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Recent episodes
The Asake Myth: Why Most Artists Going Global Are Actually Going Broke
Apr 29, 2026
1h 51m 39s
The Central Banker Who Rigged The System: How To Build Africa's Richest Man
Apr 22, 2026
1h 33m 10s
The Fashion Industry Crisis: Why Chasing the Runway Means Going Broke
Apr 15, 2026
3h 05m 40s
From Columbia Law To A Times Square Billboard: Her Scaling Blueprint
Apr 8, 2026
1h 36m 01s
Investing In Africa Is A Different Game. Here Are The Rules
Apr 1, 2026
1h 19m 01s
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4/29/26 | The Asake Myth: Why Most Artists Going Global Are Actually Going Broke | Tobi Mohammed left a career in tech and engineering to build one of West Africa's most influential entertainment companies. With two master's degrees and early success closing billion-naira deals with the federal government, he could have stayed comfortable. Instead, he followed his passion into an industry with no rulebook. Six years later, he's co-founded The Plug, sold more tickets than any festival in West Africa, managed Grammy-nominated artists like Bella Shmurda and Odumodublvck, and built Mainland Block Party into a cultural movement that spans Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Ghana, and New York. He's sold 38,000 tickets in a single December. He's worked with everyone from King Promise to Wale. And he's learned every brutal lesson the Nigerian entertainment industry has to teach. But this conversation goes far beyond events. We unpack why venues are Africa's biggest missed opportunity, what it really costs to throw a block party in Lagos, why most promoters are quietly bleeding money while chasing clout, and what it takes to build something that actually lasts in Nigerian entertainment. We also talk about ampiano artist and Afrobeats star. The Room is now open. 200 founding seats at $42/month — price locked permanently for everyone who joins now. We’re in the first 20. When it’s full, it’s full. Join at https://www.patreon.com/posts/welcome-to-inner-156114670 WHERE TO FIND TOBI MOHAMMED Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alhajipopping Twitter/X: https://x.com/alhajipopping EPISODE SPONSORS Vban - Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com AFROPOLITAN Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/posts/welcome-to-inner-156114670 TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Introduction & Patreon Announcement 0:53 The Biggest Missed Opportunity: Venues 2:22 Third Spaces & Why Nigeria Needs Them 4:42 The New Home Decor Store Creating Connection 5:38 How Mainland Block Party Actually Started 7:00 Moving Back from England and Facing Social Segregation 8:16 The First Block Party at Truffles 9:40 When the Numbers Started Growing 10:25 Moving to Berks and Solving Social Segregation 11:53 The Digital Ads Nobody Was Doing 13:05 Getting Kicked Out After 850 People Showed Up 14:15 The Saturday Night Venue Crisis 16:00 The 5-Hour Bike Ride to Find a Venue 17:20 Taking Block Party to the Island, Abuja, Ghana, NYC 19:01 Sophisticated But Inclusive: The Block Party Message 19:43 Co-Founder Relationships: Making Three Partners Work 22:47 Artist Management: The Administrative vs Creative Split 25:13 When Artists Think They've Outgrown Their Managers 27:43 Why Asake Is a Unicorn (Not the Average Case) 29:43 The Parent-Child Dynamic in Artist Management 31:45 Infrastructure Challenges for African Touring 36:22 The Data Problem in Nigerian Entertainment 37:43 Why Artists Have Priced Themselves Out 38:47 Odumodublvck's Free School Tour 39:52 K-Pop vs Hip-Hop: The Masses Strategy 42:12 How Global Artists Can Still Serve Nigeria 43:17 Brand Partnerships and Making Economics Work 46:23 Financial Advice for Artists (And Why He Stopped Giving It) 49:40 Discipline vs Creativity: What Actually Wins 50:30 The Streaming Rate Conversation Nobody Wants to Have 54:07 Psychology of Managing Chaos at Events 56:08 Profit vs Consumer Happiness 58:31 Why Block Party Stays Affordable 1:01:01 Making Wale Affordable: The Equity Play 1:05:00 Investing 60 Million in Content This December 1:07:28 Rapid Fire Begins 1:10:03 Biggest Mistake: Putting Someone Before Himself 1:10:26 Artist He Wished He'd Signed Earlier 1:10:42 Best Nigerian Food 1:11:21 Skills He Wished He'd Learned Earlier: Boundaries 1:12:37 The Niece's Birthday He Missed in Paris 1:14:38 Life Lesson: Go Where You're Invited 1:17:26 Who Should Be on This Podcast: Bankulli, Cecil Hammond, Davido, Teni 1:20:57 Why Davido's Story Matters 1:21:15 What Amapiano Artists Do Better | 1h 51m 39s | ||||||
