Popular Kameme FM drive show (Humuka) presenters, Man Simo and Katta, have rubbished Sue Munene's 'twa twa' talk terming it as populist and misleading.
Munene, a little-known Nairobi pastor's wife, in a video that has gone viral online, was recently captured saying that a successful marital relationship is heavily reliant on the bedroom matters which should be done anywhere, be it kitchen or inside the car.
She noted that her marriage continues to do well thanks to their frequent bedroom activities with her pastor husband.
"If there is anything that has kept us together with my husband, it is sex. We have it anytime anywhere we want. Inside the kitchen 'tuatua', in the car tuatua," Munene says in the video during a women's conference at her husband's church in Kasarani.
Munene's straight talk which has dominated social media conversations over the last two days, apparently, did not convince the Kameme FM's duo.
During their Tuesday show, they spoke about it to length, with Man Simo at one point having to refer to the Bible (2 Peter: 2) in an attempt to prove the pastor's wife wrong.
"These things about sex need to be taught properly and not by every Tom, Dick and Harry," said Man Simo.
He added: "Sex is holy and as such, it is not something that we should go about anywhere and any time we want it. With these kinds of church teachings, then people will justify themselves that having it outside the pubs, workplaces, bushes or anywhere else is pretty okay arguing that it is God-given. Sure, but it is something that must be done with a plan."
The two would, however, note that Munene was, anyway, just preaching about what today's churchgoers want to hear saying that if she was to touch on a different topic that seeks to educate about the 'bitter truth', the church would lose followers.
Man Simo, who almost steers the four-hour-long show as Katta laughs all the way to 8 pm when it ends, would also add that many marriages have not failed mainly because of 'tuatua', but other factors like the couple's childhood upbringing, shunning of marital responsibilities by either party, only to mention but a few.
The two would advise faithfuls to always 'interrogate' the preachings they get in church saying that some were 'ungodly' and only meant to favour the preachers and their 'church businesses'.