Funke Akindele Kunle Afolayan exchange stirs debate as the actress responds to comments on dancing to promote films and box office milestones
Funke Akindele, Nigerian actress and filmmaker, publicly responded to comments by fellow filmmaker Kunle Afolayan after his viral remarks on film promotion and box office targets triggered debate across the industry.
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Funke Akindele wrote in a social media post, “No allow jealousy burn you. I’m not the one hindering you. If you can’t beat them or join them, create your path.
Go ahead and create an alternative promotion or marketing strategy, hire a company to handle it; the opportunities are endless, and everyone has their own path. I focused on mine.”
The statement followed a widely shared comment by Kunle Afolayan, who had questioned the pursuit of billion-naira cinema milestones and dismissed the competitive narrative around box office figures.
Kunle Afolayan stated, “There is no competition. I dont want 2 billion or even 1 billion in the cinema that I won’t even be able to collect 10 million naira.”
The exchange has reignited conversations within Nollywood about marketing tactics, performance metrics, and the evolving nature of film promotion in Nigeria’s competitive cinema market.
Funke Akindele, known for actively promoting her films through energetic public appearances and social media engagement, has repeatedly defended unconventional promotional strategies that resonate with mass audiences and drive cinema attendance.
Several of her recent productions have crossed the billion-naira mark, a feat regarded by industry observers as a remarkable benchmark in local box office performance.
Kunle Afolayan, respected for his artistic storytelling and cinematic craftsmanship, has often taken a measured stance on commercial metrics, prioritising sustainability and financial recovery over headline figures.
While neither filmmaker directly mentioned the other by name, followers and industry commentators interpreted the timing and tone of the statements as a pointed response within an ongoing conversation about success, visibility, and creative independence in Nollywood.
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The episode has underscored a broader tension between artistic philosophy and aggressive audience marketing in Nigeria’s film industry, where diverse approaches continue to shape how films reach viewers and define success.






















