Chef Dawei

Chef Dawei

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Chef Dawei is a visionary Cameroonian entrepreneur blending food, culture, and sustainable agriculture.

Founder of Chef Dawei Foods Ltd, he empowers women, builds brands, and drives innovation across Africa with a focus on legacy and community growth.

Photos from Chef Dawei's post 25/04/2026

If truly you were created in the image and likeness of God, it would mean you are the flesh of God’s flesh, the DNA of God’s DNA, the blood of God’s blood, and the melanin of God’s melanin.

Moral lesson: how did the first become the last?

18/04/2026

Today, the 18th day of April 2026, Jovi gets slapped in the face with love from many industry stakeholders. Jovi, in the past, together with his gang of lowlives, hampered and slowed down our collective growth in the entertainment industry.

Twitter was his heaven as the self-proclaimed Mboko god. He used the social media platform to rain down insults on his colleagues, called their shows “Njangi house shows,” and referred to people like Magasco and Stanley Enow as wet pu***es.

For almost, or more than, a decade, he imprisoned himself in his New Bell prison (New Bell Music), working solely with artists under his label and shooting his videos exclusively with February 16, who happens to be his brother.

When others progressed and left him behind, he went into the studio to rubbish their growth as “Monshung.” Fast forward to today, where he has finally embraced the light of positive energy and let go of the bitterness that was buried deep inside his heart—a lot of good things have started happening to him. Evidently, he has finally succeeded in traveling to the UK and will be creating history with his first concert in the country, after being the first urban artist to embrace the rays of the spotlight 15 years ago—and thanks to Chef Dawei, who made it a duty to constantly and consistently call Jovi out.

Surprisingly, all those artists and industry stakeholders that Jovi struggled to destroy all chose to pay him back with love. Over the past weeks, we have seen artists like Stanley Enow, Magasco, Kocee, Wax Dey, and Salatiel, along with many other industry stakeholders, encourage their fans to buy tickets for the concert, with others even buying tickets and distributing them to their fans.

Is it safe for us to say the entertainment industry is finally embracing the true African spirit of Ubuntu, or should we wait and see the reaction of Jovi’s fans after the show? 90% of the people who are going to attend the concert are fans from different fanbases. Only 10% will be from the tribalistic Mboko gang—as they are only loud on social media platforms like Facebook but, in real life, are weak.

Jovi has finally realized that one hand cannot tie a bundle, and against the dictates of the Mboko gang, he bent his tail and acknowledged other artists. Even at that, those Mboko gang kids will still attribute the success of the concert solely to Jovi. Let’s keep our fingers crossed and hope to see real Ubuntu take over Jovi and those Mboko gang kids.

Moral lesson: do not always pay evil with evil, that’s the lesson we have learned from all the artists who are showing Jovi ❤️.

17/04/2026

Ogbono Soul soup.
Order via: 6 82 84 63 45.

16/04/2026

All nice and fresh organic palm wine at the Bantu rising house. Order via 6 82 84 63 45.

15/04/2026

I outperformed myself on this one—the taste is totally out of this world! This particular client is a returning customer; this is actually his third purchase, and he promised to keep coming back for more because the mop taste is simply out of this world!

Order food via: 6 82 84 63 45

15/04/2026

The Curse of Askia drops today,
My own side of the story.

Photos from Manadja comédie's post 15/04/2026
13/04/2026

Askia, why is it that nobody ever works with you till a fruitful end?

Far back, when Cameroonian English-speaking artists didn’t even know what it meant to be signed to a label, you were already signed to one. Since then, I think you are one of the most signed artists in this English-speaking space, yet your story always seems to end in chaos, and you are always the victim!

Askia, does everyone hete you or what? Sometimes, when certain events keep reoccurring, it’s a sign that you need to take time for deep reflection, rethink, and do things differently so you can get better results. Mami, even if you start over 1,000 times but maintain the same wrong approach, you will get the same results. People say persistence is the key? I SAY NO, NO, NO! If you persist in doing the wrong thing, you only become better at doing the wrong thing—hence, you’ll keep getting the wrong results.

Let’s come to this Chef Dawei matter. This Chef Dawei na some Papa Cadeau! This is not the first time he has made efforts to rescue you as a person. I don’t even want to talk about other young Cameroonians, yet wuna dey there dey sass mop! I remember sometime in 2023, he came with a solid plan to organize a concert for you. This was when most people had labeled you bad, unproductive, drvg addict, bitter baby mama, etc. Yet this particular Chef came with a rescue plan to give value to your art by organizing a concert that would have been financially beneficial and impactful. Na so e turn turn, we no ever hear that concert again.

In 2025, he came again and offered you another great deal. Honestly, I never believed it would lead to a fruitful end. But against all odds, he pushed through by getting you involved in the Bantu Rising House (Mami Bakala’s Kitchen). While some of us didn’t see any fruitful outcome, Chef was busy convincing everyone why you, “Askia,” were the right person for this. Again, under the guise of giving an opportunity to a single mother and an artist to make a living out of her craft and build a better life. But of course, this had to come with rules and regulations. Na so you enter Mami Bakala’s Kitchen.

