June 20th was meant to mark the dazzling debut of a brand new daytime club, Koko Culture — a fresh space full of potential, music, and momentum. Instead, the launch was marred by one of the most humiliating performances in recent memory, thanks to one disastrous booking choice: Silverstar Oh.
In what should have been an electric celebration, attendees were greeted with an awkward, almost surreal sight — Silverstar on stage, clapping to no one. The freshly tiled dancefloor remained tragically bare, the venue’s new lights and screen rig wasted on a ghost set that felt more like a rehearsal than an actual performance.
This wasn’t a bad day mishap or a scheduling error. It was the club’s grand opening — their first impression. And they handed the reins to a scandal-ridden figure whose reputation is now more famous for drug use, fraud, and social manipulation than any musical talent.
The decision to have Silverstar headline the club’s launch is nothing short of baffling. She’s already been pulled from lineups due to public backlash. She’s already tanked events before they began. And yet here we are again — only this time, it wasn’t just her image that took a hit. It was the club’s too.
With a massive LED screen flashing her name above the deserted floor, the scene was almost poetic: Silverstar Oh, completely isolated, performing to an audience that didn’t exist. Her fall from relevancy has officially entered freefall. The hype she once manufactured through deceit and manipulation has vanished — and so has her crowd.
The club’s debut was supposed to make a splash. Instead, it faceplanted in front of an audience of no one. Whoever booked Silverstar Oh for opening day didn’t just make a mistake — they made a statement.
And the statement is clear: no one is showing up for Silverstar anymore.