Friday, 14 June 2013
Tinsel Gulps N4bn In Four Years
Tinsel, Nigeria's longest running soap
opera, aired its one thousandth episode
on May 23, 2013, a landmark
achievement never before
accomplished by any other TV soap in
Nigeria.
Producers of the show MNET Africa
celebrated their milestone success by
staging a 'Tinsel 1000th premiere' event at
Eko Hotels and Suites with its cast and a
large number of other actors and
entertainers attending.
Aside the whole glitz and glamour Tinsel
brought out that night, the 1000th episode
also marked a record financial feat: during
the four years the soap has aired on TV,
costs have exceeded a whooping N4bn,
yes you read that right. N4,000,000,000.
And this, according to NET findings, is a
conservative estimate.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Tinsel was originally created by acclaimed
screenwriter Yinka Ogun (who also
created Tajudeen Adepetu 's 'Everyday
People') and produced by the trio of Femi
Odugbemi (Content Producer), Jaiye Ojo
(Executive Producer) and Lemmy Adebule
(Associate Producer).
With its success, Tinsel has surpassed
other MNET soaps like Doctors Quarters
and Edge of Paradisewhich both failed to
muster a punch on Nigerian Television.
WHAT'S THE FUSS ABOUT TINSEL'S
SUCCESS?
What has made Tinsel's success so
monumental is that it's ousted any other
soap, drama or sitcom that has ever run
on Nigerian Television in terms of budget
and number of episodes. Older soaps that
ran in the 80s and nineties such as
' Checkmate', 'New Masquerade',
'Village Headmaster', 'Ripples' 'Third
eye', 'Cock Crow at Dawn ' don't come
close.
The maths is pretty simple, while the older
soaps (which we are still fond of by the
way) ran weekly, Tinsel runs five days a
week, about 260 days a year, over four
times what a 52-week soap would achieve
in a year. And of course spending a huge
budget to achieve this…
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The soap also runs on terrestrial TV in
Nigeria, making it accessible to over 100m
Nigerians. (SomethingMNET failed to
achieve with the now defunct talent show
Naija Sings, which only ran on cable TV).
PRODUCTION COST
Experts told Nigerian Entertainment
Today last week, that Tinsel's production
cost per minute is $900. The end result of
24 minutes of excitement viewers cuddle
up on their couches to watch every
evening totals to about $21,600. (N3.4m).
It's however a far difference from another
MNET Africa production, the South African
Soap 'Jacob's Cross' which cost about
$2000 per minute to shoot (Jacob's Cross
ran for seven seasons, ending in
November 2012).
TINSEL IS FIRST STUDIO SHOOT IN
MODERN HISTORY
Falling into the category of the old time
Nigerian drama-soaps series e.g: New
Masquerade, Village Headmaster, Tinsel is
the first studio shoot in modern history,
while a lot of other soaps in the 2000s
have been shot in apartments. Of course
the cost of renting a studio would fall in
the millions not to talk about maintenance
costs. MNET until March 2013 were making
use of popular Philips studio located in
Ojota, Lagos. In early March, the most part
of studio was gutted in a fire mishap.
Since then, producers have spent much
more money shooting around town - in
two locations situated in the Ikeja environ
- at a private home in G.R.A and a studio
in Oba Akran both in Lagos. Sources say
MNET is currently building a massive
studio in G.R.A, Ikeja.
The salary structure for regular cast,
insiders tell us is N10,000 per day.
'Episodes are shot concurrently, that's
why we work every day', a staff at Tinsel
says. With a total of 11 major cast
members and an average of 60 recurring
day players, accountants will be
scheduling a huge amount of staff take
home pay every month ending.
STAFF STRENGTH
Tinsel's staff structure is pretty much
simple - every department (e.g Set, lights,
props, costuming, hair and makeup,
visuals etc) has their Heads (H.O.Ds) and
assistants followed by other subordinates.
Staff get paid monthly, so do full time
actors.
BIRTHING NEW TV STARS
Tinsel has been responsible for a breath
of fresh air into the Nigerian acting scene,
many pundits say.
The soap is responsible for the birth of
many young and fast rising Nigerian and
Ghanaian stars like former Big Brother
Nigeria contestant Gideon Okeke, Linda
Ejiofor, Tomi Odunsi, Damilola
Adegbite, Matilda Obaseki, Gbenro
Ajibade, Osas Ighodaro, Chris Attoh and
others. Arguably, these starlets wouldn't
be shining right now if not for the 30
minute soap.
'I feel like it's a dream come true and I'm
proud to be part of history', Gbenro
Ajibade who plays 'Soji' says about Tinsel
hitting its 1000th episode. Ajibade is one
of the first and main casts of the soap.
Another actor Bolanle Okhiria who plays
less regular role 'Zaza' also adds 'It's the
most entertaining soap in Nigeria. They've
helped a lot of upcoming actors'.
The young cast however play a double
edge sword role with the more matured
cast like Victor Olaotan, Ireti Doyle,
Funlola Aofiyebi, and Kunle Coker.
AND THEN OTHER EXPENSES
We can't overlook the huge sum of money
put into publicity and marketing - after all
the daily soap runs in 45 different
countries spread across Africa. Talk about
the huge billboard signs, advert spaces on
primetime TV, online adverts and more.
Other major expenses go into other vital
aspects like Costuming, hair and makeup
and many more.
In spite of the staggering amount of
money put into Tinsel, the soap opera's
influence is highly debatable; it has taken
four good years to get some traction and
some would still argue that its appeal falls
within the 'elitist' class.
The mass audiences are still warming up
to the soap unlike the old soaps (Village
Headmaster, Checkmate, Super Story)
which gathered a cult following almost
immediately. So has it been really worth
all that money?
Perhaps MNET should look at creating
other soap operas truly catching the
massive audience and stirring up reactions
with true social values.
'It is nice they have gotten this far, but I
am not overly excited because I know they
will go farther like Egoli and Generations
which is reaching its seventeenth season',
creator Yinka Ogun told NET on Sunday.
Asked whether any Nigerian soap opera
will reach this milestone in the
foreseeable future, he answered with 'a
capital NO'. 'The investment in Tinsel is
humongous, thanks to M-NET for doing
this…'
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