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Portable Slams Lizzy Anjorin and Nollywood Stars

A fiery clash between street-pop icon Portable and actor-businesswoman Lizzy Anjorin has ignited social media after Lizzy made disparaging remarks about residents of Sango, where Portable lives and operates his bar, Odogwu. Portable responded with raw verbal heat, including a dramatic assertion that his fans could buy her—including all her property. Lizzy fired back by calling him a “betrayer” and warning that he, too, could be bought off. The exchange has sparked gossip buzz, with audiences speculating about hidden alliances, deeper shade, and what it really says about celebrity loyalty in Nigeria.

Lizzy Anjorin’s remarks—that people living in Sango can’t afford an $800 handbag—hit a nerve when Portable caught wind on social media. Feeling attacked, he struck back hard: “They fit buy you, your property. If you fit no act, pack your things go inside.” 

Using the moment for unapologetic theatre, Portable didn’t just defend his community—he escalated the drama by comparing Lizzy’s relevance to that of Funke Akindele and Eniola Badmus and suggesting she should get a government job instead. 

In a livestream response, Lizzy didn’t hold back. She promised only two music videos before Portable would “pack up.” She dismissively labeled Portable a betrayer—likening him to Iyabo Ojo—and said his fame rides on the downfall of others. Plus, she warned: he’d collapse after just one major hit. 

Adding another layer of shade, Portable later posted about loyalty using a clip of Lizzy and her husband, implying that pared-down relationships built on loyalty thrive, unlike his own tumultuous personal life. The implication stung, especially because it also seemed to side-step his wife of record. 

Fans weren’t shy either—some warned Lizzy about Portable’s infatuated fan base. Others hinted at a coded message under all the threats: maybe Portable and Lizzy’s clash stems from deeper ties—money, influence, or status rivalry—rather than mere insult trading.

This isn’t just shade between two public figures—it’s power play, loyalty test, and class war all rolled into one. Portable defended his hood. Lizzy struck back with theatrical bravado. The audience? Fully invested.