| 4/22/26 | The Central Banker Who Rigged The System: How To Build Africa's Richest Man | Ayobami Adekojo walked away from corporate life to dive headfirst into one of the most brutal arenas in the world: Nigerian politics. As a political strategist, polling firm founder, and policy advisor, he's worked on presidential campaigns, sat in governors' strategy rooms, and watched history get decided in hallways most people never see. But this conversation goes far beyond elections. We unpack why the Nigerian diaspora fundamentally misunderstands how political power works at home, what actually moves a voter, and why the 2027 election is already decided before most people have even tuned in. Ayobami breaks down: The biggest misconception about Nigerian politicians: "They're some of the smartest people in the country" The real mechanics of power: wards, delegates, governors, and the machine The flat rate: what every presidential candidate quietly pays delegates Why the average Nigerian voter wants something elites would never expect How social media has quietly made politicians more accountable than ever The EndSARS autopsy: the vacuum, the bad actors, the moment it slipped The 90 minutes inside the PDP primary that handed Atiku the ticket How Tinubu outplayed Osinbajo, Amaechi, and Buhari to win APC The Emefiele playbook: hubris, dollars, and why he didn't flee The 2027 prediction: "The easiest reelection in 19 years" The honest autopsy of 2023: why Peter Obi split the vote and couldn't win Why Atiku and Obi on the same ticket was the only path to beating Tinubu What the diaspora must understand before running for office back home This isn't just about Nigerian politics. It's a masterclass on how power actually moves in a country that punishes naïveté at every turn. Become a member of the Afropolitan Inner Circle. https://www.patreon.com/posts/welcome-to-inner-156114670?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link WHERE TO FIND AYOBAMI ADEBAYO Twitter/X: https://x.com/dondekojo EPISODE SPONSORS Vban - Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com AFROPOLITAN Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/posts/welcome-to-inner-156114670?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 - Introduction: The smartest people run Nigeria 2:01 - Afropolitan Inner Circle membership announcement 2:06 - The biggest misconception about Nigerian politicians 4:17 - Why Nigeria can't function like Qatar despite oil wealth 6:33 - Regional rule vs. fiscal federalism debate 10:43 - How political power actually works: wards, delegates, governors 15:07 - The flat rate: how much every presidential candidate pays delegates 17:05 - Why ability to win matters more than money 19:21 - What voters actually want (it's not what elites think) 21:17 - Vban sponsor segment 23:05 - The party donation requests politicians receive 24:52 - Why diaspora children struggle to connect with voters 26:21 - How social media has transformed political accountability 28:50 - The EndSARS movement: organization, vacuum, and collapse 34:13 - Social media's power in governance and transparency 37:44 - EndSARS lessons: the lack of clear demands 42:13 - APC primaries: watching Tinubu outmaneuver everyone 45:15 - The 90 minutes that changed the PDP primary 48:08 - Tambuwal's dramatic stage return and the Atiku alliance 51:00 - Why Tinubu was always going to win APC 54:20 - The Buhari mystique: why Nigerians kept believing in him 59:34 - Nigeria's pattern of making the wrong collective choices 1:04:07 - Advice for diaspora Nigerians entering politics 1:07:14 - Why politicians can work with anyone (and young people can't) 1:09:10 - The hubris of Emefiele: too much power, too little foresight 1:13:14 - Why Emefiele didn't flee Nigeria 1:14:22 - 2027 prediction: the easiest reelection in 19 years 1:16:41 - The Trump-Nigeria diplomatic situation explained 1:19:21 - 2023 election autopsy: the three-way vote split 1:23:43 - Why Tinubu won with minority support 1:27:33 - Can Atiku and Obi ever unite? 1:31:25 - Rapid fire questions 1:32:48 - Who should be on the podcast next | 1h 33m 10s | ||||||
| 4/15/26 | The Fashion Industry Crisis: Why Chasing the Runway Means Going Broke | The podcast is free. The room is on Patreon → https://www.patreon.com/cw/Afropolitanpodcast Mai Atafo told me something I can't unhear: "95% of luxury goods are made in China. They just put an Italian label on it." Made in Guangzhou. Blessed in Florence. Priced like a miracle. Mai could have played the same game. Source cheap. Label expensive. Collect the margin. He refused. Sixteen years ago, he walked away from a senior brand manager role at Guinness to build one of Nigeria's most recognized fashion houses. His mother called his wife: "Are you sure about this man?" She believed before the evidence existed. Today, Mai has dressed grooms across the continent, built a brand synonymous with Nigerian luxury, and learned every brutal lesson the fashion industry has to teach. He chose to manufacture in Nigeria when everyone told him he was crazy. He chose time over a house in Banana Island. This conversation goes far beyond fashion. It's about what