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How Nigerian Artists Can Improve Their Chances Of Winning Grammys – DJ Big N

Nonso Temisan Ajufo, the Mavin Records DJ, who is popularly known as DJ Big N, has urged Nigerian artists to take steps to boost their chances of winning at the Grammy Awards.

Recall that Nigerian singers Davido,  Burna Boy, Ayra Starr, Omah Lay, and Wizkid lost to South African star Tyla in the Best African Music Performance category at the 68th Annual Grammy Awards on Sunday.

Reacting via his X page on Monday, DJ Big N claimed that the poor outing for Nigerian musicians at the Grammy’s was due to their lack of involvement in American music seminars and events.

He urged them to emulate multiple Grammy-winning Beninese singer, Angelique Kidjo by participating in American music events more and getting involved in the Grammy decision-making process.

He wrote, “It stings deeply that so many talented Nigerians were nominated but didn’t bring the Grammy home this time. But here’s the truth, Legends like @angeliquekidjo and @YoussouNdourSN have shown us the power of being involved beyond just the award night.

“She [Kidjo] is at those seminars, those events, making her presence felt. If we want to change the game, we’ve got to do the same. Let’s step up, join the @RecordingAcad voting body and be part of the process all year long. That’s how we truly make our mark. Better luck next year, but let’s also be there to shape it.”

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Entertainment News

How Davido’s Wife, Chioma Adeleke Reacted After Being Criticized Over Revealing Dress Worn To The Grammy Awards

Chioma Adeleke, wife of Nigerian singer Davido, has responded to the criticism surrounding the dress she wore to the Grammy Awards.

Recall that the chef accompanied her husband, singer Davido, Sunday night, February 1, to the award ceremony in Los Angeles.

However, many felt her dress was not flattering and they asked who her stylist was.

As Chioma shared photos from the event on IG, she wrote: “You already know you’re the perfect one Davido.”

Following her post on Instagram, Davido and his siblings responded, hailing Chioma.

However, one follower wrote: “Nne no wear this cloth again inugo. However, your husband loves you ooo.”

Chioma responded: “I will wear it again.”

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Lassa Fever K!lls Medical Doctor In Plateau

Salome Oboyi, a Nigerian medical doctor, has passed away from Lassa fever in Jos, Plateau State.

Dr. Oboyi, a Senior Resident in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology in Bingham University Teaching Hospital (BHUTH) passed away two days ago following a battle with the fever.

The Bingham University Alumni Doctors confirmed her d3ath in a statement issued on Monday, February 2, 2026 via its official X account.

“The entire BHUTH mourns. It is with a very heavy heart I announce the passing of a dearest colleague  Dr. Salome Oboyi, a Senior Resident in the department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology in BHUTH whose sad event happened 2 days ago following a battle with Lassa fever” the statement read.

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Davido Reveals What His Wife Chioma Told Him After He Lost The Grammys Again (Photos)

Davido has revealed what his wife, Chioma Adeleke, told him after he missed out on the Grammy Awards once again.

The singer attended the award ceremony in Los Angeles on Sunday night, February 1. He had his wife and siblings with him.

However, he lost the category he was nominated for, with South African singer Tyla taking home the price.

He stated that following the loss, he told Chioma that they lost again so there was no reason to go to the after party.

However, Chioma gave a profound response.

Sharing photos from their outing, Davido wrote: “I said baby listen we lost again let’s not go!

“She said ‘Be humble in victory and gracious in defeat’ we outside.”

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Despite No Grammy Wins, Nigerians Boosted The Los Angeles Economy — Music Executive, Teebillz Reacts

Teebillz, the Nigerian talent manager, has joined the 2026 Grammys conversation, highlighting that Nigerians made a significant impact in Los Angeles, even without winning an award.

According to him, Nigerians boosted the LA economy all through the Grammy weekend from hotels and restaurants to private jet parking, luxury Ubers, stylists, glam teams, rental cars, shopping, and more.

He reminded critics that the Grammys are run by a private organisation, not fans, and awards are not based on streams, popularity, or social media noise.

“A Grammy win simply means a group of people decided a work deserved it,” he said.

Teebillz added that while celebration is valid, criticism is also allowed stressing that both sides can coexist without bitterness.

View post below..

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Entertainment News

Nobody Will Shut Me Up, This Is Just The Tip Of The Iceberg — Doris Ogala Vows To Expose Pastor Chris Okafor (Video)

Nigerian actress, Doris Ogala has issued fresh threats against Pastor Chris Okafor.

