What YCee, Peller and the ‘Olodo Uprising’ Reveal About Nigeria’s Education Crisis
The debate sparked by rapper YCee’s comments about an “Olodo Uprising” has gone far beyond a clash of opinions with streamer Peller. Beneath the social media arguments lies a deeper conversation about the state of education, opportunity and the values shaping young Nigerians today.
When Nigerian rapper YCee appeared on the Afropolitan Podcast and lamented what he described as an “Olodo Uprising,” social media reacted almost exactly as expected. The conversation quickly became another celebrity debate. Was he shading streamer Peller? Was he elitist? Was he dismissive of young Nigerians who had found fame outside conventional education? Others defended his remarks, arguing that he merely voiced an uncomfortable truth.
Lost beneath the arguments, however, was a more important question: what if the “Olodo Uprising” YCee described is not the disease but a symptom? What if the growing celebration of spectacle over scholarship reflects something much deeper than internet culture? What if it reveals the consequences of decades of neglecting education in Nigeria?
The temptation is to blame TikTok, livestreams or influencers for what appears to be an erosion of intellectual culture. But anti-intellectualism did not begin with social media, nor with Peller. It began much earlier, in classrooms abandoned by the state, universities disrupted by endless strikes, and a society where education increasingly failed to guarantee opportunity.
For years, successive Nigerian governments have treated education less as an investment than an obligation to be minimally fulfilled. The consequences are now impossible to ignore. In 2026, Nigeria continues to have one of the world’s largest populations of out-of-school children. Estimates by the Federal Ministry of Education and international agencies place the figure between 15 and 18.3 million. Public schools struggle with poor infrastructure, teacher shortages and overcrowded classrooms. Universities continue to grapple with inadequate funding, while many graduates leave school only to confront unemployment or underemployment.
In such an environment, education ceases to represent certainty. It becomes a gamble. That changing perception perhaps explains the rise of one of contemporary Nigeria’s most telling catchphrases: “School na scam.” It is easy for older generations to dismiss the phrase as youthful laziness or a rejection of hard work. But slogans rarely become popular without reflecting lived experience. “School na scam” did not emerge because young Nigerians suddenly became allergic to learning. It emerged because many have watched graduates spend years searching for jobs. At the same time, people who built careers through entertainment, social media, sports or even criminal enterprise appear to attain wealth and influence much faster.
This is not to suggest that education lacks value. Rather, it reflects a growing belief that society itself no longer rewards education proportionately. Every society teaches its young people what success looks like.
Sometimes it teaches through classrooms. Sometimes it teaches through incentives. In today’s Nigeria, the incentives are increasingly contradictory. Students are told that education is the surest path to success. Yet they watch graduates drive commercial motorcycles, work jobs unrelated to their qualifications or remain unemployed for years. At the same time, they see internet personalities, musicians, content creators and public figures accumulate enormous wealth and admiration in relatively short periods. Even more troubling is the visibility of individuals whose wealth appears disconnected from productive enterprise, reinforcing the dangerous impression that results matter more than the means by which they are achieved.
People naturally follow incentives. When a society consistently appears to reward visibility more than knowledge, fame more than expertise and wealth more than enterprise, it should not be surprised when young people begin to question the value of formal education.
This changing value system is reflected in popular culture. For years, popular Nigerian music has increasingly centred on themes of wealth acquisition, luxury consumption and financial success. Many songs glorify “billing,” quick money, extravagant lifestyles, and, at times, references that blur into internet-fraud culture. Music is rarely the cause of social change. More often, it is its mirror. Artists create within the realities around them, amplifying prevailing aspirations rather than inventing them.
If these themes dominate today’s music, it is partly because they resonate with lived experiences and public desires. Art imitates life long before life imitates art. Yet the cultural landscape has not only shifted because of economics. It has also been transformed by technology.
The attention economy rewards a completely different set of behaviours from those traditionally associated with learning. On livestreaming platforms and social media, success is measured by engagement, watch time, reactions and shares. Algorithms prioritise spectacle, conflict, humour and emotional intensity because these keep audiences watching. The more outrageous the content, the greater the likelihood of visibility.
This is hardly unique to Nigeria. Across the world, influencers increasingly compete for attention by escalating performances, embracing controversy or creating increasingly bizarre content. Expertise often struggles to compete with entertainment because the digital economy rewards immediacy rather than depth.
Peller, whether fairly or unfairly, has become a symbol of this ecosystem. His success illustrates how digital platforms can elevate personalities whose primary currency is attention rather than specialised knowledge. But reducing the conversation to Peller alone misses the broader reality. Removing Peller and another creator would almost certainly occupy the same space because the system itself rewards that kind of visibility. The platform is not the root problem. It simply magnifies values that already exist.
There was a time when intellectual excellence occupied a more visible place in Nigerian popular culture. Educational programmes such as Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? and national quiz competitions turned knowledge into entertainment. School debates received attention. Science competitions inspired admiration. Winning through intellect was publicly celebrated.
For many Nigerians who grew up in the 2000s, evenings often meant watching contestants answer difficult questions for life-changing prizes. Intelligence was not hidden away in classrooms; it occupied primetime television.
Those moments have become increasingly rare. Today’s digital landscape offers young people countless opportunities to become famous, but comparatively few opportunities to see scholarship rewarded with the same enthusiasm. Visibility has expanded, while public celebration of academic excellence has diminished.
This is why the “Olodo Uprising” debate cannot be resolved by blaming individual content creators or mocking young people who embrace internet culture. The conditions that produced this moment are structural.
Governments cannot underfund education for decades, allow millions of children to remain out of school, normalise disruptions to higher education and preside over an economy where graduates struggle to find meaningful employment, then expect society to continue placing unwavering faith in education.
Neither can families preach the virtues of hard work while public life increasingly celebrates unexplained wealth, conspicuous consumption, and influence detached from productive contribution.
Young people are paying attention. They always have. If Nigeria genuinely wants to reverse this growing anti-intellectual current, the response must extend beyond moral lectures. It requires rebuilding confidence in education itself.
That begins with significantly increasing investment in public education, improving school infrastructure, training and retaining teachers, reducing the number of out-of-school children and creating an economy capable of absorbing skilled graduates. Academic excellence must once again become visible and aspirational. Government, private institutions and the media all have roles to play in celebrating scholarship as enthusiastically as they celebrate entertainment.
Equally important is cultivating a culture that rewards enterprise over mere displays of wealth. Young Nigerians deserve examples that demonstrate that diligence, creativity and knowledge remain worthwhile paths to success. YCee’s remarks may have sounded provocative, but the real provocation lies elsewhere. A society that steadily weakens its educational institutions while rewarding visibility above substance should not be surprised when anti-intellectualism flourishes.
The “Olodo Uprising” did not emerge overnight. It is what happens when a nation gradually convinces its young people that learning matters less than being seen, that knowledge pays less than virality. That education is valuable only in theory.
If Nigeria wants to change that narrative, it must do more than argue over YCee and Peller. It must make school worth believing in again.
Source: TrendyBeatz