it really costs to build something authentic in a country that fights you at every turn. AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 100 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr WHERE TO FIND MAI ATAFO Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/maiatafo Atafo Brand: https://www.instagram.com/atafo__ EPISODE SPONSORS Vban: Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com CONVO BY AFROPOLITAN Book 1:1 calls with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/ AFROPOLITAN Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter Patreon: Patreon.com/AfropolitanPodcast TIMESTAMPS 0:00 The runway is only 1% of the fashion industry 3:32 A common myth about building a business in Nigeria 5:50 What people don't see about the fashion industry 7:46 Kaftan tailors in Abuja outearning runway designers 10:14 Why fabric quality collapsed when the dollar misbehaved 17:07 The Guinness marketing framework that transformed his business 19:50 The consumer disposition funnel: loyal, regular, occasional, repertoire 21:38 Why he locked in on weddings as his niche 23:05 The playbook: "When you walked into my office as a groom, I knew exactly what to tell you" 23:21 Why creatives keep chasing newness over profit 27:48 Why ready to wear is nearly impossible in Nigeria 28:49 What he saw inside Chinese factories 31:09 The machines and systems that make Chinese manufacturing impossible to compete with 40:17 The buttonhole machine that costs ₦6.6 million and is currently broken 32:40 Nigerian customers vs corporations: the pressure on small businesses 35:27 The TikTok bride drama and designer accountability 45:18 The 95/5 rule: make it in China, add a zipper, call it Made in Italy 47:09 Building manufacturing capacity in Nigeria: a 5-10 year journey 51:19 Why Nigerian fashion needs a council like the CFDA 1:03:00 "Made in China is actually the highest quality available" 1:05:02 Why Chinese vendors freely share competitors with customers 1:12:23 The real cost of a Lagos fashion show: ₦50 million minimum 1:20:05 The December closing debate: why designers shut down when diaspora money arrives 1:27:41 Following his driver to catch him stealing fuel 1:33:13 "Money is a tool to buy your time back" 1:35:04 Why he chose time with his daughter over Banana Island 1:39:23 AI measuring and supplier ratings: tech that could change Nigerian fashion 1:47:14 Lagos Fashion Week: "Give them credit before you hit them" 1:53:03 The funding gap for medium-sized designers 1:58:00 Nigerian artist he'd love to collaborate with: Rema 2:00:46 Savile Row vs Italian tailoring 2:01:40 Why he supports Manchester United (and the story of his dad) 2:08:23 His favorite Nigerian designers and why they deserve more recognition 2:40:04 The Wedding Party partnership: how he got written into the script 2:51:01 How he maintains his values despite Nigeria's pressures 2:58:46 The World Bank rejection that became his new revenue benchmark 3:01:19 His wife as his "umbrella" who believed before the evidence existed | 3h 05m 40s | ||||||
| 4/8/26 | From Columbia Law To A Times Square Billboard: Her Scaling Blueprint | Eni Popoola went from Harvard undergrad to Columbia Law to Big Law then walked away five months in to become a full-time content creator. But this conversation goes far beyond influencing. We unpack why the creator economy is harder than it looks, what it really takes to build boundaries as a public figure, and why Black women creators still aren't getting paid what they're worth. Eni breaks down: • The biggest misconception about being an influencer: it's not easy • The hardest part: finding separation between content and life • Why she purposely doesn't give her audience "all of her" • Being first gen corporate: "No one in my family had worked a corporate job" • The meeting that changed everything: "You have to stop doing content" • Why she quit immediately: "This is my opportunity to leave" • The $700 to $7,000 brand deal story that opened her eyes • Why Black women creators are not getting paid what they're worth • The algorithm problem: same faces, smaller pool • Immigrant guilt and reframing sacrifice for the next generation • Unlearning toxic corporate culture through coaching and therapy • Why her dating pool is smaller and why she's fine with it • Therapy as a non negotiable for public figures • America's literacy crisis: "People cannot comprehend what's happening" • The intentional TikTok strategy that grew her audience • Lagos Fashion Week vs. New York and Paris: "Influencers here are celebrities" This isn't just about content creation. It's about building a life on your own terms. AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 100 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr WHERE TO FIND Eni Popoola Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/enigivensunday?igsh=eTJmN25ybW5mODY5 Website: https://enigivensunday.com/ EPISODE SPONSORS Vban - Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com CONVO BY AFROPOLITAN Book 1:1 calls with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/ AFROPOLITAN Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter TIMESTAMPS TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 - Intro: The biggest misconception about being an influencer 2:28 - The hardest part of content creation 4:32 - Setting boundaries between content and life 8:19 - The story of leaving Big Law 14:16 - The internal conversation before quitting 18:40 - "I have to quit" — the moment of decision 22:27 - Walking out with everything 25:26 - How she built financial security before leaving 29:10 - The first big check: from hobby to business 31:37 - Are Black women creators being paid what they're worth? 36:48 - Navigating negotiations with a legal background 41:43 - Immigrant guilt and first-gen pressure 47:29 - The George Floyd moment and DEI's limits 52:13 - Dating as a high-achieving creator 58:55 - How therapy helps navigate success 1:05:28 - Unlearning scarcity around money 1:07:24 - The current state of America and the literacy crisis 1:11:50 - Choosing your lane as a creator 1:15:19 - What you lose chasing virality 1:17:17 - The future: products, platforms, and storytelling 1:21:43 - Lagos Fashion Week experience 1:29:17 - Rapid Fire: favorite books, food, platforms, and more 1:34:30 - Who should be on the podcast next? | 1h 36m 01s | ||||||
| 4/1/26 | Investing In Africa Is A Different Game. Here Are The Rules | Private equity in Africa has returned less than 10% IRR over the last decade. The target? 20%. Andrew Alli has spent 30 years figuring out why. He led infrastructure investments at the IFC, then became CEO of Africa Finance Corporation—where he secured an A-minus credit rating and led a Euro bond that was 5-6x oversubscribed. But this conversation goes far beyond finance. We unpack why private equity has underperformed across Africa, what's really blocking development, and why the diaspora's most valuable asset isn't money—it's know-how. Andrew breaks down: • Why African PE returns less than 10% IRR when firms target 20% • The 30% ownership trap: why PE firms can't turn companies around • Dutch Disease: how oil destroyed Nigeria's manufacturing base • Why 54 African countries is "way too many" • Energy and productivity: the two dimensions that drive development • 95% of AFC's troubled investments shared one flaw: governance (not corruption—culture) • China in Africa: "When Europeans visit, I get a lecture. When the Chinese visit, I get a stadium." • The diaspora's real value: know-how, not cash • John Rawls and why justice is the foundation of national unity This isn't just about investing. It's about understanding the game you're playing. Essential viewing for founders, investors, and diaspora professionals building in or with Africa. AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 100 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr WHERE TO FIND ANDREW ALLI Twitter: https://x.com/afalli LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/andrew-alli-a5029a1 EPISODE SPONSORS Vban - Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com CONVO BY AFROPOLITAN Book 1:1 calls with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/ AFROPOLITAN Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 – Intro 1:35 – One uncomfortable truth: You have to work with governments 4:12 – Where do you see hope in Africa? 5:04 – 54 African countries is too many 6:12 – Africa's demographic advantage and the future of labor 7:03 – Private equity's broken model in Africa 9:50 – The currency trap: 300% in Naira, 6% in dollars 11:06 – Why PE exits take 14-15 years instead of 10 12:16 – The 30% stake problem 14:45 – Africa needs 15+ million jobs per year 15:46 – Development comes down to two things: productivity and energy 16:55 – The average Nigerian consumes the same electricity as a fridge 18:08 – Energy is the bottleneck—even for AI in the US 18:35 – Education and know-how: The Dangote Refinery example 21:18 – Only 2 African utilities are financially viable 22:37 – Macroeconomic stability and security 26:55 – When did Nigeria diverge? The 1970s oil curse 33:19 – Why 54 countries creates inefficiency 36:43 – Where young Africans should look for opportunity 40:08 – Fintechs will eventually become banks 43:41 – AFC's early days and building from scratch 46:07 – How AFC achieved an A-minus credit rating 47:25 – 95% of troubled investments had governance failures 49:55 – John Rawls and why African leaders need a theory of justice 55:21 – China's role in African infrastructure 1:00:03 – The diaspora's real value: Know-how, not money 1:06:31 – Why Andrew is on Twitter 1:08:47 – Rapid fire: Favorite Nigerian food, travel, and more 1:09:49 – How AFC's Eurobond was 5-6x oversubscribed 1:12:08 – Warm monetization: Sell Indomie, not champagne 1:16:11 – The infrastructure deal that got away 1:17:19 – Most underrated African leader: Seretse Khama 1:17:30 – Who should sit in this chair next? | 1h 19m 01s | ||||||
