The fanfare that typically accompanies a celebrity brand endorsement has given way to a storm of public anger this week after Nollywood actress Mercy Johnson Okojie was unveiled as the brand ambassador for Girls Tag, a newly launched menstrual care brand retailing at ₦25,000 per pack.
This has triggered a fierce national debate about affordability, women’s dignity, and the social conscience of Nigeria’s entertainment elite.
Girls Tag, marketed as a premium all-in-one period care pack for girls aged nine and above, launched with Mercy Johnson appearing alongside her daughter, Purity Okojie.
Shortly after, fellow actress Regina Daniels was also confirmed as an ambassador, further amplifying the brand’s profile and, as it turned out, the backlash against it.
At ₦25,000, Girls Tag sits far beyond the financial reach of most Nigerian women. With Nigeria’s minimum wage standing at ₦70,000 monthly, a single pack would consume over a third of the lowest legal wage in the country, a reality that was not lost on critics online.
“Mercy Johnson, you are an embarrassment to women,” wrote user Ms. Jorji. “In a country where women are struggling to afford sanitary pads, you want to charge 25k?” Another user, @Rebekah, was equally direct: “Nigeria is a poor country. Elitism should never extend to the basic rights and dignity of girls and women. Sanitary pads are not luxury items.”
The criticism lands against the backdrop of a well-documented menstrual health crisis. Many Nigerian girls, particularly in rural and low-income communities, regularly miss school during their periods due to a lack of affordable sanitary products, with some resorting to unsafe alternatives that expose them to serious health risks.
Not everyone joined the pile-on. User @Lai argued that market economics, not morality, should govern the conversation. “Not everyone is a philanthropist. We don’t tell Dangote to sell fuel at ₦100 to support the poor; this is business.”
But that defense rang hollow for many, particularly given that menstrual products occupy a unique space between consumer goods and basic healthcare necessities. @Ara captured the frustration pointedly: “Since when did pads start having a target audience?”
What has stung most for many observers is less the product itself and more what it represents: a celebrity with a long-cultivated image of relatability appearing to endorse a product that prices out the very people who have supported her career.
@Olaámi put it bluntly: “The majority of Nigerian celebrities don’t actually stand for anything. All they care about is their bottom line.”
As of the time of this report, neither Mercy Johnson nor Girls Tag had issued a formal response to the criticism. Whatever their next move, the launch has perhaps unintentionally thrust menstrual health equity into the center of a loud and necessary national conversation.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The controversy surrounding Mercy Johnson’s endorsement of Girls Tag ultimately boils down to one uncomfortable truth: in a country where millions of girls cannot afford basic menstrual products, attaching a ₦25,000 price tag to a period care pack and a beloved celebrity’s face to it is more than a marketing misstep.
It is a stark reminder of the widening gap between Nigeria’s elite and the everyday realities of the women and girls they claim to represent. Whether intentional or not, the brand has sparked a conversation Nigeria needed to have about menstrual health, economic inequality, and the responsibility that comes with influence.
















