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Finding His Voice: Prince Phelar’s Story Of Courage And Mentorship In Comedy

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Adefela Adeigbe a comedian with stage name Prince Phelar, digital Marketing Enthusiast, a cake plug among many other things and also an MC.

Q: You’ve been in comedy for how long now?

A: Officially I’ll say 8 years.

Q: So unofficially dey?

A: Yes sir

Q: Oh which one

A: So this is how it works, I started counting my years on stage when I met legendary Gbenga Adeyinka D’1st, because that was when I actually have the opportunity to be mentored and trained by a true veteran and someone who actually has the depth of the of the craft, but before 2016 I’ve always been doing you MC for friends back then in University, friends birthdays, Fellowship events and all of that.

Q: Interesting, so one thing that I want to ask you, what did your height do to you? (Laughs)

A: (Laughs) I get this a lot, but I’ve come to see it more as a blessing.

Q: (Laughs) Thank God you are never going to join a gang of robbers because it’s easy to just sneak in and out.

A: (Laughs) Imagine I want to rob you and shout ‘your life or your money’, you will just be like ‘what is talking’ you won’t even say who is talking, because you will just be there looking for who is talking. I’ve literally jumped through the window of a molue in Ikeja, too many people want to enter at the same time and I saw the opened window so I used the tires and helped myself in. Why I also said it’s been a blessing is that every comedian has this go-to jokes on bad days on stage, mine most times is about my height and it always works for me.

Q: Which is your favorite?

A: That I cannot keep a relationship (both laugh)

Q: How did I get that so fast?

A: Because you have a good sense of humor.

Q: How did comedy start for you?

A: I would say it’s a trait I picked from my mom, she’s always been and up until now a traditional wedding MC. Back in the university I’d see some of my seniors Honeytongue and Notrespass were the trending comedians back then and I’d always walk past their shows posters and tell myself ‘you can be you are funny too’, my friends Olumide Akinola and Theophilus Adewale (The DOT brothers) would always encourage me, they’d laugh to my jokes, but then I didn’t have that courage until after school.

What actually prompted the courage is a brother of mine in Fellowship, when I was in 500 level just called me one a Tuesday evening and asked what my plan for after school was, it was at that moment it dawned on me that I didn’t have a plan for post school other than my certificate, I mechanical engineering anyway but please don’t let me touch your car, after the conversation with my brother by help of God I just felt okay maybe this is something I can pursue later, and by the time I started my service in 2015, God bless my dear Uncle Mr. Laolu Emmanuel and his supportive wife Mrs. Ann, they gave me a room in Port Harcourt and it was right there in that room everything I do today started. My being a comedian, MC digital marketing, everything started in that room. I’d always lock myself up, ingesting information, content, practicing things on my own. I moved to Ibadan in 2016, the year I met veteran actor Ayo Adesanya on Instagram, God bless her for me, I told her that I’m an upcoming comedian and I would like her to link me up with one of her comedian friends, she’s like oh well I don’t have too much friends but I have Gbenga Adeyinka D’1st, I was like uh uh what do you mean you don’t have too many friends Gbenga Adeyinka is a crowd on his own (laughs), both in achievements and in size the man is a crowd, I sent Gbenga Adeyinka a friend request on BBM, it was BBM those years and in 5 minutes he accepted, I’ve never seen that level of humility at such level of achievement, you know, to be able to to come down from your high house and relate with ‘commo. people’, he offered me a job in 2016 that’s why I moved to Lagos.

Q: Alright maybe me I should ask for a job now (laughs), so I’m trying to draw a lesson for someone who is watching and who needs to get the same kind of courage that you have, there are many people who are stuck in careers that they don’t want to be in right now, I have a friend Bukunmi Da Preacher, he was a bank person before he decided that you know what that I’m done, what does it take to drop your fears and embrace your destiny?

A: It takes a lot, backtrack to when that my brother had a conversation with me like what was your plan for after school, right after that conversation I made up my mind that I’m going to, whilst I work on my craft before I become big in my own in my own space, pick up a 9 to 5 job that can allow me to do my thing on the weekend so it’s always been my own compass.

Q: What would you say is a major challenge for you when you got into the industry, what kind of push back have you had, what kind of feedback have you received, and how have you navigated?

A: I didn’t have so much and I’m grateful to God for that because of my mentor, Gbenga Adeyinka D’1st, this is where people need to understand the place of mentorship you don’t necessarily have to launch if you are not ready that is what a mentor does for you. I’ll give you an instance, don’t forget I said 2016 I moved Lagos because he offered me a job, so one of those times we went to Ibadan, we were preparing for Laffmattaz With Gbenga Adeyinka And Friends, October 1st, one of those nights I went to late Peteru’s comedy club with Omobaba No.1, all those all those times I was still under-studying Gbenga Adeyinka. So I took the mic in my mind I was killing it, in my mind a superstar was born that night and after the performance, sorry I won’t call it performance, after talking to the microphone I went to Omobaba and asked far how was my performance, and God bless him for being so honest he was like ‘was that a performance?’ I was dumbfounded, I had no words. He said ‘I didn’t even know when you started, I didn’t know when you finished. When we got back to Legos he told Gbenga Adeyinka D’1st about it and Gbenga said ‘I don’t want you near a microphone in the next 3 months’. This generation needs to understand the place of mentorship, and mentorship doesn’t mean looking for somebody to sort your bills, no, when it comes to mentorship it has to be both ways, what do you have to offer? With the help of God, don’t forget I’m a digital marketer so when I met Gbenga Adeyinka, I noticed he didn’t have a fan page in my in my own little way I felt if I can contribute to him in this way I won’t to be a parasite to him, and he was gracious enough to allow me into his team, soI can say it’s a symbiotic kind of relationship. So during the mentorship process he groomed me and by October 1st, in less than 3 months, I was ready to perform at Laffmattaz, October 1st and that was my introduction to the comedy industry, the biggest platform in Southwest, Nigeria.