| 3/25/26 | Tech Investor: The Trillion-Dollar Market Everyone Is Afraid To Touch | Marlon Nichols spotted the opportunity in Africa before most of Silicon Valley was paying attention. Now managing $600 million across three funds at Mac Ventures, he's built a reputation for seeing cultural shifts 18-24 months before they hit mainstream. In this conversation, we unpack how he thinks about deals, why he bets on culture as a leading indicator, and what he's learned from backing companies like Gimlet Media and Pipe. Marlon breaks down: • Why he flew to Nairobi for a board seat and how it changed everything • The cultural investing thesis: how behavior becomes business • Gimlet Media: investing in podcasts before podcasts were a thing • "You can have the biggest market, phenomenal product, and a crappy team — it's going to fail every time" • The four non-negotiables he looks for in founding teams • Solo founders: why being an "attractor" is essential • How Mac Ventures survived the ZIRP era without chasing crypto • Why energy is his biggest focus right now — and what AI has to do with it • The real difference between being a good investor and running a fund • Culture House: how a brunch turned into a global community • Skin in the game: why he left consulting and never looked back • Shackle Mobility: the Nigerian startup he wants you to know about This is a masterclass in pattern recognition, fund discipline, and building in markets others overlook. AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 100 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr WHERE TO FIND MARLON NICHOLS Mac Ventures: https://macventurecapital.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marloncnichols?igsh=MWRrM2hhcTYweHF4Mg== Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/macventurecap?igsh=MTNodWFpYTZ3cWFwdQ%3D%3D EPISODE SPONSORS Vban - Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com CONVO BY AFROPOLITAN Convo - Book 1:1 calls with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/ AFROPOLITAN Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter TIMESTAMPS 00:00 - Intro: What Marlon Saw in Africa 01:24 - Marlon's Background & Managing $600M+ at MaC Venture Capital 02:22 - The Courage to Invest in Africa Early 02:45 - How a Chance Meeting Led to His First African Investment (Kenfield Griffith) 03:39 - Finding a Nigerian LP by Accident in Portugal 05:58 - The Cultural Investing Thesis Explained 06:28 - From Cross Culture Ventures to MaC: Evolution of the Thesis 7:38 - Why Meritocracy Matters in Diverse Investing 8:00 - Culture as Behavior: Identifying Trends 18-24 Months Early 9:00 - Gimlet Media Investment: The HBO of Podcasting 10:21 - Building Mental Models for Evaluating Deals 11:02 - "It Takes 7 Years to Get Good at This" - Getting the Reps 12:59 - Current Thesis on Media Companies & Why It's Tough 15:38 - Investments in Mansa (Nate Parker & David Oyelowo) and Spill 16:33 - Biggest Misconceptions Black Founders Have About Raising Capital 18:25 - Understanding VC as a Product Business 19:41 - The ZIRP Era: How MaC Maintained Fund Discipline 21:32 - What MaC is Excited to Invest In: Energy, Fintech, AI, Healthcare 23:09 - Founder Red Flags: The Know-It-Alls 25:20 - Thoughts on Solo Founders: The Attractor Principle 26:05 - The 4 Non-Negotiables in Founding Teams 27:24 - Why Technical Co-Founders Matter (Tech Debt) 28:25 - Great Team vs. Great Market: What Wins 29:04 - Dealing with Co-Founder Conflict (Real Story) 31:29 - How MaC Venture Capital Was Formed (Cross Culture + M Ventures) 33:31 - What It Really Takes to Run a Fund 38:17 - Why Cycles Repeat: Young People Haven't Seen It Before 40:05 - The VC's Role During Tough Times: Therapist, Coach, Team Member 41:45 - How Important is Self-Awareness in Founders 42:31 - From Jamaica to Venture: Mom's Entrepreneurial Influence 45:25 - Does Capital Allocation Have a Worldview? 46:12 - The Energy Thesis: Why It's Necessary Now 48:50 - Crypto vs. AI: Why AI is Different 50:43 - How MaC Evaluates AI Companies (3 Lenses) 54:58 - Thoughts on the Creator Economy 57:15 - Stephen Bartlett's Distribution Thesis: Attention as Currency 59:13 - Super Personalization vs. Virality Debate 1:01:26 - Culture House: Origin Story at SXSW 1:04:05 - Investments Born from Culture House (PlayVS Story) 1:04:50 - What Skin in the Game Means to Marlon 1:06:52 - Auntie Art Collection Ad 1:07:35 - RAPID FIRE SEGMENT 1:07:43 - Gimlet vs. Pipe: Which Felt Better? 1:08:38 - Advice to 2015 Marlon: Vet Your Partners 1:09:54 - Biggest Red Flag in Pitch Decks 1:11:10 - Most Underrated Trait in a VC: People Management 1:11:21 - Favorite Jamaican Food & City 1:12:10 - Favorite Nigerian Food & Why LA Over SF 1:13:58 - Who Should Be on the Podcast? Shackle Mobility Founders 1:16:53 - Carrot Credit Investment Thesis 1:19:07 - Outro & Thanks | 1h 19m 20s | ||||||