In an emotional outburst shared online, the actress claimed that her late brother was k!lled and claimed that powerful interests are allegedly using money, influence, and the judicial system to intimidate her and suppress her voice.

She accused Pastor Chris Okafor of betrayal, claiming he breached their marriage agreement.

According to Doris, she is in possession of voice notes, call recordings, and other materials which she plans to release. She alleged there were discussions about “handling” a woman discreetly, intimidation tactics, and threats involving law enforcement.

“This is just the tip of the iceberg,” she said, vowing to expose everything and pursue justice for herself and her late brother.

Doris added that although she had known the pastor since 2017, she only began to see what she described as his “true nature” in 2022, noting that fear and intimidation often prevent people from speaking out.

Watch video below…

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Nigerian Govt To Share Electricity Subsidy Burden With States, LGs

The Federal Government has announced plans to end its sole responsibility for electricity subsidies, unveiling a new framework that will see the costs shared among the federal, state, and local governments starting in 2026.

The Director-General of the Budget Office of the Federation, Tanimu Yakubu, disclosed this on Monday in Abuja during a training and sensitisation workshop for ministries, departments and agencies, MDAs, on the 2026 post-budget preparation process, conducted using the Government Integrated Financial Management Information System, GIFMIS, Budget Preparation Sub-System.

Yakubu said President Bola Tinubu had directed that electricity subsidies be clearly identified, properly monitored and equitably distributed across all tiers of government, warning that the existing arrangement had created hidden liabilities and repeated crises within the power sector.

“If we want a stable power sector, we must pay for the choices we make. When tariffs are held below cost, a gap is created. That gap is a subsidy. And a subsidy is a bill,” Yakubu said.

He explained that from 2026, electricity subsidies would no longer be treated as an unlimited federal responsibility, particularly where policy decisions and political benefits are jointly shared by multiple levels of government.

“In 2026, we will stop pretending that this bill can be left to the Federal Government alone, especially where the policy choice or the political benefit is shared across tiers of government,” he said.

According to the Budget Office chief, the President has instructed that existing laws governing the electricity sector be fully applied to ensure that subsidy-sharing arrangements are transparent, practical and enforceable.

“This means subsidy costs must be explicit, tracked and funded, so they do not resurface as arrears, liquidity shortfalls or hidden market liabilities.

“If any tier of government chooses affordability interventions, the funding responsibilities must be clear, agreed and enforceable,” Yakubu said.

He stressed that the policy was not punitive but designed to align incentives across government and promote efficiency within the power market.

“This is not punishment. It is alignment,” he said, adding: “When everyone carries a fair share of the cost, everyone also has an incentive to support cost-reflective efficiency, targeted protection for the vulnerable, and a power market that can actually deliver.”

Yakubu urged MDAs to clearly reflect subsidy-related obligations in their 2026 budget submissions and avoid transferring unfunded liabilities into the electricity value chain.

Beyond electricity subsidies, he said the 2026 Budget would mark a decisive shift away from rollover budgeting and fragmented project listings, which he noted had weakened implementation and accountability over the years.

“The 2026 Budget corrects this. It is built as one coherent implementation framework,” he said. “The approach is to consolidate commitments into a single, visible pipeline and manage them as a disciplined programme of delivery.”

Describing the model as a “single-train” framework, Yakubu said it would enhance prioritisation, strengthen control mechanisms and eliminate duplication across government.

“One plan. One pipeline. One execution logic,”he said. “It allows the government to know, at any point, what we have committed to deliver.”

He also disclosed that President Tinubu had ordered a review of the Fiscal Responsibility framework to make fiscal rules more dynamic and enforceable rather than discarding them entirely.

“Fiscal rules are the guardrails of the government,” Yakubu said. “Without guardrails, spending becomes impulsive, debt becomes casual, and the budget becomes a statement of intent rather than a tool of delivery.”

According to him, the review will introduce clearer fiscal anchors, better-defined escape clauses for genuine shocks, and a credible return-to-compliance pathway, alongside stronger reporting on contingent liabilities.

For MDAs, he said the changes would significantly alter how proposals are evaluated.

“You will not only be asked what you want to spend. You will be asked how it fits the fiscal rules, how it affects sustainability, and what measurable results it will deliver,” he said.

Yakubu also revealed that the 2026 Budget would deepen the transition from long project lists to structured project financing, insisting that capital proposals must be both delivery-ready and, where applicable, finance-ready.

“A long list of projects is not a development strategy,” he said. “What citizens feel is delivery, completed roads, reliable power, functional schools and working hospitals.”

