Entertainment
Mayorkun Drops 12-Track Album With Davido, Fireboy, King Promise
Nigerian singer, Adewale Mayowa Emmanuel, popularly known as Mayorkun, has released the official tracklist for his upcoming album titled “Still the Mayor”. The new body of work, which is e…
Nigerian singer, Adewale Mayowa Emmanuel, popularly known as Mayorkun, has released the official tracklist for his upcoming album titled “Still the Mayor”.
The new body of work, which is expected to drop by midnight, contains 12 songs and features collaborations with some of the biggest names in the industry.
The album includes guest appearances from Fireboy DML (on two tracks), Davido, King Promise, Rotimi, and Olive The Boy.
According to the tracklist shared on his social media pages on Thursday, some of the songs on the album include:
Keep on Rocking
Innocent (ft. Fireboy DML)
3:45 (ft. Rotimi)
Diamonds (ft. Fireboy DML)
Konko Below
Industry Girl (Interlude)
B.O.B (ft. Davido)
Reason 2 Jaya
Hold Body (ft. King Promise)
Woman
Would You? (ft. Olive The Boy)
Jiggy
Mayorkun, a former signee of Davido Music Worldwide (DMW), is releasing “Still the Mayor” as a follow-up to his 2021 album “Back in Office”.
The album art shows Mayorkun seated with the Nigerian flag alongside his crew, dressed in black suits, evoking a strong symbolic message of identity and authority.
Fans are already anticipating what could be one of the most talked-about Nigerian albums of 2025.
Guardian.ng
Entertainment
Blood Sisters Season 2 Answers Old Questions, Then Creates New Problems (REVIEW)
Blood Sisters season 1 earned its hype. It was a genuinely refreshing entry in Nollywood, and a story that reminded you the industry could do taut, gripping television when it wanted to. So when season 2 arrived, the goodwill was already there. The question was whether the show knew what to do with it.
Probably, they didn’t need to make a second season. With one extra episode, season 1 could have tied its loose ends and left audiences either fighting about whether justice belongs only to the privileged or hopeful that things can indeed work out in the end. Either exit would have been satisfying. But season 2 exists, and here we are.
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To be fair, it opens on solid ground. Season 1 never gave us a definitive closer, and season 2 at least has the decency to answer the questions it left dangling. There is an escalating middle that works, mostly. But somewhere along the way, the show loses the plot, and by the time the finale arrives, what should have been a landing feels more like a stumble.
Where the season genuinely succeeds is in its moral architecture. Almost no one here is simply good or simply bad, and that appears to be entirely intentional.
You can understand why Kemi and Sarah did what they did and still acknowledge that desecrating a body crosses a line. You can recognise Uduak as a terrible mother and still feel something for a woman who lost her son.
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The show seems invested in the idea that people are capable of both cruelty and justification in the same breath, and that is a more honest portrayal of human nature than most Nigerian productions attempt.
The two leads also carry visible arcs across the season. Kemi and Sarah move from frightened women trying to stay invisible to something sharper, more ruthless, survival-focused in a way that shows growth rather than convenience.
The cast as a whole is strong, with no obvious weak links, though singling out any one performance for the gold medal would be difficult. Different actors shine in different scenes, which is actually a compliment to the ensemble.
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The dialogue holds up too, with occasional slips that are forgivable enough not to derail anything. Visually, the show maintains a consistent tone throughout, and the score is one of its strengths. It is woven into the texture of the story rather than announced over it, which is not always a given.
The pacing, however, is a problem. The season drags in stretches that feel designed for a different viewing rhythm, a rhythm where you are watching at full speed rather than inching forward. It is a recurring tendency in this space, but it does not make it less frustrating.
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Then there is the violence, and it’s not the plot-driven kind. The survival and prison scenes, those come with the territory. The concern is the casual, domestic kind.
A marital dispute that edges into sexual coercion is resolved without consequence by the next scene. A disabled husband beaten nearly to unconsciousness, and then the couple is fine again. These moments are presented as texture rather than examined as a problematic pattern, and the show does not seem to notice the weight it is dropping.
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Femi’s wife also suffers from a poorly resolved arc. She comes in with edge, an early instigator with a hunger for control, and exits the season recast as selfless. The pivot is never earned.
As for the ending, it suggests a third season may be coming, but it lays no real groundwork for one. Loose threads are tied off messily, what could have been a clean directional path gets fractured into too many parts, and the cumulative effect is exhaustion rather than anticipation.
Blood Sisters season 2 is not without merit. The performances, the moral complexity, the score, they all remind you what this show can be. But it needed tighter editing, more considered handling of its domestic violence subplots, and an ending that respected its own story enough to make it work.
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VERDICT: Worth watching, but manage your expectations coming off season 1. If you are willing to speedwalk a few stretches, the performances and the moral complexity make it a decent watch
Entertainment
Why Nollywood Star Adunni Ade kept Her Daughter Hidden For Two Years
A Birthday Surprise: Popular Nollywood actress Adunni Ade marked her birthday by revealing, for the first time, that she had welcomed a daughter, affectionately named Baby Sal, with her long-term partner.
A Guarded Sanctuary: The couple intentionally kept their daughter out of the public eye for over two years, with Adunni citing a desire to protect her family’s peace, celebrate an answered prayer, and navigate private struggles away from the glare of social media.
Dispelling the Rumours: Adunni used the announcement to firmly shut down online speculation and single-mother stereotypes, clarifying that her decade-long relationship did not involve breaking up anyone else’s home for the sake of digital “clicks.”
In a heartfelt post shared on social media, the actress disclosed that she and her partner had kept the child away from the public eye for over two years, choosing to deliberately protect their family’s privacy. \According to Adunni, the journey was marked by personal challenges and silent battles that tested her strength, but she remained entirely focused on enjoying the blessing away from public scrutiny.
She wrote: “We chose privacy. Not because we owed anyone secrecy but because peace is priceless, and not everything good needs an audience. We wanted to enjoy our blessing.”
The actress also directly addressed ongoing speculation regarding her personal life, stressing that her relationship did not involve breaking up any home.
“Not every single mother fits your assumptions. Not every story is a scandal. Not every blessing comes with drama attached. God gave me mine. Fully. Peacefully. Intentionally. Not ‘another woman’s man’ all in the name of clicks,” she stated.
Adunni described the birth of their daughter as an answered prayer, revealing that the couple’s quiet journey together has spanned almost a decade.
“Almighty blessed us with our first child together. Our baby girl, our answered prayer, my evidence that God still writes beautiful stories in His own time,” she added.
Entertainment
Qing Madi’s Label War Deepens As Both Sides Claim Victory In Court Dispute
JTON says a Lagos court granted an injunction restricting Qing Madi’s use of music tied to disputed contracts.
KFMD argues the court affirmed the singer’s right to choose her own management and release new music.
Both sides are publicly disputing the meaning of the ruling while the main case awaits trial.
What started as a TikTok live has become a full legal and public relations battle, with two formal statements now on record and both sides telling very different stories about the same court ruling.
To recap: Qing Madi, the 19-year-old singer behind the recently released EP Barely Legal, went live on TikTok this week to address the disappearance of her music from Spotify, pointing directly at Joy Tongo and JTON Music, the label she had been signed to, as the party responsible.
She alleged that Tongo had stolen from her, forged her signature, and systematically targeted her releases. She also claimed she had won a court case against the label, noting that because she was a minor at the time proceedings began, her mother had to appear in court alongside her.
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