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Heartbeat Episode 2: Three Notes, Mixed Signals, and One Best Kisser

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Heartbeat Watch This Weekend on DStv

Episode 2 of Heartbeat turned up the heat, giving viewers a closer look at the singles, their intentions, and the sparks already flying in the Love Pad.

Ken and Latifah were still feeling the closeness from their night together. Latifah was clearly enjoying the attention and didn’t want it to end, while Ken expressed comfort with her but also hinted at exploring other connections, a move that immediately stirred emotions.

As the singles settled in, conversations revealed more about who they really are. Chidera admitted her views on marriage and kids might clash with Kenna’s, though she confessed she liked him. Hilda shared that she was still trying to figure out Igwe, while Alvin revealed he finds older, intelligent women especially attractive. Shekinah, on the other hand, admitted she wasn’t connecting the way she hoped and longed for someone she could truly flow with in the Love Pad.

Drama soon followed when the singles wrote notes to the people who caught their eye and dropped them on the Walls of Heart. While some singles like Chidera, Kena, and Hilda didn’t receive any notes, Toria and Igwe were clearly the centre of attention.

Toria received notes from three different singles. Igwe wrote that he finds her attractive and would love to explore a connection with her. Ken described her as his “spec” and said he wants to get to know her on a deeper level, while Alvin expressed interest and curiosity, hoping to see where a connection with her could lead.

Igwe also received notes from three singles. Latifah asked him to make the first move, sharing that she would like to have conversations with him. Shekinah said she wanted to explore deeper conversations, while Toria wrote that she’s interested in getting to know him better and seeing where things could go.

Some singles didn’t get any notes, but that didn’t shake them. Chidera felt confident about her bond with Kena, Kena stayed focused on Chidera, and Hilda kept her cool despite the quiet attention.

Tensions rose during a playful lemon game when Shekinah stopped mid-play, leading to a heated exchange with Igwe. Later, Shekinah and Alvin had an honest conversation about respect and communication, leaving Shekinah surprised by his directness. Ken and Latifah navigated tricky emotions as Ken admitted he’d like to be paired with Toria if recoupling happened, which didn’t sit well with Latifah, who revealed she had her eyes on Igwe.

The episode climaxed with the Score Kiss Challenge, a blindfolded game where men kissed each woman while wearing headphones, and the women rated each kiss purely on feel. When the scores were counted, Igwe emerged as the best kisser, earning the power to choose who he would spend the night with in the Love Nest, a choice that could shift dynamics across the house.

Episode 2 proved that attraction, curiosity, and tension are rising fast. With notes exchanged, sparks flying, and Igwe holding the key to the next night, all eyes are on Episode 3 to see who will get the Love Nest and whose hearts will collide next.

Catch Heartbeat every Sunday at 9 pm on Africa Magic Showcase, GOtv Channel 8, and Showmax. 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.

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The Evolution of Home Viewing in Nigeria

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Home Viewing in Nigeria

There was a time in Nigeria when watching movies at home wasn’t strictly a “home” experience. People rented VHS tapes and later DVDs from local video clubs around the neighbourhood, and in many cases, viewing extended to video centres or where groups gathered to watch films and sports. It was a shared setup shaped by access, availability, and a very communal way of consuming entertainment.

As time went on, analogue television became the main form of home viewing. Families would gather around a single TV set in the living room, with limited channels and fixed programming schedules. Content was not really something you chose; it was something you aligned your day around. Antenna adjustments were part of the routine, and despite the limitations, TV became a central part of everyday household life.

The introduction of satellite and pay-TV services marked a major shift. Viewers suddenly had more control, more variety, and more access. Local and international content expanded significantly, covering movies, sports, news, and entertainment in a way that changed viewing habits from passive scheduling to active choice.

This is where platforms like GOtv became relevant in the Nigerian context. By making premium entertainment more affordable and widely accessible, GOtv helped bridge the gap between content quality and everyday households. It wasn’t just about more channels; it was about making consistent access to entertainment more realistic for a wider audience.

Today, home viewing has become more flexible and audience-driven. People are no longer tied to fixed schedules; viewing is now based on preference, timing, and convenience. At the same time, shared viewing still exists, especially around live sports and major TV moments, where entertainment becomes a collective experience again, just in a more modern form.

