Adeife and her boyfriend, Lawrence, who she fondly calls LomLom, recently made an appearance on Pulse TV to share their love story. She explained that she posts him sparingly, but every time she does, the videos blow up with likes, and people really enjoy the content. Laughing, she joked, โMaybe Pulse caught the fever.โ
The vlog gave a peek at their entrance to Pulse TV, behind-the-scenes moments, and their exit, all with their voices as playful voiceovers. Fans got to see the polished final product, but also a hint of what it really takes to get the perfect shot.
At one point, Adeife teased Lawrence, asking if they should start producing couple content. His response? โNever carry your joy to social media.โ Adeifeโs reply was equally thoughtful: โYou can carry your joy to social media, but I donโt want it to become performative and not real.โ
Behind the scenes of that โperfectโ video, she admitted to yelling at Lawrence multiple times just to get him focused for the voiceover โ yet all anyone sees is the cute, effortless version.

Lawrence pointed out how social media can turn love into performance: โYou begin to do it for the views, for the gram, and at some point, youโre not being real to yourself.โ Adeife agreed, highlighting the struggle of keeping content fun and authentic at the same time.
By the end, when Adeife asked again if couple content was a good idea, Lawrence playfully but firmly said, โNah.โ Her โgirliesโ as Adeife calls her followers, chimed in with mixed opinions, though most agreed that sparingly posting him, as she always does, works best.
The conversation isnโt just about Adeife and Lawrence. It taps into a larger discussion about couples on social media. When does sharing become performative? How much joy should stay private? This video shows that behind every cute post, thereโs effort, patience, and sometimes frustration that viewers donโt see.
In the end, maybe itโs best when couples share just enough joy to make people smile, without turning love into a show for the likes. And clearly, Lawrence is bent on keeping the fun real.





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