Showing posts with label 6th Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 6th Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards. Show all posts

Sunday, September 2, 2018

REVIEW. The less bad than before 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards on Africa Magic on DStv still a far way from a passing grade with many mistakes - but fewer than before.


How to say this: The 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards held for the 6th time on Victoria Island in Lagos, Nigeria on Saturday night wasn't a great award show broadcast on the Africa Magic channels, nor was it good or got a passing grade - but it was less bad than previously, so in that sense was an improvement on the previous 5 years.

The amateurish broadcast of the 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards with Nadia White as director and executive produced by Kayode Gbenga had less mistakes than in all previous years but this is still not how a so-called pan-African awards show - honouring and being about the best in film and TV no less - should look on television.

Saturday night's three and a quarter hour broadcast on the Africa Magic channels across MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform had a smoother flow; had more functional pacing that was good, and had a beautiful, world class, gold-and-white audio-visual theme that employed a little director's chair, camera, film rolls and the Africa Magic logo as a button, to great effect.

Julius Oluwadamilare and Peter Obie were responsible for the motion graphics.

Unfortunately the rest was again trash, although there were less trash.

Viewers were not shown empty seats like in the past.

Viewers didn't see late winners storm the stage doing acceptance speeches. Winners this year who went over their time unceremoniously got their mics cut and the camera switching back to one of the hosts to introduce a new category (bad and disruptive yes, but not as bad as rambling people not knowing when to stop).

When Ngozi Obasi for instance simply didn't want to stop talking after winning Best costume designer, despite the music rising louder to drown her out and play her off, producers abruptly cut her mic and switched to IK Osakioduwa who then cut to an ad break.

Sound problems and audio level mistakes - especially with the muting and unmuting of Minnie Dlamini Jones' mic - cropped up throughout the night, with Ayo Adeife who was responsible for sound overall as the audio supervisorm and with Kumle Akintayo as head sound engineer.

The cue-in and cue-out timing between category nominee AVs playing and category presenters talking, were wrong all night - with viewers who missed a lot of words and sentences during the switching between stage-live and play-AV because producers didn't do anything to improve initial mistakes and to correct the playout lag.

The stage design done by Equally Diverse Solutions looked shockingly dull, cheap, unimaginative, plain and unbecoming of an African awards show such as what the Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards tries to be.


The golden arches against the back wall were chipped, incredibly dented and scratched, and this showed up highly visible on screen throughout the night.

It gave the 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards a constant second-hand on-screen look. Wasn't this supposed to be newly built? Was this a re-use and redress from other Africa Magic shows? It was shoddy and looked trashy.

If you can't bring out proper set silverware for supposedly the year's biggest televised showcase event on Africa Magic, what can M-Net bring it out for?

Interestingly MultiChoice Nigeria (currently embroiled in an ugly court case over its recent price hikes in that country) inserted a recorded public message from John Ugbe, MultiChoice Nigeria managing director, saying "We're here to stay".

The 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards is supposed to be a pan-African awards show, so a specifically Nigerian message didn't really make sense, but it didn't detract from the broadcast.

The In Memoriam segment was once again very bad and again omitted several names across Africa that should have been included.

The producers couldn't bother to actually include pictures of those who died - in an awards show about TV and film as visual mediums, and broadcast on television where you need to show viewers things.

The inclusion of a live orchestral band - with very bad sound (did anybody do a sound and level check beforehand?) was bad because of the lack of proper mics to capture the surround sound.

The result? The orchestra sounded off (and small) - which wasn't their fault.

The inclusion of a random operatic performance was odd and completely out-of-place for a show like this. Nothing against opera, but the 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards isn't the appropriate place to insert an aria.


The sexist IK Osakioduwa was back with more lame, one-note jokes all along the theme of him lusting after women he can't have sex with, and saying things like he wants to be a rapper so he could be surrounded by irresponsible girls.

Why people like Wangi Mba-Uzoukwu, M-Net West Africa director, keep condoning his behaviour and keep hiring him back to spout this trash remarks that don't belong in Africa's entertainment industry is shocking and inexplicable.

