Avsnitt
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Welcome back to another completely unfiltered, chaotic, and eye-opening episode where your favourite trio—David, Naomi, and Spike—are back to dissect the wildest stories, viral trends, and deep social issues dominating your timelines this week. From the heartbreaking realities of the education system to deep debates on family, accountability, and surviving the current economic climate, we hold absolutely nothing back!👉 What is the weirdest or most backdated thing a teacher or lecturer has ever forced you to do? Let us know in the comments! 👇Make sure to LIKE, COMMENT, and SUBSCRIBE so you never miss our weekly drops! 🔔🎬 WHAT’S HOT IN THIS EPISODE (The Weekly Breakdown):1. Nighttime Exams 🔦The crew reacts to a viral clip of WAEC chemistry students writing exams at 8:00 PM under flashlights. What happened to exam timeliness, and how is this affecting students?2. The ₦77,000 NYSC Survival Hustle 🍉🍍We break down a corper hawking fruits in uniform. Is ₦77k enough to survive current inflation, or is this a PR strategy for public sympathy?3. Cost of Living Under Tinubu 📈With gas at ₦2,400/kg and petrol at ₦1,350/liter, families are resorting back to firewood. How are adults and students squeezing budgets to survive?4. The "Accidental Pregnancy" Debate 🤰⚖️What happens if a spouse gets pregnant from an assault? David and Spike debate the "fruit of a poisonous tree"—is termination selfless, or does every fetus deserve a chance?5. Computer Science on Paper? 📝💻The crew reviews a backdated curriculum where IT students are forced to write code on paper instead of computers. Why is the system glorifying this suffering?6. Pastor Toby's 19-Year-Old Ordainment ⛪👗An assembly ordains a teenage pastor who seems uncomfortable in her own questionable attire. We break down modern church business strategies and why pastors' kids rebel.
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What happens when the people with the biggest platforms stay quiet during crisis?
David Olayimika sits with Spike and Mirabel in this episode, to break down the ongoing debate about celebrity and religious responsibility in Nigeria’s insecurity crisis, and whether speaking up is an obligation or personal choice.
Do celebrities and pastors have a responsibility to speak during national crises, or is society placing unfair expectations on them?
Finally, we question how attention has become more valuable than intelligence, and why entertainment culture may be killing us as a society.
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The classic trio is back! David, Naomi and Spike return for another intense and hilarious episode of the WHOT Podcast.
This episode dives into one of the internet’s most controversial conversations: if your partner cheats, is it your responsibility to help them heal from it… or protect yourself and leave?
The trio also talks about:
* Relationship accountability
* Double standards around cheating
* Nigeria’s growing insecurity crisis
* Banditry, kidnappings and fear in everyday life
As always, expect honest opinions, relatable moments and heated takes.
Drop your thoughts in the comments: Would YOU forgive a cheating partner?
#WHOTPodcast #Nigeria #Relationships #Cheating #Podcast
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Join Christian Raymond (Chris Da Genius) and Adenusi Opeyemi (Life of Ego) on this rollercoaster episode where they get into many interesting and YES, HOT Topics.
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This episode got HEATED🥵We talked about:• women changing surnames after marriage• patriarchy and identity loss• religion vs culture• hyphenating surnames• why many Nigerians are rejecting low paying jobs• toxic hustle culture• burnout, survival and unrealistic work expectationsAt what point does “hard work” become self-destruction?And should marriage require someone to lose part of their identity?Drop your thoughts in the comments!#WHOTPodcast #Nigeria #Marriage #HustleCulture
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Nigerians will shame your skin tone, your body, your weight, your acne, your height… literally anything😭
This episode explores the hidden damage behind:
Colorism
Skin bleaching culture
Body shaming disguised as jokes
Toxic beauty standards
Forgiveness and emotional pain
We also unpack the uncomfortable truth that:
forgiveness is not always reconciliation.
Sometimes people forgive you… and still never let you back into their lives.
Yeah. It got deep FAST🔥
#WHOTPodcast #SkinShaming #Forgiveness #Nigeria #Colorism
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This week’s conversation explores the clash between traditional expectations and modern relationships.We discuss:• The idea of “traditional” men and women in today’s society• Whether gender roles still make sense for Gen Z• Financial responsibility in relationships• Equal partnerships vs traditional marriages• The ethical and religious concerns surrounding surrogacyThere are strong opinions from every angle, and we want to hear yours too.Do you think relationships work better with traditional roles or shared responsibilities?
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There’s a thin line between choice, culture, and control…
In this episode, we explore:
* Whether arranged marriages create stability… or take away freedom
* And how oversharing online is slowly eroding privacy in the name of connection
It’s honest, reflective, and a little uncomfortable — as it should be.
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Let’s be honest… some of you are not unlucky in love, you’re just doing too much 😭
This episode is chaos (the good kind):
• Wanting a rich, God-fearing bad boy with abs and a therapist
• Comparing your relationship to Instagram highlights
• Spending ₦250k on asoebi you’ll never wear again
Yeah… we went there.
Drop your hot takes in the comments:🔥 Are your standards realistic?🔥 Has social media ruined dating?🔥 Is asoebi actually a scam?
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A doctor hits a patient, and the internet reacts immediately.But when you slow down and really look at the situation, it raises more questions than answers.We unpack that.Then we talk about something a lot of people avoid:What it actually means for a Christian and a Muslim to be in a relationship in Nigeria.Not just the love part, but everything that follows it. Because at some point, it stops being simple.Drop your thoughts in the comments, we really want to hear your perspective on this one.
