
Cheers to 2025
Every New Year holds promise, as though it is any different from the turn of
I am privileged to share the journey to making my first film.
Behind the Glass| The Short Film| The Journey
I recollect fondly, many years ago, while completely immersed in the theatrics of seasoned actors as they performed one of Prof. Wole Soyinka’s popular stage play at the Terra Kulture in Lagos, how the award winning playwright must have felt seeing his words come alive gracefully on stage.
That thought resonated even more after the curtain was drawn and the announcer acknowledged the erudite Professor’s presence in the theater to rousing cheers, applause and cat calls. I turned in awe to see the grey-haired afro bearing septuagenarian bob his head up and down elegantly in return.
There was no way I could understand how he felt at the time, after all, he had seen scores of his plays on Broadway and other renowned theatres the world over.
The feeling must have been watered down over the years, or so I thought. I imagined that he would feel elated at the idea of seeing his work in flesh and at some point, critical of the performances of the actors as they struggled with the interpreting of his literary works.
Years later, when I got the invitation in June 2022 to the Okolo Art community Maiden edition showcase, that featured poetry, art, dance, recitation and drama, I was just grateful to be a special guest at the event in Ibadan.
At the time, I thought nothing more of it. My publisher, who shared the invitation, did not give any hint of what laid ahead at the event.
During one of the stage performances that afternoon, I was shell shocked to hear familiar names and lines from my second work of fiction –Waste of Sin.
By the time it dawned on me that the actors were dramatizing my work, my first reaction was that of confusion and utter shyness.
Although no one in the hall at the time had any inkling who the author of the dramatized work was, I felt an overwhelming timidness. I wasn’t Prof Wole Soyinka neither was I anywhere near his dexterity and skillset with the mastery of words nor the exhilarating fame that came with it.
The way I felt that afternoon was nowhere near what he must have felt.
But it felt good! Darn good!
There I was, completely mesmerized by the actors as they darted effortlessly about the stage bringing color and life to thoughts that I conceived while seated on my dining table in Lagos.
If the actors got their lines wrong during the performance I couldn’t care less, I was just glad that they considered my work worthy of their time.
The thought was then conceived. If they could get a group of seasoned actors to reproduce the script on stage in Ibadan, how difficult could it be to get them to switch to acting behind the camera.
If my works must be turned into a movie, then I would have to enlist the support of seasoned Nollywood producers and A-list actors for the works, that was for sure.
I killed the idea, after giving it a lot of thoughts.
I decided that making my works into a movie, when all I had to show was just three books. I was certain that making movies from my works would distract me greatly from completing my lofty target of “10books before I am 50!”
To achieve this goal, I would clearly need to publish a book every year until I am fifty, especially knowing that I am only 29. (that sounded like I have got a lot of time on my hands…lol)
I concluded that I would consider movie production as part of my retirement plan and the 10stories (when I am 50) would form the seed investment for an illustrious career in showbiz. Gbam!
My next stint with showbiz was a scheduled meeting with Zeb Ejiro!
How could I have imagined meeting with the producer extraordinaire whose name was constant with film credits after each episode of popular soap operas that dominated our TV screens in the 90s.
Produced by Zeb Ejiro
Directed by Zeb Ejiro
Executive Producer – Zeb Ejiro
The Nollywood maestro and pioneer, honored an invitation by an old friend of his, who owned the drink.ng brand.
I had only been briefly introduced to him 24hours earlier, yet he set up the meeting on my behalf.
Networking is Bae!
I recollect that an Indian friend of mine, YY, was greatly enthused about my second book – Waste of Sin, after he had read and shared copies with the Indian community in Ilupeju.
I am certain I have not met a middle-aged man with such boundless energy and positive vibes as YY. For his age, it is inconceivable how he seeks out opportunities to connect people within his social circle. And he did this effortlessly whether the person was Indian or not. His social circle included, actors (I met some Bollywood actors), directors, tourists.
