Vanguard Allure

Top Menu

  • Vanguard

Main Menu

  • Home
  • Allure Magazine
    • Features
    • Magazine
    • Profiles
  • Allure TV
  • Celebration
    • Fashion & Style
    • Weddings
    • Lifestyle
    • Events
  • Wellbeing
    • Allure Woman
    • Healthy Living
    • Beauty
  • Happiness
    • Food
    • Shopping
    • Travel
    • Relationships
    • Career
  • News
  • Vanguard

logo

Vanguard Allure

  • Home
  • Allure Magazine
    • What Eye See: Aduragbemi Okeyemi’s Journey Through the Art of Black-and-White Photography

      April 29, 2026
      0
    • MIKE ADENUGA… A QUIET COLOSSUS @ 73

      April 26, 2026
      0
    • Bovi and Nomzamo: AMVCA's new reveal

      April 19, 2026
      0
    • Bola Obileye on Purpose, Power and the Art of Fashion

      April 16, 2026
      0
    • Dr Bernardette Nwokoro shines at 100 Iconic Personalities of the year 2026

      April 13, 2026
      0
    • Favour Erere Eyeoyibo: Many hats one calling

      April 5, 2026
      0
    • Nollywood YouTubers redefining entertainment

      March 30, 2026
      0
    • MISKAY and Hilda Baci Launch Signature Collection in Lagos

      March 27, 2026
      0
    • Must a woman change her surname after marriage?

      March 13, 2026
      0
    • Features
    • Magazine
    • Profiles
  • Allure TV
  • Celebration
    • Fashion & Style
    • Weddings
    • Lifestyle
    • Events
  • Wellbeing
    • Allure Woman
    • Healthy Living
    • Beauty
  • Happiness
    • Food
    • Shopping
    • Travel
    • Relationships
    • Career
  • News
    • EDEN REBORN: ‘Glamgirl By Sefiya’, A Couture Fantasy Where Fashion Becomes Mythology

      June 3, 2026
      0
    • Seinde Signature Introduces Luxury Perfume Bar Experience in Ikoyi

      May 7, 2026
      0
    • Seinde Signature Hosts Sarah Baker in Landmark Multi-City Fragrance Premiere in Nigeria

      April 14, 2026
      0
    • Faith Morey Takes The Grace Circle Beyond Borders with Accra Edition

      April 11, 2026
      0
    • World Autism Day: Foundation calls for early intervention in Children

      April 7, 2026
      0
    • Belaire and Stars Shine at Yemi Alade’s Yem Beauty Launch

      April 5, 2026
      0
    • Faith Morey Introduces The Grace Circle to Lagos

      March 8, 2026
      0
    • Jobberman Pushes Inclusive Hiring at HR Fusion - Pink Edition

      February 25, 2026
      0
    • Application for Lifesaver Intervention Initiative leadership certification course opens

      February 23, 2026
      0
  • EDEN REBORN: ‘Glamgirl By Sefiya’, A Couture Fantasy Where Fashion Becomes Mythology

  • Foundation, OPAY supports 1,000 Osun students with back-to-school outreach

  • I’ve visited seven countries since last year— Olabanke Subair

  • Self-Advocacy: A Pivotal Tool Of Healing In Mental health

  • Stress and Smoke: The Quiet Addiction We’ve Mistaken for Relief

CelebrationEvents
Home›Celebration›Another year, another Detty December: Chaos and Culture

Another year, another Detty December: Chaos and Culture

January 6,2026
Share:

Chisom Kanma-Okafor

Here we go again
Another year, another Detty December where Lagos asked us one simple question. How much do you really love enjoyment? And then proceeded to test us with traffic, prices that felt personal, and events stacked so tightly you needed a spreadsheet to survive. This year was not for the weak. It was for the delusional, the determined, and the deeply unserious.


