Content Creators: Kiekie on Personal-Professional Boundaries

Nigerian Entertainer Kiekie Advocates for Clear Boundaries Between Personal and Professional Life for Creatives

At a recent industry event in Lagos, Nigerian actress and digital content creator Bukunmi Adeaga Ilori, widely known by her online persona Kiekie, stressed the importance of content creators and celebrities establishing firm boundaries between their private lives and their public roles.

Speaking during a session at The Creative Blueprint 2.0, a forum focused on navigating modern entertainment and media, Ilori detailed her own method for compartmentalisation. “I have created a very thick line between what is personal to me as Oluwabukunmi Adeaga Ilori and what is personal to my brand as Kiekie,” she stated. She defined her professional brand by clear functions: event and television hosting, acting, and content creation, with her content specifically centred on comedy.

This deliberate separation informs her decisions about her family’s presence in her work. Ilori explained that her husband, Tunji Ilori, does not appear in her comedic content because “he is not funny,” underscoring that only elements aligning with the brand’s comedic purpose are included. Conversely, she features her daughter, Nola, on social media because “she is made for the camera.”

However, Ilori was quick to qualify this exception with strict limits. She clarified that her daughter is only included in content creation during academic breaks, ensuring her education and normal childhood remain unaffected. This stance led her to a broader warning against the common trend of excessive family integration in digital content.

“We overmilk viral moments until it becomes annoying. And that is where oversharing comes in,” she remarked, advocating for restraint among creators who regularly feature relatives. She implied that such practices can dilute a creator’s brand identity and risk exploiting private family dynamics for public consumption.

Ilori’s comments highlight a growing conversation within the global creator economy about sustainability, personal privacy, and brand integrity. As the lines between influencer and individual continue to blur, her approach suggests that long-term success may depend on a strategic separation of one’s personal narrative from one’s professional output. Her advice positions boundary-setting not as a limitation, but as a crucial component of a deliberate and enduring creative career.

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