YY always smiled heartily, no wonder he looked almost ageless at 50. Same face, same smile, same energy since I have known him.
He is the second best connectologist I have ever met, second only to Kamil Olufowobi- The world greatest!
YY pulled the strings and within a few days, I was connected with Zeb Ejiro, whom I gifted copies of my first two books in anticipation of his feedback on the commercial viability of making a movie off any of the stories.
YY also assembled a group of movie enthusiast- all Indians, who were willing to sponsor the movie!
Amazing! In this life, have quality connects!
It felt like moving from zero to a hundred within a week and this is something only a few individuals like YY could pull off. He called, texted, harried and prompted his friends, showing an uncommon zeal for success, so much that one could have thought he owned the collection of stories.
Zeb reverted within two weeks with positive news for all the stories.
This was a great validation.
What was left was the sponsors and they were ready to commit on the condition that I put in the hardwork.
The big decision was whether to commit to the big dream of making all my movies myself as my retirement and leisure plan or to pursue glory in the immediate jettisoning my “10 books before 50 goal.”
Sadly, I disappointed my new Indian friends.
What was required of me was the least in the scheme of things, yet I didn’t put in any effort!
None!
I watched the project suffocate from lack of attention till it fizzled away and died naturally.
I wasn’t ready. I just wasn’t ready!
Unknown to me, another temptation was lurking in the corner after my third published work.
I didn’t see it coming.
It came disguised as a meeting over drinks to talk about life, career and the medium-term future with an acquaintance.
Enter Mansu!
She was relocating out of the country and was touching base with contacts in hope that it could spark a project. She had authored a couple of books for kids and had her hands in everything artistic at the time. I was meeting her only for the first time although we engaged occasionally via text messages.
I am certain we both did not think that the seeming innocuous meeting would berth a great feat only a few months later.
We exchanged copies of our books and promised to give feedback after we were done reading.
A few weeks later she was talking about making one of the 14 stories in Dreams from Yesterday into a movie!
There you go!
I didn’t decline her request. How could I? She is a bundle of talent and an eclectic version of myself many years ago. She is self-motivated, has got energy that can move mountains and never walked alone. She has got a contact list that can be quantified in huge monetary terms.
Unlike the previous attempt to turn my book into a movie with my Indian friends, she had read the stories and could connect with the message and the general theme.
The fact that she is an author also meant that she could empathize with the typical challenges that young (at 29, YES) authors like myself had to contend with.
Since I had passed on the sponsorship offer on my second book, Mansu and I produced and bore the cost of production of a low budget short film for “Too impaired to deal”- the 9th story in “Dreams from yesterday”.
The film is titled “Behind the Glass”
Mansu pulled all the strings, to be honest, while I was just there for the ride. She worked on the budget, selected the young actors to work with, engaged the crew, chose location, fought off betrayals from colleagues and worked tirelessly against time and a tight budget to deliver her first movie as a producer.
Weeks later, I turned on my laptop to watch the first cut of the movie and I got emotional. No, I didn’t shed tears. I felt some type of way that words are incompetent to describe.
The closest to it would be fulfilment. However, the movie project left me with more questions than answers.
Maybe I should have made the movies years ago! Perhaps I should have collaborated with the Indians who wanted to write a script that included Bollywood romance in Waste of Sin.
Maybe I should have enjoyed the sponsorship without the burden of working on a budget only months later.
Maybe this. Maybe that. Maybe yadayada!
In my opinion, this was just the right time to produce the movie.
Mansu was just the right person to work with now. Life calls for completeness not perfection and the right time was just now.
Look out for the short movie “Behind the Glass” soon!
Cheers.

