Mugiithi artist, Samuel Muchoki better known as Samidoh and his second wife, nominated senator Karen Nyamu made an appearance on Bahati’s reality show, The Bahati Empire, now streaming on Netflix.
In one of the episodes, Diana Marua invited the couple out for lunch, to express her frustration over how husband Bahati suggestively interacts with his video vixens, explicitly describing his contact with their posterior. READ FULL STORY
Diana stated she felt very disrespected, recounting how she walked in on Bahati’s female dancers twerking suggestively on him.
“I found Bahati in the middle of women with voluptuous behinds, and he was holding them as they twerked for him. The issue is not even the size of their ‘assets’ but the disrespect I saw. I was like, how did it get this far even if it is work?” she posed.
Karen Nyamu and Samidoh were caught off guard and giggled at the story, advising Diana to calm down because that was how Bahati made his money and it would not be ideal to stop him from working to provide for the family.
“Your problem is women twerking for your husband yet he is working? Maybe he is not their type, and you are here complaining.
The vixens are there to be paid and maybe they are not interested in Bahati. That is a very small issue.” she scoffed.
Karen then warned Diana against calling her because of such trivial matters.
“Don’t call me again for such things. Call me when Bahati has done something serious. I thought there was another girl involved so I could teach you how to manage having a co-wife,” Nyamu added.
Diana responded firmly in her confessional that she would never share her husband.
“Having a co-wife is not my portion. I don’t understand how I should allow that, saying it was his line of duty,” she affirmed.
The Bahatis have been a trending topic since the show dropped, owing to the candid dialogues that offer an unfiltered glimpse into the dynamics of celebrity relationships and the distinctive challenges they encounter.
They have also featured other celebrities including Rev. Lucy Natasha, The Murayas, Nameless and Wahu, Jackie Matubia, and MP Jalang’o among others.