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Home Entertainment

Ice Prince’s ₦340M Smoking Revelation

by Chinenye Odikpo
May 30, 2026
in Entertainment
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Ice Prince's ₦340M Smoking Revelation

The celebrity weed confession Photo Credit_Google

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Desk Entertainment
Story Mode Culture & Lifestyle Report
Region Culture & Society
Public Interest Culture, identity, creativity, lifestyle and social meaning

Ice Prince’s ₦340M Smoking Revelation Why Ice Prince and Ebuka Smoking Confession Matter

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Publication

Publication Date

Odikpo Chinenye

Morganable

May 30, 2026

abuja —

The Nigerian entertainment industry is famous for its glitz, glamour, and the carefully curated illusion of perfect, luxury lifestyles. Fans look up to their favorite music stars and media personalities as larger-than-life figures who have it all figured out. However, the entertainment landscape experienced a massive shift recently as a wave of unexpected honesty took over the airwaves. Instead of showing off flashy cars, expensive jewelry, or premium champagne, major celebrities began opening up about a much darker, highly sensitive topic: substance addiction. Dubbed by fans and media houses as the “Weed Confessions,” this sudden movement toward raw transparency has completely shattered the traditional celebrity persona in Nigeria, triggering vital conversations about health, finance, and peer pressure.

Two major public figures have driven this trending national discourse. First, legendary veteran hip-hop artist Ice Prince Zamani shocked the nation by breaking down the staggering financial and physical toll his long-term smoking habit took on his life. Shortly after, Nigeria’s most prominent television host, Ebuka Obi-Uchendu, added his voice to the conversation, sharing a deeply personal history of a thirteen-year-old addiction that quietly began during his formative school days. Together, these confessions have pulled back the curtain on the hidden realities of entertainment culture, forcing both fans and industry players to look beyond the hype.

Ice Prince’s ₦340 Million Wake-Up Call
For over a decade, Ice Prince has been celebrated as one of the pioneers of modern commercial African rap, dominating global charts with historic monster hits like “Oleku.” Yet, behind the international awards and stadium performances, the rapper was battling an expensive and consuming habit. In a recent, highly public interview, Ice Prince dropped a bombshell that instantly dominated headlines across West Africa: he estimated that he had spent a staggering ₦340 million solely on purchasing cannabis over a six-year period.

To the average Nigerian citizen navigating a tough economy, this enormous number was hard to process. Ice Prince explained that the lifestyle of a touring musician often normalizes heavy substance use, making it incredibly easy to lose track of both financial spending and personal well-being. He revealed that his decision to completely quit smoking was driven by two heavy realizations: financial discipline and long-term physical health.

The veteran rapper admitted that looking back at the sheer amount of capital literally going up in smoke made him re-evaluate his future asset management. More importantly, he began to feel the physical toll that constant smoking was taking on his stamina, vocal cords, and general mental clarity. By stepping forward with his story, Ice Prince did something rare for an old-school rap icon: he admitted vulnerability, showing young, upcoming artists that the “cool” rockstar lifestyle comes with a massive, unsustainable price tag.

Ebuka Obi-Uchendu: The Secondary School Trap
While Ice Prince’s story highlighted the financial extravagance of adult stardom, media personality Ebuka Obi-Uchendu brought a completely different, highly relatable perspective to the table. Known globally as the pristine, flawlessly dressed host of Big Brother Naija, Ebuka embodies sophistication and ultimate self-control on screen. That is precisely why his sudden confession sent shockwaves through social media.

Ebuka revealed that he had battled a severe, thirteen-year smoking addiction that didn’t start at a glamorous celebrity party, but rather in the dormitory corridors of secondary school. He opened up about the powerful reality of youth peer pressure, explaining how a desire to fit in with older, seemingly cool classmates led him to pick up his very first cigarette at a tender age. What started as an innocent schoolboy experiment quickly spiraled into a powerful, decade-long dependency that followed him all the way through university and into the early years of his professional media career.

Ebuka’s transparency highlighted a critical truth that many Nigerian families prefer to ignore: substance abuse often starts incredibly early, long before an individual ever enters the limelight. His story shifted the focus of the debate toward parental guidance, boarding school environments, and the heavy psychological weight of childhood peer pressure. By explaining how difficult it was to break a habit that had rooted itself deep into his daily routine for thirteen years, Ebuka demystified the struggle of quitting, offering a beacon of hope to millions of young people currently trapped in similar cycles.

Breaking the Stigma and Changing the Narrative
Historically, discussing substance abuse in Nigeria has been treated as a major taboo. Society often looks down on individuals struggling with addiction, labeling them with harsh moral judgments rather than viewing the issue as a public health concern. Because of this intense cultural stigma, many people especially high-profile celebrities choose to suffer in silence, hiding their struggles behind beautiful Instagram photos and highly edited public relations statements.

This is exactly why the “Weed Confessions” matter so much. When heavyweights like Ice Prince and Ebuka intentionally choose to speak openly about their past struggles, they strip away the shame associated with the topic. They show their massive audiences that addiction does not discriminate; it can affect the most successful artist or the most educated professional.

Furthermore, these confessions directly challenge the dangerous pop-culture narrative that constantly links artistic creativity and high social status to drug use. For years, music videos and lifestyle influencers have subtly marketed smoking as an essential tool for creative inspiration or a required badge of elite social belonging. Hearing established, highly respected veterans explicitly state that breaking free from the habit was the best decision they ever made offers a powerful counter-narrative for the younger generation.

The Ripple Effect Across Pop Culture
The honesty from these entertainment icons has created a beautiful ripple effect across the Nigerian digital space. Since the interviews aired, online comment sections have transformed into safe spaces where ordinary everyday Nigerians are sharing their own recovery stories, discussing the cost of habits, and encouraging one another to seek help.

This unexpected moment of transparency is an encouraging sign of growth for the Nigerian entertainment industry. It proves that the country’s biggest stars are beginning to recognize the immense social responsibility that comes with their massive platforms. By choosing raw truth over fake perfection, Ice Prince and Ebuka have sparked a cultural shift that could save lives, change perspectives, and inspire a healthier, more financially conscious generation of creators.

To listen directly to the candid discussions and watch the media reactions that sparked this nationwide conversation, you can view this report on the Celebrity Weed Confessions & Entertainment Culture. This video package dives deeper into the specific interview moments where these stars detailed their journeys toward sobriety.

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Chinenye Odikpo

Chinenye Odikpo

Chinenye Odikpo is a Staff Reporter at Morganable, covering Entertainment and Lifestyle news with a focus on culture, people, creativity, public life, and the stories shaping contemporary society. At Morganable, she reports on developments across the entertainment industry, lifestyle trends, personalities, events, fashion, arts, media, and human-interest stories. Her work supports Morganable’s commitment to credible, engaging, and well-presented journalism that informs readers while capturing the energy of modern culture. As part of the Morganable newsroom, Chinenye contributes to the publication’s growing coverage of entertainment and lifestyle issues, bringing attention to the people, movements, trends, and cultural moments that influence public conversation locally and globally.

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