 Hafiz Oyetoro’s controversial move from Etisalat to MTN as a brand face seems to have changed his fortune for good.
Hafiz Oyetoro’s controversial move from Etisalat to MTN as a brand face seems to have changed his fortune for good.
South Africa-based scholar, Prof. Kole Omotosho, and lecturer at 
Adeniran Ogunsanya College of Education, Hafiz Oyetoro, do not belong to
 the same generation. The distance between Nigeria and SA also implies 
that they cannot be meeting each other constantly. Yet, they both have 
something in common.
They have the enviable record of successfully combining their work as 
lecturers with advertising. Apart from the fact that Omotosho is a 
writer, best known for his controversial novel about Nigeria – Just 
Before Dawn – he has made a name for himself in SA where his face has 
graced several advert bill boards. The latest is the one in which he is 
advertising for Fidelity Bank Plc.
Also, both men are household names in SA and Nigeria. While Omotosho is 
almost worshipped as a cult hero called Yebo Gogo, Oyetoro is popularly 
known as Saka among TV viewers in Nigeria.
Incidentally, at a time when Omotosho’s 70th birthday is still the talk 
of the literary community, Oyetoro, who has also established himself as 
an actor and a popular face on TV, also recently stirred the scene. This
 is courtesy of his ‘shocking’ appearance in the MTN’s 'I don port' 
advert, a commercial that many have described as an excellent one – not 
minding the fact that some believe it is a below-the-belt jab for 
Etisalat, the telecoms company for which he worked as an advertising 
model for some time.
Ever since Oyetoro’s  crossover, in which he is required to lead a major
 advertising campaign to drive the network portability initiative by 
Nigerian Communication Commission, Nigerians have not stopped talking 
about him and his amazing rise to fame and riches.
The deal is believed to be worth about N20m, which is enough to give the
 hardworking and self-effacing actor a clean break from poverty. But 
while the man himself has declined to comment on the positive twist in 
his fortune, he was recently quoted in  THE NEWS as saying that he had 
finally conquered poverty.
“To the glory of God, level don change. Let me put it like that. I 
believe that in the nearest future, level will finally change. But now, 
level don dey change. I have murdered poverty and God has finally 
murdered it for me. I am no longer poor, but very comfortable,” he said.
In a telephone interview with our correspondent on Tuesday, he said he 
was not ready to talk about his new contract with the telecommunications
 company.
“For now, I don’t want to say anything. I promise you that I will talk at the appropriate time,” he said.
But when asked if his new responsibilities as a brand ambassador for MTN
 would not clash with his job at the Adeniran Ogunsanya College of 
Education, he replied, “I am a responsible civil servant. My duty is to 
teach other people’s children well, just as I would expect others to 
teach mine. So I cannot abandon my job. I assure you, everything has 
been taken care of.”
A few years ago, little was known about Oyetoro.
Although he studied Theatre Arts at the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ago 
Iwoye worked as a part-time lecturer at the Olabisi Onabanjo University 
before moving to Adeniran Ogunsanya College of Education in Ijanikin, 
Oyetoro remained relatively obscure for a long while.
In those days, he managed to appear in a few insignificant theatre 
productions, in which he played mostly comic roles. It took a while 
before the qualities that would raise him a notch higher than most of 
his peers began to manifest.
First, Nollywood came calling with an opportunity to establish himself 
as a regular face on the lighted screen. Oyetoro, who was burning up 
with a desire to prove himself, had to grab it. Still, a few years later
 and with appearances in hundreds of Nollywood films to his credit, he 
was far from hitting the limelight.
Then another opportunity presented itself. This time, it came from 
Centrespread, an advertising agency. The agency wanted him to be their 
model for its advertising campaigns with Etisalat. The deal clicked and 
Oyetoro’s transformation began in earnest. That was when, for the 
purpose of the campaigns, he assumed a new identity: he became known 
‘Saka’, a character that he helped create along with other Thespians in 
2004 for a TV comedy series titled ‘House A-part’.
Eventually,  Oyetoro became the face of Etisalat campaigns. Within a 
short time, Saka had become a household name and Oyetoro could look 
forward to a brighter future free of the clutches of poverty.
In an interview published on the Internet, the actor cum lecturer 
admitted that he was involved in a bitter struggle against poverty for a
 long time.
“Poverty was my friend and family for a long time. As you sit with me 
here side by side, that was how I was sitting with poverty in the past,”
 he said.
The struggle against poverty had also cost him the opportunity to settle
 down early enough in life. “There was a lady who disqualified me 
because I didn’t have a car. But, thank God, I eventually got a wife who
 genuinely loves me and who I genuinely love,” he said. Source, Music212
 
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