He explained that projects submitted for funding must demonstrate readiness, clear sequencing, defined financing strategies, measurable outputs and realistic timelines, noting that fewer but well-funded projects would yield greater impact.

Yakubu described the GIFMIS Budget Preparation Sub-System as central to restoring credibility to the budgeting process, calling it “the operating system for credible budgeting” that enhances transparency and traceability from submission to execution.

“The success of the Renewed Hope Agenda is shared,” he said. “The Budget Office will coordinate and enforce standards, but delivery depends on every MDA. Nigerians expect results, and through a credible 2026 Budget, we must deliver.”

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Sport News

Transfer: Cristiano Ronaldo’s Release Clause Revealed Amid Uncertain Future With Al Nassr

Al Nassr forward Cristiano Ronaldo is reportedly subject to a release clause in his current contract.

The 40-year-old is currently on strike and did not play in Monday’s Saudi Pro League fixture against Al Riyadh.

Ronaldo could considering quitting the club in June and his options include a move to the Major Soccer League, MLS, or a return to Europe.

It is understood that the Portugal captain. has a release clause of €50 million.

Ronaldo is angry with how Al Nassr has been treated by the Saudi Sovereign Wealth Fund, PIF, the state entity that acquired the majority stakes in Al Nassr, Al Hilal, Al Ittihad, and Al Ahli in 2023.

He feels that the PIF is preventing Al Nassr from strengthening their squad in a bid to prevent the team from winning the title.

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It’s Disrespectful – Nigerian Actress, Toyin Alausa Slams People Who Share Photos Of Deceased Persons On Social Media

Nollywood actress Toyin Alausa has condemned the increasing practice of sharing photos and videos of deceased persons on social media, describing the trend as disturbing, disrespectful, and unnecessary.

In a post on her Instagram page on Monday, Alausa questioned the motive behind publicly exposing the dead, warning that such actions strip individuals of dignity and deepen the pain of grieving families.

She stressed that the rush to post graphic content for online engagement has become alarmingly common.

“The way people just expose the dead on social media these days is so annoying and mind-boggling. What’s the point, actually?”she wrote.

The actress urged social media users to show empathy by at least covering the faces of deceased persons, particularly in cases of accidents or sudden deaths. According to her, doing so is a basic sign of respect and helps protect the emotional wellbeing of relatives.

“Immediately it’s confirmed that someone has passed, the right thing to do is to cover them, at least the face. It’s about showing respect, offering dignity, and, in a way, providing emotional closure for their relatives,” she said.

While acknowledging that documentation may sometimes be necessary for clarification or public interest, Alausa insisted such content should not be turned into viral material.

“This inhumane attitude has sadly become the norm. It may be important to get footage for clarification or when immediate relatives aren’t nearby, but not to be splashed as content on social media. It’s so disrespectful,” she added.

Alausa also warned that repeated exposure to images of the deceased can be traumatic, not just for families, but for the wider public, calling for greater sensitivity and restraint online.

“Seeing a blank face devoid of life and emotions can be extremely traumatic. We can do better and be more empathic,” she said.

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Grammy 2026: I Initially Thought Davido Didn’t Like Me — Omah Lay Reveals (Video)

Afrobeats sensation Omah Lay has revealed that he once thought fellow Nigerian artist Davido didn’t like him—a misconception that was later proven wrong and eventually paved the way for their Grammy-nominated collaboration, With You.

Speaking during a GRAMMY 2026 red carpet interview with OkayAfrica, shared by HYPETRIBE on Monday, Omah Lay explained that his perception changed after he came across a video clip of Davido reacting positively to his music.

According to the singer, the moment came at a difficult time for him personally, and seeing Davido’s reaction left a strong impression.

“I was in the house, really, and I was going through it when I saw it, and I lost my mind,”he said.

Omah Lay admitted that he had previously thought there was tension between them.

“It was the fact that I didn’t know Davido was like that. I thought we had a beef. I thought he didn’t like me,” he explained.

However, the misunderstanding was quickly cleared up after they connected.

“It was funny, and we connected so well after that. Boom—magic happened,” he added.

He went on to describe their collaboration as natural and effortless, noting that the chemistry came easily once they began working together.

Omah Lay also spoke about Nigeria’s strong presence at the Grammys, particularly in the Best African Music Performance category.

When asked who he expected to win, he responded, “Me and Davido, of course. But Burna is there, Ayra is there, Wizkid is there. Any of us—we are repping Nigeria.”

Despite the multiple Nigerian nominations in the category, the award ultimately went to South African singer Tyla for her song Push 2 Start.