Key points
- Uche Ogbodo says body work is not a moral issue. She urges people to fix what hurts their confidence.
- She calls for safe, expert procedures with honest guidance. She rejects shame and warns against risky shortcuts.
- Maureen Solomon earlier criticised BBL as a poor example. Ogbodo replies that choice and safety should guide fans.
Nollywood actress Uche Ogbodo has replied colleague Maureen Solomon over a fresh debate on Brazilian butt lift surgery. Ogbodo says body enhancement is a personal choice, not a moral matter. “There is nothing morally wrong in enhancing any part of your body,” she said.

In a video shared online, she argued that modern care lets people fix features that hurt their confidence. She urged fans to learn the right process, use trained hands, and avoid unsafe shortcuts. The talk also follows businesswoman Ehi Ogbebor’s hip reduction surgery claim.
What Uche Ogbodo said
Ogbodo framed cosmetic work as a health and confidence choice rather than a virtue test. “It is your body; technology now lets you improve it,” she added. She said open talk on safe clinics and recovery beats silence that pushes people into bad hands.
Why the debate persists
Body work by stars keeps raising two hard questions: role-model duty and safety. Critics fear it normalises high-risk choices for young fans, while supporters say facts and consent reduce harm. Social media magnifies both sides as before-and-after posts draw sharp reactions.
In recent weeks, related voices have surfaced across entertainment feeds. Ogbodo’s partner, actor Bobby Maris, urged safe, expert-led choices and backed confidence-building work; see context in Bobby Maris backs BBL. Ogbodo’s own note today sits in that lane, calling for facts and trained care rather than shame.
She closed by stressing that choice, safety, and clear guidance should lead the talk. She said young people need truth on risks, costs, and recovery, not hush rules. The wider debate will likely continue, but her line is plain: inform, don’t judge





