It’s not every day that a Liberian comedian drops his mask and lets the world into his storm, but today, Mama Liberia, the character name of one of Liberia’s most beloved comedians Abass Conde, took to social media and poured out raw, painful truths that caught the entertainment world off guard.
In a now-viral post, he wrote, “I f**k up and only owe my wife apologies but now the this girl trying to run me, before she does I’m going to run myself and run her too! I’m a human.”
Yes, he said it just like that. No filters. No PR statements. Just emotion, confusion, regret, and defiance all bubbling into one digital breakdown that’s now being screenshotted, shared, and analyzed across Liberian platforms.
From all indications, Mama Liberia is going through what seems to be a messy personal scandal, one involving his wife, a side chick (allegedly America based), and the type of emotional chaos that doesn’t stay behind closed doors anymore.
In his own words, the American woman has been making repeated efforts to break his home. According to him, this woman even messaged his wife claiming to be her sister and promising to take her to America, all in a ploy, he says, to create more tension in his marriage.

“She’s doing all this so my wife can divorce me,” he claims.
And if you think that’s all, the post gets even deeper: “Before she try to damage me, I will damage myself before I damage her,” he writes, hinting at a mental and emotional struggle far bigger than just a cheating scandal. Maybe something that’ll even destroy his career.
What makes this situation different from the usual celebrity drama is how deeply personal and unguarded his statement was. No excuses. No blame-shifting. Just a man admitting that he messed up, and perhaps doesn’t know how to fix it.
“I’m a human. I do make mistakes,” he wrote. A line that has since sparked both sympathy and criticism.
Some fans are praying for healing in his home, while others are calling him out for not protecting his marriage from the start. Then there are those questioning the side woman’s motives, wondering how far is too far when it comes to trying to break a home.
Whether Mama Liberia was right to take this online or not, one thing is clear: this isn’t just a comedian trying to be funny anymore. It’s a man standing in his flaws, his guilt, and his fears, while the internet watches and judges.
And honestly, maybe it’s a conversation we needed. About infidelity. About mental health. About the toxic games people play when emotions get involved. About how some people weaponize “help” to destroy.
For now, Mama Liberia says he’s grateful he didn’t “divorce himself”, a poetic way of saying he hasn’t given up on who he is, despite the shame and struggle.
Whether his wife will stay, whether the side woman will back off, whether he will truly take accountability and change, those are the stories that time will tell.
But for now, the internet has seen the comedian behind the comedy. And what we’re looking at isn’t a joke, it’s a man trying not to fall apart.