NB: Mami Bakala no be Askia o. This is the pure definition of an African woman in her prime. Fully natural, yet in a very beautiful state. A confident African woman who needs no validation and seeks no artificial complements for the public to affirm her beauty. Mami, I been know say you no for fit!

Long story short, you wore the hat, and Mami Bakala entered a new phase with you in it, with hopes of taking your career to a very beautiful place. Now we wake up to issues between you and your father, and all of a sudden, Chef Dawei becomes the bone of contention. That one na wuna palava. But as Chef has always stood by you, I know he’ll still come through and cover you.

Now, Mami, don’t you think it’s time to ask yourself some bitter but truthful questions? Why has no one ever successfully worked with you? Is it something you’re doing wrong, or is it always the other party that is wrong? All man di ever try for show you love but for last fight na dem be bad people! Why na mom?

Askia, you are beautiful and you don’t need the public to tell you this. You are equally a very brilliant woman. As a matter of fact, you can be a role model to many if only you work on yourself. I personally don’t believe that everyone who has tried to work with you is always wrong! Mami, do a self-examination and find out what’s really going on. This is not a spiritual problem but a mental state. And once you overcome this stage, you will truly enjoy who you are.

Beyond the clout and controversy, I see you as an asset. Mami Bakala was a test, and frankly, you can become that person, if that’s truly how you see yourself.

The last time you wakop block me 😂 Whether you unblock me again na because of why o... I no know.

Now you’re telling us that even the Mami Bakala project has collapsed. Hanty, qu’est-ce qui n’a pas marché? Ou bien, qu’est-ce qui ne marche pas?

At some point, growth requires brutal honesty with oneself. If the pattern keeps repeating, then the solution is not outside, it is within. Take responsibility, reset your mindset, and rebuild differently. That’s the only way this story can finally have a different ending.
Bye! If you like to block me again 😂

$$

13/04/2026

My reply to Jovi the Mboko god! I do yes, I do no, I don’t do maybes, pick a side, pick a side. You’re with me or you’re with them better decide!
Tuma Jovi,
Tuma Mboko gang,
Tuma y’all who wanna kiss their buttocks!

13/04/2026

My Response to Jovi’s Interview on Ndicho Boris’ Platform

Jovi presents himself as the “Mboko god,” but leadership is not just about words—it’s about consistency between what you say and how you live.

If your lyrics come from the heart, then you should stand by them—especially after influencing a whole generation to internalize and defend those words as truth.

In one of Jovi’s songs, he clearly said:
“Pick a side, pick a side; you’re with me or you’re with them—better decide.”

That wasn’t just music—that became a code of operation. A mindset that conditioned many useless Mboko kids to adopt division, take sides, and treat perceived enemies as their own.

Let’s be honest—this situation didn’t start today. It is the result of a system that was built over time.

A system where loyalty was defined as blind alignment, not independent thinking.

We’ve seen the consequences:
People losing relationships, creating enemies, and fighting battles that were never truly theirs—all in the name of loyalty—overall, the decade-long division in the industry and the stagnation!

We all remember when Askia had to delete a photo she took with Stanley Enow just hours after posting it—because of the pressure from this same unwritten code associated with the Mboko tribalistic gang.

Funny industry with no one having critical thinking—all ass-licking bloggers, especially that Ndicho Boris, who had apparently picked a side decades ago. A bitch-ass blogger, in his capacity, couldn’t ask Jovi real questions. Perhaps he didn’t know Jovi had already used his lyrics to program most of them like robots to automatically hate on people like myself who truly hold him accountable.

When situations become complex between Askia and her daughter Peace T, the same rigid “pick a side” principle suddenly turns into neutrality and flexibility on Ndicho Boris’ ass-licking interview.

That raises a simple question:
Was it ever about principles—or just control?

This is bigger than one interview.
It’s about accountability, influence, and the responsibility that comes with shaping minds with lyrics that were probably written by others—because I always knew Jovi’s lyrics are stronger than him. Once again, on that bitch-ass interview, wherein he couldn’t stand by his “pick a side” mentality but instead spoke about not telling anyone to inherit his enemies, proved me right once again—Jovi in real life is weaker than his lyrics. Could there be a ghostwriter?

I have single-handedly changed Jovi over the years—some of the things that I criticized him for, I now see gradual growth. For instance, he finally reciprocated Stanley Enow’s love and gave him his flowers by calling him the biggest King Kong, whereas in the past, he would have called him a wet p***y.

Change is a constant thing, and I hope to see Jovi become bigger by owning his lyrics, apologizing to those of us who received hate from his Mboko gang for criticizing him whenever we saw him going off. If not for our genuine criticisms, Jovi would never have embraced change or rid himself of negative energies and the spirit of unforgiveness.

Final thought:
True leadership doesn’t divide people—it empowers them to think for themselves.

Moral lesson: The Curse of Askia dropping next!!

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