Some people have remarked in writing
and in other forms of communication that President Goodluck Jonathan has given
more attention to the entertainment industry to the detriment of other
industries.
When I read such remarks or hear
them from pundits on radio and TV talk shows, it does occurs to
me that there
are many who do not understand the inter connectivity of the various industries
and sectors that make up a nation and how growing one has a multiplier effect
on growing all.
Let me go deeper.
President Jonathan & members of
the Actors’ Guild of Nigeria @ the State House
Except Nigeria is a very unambitious
nation, (which it is not-Nigeria and Nigerians have a global reputation for
ambition) it naturally would be the desire of our industries to spread their
wings beyond Nigeria and into foreign domains, particularly in this era of
globalization.
Our industries would like to have a
presence in other African nations and from there conquer the globe.
But the truth is that nobody buys
your product except they first buy your culture!
Culture is a door opener.
Take the United States for example.
The government of the US has since the end of the Second World War vigorously
supported the exportation of American culture to the rest of the world.
They arranged for American actors
and singers to go on cultural exchanges to Europe, Asia and The Middle East.
The world soon fell in love with
Buddy Holly, Shirley Temple, Louis Armstrong, Jimmy Dean, Fred Astaire and
other first generation American international stars.
After falling in love with these
icons, the world wanted to dress like them, to drive the cars they saw in their
movies, to visit the cities they talked about in their songs.
And they did just that. This was the
reason American brands like Coca Cola, Ford, IBM and Chevrolet went global
immediately after the Second World War.
By the time America unleashed Elvis
Presley, James Brown, Marilyn Monroe, John Wayne and the Motown retinue of
stars on the rest of the world, their dominance of global pop culture was
unassailable and what resulted from this was their dominance of the world
economy.
It was and still is a common
practice for American companies to hire movie stars from Hollywood and country
music stars from Nashville as cultural ambassadors to project their products
into nations they wanted to enter.
The logic was that these stars
enjoyed a lot of goodwill from the people in those nations and they could
transfer that goodwill to their products.
America continued this practice
through stars like Michael Jackson who was so popular in Japan that Japanese
conglomerates hired him to come to Japan to endorse Japanese products before
the Japanese themselves would buy them!
Today, the world is still buying
American products because the picture of a movie star appears on a tube of
toothpaste, or their songs are used to promote a new mobile phone.
That is the power of projecting and
selling your culture!
Where your culture goes, your
industries go too!
I remember as a teenager watching
Wale Adenuga, the creator of Super Story, gush all over the media about how
Super Story had become the number one show in several African nations including
Kenya, Uganda and Ghana.
I also remember in my twenties how
Nigerian stars were given red carpet receptions in African capitals.
Do we think it is a coincidence that
it is precisely in those nations were Super Story, then Nollywood first went to
that Nigerian businesses have now landed?
![OmosexyAwards](file:///C:\Users\PROF~1.KAT\AppData\Local\Temp\msohtmlclip1\01\clip_image002.jpg)
In Kenya, Dangote is emerging as
perhaps the single largest Foreign Direct Investor, closely followed by
Nigerian banks and the service industry.
Uganda and Tanzania are likewise
opening up to Nigerian business.
Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Ghana
were the nations Wale Adenuga was gushing about over 20 years ago when he was
excited about the success of his Super Story series.
These things are interconnected!
If fans at Accra, Ghana, can go gaga
for P-Square, it will not be too long before they will be buying Nigerian
products like Innoson’s cars and Chivitta juices and using Nigerian services
like Globacom and ABC Transport.
In 2011, I was walking around Union
Square in San Francisco with Kanayo O Kanayo, when a woman walked up to Kanayo
and greeted him in an almost flawless Nigerian accent and declared herself to
be his fan.
We asked her what part of Nigeria
she was from and she was shocked. She was an American!
That incidence taught me a lesson
which is that were unscrupulous Nigerians might have spoilt our national
reputation through negative actions such as Advance Fee Fraud and other
Internet scams, it is our music and Nollywood stars that can correct the
negative impression some would have about Nigeria and Nigerians.
And this is what a visionary
philosopher King like President Goodluck Jonathan has seen which is why he
continues to support the entertainment industry.
Whether you refer to the $200
million credit facility to the industry or the 3 billion Naira grant to
Nollywood, or the various ways he has assisted the entertainment industry, such
initiatives are for the benefit of Nigeria’s economy.
If we do not value, patronize and
project our own culture via our entertainment industry, no one will.
And if no one buys our culture, no
one will buy our products.
The fact cannot be
overemphasized-culture means business! People who have made connections with
Nigeria’s culture will naturally have a higher interest in visiting Nigeria and
patronizing Nigerian businesses and services. That is something that must sink
into the consciousness of every sector, industry and chamber of commerce!
So next time you see Genevieve Nnaji
gracing the cover of the British Hello! magazine or Omotola Ekeinde in the line
up of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential persons in the world, don’t think
they are going places alone. No. They are taking 170 million Nigerians along
with them.
So, as President Goodluck Jonathan
hosts the entertainment industry today, Friday the 28th of November, 2014, let
everyone know that he is doing it for Nigeria’s benefit.
Reno Omokri is Special Assistant
(New Media) to President Jonathan.
--Vanguard News
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