| 3/18/26 | Why Spotify & Apple Own Afrobeats ( And How We Lose) Audu Maikori | Audu Maikori built Chocolate City into Africa's most enduring record label — the only one from its generation still standing and profitable after 20 years. But this conversation goes far beyond music. We unpack the intellectual property crisis quietly stripping Africans of ownership over their own culture, why Nigerian artists are generating billions of streams while losing the rights internationally, and the distribution bottleneck holding back every sector of the Nigerian economy. Audu breaks down: • Why Chocolate City survived when every other label from its era collapsed • The copyright trap: why your music isn't yours if it's not registered in the US • "We built an industry on someone else's infrastructure. We own nothing." • Linda Ikeji vs. BellaNaija: the difference between a hustle and an institution • Why hip-hop has been "trapped" for 15 years — and what Afrobeats can learn • The $22 billion catalog acquisition wave and what it means for African artists • Jay-Z vs. Diddy: the brutal lesson on community, legacy, and co-ownership • His "wilderness moment" — broke, in debt, and one prayer away from giving up • Why destabilizing Nigeria is a geopolitical project, not just a governance failure This isn't just about entertainment. It's about ownership, infrastructure, and who controls the future of African culture. AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 100 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr WHERE TO FIND AUDU MAIKORI Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/audumaikori Twitter: https://x.com/audumaikori Chocolate City: https://www.chocolatecitymusic.com EPISODE SPONSORS Vban - Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com Quill - AI meeting notes that live on your device, not in your cloud. No bots on your call, no copy-pasting transcripts. Try free → https://www.quillmeetings.com/partners/afropolitan CONVO BY AFROPOLITAN Convo - Book 1:1 calls with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/ AFROPOLITAN Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 - Intro: The myth about the business of entertainment 2:03 - Has Nigeria done a good job exporting its culture? 4:28 - Is the music industry more structured now vs. when you started? 7:30 - Why 70% of label revenue comes from outside Nigeria 7:54 - The copyright registration problem (Nigeria vs. US) 9:01 - The real reason behind the Chocolate City investment 12:14 - How a legal background shaped Chocolate City's success 17:07 - Why contracts matter: "Social media tweets can't get you out of contracts" 18:58 - The role of technology infrastructure in capturing value 21:03 - "We built an industry on somebody else's infrastructure" 22:33 - Is Nigerian music an industry or a hustle? 23:29 - Linda Ikeji vs. Bella Naija: Two business models 27:06 - The Apple vs. Android approach to building brands 28:23 - What opportunities are we missing in the creative sector? 31:03 - The distribution problem: "We can't get products to people" 33:19 - Why 80% of telco budgets ignore Nigeria's biggest populations 36:02 - The untapped opportunity in Nigerian football 37:15 - Similarities and differences between Hip-Hop and Afrobeats 40:04 - "Hip-hop was quickly owned by the white man" 41:48 - "Intellectual property enslavement is in perpetuity" 47:47 - Why the advertising-music marriage hasn't worked in Africa 51:41 - Nigerian designers and the distribution gap 54:21 - "Is Nigeria ready?" - The Walmart model for Africa 59:52 - The fashion industry's missed opportunity 1:04:17 - The M.I. story: "Stop Plus is on the way out, you're on the way in" 1:07:02 - How to see potential in people before others do 1:10:10 - The early Chocolate City days: "You get this bar?" 1:13:03 - Stories from the studio: Developing Oleku and Safe 1:19:00 - "Your vision is your vision" 1:21:01 - The airplane perspective lesson 1:23:22 - Advice for founders in their "wilderness moment" 1:24:28 - The 2004 turning point: From broke to breakthrough 1:29:31 - Being exiled for speaking truth 1:32:23 - Why destabilizing Nigeria destabilizes Africa 1:35:00 - Sponsor: Aunties Collection 1:35:47 - Sponsor: Quill 1:36:28 - RAPID FIRE: Best hip-hop album of all time 1:36:57 - Artist you wish you had signed 1:38:31 - Should artists own their masters from day one? 1:41:52 - Favorite hip-hop song of all time 1:42:37 - Perspective on Jay-Z as artist and businessman 1:46:53 - The Diddy comparison: "You can't fake community" 1:50:01 - Who should sit in this chair next? | 1h 54m 47s | ||||||
