The global rise of Afrobeats is undeniable, but beneath the infectious rhythms and high-energy dance moves lies a controversial sub-narrative. For years, critics and researchers have argued that the genre has become a primary vehicle for the promotion and normalization of “Yahoo Yahoo” (internet fraud). What started as subtle nods to “hustle” has transformed into a blatant celebration of cybercrime, where the fraudster is no longer a villain but a folk hero. This evolution suggests that Afrobeats isn’t just reflecting society, it is actively shaping a moral code that makes financial exploitation look like a divine blessing.
The Foundation: Olu Maintain and the “Yahooze” Era
To understand how we got here, we must look back at 2007 and the release of Olu Maintain’s “Yahooze.” At the time, the song was a cultural phenomenon, even famously danced to by former US Secretary of State Colin Powell. While many international listeners saw it as a simple party anthem about wealth, Nigerians recognized the title immediately. “Yahooze” became the unofficial national anthem for the first generation of Yahoo Boys.

The song focused on the extravagant lifestyle that followed a successful “payday” the luxury cars, expensive champagne, and spraying of cash. It set the blueprint for using music to “launder” the image of cybercriminals, turning the act of defrauding others into a celebratory milestone of success.
If Olu Maintain was subtle, Kelly Hansome was direct. The title itself, “Maga Don Pay,” literally translates to “The Fool has Paid.” The song celebrates a successful transaction with a victim (the Maga). It frames the fraudster as someone who has finally made it out of poverty by successfully trapping a “client.” This song is a perfect example of how the music dehumanizes the victim, turning a person’s financial loss into a reason for a massive party.
As the culture evolved into “Yahoo Plus” (combining fraud with spiritual rituals), the music followed. In “Able God,” featuring Chinko Ekun and Lil Kesh, the lyrics are filled with requests for “alerts” and “paydays.” While it sounds like a gospel song about God’s blessings, the context in the streets was clear: it was a prayer for successful fraudulent transfers. The mentions of “No more getting zero” and “Omo mi, update” (My son, give me the latest scam link) showed the transition into spiritualizing cybercrime.
The Modern Spiritualism: Shallipopi – “Elon Musk”
One of the most recent examples is “Elon Musk” by Shallipopi. The song talks about “Evian” (a slang term often linked to spiritual powers or rituals used to “win” over victims). It also references “Plug” and “Sat” (slang for staying online to wait for a victim). By naming the song after the world’s richest man, it connects the idea of massive wealth with the “grind” of staying up all night on a laptop. This represents the new wave of Afrobeats where the line between a “tech bro” and a “Yahoo Boy” is intentionally blurred.
Dehumanizing the Victim
One of the most dangerous aspects of current Afrobeats lyrics is the systematic dehumanization of fraud victims. In the world of Yahoo-driven music, the victim is never a person with a family or life savings, they are referred to as “Maga” or “Mgbada” (an Igbo word for antelope). This language creates a “predator vs. prey” mindset.
By calling a victim a “client” or a “profile,” the music strips away the moral weight of the crime. Songs often frame the fraudster as a smart “hunter” who has successfully trapped a “senseless animal.” This rhetoric makes it easier for young listeners to justify the pain caused to victims, especially those in the UK and US, by viewing them merely as “cash cows” in a global game of survival.
When Fraud Meets “Grace”
Modern Afrobeats has introduced a new, darker layer known as “Yahoo Plus” or cyber-spiritualism. This is the intersection of digital fraud and traditional rituals. Many recent songs between 2023 and 2025 no longer credit success to just a fast internet connection or social engineering. Instead, they credit “Aje” (the deity of wealth) or the use of “spiritual soap.”
Lyrics now merge religious Islamic or Christian thanksgiving with successful fraudulent transactions. When an artist sings about “praying for the alert” or “God’s blessing” on a scam, they are spiritualizing a crime. This makes the Yahoo Boy feel that their ill-gotten wealth is a sign of divine favor rather than a criminal offense. It creates a mindset where if “the alert drops,” God has approved of the theft.
The UK Connection and Global Impact
The influence of these narratives has hit the UK particularly hard, where the “Afrobeats aesthetic” is a major part of youth culture. In London and other major cities, the lifestyle portrayed in these songs, the high-end fashion, the “soft life,” and the “hustle”—is being emulated by young people who may not fully understand the criminal origins of the wealth.
Case studies in the UK show that “Romance Fraud” and “Business Email Compromise” (BEC) are often fueled by the social prestige found in these songs. For a young man in the diaspora, “Maga don pay” isn’t just a lyric, it’s a lifestyle goal. The music provides the “soundtrack” for the crime, making the act of scamming feel like a transgressive, cool form of rebellion against a global system that they feel has historically marginalized them.
More Than Just a Hustle
While it is unfair to blame the entire Afrobeats genre for the rise of cybercrime, it is impossible to ignore its role as a moral compass for the “Yahoo” generation. By wrapping fraud in the language of “hustle,” “grind,” and “divine grace,” the music has helped normalize a global problem. Emerging artists often use these “street” references to gain instant credibility, ensuring that the cycle of glorification continues. As Afrobeats continues to dominate the world stage, the question remains whether the industry will eventually distance itself from these criminal undertones or continue to provide the rhythm for the world’s most successful digital thieves.
















