Radio personality MC Yaa Yeboah has set social media ablaze with her blunt assessment of fast-rising artist King Paluta.
“King Paluta lacks personality outside his music,” she declared during her popular afternoon show, sparking immediate backlash and support.
The entertainment commentator doubled down when challenged: “His interviews are flat, his stage presence needs work – the hits are carrying him.” Her critique comes as Paluta enjoys breakout success with street anthems like “Yahitte” and “Aseda.”
Paluta, known for his grassroots appeal, hasn’t directly responded. However, associates describe him as intentionally low-key: “He lets the music speak,” said collaborator Kofi Jamar.
Marketing expert Kwame Asante weighed in: “Today’s artists need multidimensional appeal. Talent alone isn’t enough in the digital age.”
He cited Stonebwoy and Shatta Wale as examples of strong artist personas.
The debate highlights Ghana’s evolving entertainment standards. Where raw talent once sufficed, streaming era success now demands charismatic packaging. Some argue Paluta’s authenticity is his brand, while others believe Yeboah’s tough love could help his career.
As Paluta prepares his debut album, this controversy may test whether musical talent alone can sustain stardom – or if personality truly is the missing ingredient.