Didn't he have a script that he had to study and keep to? And if he had a script and this was in there, who okay'ed this and though it was acceptable?

The awards show finished on time at 23:15, when it should have - an improvement on the past.

The on-stage lighting was mistakenly switched off several times with Minnie Dlamini Jones and IK Osakioduwa literally standing in the dark, especially towards the end, and having to talk, visible only as silhouettes.


Why does it remain so difficult for M-Net and Africa Magic to broadcast a passing grade and half decent awards show?

If Nigeria doesn't have the required technical talent to pull of an awards show of this scale that comes with certain visual, audio, floor, stage and other planning challenges, why not fly in experienced production people from elsewhere for the Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards to help and do it if so many other people are already being flown in?

Pan-African viewers deserve better than what the 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards showed, although it was the "best" one out of the bad of the past 6 years. Hopefully the still not quite there production values will continue to improve.

Kenya manages to make a stronger showing in the winners list at the 6th 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards, grabbing 5 awards, including Best movie for 18 Hours.


M-Net and MultiChoice's supposed pan-African 6th 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards on Saturday night remained a decidedly Nigerian-focused affair with the bulk of the category winners from Nigeria and West Africa although Kenya very deservedly cooped the Best Overall Movie category for 2017's 18 Hours from Phoebe Ruguru.

The 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards was once again done as a live broadcast ceremony on M-Net's array of Africa Magic channels on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform throughout sub-Saharan Africa from the Eko Hotel and Suites on Victoria Island in Lagos, Nigeria.

It once again had production mistakes and problems, including a red carpet pre-show with bad production values and a returning and still clueless and unprepared Helen Paul, although both broadcasts showed less problems than in the past.

Minnie Dlamini Jones from South Africa returned as the co-host next to the sexist IK Osakioduwa who was also back again with his tiring one-track "lusting after women" schtick that roiled viewers.

Supposed to represent West, East and Southern Africa somewhat "equally", the 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards, produced by M-Net West Africa and always originating from Lagos, Nigeria remains top-heavy with Nigerian category nominees and therefore winners.

East Africa managed to make a better showing on Saturday evening, with 4 Kenyans who managed to win 5 awards for Mark Maina as Best Picture Editor (18 Hours), Phoebe Ruguru winning Best Overall Movie (18 Hours) and Best Movie award in East Africa (18 Hours), Dennis Wanjohi Maina for Best Documentary (The Flesh Business) and Nyce Wanjeri as Best Actress in a comedy and TV series.

Although called "viewers' choice" African viewers can only vote for 7 out of the 27 categories Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards.

In one of the several odd moments from this year's awards ceremony - that also included an out-of-place operatic number with a live orchestra - the former Big Brother Naija contestant, Bisola Aiyeola who couldn't stop screaming on stage, won the Trail Blazer Award.


Here's the complete list of 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards winners:

Best Sound Editor
Tatu – Kolade Morakinyo and Pius Fatoke

Best Picture Editor
18 Hours – Mark Maina

Best Lighting Designer Movie/TV Series
Tatu – Akpe Ododoru, Tunde Akinniyi

Best Cinematography Movies/TV series
Okafor’s Law – Yinka Edward

Best Costume/Designer Movie or TV Series
The Bridge – Ngozi Obasi and James Bessinone

Best Short Film/Online Video
Penance – Micheal Ama Psalmist’ Akinrogunde

Best Documentary
The Flesh Business – Dennis Wanjohi

Best Make Up Artist Movie/TV Series
Tatu – Thelma Ozy Smith, Hakeem Effect Onilogbo

Best Art Director
Lotanna – Tunji Afolayan

Best Soundtrack Movies/TV Series
Tatu – Evelle

Best Indigenous Language Movie or TV Series – Swahili
Super Modo – Sarika Hemi Lhakani

