Kevin Taylor honored his promise, buys Nana Yaa Brefo $19,000 uber car
For years, the Taylor-Brefo dynamic was the ultimate example of “engagement through conflict.” Their feuds generated millions of views because they represented two different pillars of Ghanaian media: the traditional, disciplined broadcasting of Brefo versus the raw, unedited digital activism of Taylor.
The unique twist here isn’t just the car; it’s the humanization of the “Enemy. By Taylor offering a vehicle for her Uber business, he isn’t just being “kind”—he is acknowledging the harsh reality of the “Diaspora Reset.” In Ghana, they were titans; in the US, they are both immigrants navigating a system that doesn’t care about their celebrity status.
One of the most unique angles of this story is Nana Yaa’s debunking of the GH₵50,000 monthly salary rumor. Her transparency about moving for her son’s health and the high cost of US medical bills has cracked the “sika wo fie” (wealth is at home) facade often maintained by media stars.
- The Irony: Kevin Taylor, who usually attacks the “system” in Ghana for failing its people, is now essentially becoming a private “Social Safety Net” for a person he once tried to dismantle. It’s a rare instance of a political critic putting his money where his “respect” is.
