For more than a decade, Nollywood has undergone a dramatic transformation—one driven not by cinemas or DVDs, but by digital platforms, most notably YouTube.
The platform has empowered filmmakers, created new stars, and introduced Nigerian films to worldwide audiences at unprecedented speed. But with this revolution has come a growing temptation: the buying of fake views. It is a trend that actress and filmmaker Ruth Kadiri recently condemned, calling it a silent threat to the industry’s integrity.
This story looks beyond the headlines to explore how Nollywood got here, what creators used before YouTube became dominant, and why some filmmakers are now taking unethical shortcuts.
Before YouTube: How Nollywood Survived the DVD Era
Long before streaming, Nollywood’s engine ran on DVDs and physical distribution networks. In the early 2000s, filmmakers relied heavily on marketers in Lagos’s Alaba International Market, who controlled distribution across West Africa. These marketers funded movies, printed DVDs, and moved them through large networks of street vendors. Success was measured not by views, but by physical sales.
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For many creators, especially independents, this system brought significant limitations. DVD pirates disrupted revenue streams, opaque accounting practices left filmmakers underpaid, and new voices struggled to break into a tightly-controlled market. A film’s reach was limited by geography—if your DVDs didn’t travel, your story didn’t travel.
Filmmakers craved freedom, transparency, and direct access to their audience. As DVD sales rapidly declined in the late 2010s, that desire grew more urgent.
The Arrival of YouTube: A New Playground for Creativity
YouTube became an unexpected lifeline.
By the time streaming giants like Netflix and Showmax entered Nigeria’s space, YouTube had already opened the door for independent producers to bypass the traditional system entirely. Any filmmaker with a camera, editing software, and a good story could upload content and potentially reach millions—without begging a marketer for approval.
Ruth Kadiri is one of the filmmakers who maximized this opportunity. Her channel, built through consistent uploads and relatable storytelling, has become a home for loyal viewers. She represents a new wave of Nollywood creators who found financial independence on the platform.
YouTube offered four key benefits:
- Global Visibility – A filmmaker in Benin City could reach viewers in Canada, Kenya, or the UK instantly.
- Monetization – Revenue from ads created a sustainable income source for creators.
- Creative Freedom – No gatekeepers, no restrictive commercial formulas.
- Analytics and Feedback – Real numbers, real engagement, and real community building.
In the eyes of many, YouTube restored dignity to independent filmmaking. It allowed creators to build their own audience rather than rent it.
When Success Became a Number: The Temptation of Fake Views
But as with every open platform, new challenges emerged. Over time, view counts became a visible measure of success—something audiences, marketers, and even actors began to use as a yardstick for quality and influence.
Here lies the root of the problem.
As Kadiri noted during a panel at AFRIFF, “Two years ago, one million views was a big deal. Today it has become the baseline.” She revealed that some filmmakers are now “buying views” to make their films appear more popular than they are.
The reasons are complex:
- Pressure to Compete
With so many Nollywood channels popping up, competition has intensified. A channel that once celebrated 200,000 views now feels overshadowed by others claiming millions overnight.
- Perception of Success
High view counts attract advertisers, sponsors, and even better collaboration opportunities. Some filmmakers artificially inflate these numbers to appear more successful than their peers.
- The Algorithm Race
Creators fear that low-performing videos will bury their content in YouTube’s algorithm. Fake views offer a shortcut to visibility—even though it violates YouTube’s policies.
- Industry Validation
Actors now ask about viewership before accepting roles. Marketers compare numbers when negotiating brand deals. With so much weight placed on metrics, some filmmakers bend the rules to stay relevant.
The Cost of Inflated Numbers
Fake views harm more than just YouTube’s integrity—they damage the ecosystem Nollywood is trying to build.
Kadiri warned that these inflated metrics mislead audiences and discourage filmmakers who genuinely work hard for organic growth. A creator who celebrates 500,000 honest views may feel inadequate compared to someone who artificially pushes their film to two million.
Even worse, fake numbers shift attention from storytelling to statistics. Writers and directors begin focusing on “what will go viral” instead of what makes a compelling film.
Reclaiming Authenticity: Kadiri’s Call to Action
Kadiri believes Nollywood must return to valuing authenticity over digital clout. She urges platforms, content creators, and the film community to build a culture where real engagement matters more than inflated metrics.
She also encourages young filmmakers not to be intimidated by unrealistic benchmarks. “Your growth is your growth,” she often tells emerging creators.
YouTube remains a powerful tool—a platform that has given Nollywood more freedom than ever before. But for it to continue empowering filmmakers, the industry must confront the growing addiction to fake validation.
If Nollywood can prioritize real storytelling over artificial numbers, the digital future of African cinema will be stronger, more honest, and far more sustainable.













