20/07/2025
📢 Peller didn’t do anything wrong. Y’all are just emotional, entitled, and confused about how the internet works in 2025.
Let’s be honest — when a content creator says “₦500,000 job offer” and only wants applicants with a Master’s degree for a cameraman role, that should already tell you something’s *off* or at least unconventional. But no — Nigerians pulled up with CVs, clean suits, and dreams of financial freedom. Now that the whole thing turned out to be content, everyone is crying foul. But let’s pause — **was anyone really lied to?**
This is not a government agency. It’s not Shell, it’s not Dangote. It’s a **streamer** — a guy whose entire life is built on shock, attention, and audience engagement. So why do we act surprised that he used a job ad as content? Is it fair? Maybe not. Is it smart? Absolutely.
This entire outrage smells like selective morality. Y’all cheer when skit makers prank people, or when influencers fake phone calls and giveaways for likes. But now that someone used an interview scenario, suddenly we’re preaching ethics? Be serious.
Nobody forced anyone to come. Nobody was dragged. They saw the flier, decided it was worth the risk, and walked in — knowing it could be real or fake. That’s the gamble of internet-age opportunity. If you don’t want to be part of the game, don’t play.
Let’s also be clear — **this generation is in love with outrage**. One moment we’re begging for jobs, the next we’re dragging someone because their method of hiring didn’t align with our expectations. Life doesn’t owe us a perfectly packaged opportunity.
Now we’re hearing lawsuits, defamation claims, ₦500 million damages — over what? A content creator asking questions and not giving you a job? C’mon. Emotional disappointment isn’t a crime.
What Peller did was capitalize on public desperation — and that’s uncomfortable, but it’s not illegal. Politicians do it every election cycle. Brands do it during every “promo.” He just brought it to the