I recently came across a video of a young boy on TikTok, @Smartician, Ovwighosuotu Darlyton, who built a functional blender using plastic bottles and a soda fountain from carton paper, among other creations using local objects found in his environment. It wasn’t just impressive; it was a reminder of the kind of ingenuity that exists quietly among Nigeria’s Young Innovators across Nigeria. These are the kinds of creators who look at the world around them and, instead of complaining about what they don’t have, they build with what they do have.
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This kind of talent is not just creativity; it is innovation in its purest form. And it tells a deeper story about Nigeria, both the promise we carry and the gaps we haven’t closed.
The Implications of Talent Like This
The boy’s inventions highlight a few things. First, Nigeria has an abundance of natural problem-solvers, children who think like engineers long before they ever see a laboratory. Second, it reveals the vast disparity between potential and opportunity. A child with this level of skill should be in a STEM program, a makerspace, or a tech innovation hub, not relying on carton and discarded plastic to express brilliance.
It also raises a painful question: how many young innovators like him go unnoticed, unsupported, and eventually lost to circumstances? For every one we see online, there are countless others who may never be discovered.
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How This Talent Can Be Channelled Productively
Nigeria’s challenge is not a lack of talent; it is a lack of structure to harness it. For talent like this to flourish, a few things must happen:
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Early mentorship from engineers, STEM teachers, and innovators who can guide young creators beyond improvised projects.
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Access to tools and maker labs, where children can safely experiment with electronics, mechanics, and robotics.
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Support from NGOs, tech hubs, and private-sector partners who can sponsor young inventors and give them exposure.
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Platforms for visibility, competitions, exhibitions, TV segments, and innovation fairs that celebrate creativity at the grassroots level.
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Scholarships and innovation grants, because brilliance shouldn’t depend on a family’s financial situation.
Beyond institutional support, we also need to build a culture that sees innovation as something worth nurturing, not something reserved for foreign countries or elite schools.
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Why This Matters
Countries that dominate technology and engineering today started by nurturing the curiosity of children who played with scraps and imagined what could be. Nigeria has that same opportunity staring us in the face. The young boy on TikTok is not an exception; he is a sign of what is possible when imagination refuses to be limited by environment.
If we channel this energy properly, we won’t only empower one child; we’ll build a generation of inventors capable of transforming Nigeria’s manufacturing, engineering, and technology sectors.
This is not just about a boy building a blender from plastic; it is a call to recognise that innovation is already happening all around us. What remains is for all of us, institutions, educators, parents, and policymakers, to catch up.
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