Mugithi star Waithaka wa Jane has weighed into the social-media feud between Wanja Nyarari and media personality Baby Top after Wanja publicly accused Baby Top of having had an affair with her former lover. The row — fuelled by screenshots, AI images and viral posts — has dominated celebrity feeds this week.
Wanja said she once found evidence that her then-partner was cheating and later accused Baby Top of being the other woman. In a series of posts she shared screenshots and even AI-generated images she says support her claim, and hinted she will include the episode in an upcoming book. She also recounted a moment when women’s underwear fell out of the man’s bag — an incident she says exposed the affair.
Following Wanja’s explosive posts, Waithaka — who has been part of the larger dispute involving the Germany show and subsequent social-media fallout — issued a public response urging calm and asking fans to avoid speculation. He acknowledged the tensions around the Ngemi Festival incidents but encouraged those involved to settle personal matters privately rather than making unverified claims public.
Baby Top dismissed Wanja’s accusations outright, calling them “hallucinations” and firing back with mocking posts. The exchanges have sparked fierce debate online: some users back Wanja’s right to expose betrayal, others criticise airing private matters publicly or using AI images as “evidence.” The row also re-ignited conversation about how quickly celebrity disputes escalate on social platforms.
This episode shows how influencer culture, AI tools and social platforms collide — private grievances can become public spectacles overnight, complicating reputations and raising questions about evidence, consent and online harassment. For artists and promoters (and the audiences that support them), there are real reputational and legal risks when claims are made in public without clear verification.
Celeb beef draws clicks, but it also exposes fragile personal boundaries in the digital age. Whether the matter ends in reconciliation, legal action, or simply fades with the next viral story, it’s a reminder: social media amplifies both truth and rumor — and the fallout can be lasting.
Do you think public figures should publicly air private relationship disputes, or should such matters stay private? Share your view below and follow for updates as the story develops.
By tuko