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This episode is messy… and not in a funny way.
A pastor offers money, a house, and lifetime support to any woman willing to marry his autistic son.
Three days later, a woman says yes.
What follows? Confusion, controversy, and questions nobody is ready to answer.
Then another story breaks…
An 11-year-old girl.
₦150,000.
And a system that failed her completely.
And just when you think it can’t get more intense…
The internet explodes over a simple statement:
“My sister, divide everything by 2.”
But this isn’t just about bills.
It’s about power. Expectations. Survival. Identity.
In this episode, we’re asking the uncomfortable questions:
• Is this charity or exploitation?
• Can poverty justify certain decisions?
• What does consent look like in situations like this?
• Is marriage still about love… or just survival?
• And what are we really splitting when we say 50/50?
Watch, think, and tell us what YOU believe.
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This episode starts with religion… and somehow ends in relationships.
We talk about:
• Changing doctrines and their real-life consequences
• Whether authority should always be trusted
• And how male birth control could completely change dating dynamics
At the center of it all is one question:
Is control power… or responsibility?
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“Bandits at our airport.”
It sounds unreal… but it perfectly captures how unpredictable things are starting to feel in Nigeria.
In this episode, we break down multiple conversations happening at once:
From the viral school bullying case that sparked outrage,
to the idea of “celebrity bandits” and rising insecurity,
to the uncomfortable truth about love and money,
and finally, the question many Nigerians are asking quietly:
If we’re working this hard… why does it still feel like survival?
This isn’t just gist. It’s a reality check.
💬 Topics:
• School bullying & social media accountability
• Insecurity and the evolution of crime
• Love vs money in modern relationships
• Hustle culture vs real economic progress
Is Nigeria evolving… or are we just adapting to survive?
Drop your thoughts in the comments.
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BBL surgery, beauty pressure, and the risks people take in pursuit of the “perfect” body.
In this episode, we unpack the ongoing debate around cosmetic surgery and why the conversation around BBL procedures has become so intense online. Who should be held responsible when things go wrong, and how much influence does social media have on the choices people make about their bodies?
Then we turn to another controversial topic: prenups. Are they simply smart financial protection in modern marriages, or do they create doubt before a marriage even begins?
Let us know what you think in the comments.
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Is living together before marriage a smart way to test compatibility or a dangerous gamble for relationships?
David Olayimika and Spike dive into the heated debate around cohabitation among young Nigerians.
With guest artist Yinny Lin, they unpack:
• Does living together actually strengthen relationships?
• Why Nigerian law doesn’t protect cohabiting couples
• The economic pressure pushing couples to delay marriage
• Why women may face higher risks in these arrangements
Is cohabitation preparation for marriage… or a shortcut that backfires?
Join the conversation.
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This episode is not about picking sides.
It’s about holding two truths at once.
After Simi’s anti-rape advocacy sparked controversy involving Adekunle Gold, false accusation cases, and intense public debate, we realized something:
We are reacting emotionally. Not structurally.
In this episode, we talk about:
• Why men feel attacked
• Why women feel dismissed
• The legal reality under Nigeria’s VAPP Act
• And how silence protects injustice
This is not a gender war.
It’s a justice conversation.
Join David, Naomi and Nike on this expository ride!
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Nigeria is having uncomfortable conversations.
From viral “Train Your Parents” confrontations to debates about kneeling proposals and trust during kidnapping crises, one thing is clear: culture is evolving.
In this episode, we examine:
* The generational shift in how respect is defined
* The role of social media in reshaping cultural norms
* and whether romantic gestures have become performances
This episode challenges assumptions and asks the hard questions.
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Valentine’s Day reveals more about our society than we realize.
It exposes gender expectations, financial pressure, social media influence, and the emotional gaps in many relationships.
In this episode, we talk about:
• Why Valentine’s feels heavier for men
• The pressure of being someone’s “official Valentine”
• Situationship expectations
• Love languages and materialism
• And how social media has turned love into a public performance
If there were no cameras, no posts, and no pressure… how would you celebrate love?
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On this episode of the WHOT Podcast, we unpack 3 church stories, along with one sensitive culture subject that got Nigerians talking, arguing, and choosing sides online.
From a pastor’s viral tattoo to the debate over child marriage, we look beyond the headlines and ask the real questions:
Where does culture end and scripture begin?
When does influence become control?
And how do we separate facts from online outrage?
Topics in this episode:
• Viral child marriage video
• Pastor Kingsley’s tattoo and the Christian debate
• Should a married woman use her pastor as her DP?
• Pastor arrested over alleged church rivalry
This isn’t about attacking faith or defending trends. It’s about asking honest questions in a country where religion shapes everyday life.
Watch, listen, and decide for yourself.
Drop your thoughts in the comments:
Is tattoo a sin, or just culture?
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Every Nigerian has heard it: “Wait for God’s time.”
But what happens when God’s time hits your bank account… accidentally?
This episode of the WHOT Podcast starts with the case of Ojo Eghosa Kingsley and expands into bigger questions about money, morality, power, and survival in Nigeria.
We discuss:
• The ₦1.5B bank error and the one-year sentence
• Politicians’ kids and unexplained luxury
• IShowSpeed’s Lagos livestream
• Oshiomhole’s “cheap food” comment
God’s time may be the best.
Nigeria’s system? That’s the real debate.
- Visa fler