Peller, the flashy streamer who openly admits he’s not educated, wants an MSc holder to hold his camera—yes, camera. And Nigerians are now asking: How can someone with no degree demand a graduate?
Well, the drama doesn’t end there. A woman who showed up for the role has now exposed how the whole interview turned into content creation. “It wasn’t a job interview,” she said. “It was content farming disguised as opportunity.” So now we’re forced to ask—was this about skill, clout, or just raw disrespect?
So You Can Be Uneducated and Still Set the Rules?
This is where it gets uncomfortable. Peller says, “Yes, I’m uneducated—but I don’t want an uneducated cameraman.” He even joked (or was it really a joke?) that MSc holders were required.
So is it fair? He didn’t go to school, yet demands those who did must now kneel for a job in his shadow. Is that ambition… or arrogance?
Real talk: Are we angry because he’s wrong, or because he’s proof that certificates don’t always win?
From Interview to Humiliation: “He Talked About My Body and Tribe”
One of the applicants, Nkese, didn’t hold back. She recounted how Peller ditched professionalism for mockery:
“He told me Efik isn’t a tribe. Said I’m too big. I went there for a job interview, not a roast session.”
Worse still, she says the whole event was never really about recruitment—it was content for the internet. And just like that, highly educated Nigerians who spent money and travelled long distances became unpaid extras in a TikTok circus.
So here’s the big question: Is this hustle or exploitation?
Peller Responds: “You Can’t Be My Cameraman If You’re Not Educated”
In a livestream clapback, Peller doubled down. “I can’t take someone who’s uneducated to a foreign country and expect good results,” he said. That’s rich—coming from someone who just admitted he isn’t educated himself.
Was this wisdom or self-hate? Is Peller reinforcing the idea that educated Nigerians are only useful when they’re behind the scenes of uneducated success?
Reno Omokri Chimes In: “Life Is the Real School”
Trust Reno Omokri to insert himself into the mix, offering his usual philosophical twist. “Peller didn’t go to school,” he said, “but he’s the one holding interviews while degree holders beg him for a job.”
Classic Reno. Always ready with a motivational nugget—but people aren’t buying it this time. One user asked, “How does your brain work?” Another said, “You’re missing the real issue: disrespect and deception.”
Even if life is a school, is that license to mock those who chose classrooms?
Who Should Be More Ashamed—Peller or the Applicants?
Here’s where things get real uncomfortable. Some say the applicants should have known better—why attend a clown’s interview and expect corporate dignity?
Others say the country is hard, and when someone offers N500K, you show up regardless of your pride.
But what does this say about Nigeria’s job market when MSc holders line up to be humiliated for a cameraman gig?
So Let’s Talk: What’s the Real Offense Here?
- Was Peller wrong for demanding degrees he never earned?
- Are the applicants victims, or just opportunists who misread the room?
- Is this a smart business move, or straight-up classist exploitation?
If Peller had been a tech founder or musician, would we be having this same conversation—or is it because he’s a loud TikToker with no formal education?
So…
Who’s the real joke here?
- The uneducated employer?
- The educated job seekers?
- Or a system where degrees are plenty but dignity is scarce?