Q: You said something about mentorship, and you said that people must recognize its place, how easy is that to sell to a 20-year-old idealist who believes that he’s got everything that he needs.

A: Oh well, guess what, you don’t have to sell it to them, just leave them, let them go and do it, if you feel you don’t Mentor don’t need a mentor, don’t worry just go, it’s only a matter of time, you will learn.

Q: What should we expect from Prince Phelar?

A: Like I said up till now, I’m still undergoing mentorship, because I believe mentorship is a lifetime activity, you’d never know it all. Even my mentor, sometimes when we are talking he still references Alibaba despite the fact that they are colleagues and friends. He told me ‘it takes greatness to identify greatness’, so it doesn’t even matter how long it takes, mentorship is always good. And I will always be improving on my craft, taking as many as many MC gigs as I can, taking as many stages as I can, God helping me. And someday I’ll stage my own comedy show as well.

Q: And continuing to Design Cakes (laughs)

A: (Laughs) and that as well, God bless you sir.

Q: Thank you for your time Prince Phelar.

A: Thank you for having me, the Fela that doesn’t smoke or drink. Gbenga Adeyinka D’1st and Omobaba will say I’m just wasting my name, that how will I be called Fela and I won’t drink or smoke (laughs)

Q: (Laughs) I agree with them. (Both laugh)

 

Follow Prince Phelar on social media @princephelar, you can also contact him for bookings via calls/WhatsApp on 08102009733.

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NDLEA Seizes Lipsticks Stuffed With Drugs At Lagos Airport [VIDEO]

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Officials of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency have uncovered another batch of female lipsticks containing illegal drugs at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport in Lagos.

Femi Babafemi, the agency’s Director of Media and Advocacy, revealed this in a post shared on his X (formerly Twitter) page on Sunday.

He also urged Nigerians, particularly women, to be extremely vigilant when purchasing or accepting beauty products, especially from unfamiliar sellers or dubious online platforms.

The statement read, Ladies beware! It does appear like female lipstick is becoming attractive as an instrument for concealment and trafficking now with yet another consignment of factory fitted female lipsticks stuffed with illicit substances intercepted at MMIA barely a week after @ndlea_nigeria officers uncovered a similar cargo at a courier company in Lagos.

Watch Video Here

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JUST IN: Former President Buhari Dies In London Clinic

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Former Nigerian leader, Muhammadu Buhari, passed away on Sunday.

His longtime media aide, Garba Shehu, confirmed the news in a brief statement issued on Sunday afternoon, stating that the former president died at a clinic in London.

Shehu’s message, distributed to the media, read:
“INNA LILLAHI WA INNA ILAIHIRRAJIUUN. The family of the former president has announced the passing on of the former president, Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR, this afternoon in a clinic in London. May Allah accept him in Aljannatul Firdaus, Amin.”

The statement concluded with the date: July 13, 2025.

Although the cause of death was not disclosed, Buhari, who held office from 2015 to 2023, had frequently sought medical care in the United Kingdom during and after his time as president.

Buhari, a retired Major General in the Nigerian Army, first led Nigeria as a military head of state from 1983 to 1985. Decades later, he was elected president through a democratic process. He made history as the first opposition candidate to unseat a sitting president in Nigeria.

Funeral plans have not yet been made public.

 

More to come…

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No Effective Governance Without Full Local Government Autonomy — Femi Gbajabiamila

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The Chief of Staff to President Bola Tinubu, Femi Gbajabiamila, has stated that governance at the local government level cannot be effective without complete autonomy.

He made the remark while addressing journalists after voting in the Lagos State local government elections in Surulere on Saturday.

When asked about the progress of implementing the LG autonomy ruling by the Supreme Court one year after it was delivered, Gbajabiamila described the process as ongoing and said it would be completed with time.

Gbajabiamila said, “The ruling was welcome by everybody. It’s the execution of that ruling and the implementation of that ruling that we are still trying to dot the Is and cross the Ts.

“I believe in a matter of time, we will realise full autonomy. There cannot be effective governance without full autonomy. That’s what we are working toward.”

In July 2024, the Supreme Court granted autonomy to all 774 local government areas across the country following a case filed by the federal government through the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation. However, the ruling is yet to be fully implemented.

Following the judgement, the Senate urged state and local governments to immediately adhere to the court’s directive, especially regarding local government accounts and direct fund disbursements.

The Senate also moved to amend relevant sections of the Constitution to ensure full local government autonomy nationwide.

The announcement was made by Deputy Senate President Senator Jibrin Barau, after lawmakers emerged from a closed-door session where they discussed alleged efforts by some state governments to bypass the Supreme Court’s ruling on July 11.

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