Reels & Social Media Highlights
Tears, Laughs, and Late Nights — Ghana’s Internet Erupts Over Repatriations, Rants, and Rising Waters
If your timeline felt like a heavy emotional drama spliced with a slapstick comedy this Wednesday, you weren’t alone. The energy across Facebook and X (Twitter) on May 27 swung violently between patriotic grief, industry debate, and pure, unfiltered schadenfreude.
The heaviest weight on the digital heart today is #GhanaEvacuation. As dawn broke, the first batch of citizens fleeing xenophobic attacks in South Africa touched down at Kotoka International Airport.
The Ghanians who spent a night at the Embassy of Ghana in Pretoria waiting to be repatriated back home have started arriving at the OR International Airport.They took a decision to leave South Africa due to the growing anti immigrant sentiment in South Africa. #sabcnews pic.twitter.com/vrxhM3LCeG
— Sophie Mokoena (@Sophie_Mokoena) May 27, 2026
Twitter—now X—became a virtual embassy. While videos of weary families receiving government support packages triggered tears and heated debates about “Akata” (diaspora) belonging, other users tracked flights live, mixing panic with profound relief.
The mood is somber but united; Ghanaians are fiercely protective of their own.
But just as the tears started drying, the laughter began. A video of a controversial local prophet attempting to part the Atlantic Ocean—only to be dramatically wiped out by a wave—is the meme of the hour.
FAKE MOSES tries to PART SEA
— RT (@RT_com) May 24, 2026
Crowd cheers wildly with arms raised as waves crash around him
Turns and RUNS when massive wave barrels straight toward him pic.twitter.com/wahtqH2Ma6
The man, who predicted a 2025 apocalypse that never came, is now the face of “fake prophet fail.”
The comments section is a masterclass in Ghanaian Pidgin sarcasm, with users asking if he forgot to calculate the tide schedule.
Finally, the creative class is at war. Sarkodie, the rap icon, sparked a massive backlash by suggesting shows start earlier (yes, before 4 AM).
While he argues performing at dawn is physically unsustainable for artists, fans argue the “Koliko” (night owl) culture is the lifeblood of the scene.
It’s a fascinating class clash between artist welfare and party economics.
Ghana’s social media today proves it is a space of duality. We are grieving the trauma of our brothers returning from SA, yet mocking divine arrogance in the next breath.
We are defending our nightlife while demanding professionalism. It’s chaotic, empathetic, and deeply Ghanaian.
Reels & Social Media Highlights
The Vibes on the Timeline: A Tense Homecoming & A Jersey War
If you opened your X app in Ghana this Thursday morning, May 21, you didn’t just check the news—you ran straight into a national debate. The algorithm is spicy, and the streets (online) are divided.
The iron fist in the velvet glove of today’s trends is The Evacuation. The first batch of 300 Ghanaians fleeing xenophobic tensions in South Africa touched down today.
While Foreign Minister Ablakwa was hailed for the “welcome home” financial packages, the comments section turned into a fierce class war. “Taxpayer money for those who left?” argued one side, pointing at Ghana’s struggling youth. “Safety is non-negotiable,” fired back the other. It is empathy versus economics, and the replies are a battleground.
But the tension broke for a moment thanks to Parliament. A clip of NPP MP Davis Opoku Ansah teasing Tema Mayor Ebi Bright—calling her “our wife” —exploded faster than any policy debate.
The revelation of her marriage to Rockson-Nelson Dafeamekpor has turned a PAC sitting into Ghana’s favorite reality show. It’s rare to see MPs trending for love and laughter instead of cuts and bruises.
And if you thought sports were a relief, think again. Puma is in the trenches. The sports brand dared to drop new Black Stars jerseys featuring primarily light-skinned and mixed-race models. Ghanaians are furious. “#StopUsingMixedRace” is burning up the timeline, with users asking, “Why is the white girl our identity?” . For a nation proud of its Black Star, this felt like an own goal.
Today, Ghana’s digital space proved to be a mirror of its anxiety. We are laughing (at the MPs), fighting (over the jerseys), and arguing about who deserves a safety net. It is loud, chaotic, and deeply, undeniably Ghanaian.
Reels & Social Media Highlights
The Visa Privacy Panic & The “Fake” Fashion Police
If your timeline felt like a rollercoaster this Tuesday, you weren’t alone. On May 19, 2026, Ghanaian netizens woke up to a digital identity crisis, oscillating between defending their online privacy and exposing the threads on their backs.
The spark that lit up the X (formerly Twitter) trends was sheer policy shock. The US Embassy dropped a bombshell requiring visa applicants to set their social media accounts to “public.” Cue the chaos.
Users responded with a mix of anxiety and sharp wit, coining the phrase #ByForceSaa (meaning “Is it by force?”).

The meme cycle hit immediately—Ghanaians joked about forgetting old passwords or having to explain their “fanboy” tweets to consular officers.
Simultaneously, the fashion police arrested the entire industry. A viral interview clip featuring business magnate Nana Sarfo made the rounds, where he declared that 99.9% of designer goods in Ghana are fake.
The accusation split the room: some clapped back that “authenticity is expensive,” while others admitted their “Boutique in Osu” drip was definitely not direct from Milan.
Meanwhile, the legal heat surrounding content creators (like the recent arrests over political commentary) loomed in the background, reminding influencers that online words have offline consequences.
Across Ghana’s digital streets, the mood is one of skeptical maturity. Whether challenging embassy policies or questioning the luxury economy, Ghanaians are scrolling with their eyes wide open.
Reels & Social Media Highlights
Politics or Tribe? OB Amponsah’s Deleted Post Tears Social Media Apart
If there is one thing Ghanaians on social media love more than jollof, it is receipts. And this Saturday, the receipts came with a side of chaos, laughter, and a whole lot of side-eyeing. From the football pitch to the red carpet and the pulpit, the digital streets were a battlefield.
The undisputed king of the timeline was Prophet Fire Ogya. After the Black Stars secured their ticket to the 2026 World Cup on Sunday, the cleric became the internet’s favorite punching bag on Saturday as clips of his failed prophecy resurfaced.
Social commentator Bongo Ideas led the charge, mockingly asking if the prophet’s “white horse” revelation was a divine vision or a trip to the zoo . The memes were relentless, tapping into a deep Ghanaian skepticism of “one-man churches” who gamble on sports predictions.
Simultaneously, a more sartorial spat was unfolding. Fashionista Osebo the ZaraMan went scorched earth on the just-ended TGMA red carpet, calling Ghana’s fashion culture “very poor” and suggesting the awards leave the country.
He argued it’s embarrassing to see €1,000 shoes beside ‘chale wote’ (local slippers). The quote went viral, splitting the room between those who agreed our standards are slipping and those who accused Osebo of gatekeeping.
Meanwhile, a political firestorm burned through Facebook. Comedian OB Amponsah briefly posted—then swiftly deleted—a comment labelling the Tourism Minister as “TouEweism.” The post ignited a fierce debate about ethnicity vs. politics.
Blogger Rashad weighed in heavily, arguing that the anger between Ashantis and Ewes is manufactured by the NPP and NDC for political gain, insisting: “Our problem in this country is politics”.
From false prophets to fashion wars, Ghana’s digital mood is loud, proud, and refuses to take itself too seriously.
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