Opinion

Beyond The Selfies: What The Chike Frenzy Says About Our Broken Moral Priorities -By Isaac Asabor

The women who rushed to celebrate Chike may see their actions as harmless excitement. But collectively, their behavior reflects a troubling reality: in today’s culture, talent can overshadow character, and celebrity can silence conscience. That is not merely fandom. It is moral surrender.

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What happened at Filmhouse Cinema over the weekend was more than ordinary fan excitement. It was a disturbing snapshot of a society steadily losing its moral bearings.

In videos that quickly circulated online, female fans swarmed singer Chike with near-hysterical energy, pushing, scrambling, and stretching over one another just to secure a selfie or brief interaction. At first glance, it may seem like harmless celebrity worship. After all, popular artists attract attention everywhere in the world. But this frenzy did not happen in a vacuum. It unfolded against the backdrop of an ugly and highly publicized controversy linking Chike to the collapse of veteran broadcaster Frank Edoho’s marriage.

Yes, the allegations remain unconfirmed. Yes, rumors on social media are not proof. But even with that caveat, the reaction from many women at Filmhouse raises uncomfortable questions about the values we claim to uphold as a society.

At the heart of this issue is not merely whether Chike is guilty or innocent. It is the eagerness with which people are willing to suspend moral judgment once fame, attractiveness, and celebrity status enter the equation. That is the real scandal.

If an ordinary man, perhaps a bus conductor, banker, or office worker, were accused of helping destroy a marriage, public outrage would be swift and merciless. Social media commentators would deliver sermons about family values. Women would condemn him as irresponsible and immoral. But when the accused is a famous musician with charm, good looks, and hit love songs, accountability suddenly becomes optional. That contradiction exposes the hypocrisy at the center of modern celebrity culture.

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We often hear Nigerians describe themselves as deeply religious and morally conservative. We preach endlessly about preserving family values and protecting the sanctity of marriage. Yet when a celebrity becomes entangled in allegations involving infidelity or marital betrayal, many people react not with caution or disappointment, but with excitement and adoration. Where, then, is the consistency?

One cannot claim to defend the institution of marriage while simultaneously glorifying individuals accused of undermining it. Morality cannot operate on a sliding scale where fame determines who deserves scrutiny and who escapes it.

Equally troubling is the silence surrounding the allegations. Chike has neither publicly denied nor addressed the rumors connecting him to the controversy. While silence is not an admission of guilt, it is impossible to ignore how modern celebrity culture often turns controversy into currency. In today’s entertainment ecosystem, scandal fuels attention, attention fuels engagement, and engagement fuels profit.

The crowd at Filmhouse effectively reinforced that formula. Their message was simple: regardless of the allegations, admiration remains intact.

However, normalization is dangerous. When society rewards public figures despite credible accusations of morally questionable behavior, it sends troubling signals to younger generations. It teaches young men that character matters less than status. It teaches young women that charisma and fame excuse conduct they would otherwise condemn. Over time, this weakens the ethical foundations upon which relationships and trust are built. The double standards are impossible to ignore.

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Many of the same women celebrating Chike are often vocal about dishonesty, infidelity, and emotional manipulation among Nigerian men. Yet when allegations involve a celebrity they admire, outrage suddenly transforms into fascination. Principles become negotiable. Standards become selective.

If the situation were reversed, if a female celebrity were accused of contributing to the breakdown of a marriage and male fans reacted with the same feverish excitement, the public backlash would likely be severe. She would be insulted, shamed, and “cancelled” almost instantly. But because Chike is male and admired, much of the criticism is softened or dismissed as jealousy, bitterness, or overreaction. That imbalance reveals how celebrity worship frequently overrides fairness and critical thinking.

There is also a human dimension many people seem eager to ignore. Frank Edoho and his estranged wife have children. Whether the allegations are ultimately proven true or false, the public spectacle surrounding the controversy will remain permanently accessible online. One day, those children may encounter headlines, videos, and commentary tied to one of the most painful periods in their family’s life.

In moments like this, society must ask itself an important question: Is entertainment worth the erosion of empathy? Of course, some will insist that everyone deserves the presumption of innocence. They are correct. No one should be condemned without evidence. But that is not the central issue here. The issue is the complete absence of restraint, caution, or even basic moral reflection from many fans.

Why the desperation to idolize someone caught in the middle of such damaging allegations? Why the urgency to elevate entertainers into untouchable figures who exist beyond accountability?

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Chike is an artist, not a saint. He sings beautiful songs, but musical talent alone should not exempt anyone from scrutiny or ethical expectations.

Ultimately, the chaos at Filmhouse Cinema symbolizes something much deeper than fandom. It reflects a culture increasingly obsessed with fame at the expense of values. We have confused popularity with virtue. We have allowed celebrity status to become a shield against moral evaluation. That should concern all of us.

A society that excuses questionable behavior simply because the individual involved is talented or attractive gradually loses its ability to distinguish admiration from irresponsibility. And once that line disappears, accountability becomes impossible.

The women who rushed to celebrate Chike may see their actions as harmless excitement. But collectively, their behavior reflects a troubling reality: in today’s culture, talent can overshadow character, and celebrity can silence conscience. That is not merely fandom. It is moral surrender.

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