Every New Year holds promise, as though it is any different from the turn of

I want to tell you something about confidence that most people get spectacularly wrong.
And I mean that without arrogance — because I got it wrong too, for longer than I care to admit. I walked into rooms with my chest out and my chin up and told myself that was confidence. I practiced certain expressions in the mirror before big presentations. I rehearsed answers to imagined tough questions in the shower until the water ran cold.
I looked confident. I performed confidence quite convincingly, if I do say so myself.

There is a conversation you have been postponing.
You know the one. It has been living rent-free in the back of your head for days, possibly weeks. You have rehearsed it in the shower. You have drafted opening lines in your head while stuck on the Third Mainland Bridge. You have imagined seventeen different versions of how it could go, and approximately sixteen of them ended badly.
So you have said nothing. You have smiled when you did not feel like smiling, agreed when you wanted to disagree, and quietly let something important fester because the alternative — the actual conversation — felt like detonating a device in a room you still have to live in.

There is a category of question that polite intellectual company tends to avoid: the kind that, if you pull the thread long enough, begins to unravel not just a specific mystery but the entire fabric of what we think we know about human history. The Pyramids of Giza are that thread. They have been standing in the Egyptian desert for roughly 4,500 years.

Let me take you somewhere. Not to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean — at least, not yet. First, to Lagos. Nigeria. Sometime in the late 1980s. A teenager who should probably have been revising for exams is instead sitting cross-legged on the floor of a library, holding a book that is older than most of the furniture around it, reading about a city beneath the sea.

This is my story of discovering a film that challenged everything I thought I knew about the gift of time, every pulsating detail documented to inspire you to leap beyond your limitations and appreciate the beauty of growing old.
This story explores the paradox of immortality and why a movie from 2015 still resonates so deeply with audiences today.
I hope you find it worth your time.

This is my story, every pulsating detail documented to inspire you to question what you know and leap beyond your limitations.
This story is about the audacity of belief, the power of a well-told lie, and the journey to unlearn the things that poisoned my teenage mind.
I hope you find it worth your time.

There is a category of question that polite intellectual company tends to avoid: the kind that, if you pull the thread long enough, begins to unravel not just a specific mystery but the entire fabric of what we think we know about human history. The Pyramids of Giza are that thread. They have been standing in the Egyptian desert for roughly 4,500 years.

There is a peculiar kind of madness that does not arrive with hallucinations or trembling hands. It arrives quietly. At two in the morning. In a small desert town in New Mexico. It sounds like an idling diesel engine somewhere in the distance — except there is no engine. It sounds like a bass note being held by an invisible orchestra — except there is no orchestra.

Let me confess something. Long before LinkedIn articles, podcasts, and leadership keynotes became my world, I was a teenager sneaking to the library

In an era that increasingly demands hyper-specialization, Akin Akingbogun stands out as a refreshing anomaly. He is a man who refuses to be confined to a single box.

There is a particular kind of silence that falls on a man when the phone stops ringing, the proposals go unanswered, and the diary that once groaned under the weight of appointments sits quietly — almost mockingly — open. If you have ever been there, you know it.

Let me tell you something uncomfortable: the most generous person you know — the one who volunteers every weekend, donates quietly, never asks for anything in return — is probably getting something out of it. Not money. Maybe not even recognition. But something.

Adaeze had been awake since 4 a.m.
Not because she was anxious — though she was — but because this trip felt different. After eighteen months of follow-ups, phone calls, and PowerPoint presentations polished to a mirror shine, the deal was finally ready to close. An investor meeting in Abuja. A partnership that would change the trajectory of her small but gutsy consulting firm. She had triple-checked her flight, her documents, her outfit. She had prayed. She was ready.
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6 thoughts on “Behind the Glass -The Short Film”
That’s really exciting news about the movie version of your novel! It’s always tough to lose opportunities, but it sounds like you’re turning things around in a big way. I can’t wait to see how your story comes to life on screen☺️
Oh mine I can’t wait to see how your story will come out on life screen am so excited.
Well done
Great news! I’m not bothered one bit about the possibility of an earlier production, at the right time it will hit the screens. You always have it in you, I mnow that for sure.
Well done, brother
I’m sure the movie version is going to be a banger. Welldone boss and more knowledge and wisdom sir
Awesome! Keep up the great work.More grace and wisdom.I can’t wait to see the movie and I trust it will be as interesting as the book.