, creating a self-sustaining ecosystem of skilled professionals.
Bahati Kajigi Benjamin from DRC found that MTF gave him the network he needed to tell stories close to his heart.
“My experience with MTF was incredible,” says Benjamin. “I formed a family with my fellow students, and we bonded deeply. We collaborated on numerous films and wrote one that is particularly meaningful to me, illustrating the struggles of my people.”
That film was titled The Canvas, a Zee World project.
Benjamin currently works as a camera operator and editor at Sauti Media Hub in Uganda, producing Kampala Creme, one of the top East African reality shows. He says he secured the position through a recommendation from a fellow MTF alumnus.
Benjamin says his time at MTF was invaluable in honing his skills in cinematography and colour grading.
“I gained extensive knowledge about camera techniques, lighting, and colour harmony in film, which I am currently applying in my role at Kampala Creme.
Benjamin appreciates the importance of paying opportunities forward. He recently shared his cinematography expertise on a three-month online platform called Film Chat, aimed at empowering up-and-coming African creatives.
His advice to young creatives is to never overlook the importance of marketing themselves, and to remember that filmmaking is a business.
“Funders want to understand more than just the script or story,” he says. “You should spend time discussing the financial aspects and the impact the film will create. This is what appeals to investors. Ultimately, it’s an investment for a return.”
Career transformation
MTF West Africa graduate Allen Onyige pursued his passion for human behaviour and storytelling at MTF after leaving university and working in live broadcasting. He describes his time at MTF West Africa as “transformative”.
“MTF refined my creative vision, strengthened my technical skills, and played a pivotal role in shaping my journey as a filmmaker,” he says. “The experience changed my life and set me on the path toward meaningful visual storytelling.”
He says understanding the business side of broadcasting was just as important as the creative skills he gained.
After he left MTF, his production company was commissioned by Africa Magic to produce several series and feature films, including Ikenna’s Trial, Sikiru, Elenini, Kadara, and Dear Future Me.
In 2024, Onyige won the Best Indigenous Language Series award at the AMVCAs for Irora Iya. He also served as director of photography on Grind, now on Amazon Prime. His documentary Sunset in Makoko was nominated for Best Documentary at the AMVCAs. He also worked as a cinematographer on the Emmy Award–winning documentary Mothers of Chibok.
Onyige says young people looking to build a career in film and TV should first look to learn the craft and business of filmmaking, but to master one specific skill. Secondly, he recommends being a team player who sets high standards.
“Be a man or a woman of excellence,” he says. “Integrity will get you jobs that talent alone may not be able to give you.”
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To learn more about the MultiChoice Talent Factory and how to launch a career in African film and television, visit https://
multichoicetalentfactory.com -
Applications for the 2027 intake are still open, and the closing date is 27 May 2026.
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