December in Lagos has evolved from a festive season into a cultural phenomenon. This year’s Detty December was sharper, louder, and wildly unapologetic. The vibes were elite, the prices were offensive, and the chaos was expertly curated.


The Luxury of Having Fun
Let’s start with the obvious. The prices. What?! 
Somewhere between refreshing ticket links and seeing VIP prices, many of us had to pause and reflect on our life choices. Some of these prices looked less like access to music and more like down payments. 
Traffic, of course, was another highlight of the season. It took longer to get from Lekki Phase 1 to Ikoyi than it takes to process a Nigerian visa. People were late to events they paid heavily for, stuck in cars contemplating the meaning of enjoyment while watching other people in the same situations.


And the roads. A mix of newly patched optimism and old potholes that have seen more Decembers than most of us. Those who remember last year, can at least attest to more lights in the streets. Apart from the lavish display of Christmas lights, street lights appeared.

Also some potholes were filled as if roads were suddenly remembered. It was almost touching. Like watching someone cram for an exam the night before and still show up confident.


Scams, Snatches, and Strange Parties
Scams were more creative. Fake events. Fake tables. Fake guest lists. Fake promises. If you weren’t scammed personally, you definitely know someone who was. It became part of the Detty December bingo card.


Then there were the wig snatching incidents. Because nothing says festive season like realizing your wig is now living a separate life from your frontal somewhere in the crowd.
And the private parties. The very eccentric private parties. Invite-only events with unclear themes and undisclosed locations. Some of them felt less like parties and more like exclusively curated experiences.


Lagos as a Stage
Still, the stars showed up. Lagos became a revolving door of global talent. Strating off with Ciara. Gunna touched down. Shenseea passed through. Tyla came and reminded everyone why we love South Africa. Wizkid appeared, as is tradition. Darko brought London vibes to town. Fireboy delivered vocals that felt like emotional support.

And countless others made appearances, popping up on stages, in clubs, and accidentally in people’s Snapchat stories.
For a few weeks, Lagos felt like the center of pop culture. If you blinked, you missed someone famous standing behind you at a bar.


Diaspora Discourse 
Like last year, there was an international spotlight on the country. Those in the diaspora were crafting think pieces, essays, and social media manifestos about why they wouldn’t be “doing Lagos December” this year. Their Instagram stories were full of declarations, WhatsApp statuses promised “next year for sure,” and the occasional suspiciously detailed question about ticket links betrayed their curiosity. The FOMO was loud, the denial was louder.


But there was also a noticeable rise in voices criticizing the experience and highlighting that participation in Detty December can be indulgent, short-sighted, or socially and economically irresponsible.


People in the diaspora took to the internet to explain why they would not be coming this year. Long threads about safety, cost, infrastructure, and personal growth. Their concerns turned out to be very valid especially in light of the tragedies that occurred during the festive season. From road accidents to news of kidnap cases accross the country, it was also a season to be hyper vigilant, careful and safe. 


Nigeria the Brand vs Nigeria the Reality
This year once again proved that Nigeria’s pop culture influence is unmatched. Afrobeats, fashion, nightlife, and vibes carried the country on their back while everything else struggled to keep up. Detty December continues to be our most effective PR campaign. No ads needed.
But the contrast was more apparent this year. The gap between curated enjoyment and everyday reality widened.

While some people were popping bottles on rooftops, others were navigating inflated transport fares and rising costs with a straight face and empty pockets.


On the flip side, Small businesses cashed out. Vendors rebranded regular items as “December specials.” Everything was festive, limited edition, and priced accordingly. Capitalism did what capitalism always does. It showed up early and stayed late.


And Yet, We’ll Be Back
Despite it all, the madness, the prices, the traffic, the wig snatching, the scams, the think pieces, we’ll be back. Because Detty December, for all its chaos, still taps into something deeply Nigerian.


The joy. The resilience. The ability to laugh through inconvenience. The strangers to friends moments. The friends to strangers moments as well. The learning to appreciate the journey as much as the destination. Because if there’s one thing Nigeria will always do, it’s turn chaos into culture.


