Angela Okorie clearly thought she found Regina’s weak spot. But what she doesn’t realize is that Regina is now at home with that line. Years of social media noise have toughened her skin. That card might have worked on a less grounded woman, but not Regina. Instead of hitting a nerve, Angela only exposed her own lack of strategy.
Let’s be honest – if it was really about “respect” or “the industry,” that’s where the conversation should’ve stayed. But the moment she started dragging Ned Nwoko into the mix, it became obvious: this wasn’t about principle. It was about ego. That kind of behavior doesn’t elevate the conversation. It drags it into the mud.
It’s one thing to call someone out. It’s another thing entirely to veer off and start attacking their family or people who aren’t involved. That’s not strength, it’s bitterness shouting through a megaphone.
If you’ve ever dealt with someone who can’t argue without going low, you know how exhausting it is. They don’t seek understanding. They seek domination – even if it means reaching into places that were never part of the issue. And in the end, they only make a spectacle of themselves.
Angela obviously knows Regina has what many only dream of. But she seems to think she (Angela) still holds something that can rattle the “little girl” whenever there is a clash. The truth? That ‘something’ moved a long time ago. And in this whole drama, it’s clear who’s doing all the shouting.
Let’s normalize ending arguments at the point they stop being constructive. You can disagree. You can confront. But do it without involving someone’s family or dragging up their past. Because when that happens, the issue stops being about them – and becomes all about you.