Best Indigenous Language Movie or TV Series – Hausa
Mansoor – Ali Nuhu

Best Indigenous Language Movies or TV Series – Yoruba
Etiko Onigedu – Femi Adebayo

Best Indigenous Language Movies or TV Series – Igbo
Bound – Lilian Afegbai

Best TV/Drama/Comedy series
This Is It – Dolapo Adeleke

Best Movie East Africa
18 Hours – Phoebe Ruguru

Best Movie West Africa
Isoken – Jade Osiberu

Best Movie Southern Africa
The Road to Sunrise – Shemu Joyah

Trail Blazer Award
Bisola Aiyeola

Industry Merit Award
Tunde Kelani

Best Writer Movie/TV Series
Alter Ego – Patrick Nnamani/Koye O/Moses Inwang

Best Supporting Actress
Lydia Forson – Isoken

Best Supporting Actor
Falz – New Money

Best Actress in a comedy and TV series
Nyce Wanueri – Auntie Boss

Best Actor in a comedy
Odunlade Adekola – A Million Baby

Best Actress in a Drama/TV Series
Omotola Jalade Ekeinde – Alter Ego

Best Actor in a Drama Series
Adjetey Anang  – Keteke

Best Director
Jade Osiberu – Isoken

Best Overall Movie
18 Hours – Phoebe Ruguru

TV CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK. Why is nothing available - or being made available - to the press about the M-Net and MultiChoice executives panel discussion that preceded the 6th Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards 2018?


Why is nothing available - or being made available - to the press covering it, about the panel discussion that M-Net and MultiChoice executives had before the 6th Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards for 2018 that took place on Saturday night?

While panelists like Yolisa Phahle (MultiChoice CEO for general entertainment), John Ugbe (MultiChoice Nigeria managing director), Nkateko Mabaso (acting M-Net CEO), Wangi Mba-Uzoukwu (M-Net West Africa director) and the 3 MultiChoice Talent Factory directors Njoki Muhoho, Berry Lwando and Femi Odugbemi all attended in Lagos, Nigeria and spoke, neither M-Net nor MultiChoice bothered to release any press statements, audio or a rush-transcript for the media about it.

While M-Net and MultiChoice are multinational, pan-African companies and hold up the Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards as a continental type of awards show and competition, the organisers don't seem to really bother, or want to bother, with making the effort of properly including East or Southern Africa beyond the most superficial level.

MultiChoice and M-Net marketing exec and publicist haven't bothered to issue any information or even a bare-bones transcript, speeches or just notes with talking points, about the exec panel discussion.

The question is why. Are they lazy? Are they incompetent? Are they not aware that it matter? Are they really so clueless that there are media who find it important enough to cover and who would actually want to report on what the pay-TV provider's executives have to say?

Why make the effort of organising a public panel with company executives, and then not actually pass the final hurdle of communicating properly what was said there to media who can't physically attend?

Some press did attend but themselves haven't bothered to report anything about what was actually said at the panel discussion.

This again follows the established pattern of superficial coverage and largely non-coverage of invited media who annually end up doing very little at the Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards although their purpose is supposedly to cover the actual event and things like the panel discussion leading up to it.


The AMVCA organisers and M-Net and MultiChoice should be doing better with media relations and getting information out, and to, the actual journalists and media really covering the TV industry on the continent, but either doesn't know how, or doesn't care to do this better or properly.

The panel discussion apparently would have revolved around how MultiChoice and M-Net is growing original African television programming and investing in films, what these companies are doing to promote new talent, how the new MultiChoice Talent Factory works and what MultiChoice and M-Net are contributing to the continent's video entertainment sector.

The information and the opportunity for the Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards, as well as M-Net and MultiChoice to communicate all of this, would have been interesting but also valuable to not just the TV and film industry across Africa to hear, but also to the broader public who might be following what these companies do and what they are involved in.

Sadly that opportunity of course is lost.

There will however be lots of photos of women in pretty dresses as the Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards deliberately dilutes, through inaction, the focus of what it can really communicate to the public and the industry about what is being done to invest and help improve television and film in Africa.