A single bottle of water sparked chaos on a Nollywood set, leaving one woman battered and an entire industry in uproar.
It was just another filming day in Lagos. The crew was deep into production under Caddilly Production when the head of makeup, a respected professional, asked for her entitled bottle of water.
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Production manager Anierobi Courage, known on set as "Nwa South," refused. "Drink sachet water," he barked. What started as a petty argument quickly turned violent.
In a 16-second clip now burning through Nigerian social media, Courage is seen slapping the woman, grabbing her by the throat, and punching her stomach repeatedly. He tears her top, exposing her, as she fights back in tears.

The assault was brutal. He pinned her down, hands locked around her neck in what eyewitnesses described as a strangling attempt. Bruises bloomed across her body. One eye appeared swollen shut.
Crew members stood frozen. No one moved to help at first. Only when the set's task force arrived was she finally taken for medical care.
The incident happened on October 29, 2025, around 10 a.m. local time. The first video surfaced online at 10:31 a.m. GMT, posted by Grammy-nominated assistant director @GeneralSnow_, who called it "animal behavior."
"This is not my industry," he wrote. "We cannot tolerate this."
By evening, the clip had racked up over 663,000 views. Replies poured in, anger, disbelief, demands for justice. Hashtags like #NollywoodScandal began trending.
Anierobi Courage was arrested shortly after the attack. Sources say he's being investigated, but no charges have been confirmed yet.
The victim, whose name has not been released, remains traumatized. She was left on the ground, sobbing, while filming reportedly continued around her.
This isn't just about water. It's about power, respect, and the dark underbelly of an industry where women too often bear the cost of egos.
Nollywood has long battled issues of abuse and exploitation. But rarely has it been caught so raw, so public, so undeniable.
Women in the industry are speaking out. "If this can happen to a Head of Department, what about the extras?" one actress wrote. Another demanded a lifetime ban for Courage.
The director, identified only as Mr. Steve, has stayed silent. So has the production company.
But the internet won't let this die. Memes, threads, and emotional testimonies flood X. Some call Courage a "psycho." Others blame a toxic culture that lets men act with impunity.
One thing is clear: this video has cracked open a conversation Nigeria can't ignore.
As the victim recovers, the question lingers, will Nollywood finally protect its own?
Or will this, like so many scandals before, fade into yesterday's gossip?
For now, one woman's pain has become a movement. And Anierobi Courage's name will never be spoken the same.

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