Kenyan socialites are the biggest personalities this year beating top female anchors

Whores, bimbos, non-starters, cheap attention seekers and a product of a morally depraved youth soon to be forgotten into oblivion.
That is how Vera Sidika and her ilk were described when they first burst on the scene.
The vitriol was unceasing as they were held up as the biblical prostitute with scarlet lips dripping honey ready to devour the unsuspecting youth.
Many mainstream establishments from businesses to media abhorred them and they became a staple for entertainment blogs in a perfect symbiotic relationship.
Fast forward three years down the line and everyone wants a piece of Vera Sidika , Huddah Monroe and Corazon Kwamboka.
 
They burst their way to national consciousness with relentless bombarding of our senses with their acres of thirst inducing flesh even the pulpit took notice.
Then they changed tact and went corporate, once in a while posting a teasing photo as a token to their ever loyal fans.
Then they crossed borders, graced all TV channels and became social influencers whose like has never been seen before. Suddenly, any lass with or without an ass to write home about wanted to become a socialite.
In a society where being seen to be successful counts for more than actually being successful, no one does it better than the socialites.
 
Previously glamorous jobs such as being a TV anchor faded became mundane. Ladies of all kinds, and age suddenly wanted to be spotting the latest asset enhancing clothes.
 
They wanted to post their latest travels, roll with the high and mighty and have hundreds of followers lapping on every single post they share.
When the socialites began landing endorsements and becoming fashion icons it was simply game over for any other lady out there.
 
Nowadays Vera and Huddah no longer need scandals. Google searches in Kenya reveal these two to be the most searched for female personalities in Kenya.
A comparison is shown below on how they fare against other female celebrities notably the top four female anchors.
Huddah launched a lipsticks line recently and this time no one doubted the viability of the idea as even celebrities like Avril and the actress Catherine Kamau.
 
Vera Sidika and Corazon Kwamboka have clothing lines competing with the likes set up by anchors like Julie Gichuru and Lillian Muli. They drive the latest rages and live in posh residences flying fast class around the continents.
While their TV counterparts struggle to get corporate hosting gigs, the three are busy dominating the showbiz events.
Further proof of their influence is the making of the Reality TV show Nairobi Diaries based on the lives of Nairobi socialites.
 
Meanwhile the news anchors now depend on their own scandals to trend or make major news losing their place as role models and fashion icons to yesterday ‘whores’.

About this writer:

Mr. Majani