Beverly Osu Supports Omotola’s Call for Residual Payments in Nollywood

Advertisment

Former Big Brother Naija housemate and actress Beverly Osu has weighed in on the conversation sparked by Nollywood icon Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde, following the latter’s comparison of her earnings from Hollywood and Nollywood.

Advertisment

Omotola recently revealed that despite working in Hollywood for only four years and completing just two test projects, she still receives monthly residual payments. In stark contrast, she lamented that after three decades in Nollywood and over 310 projects, she receives no royalties or residuals for her work.

Advertisment

To validate her claim, Omotola posted two SAG-AFTRA payslips evidence of her recurring earnings from Hollywood highlighting the disparity in compensation structures between the two industries.

READ THIS  "AI stands for Antichrist Inception" Mother warns daughter to take down her photo before the 'devil uses the AI app to take her glory'

While some Nigerians applauded her honesty and transparency, others accused her of making unfair comparisons between a developed and a developing country.

Advertisment

Beverly Osu, however, stood firmly in support of Omotola, insisting that the veteran’s post wasn’t meant to compare nations, but rather to spotlight how artists should be respected and properly compensated.

Advertisment

“What Omotola posted is not about comparison of nations. It’s about the basic dignity of the artist.

Advertisment

She criticized the tendency to shut down conversations about fairness with the excuse of the “first world vs third world” narrative.

Advertisment

READ THIS  JJC Skillz’s baby mama spills damning secret about Funke Akindele’s marriage

“Art is art. Work is work. Labor is labor. Residuals are a right, not a luxury.
Saying ‘don’t compare 1st world to 3rd world’ is a lazy argument that keeps us trapped,” 
she added.

Advertisment

Beverly concluded by emphasizing that regardless of the country be it Nigeria or the United States actors deserve long-term compensation for their creative contributions, especially through royalties and residuals.

Advertisment

Her remarks have resonated with many creatives who feel that the Nigerian entertainment industry needs better structure, fairer compensation, and deeper respect for artistic labor.

Advertisment

SEE POST…

Advertisment

Advertisment

Check Also

Pastor Oritsejafor opens up on secret cancer battle, $120,000 treatment, and recovery journey

AdvertismentAdvertisment Popular cleric and founder of Word of Life Bible Church, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, has …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Discover more from Fastrumours

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading