Advertisement
Continue Reading Below

Kess Shades Ceec’s Character After Her Clash With Pere

By john cee 63 Views

Big Brother Naija (BBNaija) star Kess Adjekpovu has seemingly shaded fellow housemate Cynthia Nwadiora, better known as Ceec, following her clash with Pere.

-ADVERTISEMENT-

Ceec and Pere had a heated argument on Wednesday night after Ceec was accused of snubbing a meeting for their wager task. Ike had gone to inform Ceec that the housemates were not happy with her decision to skip the meeting, and shared some of the things they said about her.

This enraged Ceec and she questioned why they singled her out when Angel, Alex and Mercy, were also absent from the meeting. She specifically attacked Pere, whom Ike had claimed complained about her refusal to show up at the meeting. This degenerated into a serious clash, with Ceec hurling insults at Pere and calling him names.

In a seeming reaction to this, Kess took to his Twitter page to assert that a certain Cynthia possesses terrible character. Though he did not specifically mention Ceec’s name, netizens deciphered that he was referring to the 30-year-old lawyer.

Read also: “We got this done in six hours” – Reality TV star, Nengi says as she shows off her new butt cheek tattoo (video)

He tweeted, “This Cynthia character very very bad.”

Advertisement
Continue Reading Below

Kess was a housemate in the Level-up edition of the reality TV show in 2022. He is known for his outspoken personality and has never shied away from sharing his opinions.

SEE ALSO:  BBNaija: “The emblem on the neck of the HOH should never be disrespected” – Pere reacts to Phyna and Bella’s fight

His tweet has sparked a debate on social media, with some people supporting him and others defending Ceec.

One Twitter user wrote, “Kess is right. Ceec has a very bad character. She is always starting fights and picking on people.”

Another user wrote, “I don’t think Kess should be shading Ceec like that. They are both adults and should be able to resolve their differences without resorting to name-calling.”