Social media influencer Segun Yemisi has set off a firestorm of debate with a new post that many are calling irresponsible and offensive. In a move clearly designed to attract attention, Yemisi shared a post titled “the easiest Women to Sleep With,” listing specific types of women she claims fall into this category.
The list, which she shared on her page, quickly spread beyond her followers. It includes groups like “desperate single mothers,” “teenagers that want to belong by all means,” and “some married women whose husbands are sexually inexperienced.” Also on the list were “women being married to a woman,” “women with high libido,” and “slay queens with high life + zero source of income.”
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See the list below:
- Desperate single mothers → Single mothers seeking support or companionship
- Teenagers that want to belong by all means → Teenagers eager to fit in or be accepted
- Some married women whose husbands are zzxually inexperienced/inactive → Married women in relationships with s£xuaIIY unfulfilled partners
- Women being married to a woman → Women in same-zzx marriages or relationships
- Women with high libido → Women with strong s£xu@I desire or active sexual appetite
- Slay queens with high life + zero source of income → Women who enjoy a lavish lifestyle without a stable income source

The reaction was swift and largely critical. While the post gathered the typical engagement of likes and shares, the comments section filled with people questioning Yemisi’s purpose.
” What was the point of this content?” one user directly asked. “Are you encouraging married women to cheat since you added them to your list?” Others challenged the truth behind her claims. “What is your source for this information?” a comment read. “This list is not true and is just harmful.”
Many pointed out that the list relies on damaging stereotypes, painting vulnerable groups—like single mothers seeking stability or teenagers navigating social pressure—with a broad and unfair brush. Critics argue that such content reduces complex individuals to crude labels purely for online clicks.

Observers note that this is a classic tactic for generating engagement, where creating outrage or controversy drives traffic and comments. Whether Yemisi genuinely believes her list or posted it “just catching some fun,” as some speculate, the result is the same: a wave of attention that has put her name in more feeds.
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The incident raises familiar questions about the limits of social media content and the responsibility of influencers with large platforms. While Yemisi has certainly gotten the attention she may have wanted, the cost appears to be a damaged reputation and a serious conversation about the impact of such posts on the women she so casually categorized.

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