Shatta Wale Has No Home Training - Ola Michael

Pundit, Ola Michael, labels all disrespectful artistes as people who lack home training after his bust up with Shatta Wale

Shatta Wale Has No Home Training - Ola Michael
Shatta Wale

Ola Michael has directed another attack at Shatta Wale after their most recent fight.

The film producer and entertainment critic who has always held critical views about the actions of the dancehall artiste maintained that only artists who have no home training are disrespectful, a situation he noted stems from the artist's inability to see ordinary people as human beings.

He said this after he had severely berated Shatta Wale for 'ordering his thugs to harass road construction workers for refusing to extend the road they were working on to his Shatta Movement Secretariat Near East Legon.

Ola Michael categorically stated that some artists are of very poor upbringing.

“First of all, respect depends on one’s upbringing. How and where you were brought up has so much impact on how you relate to people. So even though you have become famous, you still have respect for others. Not so? Because that was how you were trained from home. Your stardom has not overshadowed your training.”

“Some people don’t have that training. So when they become famous, they don’t respect anyone. Unless they have someone like Bullgod to tell him to hold on because the industry works on mutualism. You need to respect the person and let the person respect you. So some artists are disrespectful whilst others are nothing to write home about.”

This he said while speaking on the relationship between artists and the media on United Showbiz.

He also blamed the management of artists who cannot control their wards with the way they interact with the media.

It would be recalled that Shatta Wale had assaulted road workers after they would not heed his commands to build his road. 

The overseeing engineer, whose name is Kennedy told Starr FM that he was discharging his duty with his team when the thugs ordered his workers to stop working because of a disagreement he had with Shatta Wale.

"He sent someone to us on Saturday to tell us to extend the road to his office but we told them the length of the road and areas covered are contractual matters and not decided by the site workers. We asked them to pick the matter up with Urban roads who are supervising the project."
"We were working today when he (Shatta Wale) just drove past the roadblock sign and came through where we were working despite the fact that we had just laid the asphalt, and asked who was in charge, I went close to tell him I was in charge and before I could explain anything, one of the guys with him just slapped me and he was looking on. There were a number of guys on motorbikes with him,” he narrated.