Saturday, 18 April 2020

Saturday, 14 March 2020

Wednesday, 1 January 2020

Ronke: Founder of Miss Charismatic Nigeria pageant NewYear post

If you recall sometimes in July 2018, that an interview was granted by Ronke on the issue of Nudity in Nollywood, the excerpts seems a preparation for an act to me.
These days, nudity seems the name of the game and so many are warming up to it with flourish. But for Miss Charismatic at the Most Beautiful Girl in Nigeria (MBGN) 2013 and the founder of Miss Charismatic Nigeria pageant, #Ronke Tiamiyu, nudity is not all trashy if the intent has positive connotations. To her, there’s distasteful and tasteful nudity. “Nudity is a controversial topic these days as more women embrace their femininity and break from some of the older, more close-minded ideals of society,” she began airily, in a chat with Potpourri. “Nudity for the sake of creating gossip to cause a stir and get people to notice you is really just trying to hide a lack of talent. Nudity can be artistic though. It has to be tasteful and fit the scene. It must tell a story. It cannot be nudity just for the sake of nudity. There must be an artistic element to it. I also think a person embracing their body, whether their body is beautiful, skinny, fat, a little chubby, athletic, it doesn’t matter, it’s an important message.
Is this a gossip or notice me kind off that uncelebrated artist sought for themselves? “People must be comfortable in their own skin and embrace who they are and not judge themselves and their body by society’s standards. All of us are flawed and have imperfections, and that’s okay. You should love your body and if in doing so, this leads you to pose Nude or be Nude in a scene, then I applaud that person because it takes a great deal of confidence to do it. It can send a great message to love who you are, the beautiful, imperfect you. Again, just so long as this is done artistically and not as a means to get noticed, then it’s just trashy,” she said.