The search for reality
The problem with reality shows is they do pertain to more reality than fiction or acting out some contrived event. There is no telling that at times producers could connive to instigate a particular scene through manipulation with the intent of gaining notoriety with the consequence of higher audience figures leading to more advertisement revenue and lucrative sponsorships.
Of the many that visit our screens in Europe and are now making rounds in Africa, Big Brother and West African Idols have been received with some acclaim.
I was not however aware of one Gulder Ultimate Search run under the auspices of the Nigerian Breweries which is part of the Dutch Heineken Brewery group.
Apparently, it is some survival of the fittest kind of game where physical challenges need to be surmounted and in the process the weaker ones get eliminated.
Shere Hills and beauty
It was about to commence its fourth season and prospective contestants were taken to Shere Hills in Plateau State where they were to demonstrate their physical prowess and deftness as the case may be.
Now, I do remember Shere Hills as the site of the 1st All African Scouts Jamboree in 1976, but before then we lived in Jos and it was in some way a place for touristy recreation.
Drowned? How?
However, the news is a contestant named Anthony Ogadje died whilst preparing for the programme.
The devil must be in the detail somewhere but I am not sure we have that detail that clearly states what happened.
Apparently, the young man drowned and died suddenly - a drowning accident - the company states, I have analysed this scenario with all sorts of permutations and cannot seem to make it compute that a man somehow got into water, drowned and died suddenly.
For instance, did he fall off something into the lake or was he swimming in the water and he encountered some difficulty that nobody noticed till it became too late?
It is quite commendable that there was an attendant medical team and lifeguards as well as his fellow contestants about to help, but it is great concern that the situation was so bad that lifeguards trained in first aid for drowning and medical staff supposedly trained in resuscitation techniques could do nothing to save this man.
Basically, I am saying the story just does not add up at all.
Survival or suffering?
This is a survival show and I would suspect a good deal of it would be about endurance, strength and the ability to withstand high thresholds of pain or other forms of deprivation better than other contestants.
What makes me even more suspicious of the event is in May in Boulder, Utah in America, a man who was on a desert survival trek was refused water and succour that in the midst of fellow contestants and guides he died of thirst - in some ways, he was the weak one, but no contest should offer so great a reward and also exact a great price as to involve the loss of life.
Not pandering to the weak obviously makes a contest look really tough, it stops other contestants thinking one is favoured over the other and certain personalities might not know the limits of their abilities or cannot afford to give up too easily for pride and price that they might do something really foolish.
Maybe ...
One would suppose that is why there is a medical team, lifeguards, umpires and adjudicators about as well as a television crew to help ensure that all matters are handled with commonsense.
The phrase drowning accident baffles me, you can have a car crash or a car accident, but I do not think you can have a crash accident except of you were organising a crash and then had an accident. At the risk of being pedantic, the drowning would have be an accident as a result of doing something probably in the water, a drowning accident however sounds like a drowning that went wrong - maybe I have had a glass of wine too many.
But really, I do not think I would be far from the truth if looking at the lake, the lifeguards and the possibility of drowning, the contest was about how long people could hold their breath under water as a kind of endurance test - the man probably held it for so long that they thought he was breaking a record when in fact his soul was breaking away from his body.
Worse still it could have been dunking where the head is forcibly immersed in water as a form of torture or in this case horseplay.
Even so, since this game is about the search for treasure, probably the said treasure was placed in a proverbial Davy Jones' Locker - the truth will out somehow and hopefully very soon and the contestants had better start speaking up.
Assessing responsibility
If that turns out to be the truth, there would have been a gross dereliction of duty of the organisers from simple team discipline if people had gone off to do their own thing unsupervised along with issues of safety, but in the end, nothing short of manslaughter charges should be filed on anyone who has a stake in that show.
That is the fact of reality shows, something really bad could happen and when it happens it could be happening to you.
The quest to win the 4th Gulder Ultimate Search Mr. Ogadje came upon the unexpected 1st Gulder Ultimate Death, so, so sad.
The problem with reality shows coming out of Nigeria is that they actually
make an attempt at being real. Now they have a death in their hands. If
only they had the mind to stage events like that Americans do.
This is so sad. I just read it on BBC. I am curious to know more of the
details but agree that if the facts show manslaughter, then there should be
charges.
It was so sad. I remember I was telling my wife that a guy name rings a
bell amongst the Searchers, and it happened to be Mudiaga whom we wanted to
link as the Boyfriend of Ify - one of the inmates of Big Brother Nigeria.
In as much as I share in the grief on the loss of live, I don't agree with
the insinuations that Akin has made here against the organisers of the
show. I was a part of the screening process in Lagos even up till sea
school and I can say the modalities in place in terms of security and
medicals are second to none.
I watched the show yesterday for the first time and I kept wondering what
money has turned our youths into. I was in Jos last year for a conference
which was held in an open field and I can't imagine people going to Jos to
stay in the cold mountains.
First, I would like to say that may his soul rest in perfect peace and may
God strengthen and uphold his family. It's very difficult to loose someone
at the young age and I feel really bad for his family...only God knows what
they going through now. Anyway, to the best of my knowledge, I believe
there's definitely more to it. For instant, I'm very sure that they aware
that he couldn't swim, and even if they didn't know that he couldn't swim,
when he "jumped in the water", why wasn't a lifeguard there to rescue him
on time to the extend that the poor guy drowned and lost his life...this is
very sad!...don't even know what to think....