From rented tapes and video centres to satellite TV and now more structured, accessible entertainment platforms, the evolution of home viewing in Nigeria has been a steady shift toward more choice and control. Throughout that journey, GOtv has remained part of the ecosystem, supporting how everyday audiences access and experience entertainment at home.

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How Far Would You Go For the People You Love? Stripped Answers This

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Africa Magic Stripped

Five episodes in, and Africa Magic’s limited series, Stripped, has quietly got people talking. Not because of the stripping, though yes, that is very much part of it, but because of what sits underneath all of it. The guilt. The shame. The quiet, suffocating pressure of being a man in Lagos who is supposed to have it all together but simply does not.

The premise sounds simple. Five friends, all broke, all stuck, all too proud to say it out loud, stumble into a stripping gig at an upscale club called Trabaye after its sharp and seductive owner, Yvonne (Constance Owoyemi) spots them at a birthday party and sees something worth paying for. What follows is anything but simple.

Kelechi “Kel” Okere (Daniel Etim Effiong) is the one carrying the most weight. A former marketing executive now driving Uber to keep his wife and children afloat, Kel is the kind of man who will smile through a crisis so nobody worries. His wife, Ada (Future Lolo Lamai), thinks he is still closing big deals. His children need school fees. The rent is overdue. And every night he comes home, the lie gets a little heavier.

Bolaji (Mofe Duncan), who is loud, charming and energetic, watches his cafe dream bleed out quietly. Suppliers want cash; customers want credit, and charm, it turns out, cannot patch a leaking roof.

Damina (Efa Iwara) is the cool bachelor whose carefully constructed life collapses the moment his pregnant ex walks back through the door. Mensah (Ian Wordi) is a Ghanaian-Nigerian architect and youth pastor caught in a relationship that is slowly erasing him. And Voke (Kunle Remi) is running out of time to free his imprisoned father, one clever scheme at a time.

Their first night at Trabaye is overwhelming. The music, lights, money, and the strange, intoxicating feeling of being wanted. They laugh in the car afterwards and call themselves “Strip Gawds.” For one night, the bills don’t exist. But nothing in Lagos stays clean for long.

Bolaji’s wandering eye pulls the group into dangerous territory. Voke’s schemes start bleeding into the club’s shadier edges. Kel finds himself dangerously close to a line he cannot cross, pulled back only by the sound of his wife’s voice on the phone. And Mensah quietly wonders how many layers of himself he can strip away before there is nothing left worth keeping.

The show’s most devastating moment comes in Episode 4, when Kel has a panic attack. There is no dramatic score, just a man cracking under the weight of everything he has been holding alone. Viewers have not stopped talking about it since. It is the kind of scene that does not just tell you about a character; it shows you something true about the world.

Etim Effiong, who also serves as executive producer, said it plainly. “Men need to catch a break. It’s a really tough world for men, and we deserve some credit.” Episode 5 offers a brief exhale before the walls begin closing in again. The money is good. But the shadows are getting closer.

Stripped is no longer just a show about five men taking their clothes off for money. It is about what men carry in silence, what friendship costs when survival is on the line, and whether the things you do to save your life can also be the things that cost you your soul.

If you have not started watching, you should start now. Catch up on all five episodes now on DStv Stream, and tune in for the final episode this Sunday at 8 PM on Africa Magic Showcase, DStv Channel 151, and GOtv Channel 8.

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Nigerian Singer Niniola Loses Husband to Death

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Niniola Michael Ndika

By Modupe Gbadeyanka

Popular Nigerian singer, Niniola Apata, professionally known as Niniola, has lost her husband to the cold hands of death.

Niniola confirmed the demise of her heartthrob, Mr Michael Ndika, in a series of posts, including God took my husband, and My husband died, among others.

However, the circumstances behind the death of Mr Ndika were not revealed by the Nigerian afro-house songster.

In the Instagram story on Wednesday morning, the 39-year-old Grammy-nominated entertainer indicated that she had been in a relationship with her late husband for over a decade.

The posts attracted reactions as she was consoled by her teeming fans, who expressed condolences to her for the loss.

Before his death, Mr Ndika was the chief executive of a multimedia platform focused on afro-house and contemporary African music known as NaijaReview.

Niniola is the older sibling of another famous entertainer, Teni.

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