We complained loudly. We laughed louder. We survived. We need therapy. But we hope to see and experience another one.
Same time next year!

TagsDetty December
Previous Article

Healthy Breakfast Ideas for Chaotic Days

Next Article

Ranto Clothings: From Lagos to the Global ...

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Related articles More from author

  • Features

    IS BEING NIGERIAN EMBARRASSING NOW?

    February 27, 2026
    By CHIOMA
  • Allure MagazineFeatures

    The Gentrification of Nigeria: The Detty December Chronicles

    January 22, 2025
    By CHIOMA
  • LifestyleRelationships

    Reasons why your partner will end up cheating on you

    August 12, 2021
    By Ashimedua
  • Allure WomanCelebration

    Betty Irabor celebrates at 62

    March 25, 2019
    By allure1
  • GTCO FOOD AND DRINK 2024
    CelebrationEvents

    2024 GTCO Food & Drink Festival holds April 26 to 28

    April 22, 2024
    By allure
  • CelebrationNews

    Olu of Warri, wife, joins world leaders to celebrate Commonwealth Day in London

    March 16, 2023
    By Temitope
0

  • sex
    Relationships

    For men: 5 places you shouldn’t touch a woman during s*x

  • Allure MagazineNews

    My fight with Davido was my biggest fight ever- Ovation publisher, Dele Momodu

  • Allure MagazineNews

    ‘Big Brother Nigeria is in love with TBoss’- Tunde Ednut insinuates rigging in votes

  • 5312
    Followers
  • 0
    Likes

Timeline

  • June 3, 2026

    EDEN REBORN: ‘Glamgirl By Sefiya’, A Couture Fantasy Where Fashion Becomes Mythology

  • June 3, 2026

    Foundation, OPAY supports 1,000 Osun students with back-to-school outreach

  • June 1, 2026

    I’ve visited seven countries since last year— Olabanke Subair

  • May 31, 2026

    Self-Advocacy: A Pivotal Tool Of Healing In Mental health

  • May 31, 2026

    Stress and Smoke: The Quiet Addiction We’ve Mistaken for Relief

Categories

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Sign up to receive email updates and to hear what's going on with our magazine!

  • Recent

  • Popular

  • Comments

  • EDEN REBORN: ‘Glamgirl By Sefiya’, A Couture Fantasy Where Fashion Becomes Mythology

    By allure
    June 3, 2026
  • Foundation, OPAY supports 1,000 Osun students with back-to-school outreach

    By Temitope
    June 3, 2026
  • I’ve visited seven countries since last year— Olabanke Subair

    By CHIOMA
    June 1, 2026
  • Self-Advocacy: A Pivotal Tool Of Healing In Mental health

    By CHIOMA
    May 31, 2026
  • Chioma Jesus, Sammie Okposo, Midnight Crew set for #THUGGLA2018

    By CHIOMA
    April 24, 2018
  • American rapper, Kendrick Lamar wins Pulitzer prize for 2017 ‘Damn’ album

    By CHIOMA
    April 17, 2018
  • Afrobeat singer, Seun Kuti drops new album titled ‘Black Times’ 

    By CHIOMA
    April 23, 2018
  • Actor, Yul Edochie declares intention to run for presidency

    By CHIOMA
    April 23, 2018

Entertainment

  • January 3, 2026

    Olajide Ajose, Davido, Omoni Oboli Make Visibility 50 Africa List

  • November 21, 2025

    Evia Simon Unveils New Christmas-Themed Film Project

  • October 22, 2025

    Davido Becomes Osun State’s Chairman of Sports Trust Fund 

  • October 21, 2025

    Iyabo Ojo welcomes daughter, grandson back to Nigeria

  • October 5, 2025

    Imisi crowned winner of Big Brother Naija Season 10

Follow us