Popular comedian Ayo ‘AY’ Makun, has realized he made an error in
judgement when a joke about media Lords, Kenny ‘Keke’ Ogungbe and Dayo
‘D1’ Adeneye didn’t go down well with them and has since issued a public
apology to that effect.
AY, In an open letter on his Facebook page and signed by him,
explained that it was only a ‘harmless joke that meant neither
vilification nor slight’. He further explained that the ‘joke was only a
spontaneous exaggeration by a comedian who needed to just lie to the
world and make a living from it’.
The apology which is a 5-paragraph letter, makes reference to
different important personalities that have received a fair share of
comedians’ taunts and goes on to say ‘the truth of the matter is that
only those revered by society enter into the contemporary comical
repertoire. Please may all VIP’s note this down.’
Here’s a part of the letter where the apology is tendered:
“Dear Kennis Music, permit me to modestly state that it was an
harmless joke that meant neither vilification nor slight when I said “
we all saw an advert on television confirming that Kenny and D One were
going to cover the Red Carpet at the last Grammy Awards in America for
our viewing pleasure back home in Nigeria, Only for us to find the two
of them interviewing their own artiste Jawon (around an American 3rd
Mainland Bridge very far from the venue) without having access to the
venue and foreign celebs at the event”. That joke was only a spontaneous
exaggeration by a comedian who needed to just lie to the world and make
a living from it.The naivety and clumsiness in attacking you aside, you
and I know very well that any attack on you by any comedian is as
pointless as a wild-goose chase. However, my sincere apologies if I
exaggerated in my jokes. Please no harm was intended. It was rather a
confirmation of your significance to society. The several great artistes
you created will witness better to this than my little self. Again, by
‘agelessness’ I intended the lasting glamour of your presence in the
entertainment industry, and the future and perpetuity you stand for in
the music enterprise. This is it; no equivocation was intended. Please
forgive and forget.”


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