Nigerian late-night television once held a shared cultural presence, with programmes like The Teju Babyface Show bringing together entertainers for conversations that kept audiences engaged beyond primetime. That model has largely shifted in recent years, as viewership moved to digital platforms, on-demand streaming, and social media-driven clips.
Within that context, Black Table on TVC positions itself differently. Airing every Friday night, the show centres on long-form, studio-based conversations that lean into topics often avoided or softened on mainstream television.
Hosted by Olamide Jeanluc Oshoffa, a Senior Programmes Producer at TVC Communications, alongside co-host Tyeng Gang, the programme brings in two guests each week to engage with issues shaping Nigerian life, including relationships, religion, music, film, and broader cultural debates.
The format is direct. Conversations are largely unfiltered, with minimal framing or editorial cushioning, allowing guests to fully interrogate the subject matter.
A recent episode reaffirmed that approach, taking on comments made by 9ice at an album listening event, where he questioned the role of organised religion in Nigeria’s development and suggested a return to traditional belief systems. The remarks generated widespread reactions online, with much of the coverage focusing on the controversy itself.
On Black Table, the discussion moved beyond the headlines. Guests Kas Shobayo, known as Kas Beats, and Ayomide Tayo approached the topic from different perspectives, unpacking both the theological and cultural implications of the statement.
Kas Beats framed religion as a constructed system distinct from the idea of God, arguing for a broader understanding of spirituality. The conversation remained layered, resisting the reduction of the issue into a single viewpoint.
Ayomide Tayo, however, introduced a sharper cultural critique, linking the idea of returning to traditional deities with contemporary realities. His remark, questioning whether a return to Sango should, by extension, address Nigeria’s electricity challenges—captured the intersection of belief, history, and present-day infrastructure concerns in a single response.
The exchange reflects what Black Table has increasingly come to represent: a space where conversations around Nigerian identity, religion, and culture are not only aired, but examined with a level of directness that is often absent from broadcast television.
As traditional TV formats continue to compete with digital media, the show’s emphasis on extended dialogue and topical relevance suggests an attempt to re-establish late-night programming as a site for cultural conversation, rather than just entertainment.