In 2024, something shocking happened in Nigeria — and most people missed the deeper meaning.
20 Master’s degree holders applied for a cameraman job.
Not at a TV station. Not at a media house. But with a young content creator named Peller, known for making videos with just a smartphone and creativity.
This wasn’t a comedy skit — it was real. And it exposed a deep crack in Nigeria’s system.
For years, youth were told:
“Study hard. Get a degree. You’ll succeed.”
But between 2010 and 2025, the dream faded. Thousands graduated into a job market that didn’t want them. Corruption, low pay, and outdated systems left brilliant minds broke and forgotten.
Meanwhile, creators like Peller — without fancy degrees — rose to fame, income, and influence. Not because they followed the rules, but because they rewrote them.
This moment wasn’t just about one man. It was a turning point in Nigeria’s history — where content became currency, and the old education system was exposed as broken.
So we ask:
Is education still the key — or has the lock changed?
Watch the full story here and decide for yourself:
This is not just content.
It’s history in motion.