| 3/11/26 | Why Your Tech Degree Won't Make You Rich Anymore | This episode is sponsored by Quill. Quill is how we run every meeting — it records on your device (no bot joining the call), and then you just talk to the agent to turn the conversation into proposals, action items, tasks, whatever you need. No downloading transcripts. No pasting into ChatGPT. I used it to close a deal last month. If you're still doing the copy-paste workflow, switch. Try Quill free → https://www.quillmeetings.com/partners/afropolitan He walked away from a six-figure investment banking salary to build in Africa. His grandfather was one of the first Africans at Harvard Law in the 1960s, then was assassinated during Eritrea's civil war. His father fled as a political refugee. Now, Yacob Berhane is building the infrastructure for Africa's next generation of founders. We unpack: • Why good African startups "died on the vine" during the funding winter • The real reason African founders struggle to raise Series A • How AI will create millions of jobs in Africa • Building Quill: an agentic AI note-taker that's quietly raised $5M+ • Why taste and discernment matter more than technical skills in the AI era • The 48-month countdown to a "step function change" in AI • Why builders need to stop being silent while "noise makers" fill the void 📍 YACOB BERHANE Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/y_berhane?igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ%3D%3D&utm_source=qr Twitter:https://x.com/YacobBerhane Linkedin:https://ke.linkedin.com/in/yacob-berhane-38981541 👥 Afropolitan Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter 🎨 AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 100 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr Sponsors Sponsored by Quill — AI meeting notes that live on your device, not in your cloud. No bots on your call, no copy-pasting transcripts. Try free → https://www.quillmeetings.com/partners/afropolitan Vban - Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com 0:00 Intro 2:04 What does it take to build in Africa? 5:16 Yacob's origin story: Harvard Law grandfather, assassination, refugee father 7:13 "Life is very finite" - choosing Africa after loss 8:08 The Flutterwave connection (OluBenga in the first accelerator) 9:26 The 2014 founder vintage and startup cycles 10:07 Why African startups died: macros, currency collapse, AI boom 13:47 Building Parity: solving the asymmetry of knowledge 18:28 Africa's 8 million job deficit 20:18 The fundraising paradox: pre-revenue vs. in-review 22:19 Default to live explained 25:34 Africa's AI opportunity: human capital advantage 31:05 Technology won't wait for Africa 33:25 Creativity and storytelling as leverage 37:11 The return of analog experiences 41:44 Yacob's AI journey and building Quill 47:07 Taste, discernment, and judgment in the AI era 48:55 The $140K prototype now costs $20 52:12 The layoff reckoning: AI replacing white-collar jobs 55:04 48 months to step-function change 57:29 Robots, solar, and the future of labor 1:02:53 "You have to be an owner of something" 1:14:07 Building quietly: why they haven't announced the raise 1:19:27 Builders vs. noise makers 1:23:38 Grandmother's letter: seek wisdom from people who love you 1:29:43 Rapid fire questions 1:30:20 Bible verse: "Arise, shine for your light has come" 1:30:52 Best city for African founders 1:32:03 Book recommendation: The Alchemist 1:33:50 "The universe meets you at your level of faith, not fear" 1:34:03 Who should be in that chair next? Acha Leke | 1h 36m 44s | ||||||
| 3/4/26 | The Nollywood Crisis: Why Being a Star Means Going Broke | 🎨 AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 200 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr She lost her father at 12. Became a mother figure at 15. Got married at 18. Won Best Actress the same year—nine months pregnant on stage. Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde isn't just a Nollywood legend. She's a case study in resilience, reinvention, and refusing to compromise. We unpack: • Why Nollywood still can't compete with Afrobeats globally • The 2005 industry ban and why she refused to apologize for 2 years • 30 years of marriage in the spotlight • Why she relocated to LA after COVID • The difference between Nollywood vs. Hollywood • Her take on the "dance to promote your movie" debate This isn't just about entertainment. It's about legacy over money. It's about what it really takes to last 30 years at the top. MOTHER'S LOVE - Omotola's directorial debut. Lagos Premiere: March 1st | Cinemas: March 6th 📍 WHERE TO FIND DR OMOTOLA Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/realomosexy?igsh=MTV1OWdiOWs4MzBmMA= (https://www.instagram.com/realomosexy?igsh=MTV1OWdiOWs4MzBmMA==)Twitter: https://x.com/realomosexy?s=21 EPISODE SPONSORS Vban - Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com Risevest - Dollar-denominated investments in US stocks, real estate & fixed income: https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo - Book 1:1 calls with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/ 🎧 LISTEN ON OTHER PLATFORMS Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6YwRlkSOq8e35xU6bOp9pU Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afropolitan/id1808954585 👥 YOUR HOSTS Eche Emole — https://www.linkedin.com/in/eemole/ Chika Uwazie — https://www.linkedin.com/in/chikauwazie/ Book 1:1 with Eche: https://convo.vip/echeemole Book 1:1 with Chika: https://convo.vip/chikauwazie 🌍 STAY CONNECTED Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation/ Website: https://www.afropolitan.io Join the Network State: https://afropolitan.io/join Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter Community: https://afropolitan.io/community TIMESTAMPS 0:00 - Introduction 0:37 - The Biggest Misconception About Nollywood 3:27 - What Keeps Her Going After 30 Years 4:19 - What's Exciting About Nollywood Right Now 6:04 - Why Nollywood Hasn't Exported Like Afrobeats 10:39 - Losing Her Father at 12: The Grief She Never Processed 14:53 - Walking Through the Arc of Being the Strong One 17:19 - Timeline Grief: Mourning the Life You Thought You'd Have 19:50 - Sitting by Gutters at 1AM Begging for Food 22:27 - Why Money Doesn't Faze Her Anymore 23:04 - How She Avoided Compromising Situations 27:06 - VHS Era vs. Cinema vs. Streaming 31:55 - Winning Best Actress at 18 (Nine Months Pregnant) 35:15 - Her Mother: "This Will End Your Marriage" 39:04 - Getting Married at 18: What Gave Her Confidence 42:29 - Why Divorce Is Not an Option (For Her) 45:13 - The 2005 Nollywood Ban: Fighting for Standards 50:06 - Nollywood vs. Hollywood: The Real Differences 54:20 - Why Netflix & Amazon Left Nigeria 59:24 - Why She Relocated to LA After COVID 1:02:03 - What Changed: "How Calm I Am Now" 1:04:06 - Learning Humility in Hollywood 1:07:46 - Mother's Love: Her Directorial Debut 1:08:44 - Why Pre-Production Is 70% of Filmmaking 1:14:29 - Emergency Surgery While Editing the Film 1:19:14 - What She's Most Proud Of After 30 Years 1:20:06 - Holding Her Dead Father's Passport, Hoping for a Visa 1:22:02 - Bringing Back Authentic Nollywood Storytelling 1:27:59 - The Dance Promotion Debate 1:32:11 - What Success Really Means to Her 1:36:30 - One Performance That Defines Her: "My Story" 1:37:16 - Who She'd Play in History: Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti 1:39:30 - "Nollywood Made Me, Hollywood Will Pay Me" 1:40:24 - Who Should Be on the Podcast Next | 1h 43m 26s | ||||||
| 2/25/26 | Sarz: The Brutal Truth About Making It in Afrobeats | "In Nigeria, I haven't received any residual income from my music. From Nigeria." Sarz, the architect behind two decades of African sound, joins us for a raw conversation about what it really takes to build a career in music from this side of the world. From producing "One Dance" to "Beat of Life" to his latest album, Sarz has shaped the sonic identity of Afrobeats—but the journey has been anything but glamorous. In this episode, he breaks down the brutal economics of being a producer in Nigeria, why "One Dance" going global actually made him feel unreachable to the Afrobeats community, and the moment he realized his destiny couldn't be tied to anyone else's decisions. We go deep on the business politics that kill collaborations, why black music globally is at a crossroads, and the personal cost of two decades of relentless ambition. This is a masterclass for anyone in the creative industry—and a wake-up call about the infrastructure gaps holding African music back. 🎵 WHAT THIS EPISODE COVERS • Why Nigerian producers earn nothing from local streams while their music dominates • The politics behind why hit songs never get released • How "One Dance" changed everything—and nothing • The real reason Afrobeats artists are leaving Nigeria • Timeline grief, burnout, and reconnecting with family after years of grinding • AI in music: threat or tool? • Building the Sarz Academy to change the game for the next generation 📍 WHERE TO FIND SARZ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/only1sarz/ Sarz New Album: https://sarz.lnk.to/PSAAC? 💰 EPISODE SPONSORS Vban - Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com Risevest - Dollar-denominated investments in US stocks, real estate & fixed income: https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afrop Convo - Book 1:1 calls with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/ 🎧 LISTEN ON OTHER PLATFORMS Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6YwRlkS Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast 👥 YOUR HOSTS Eche Emole — /eemole Chika Uwazie — /chikauwazie Book 1:1 with Eche: https://convo.vip/echeemole Book 1:1 with Chika: https://convo.vip/chikauwazie 🌍 STAY CONNECTED Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: /afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn: /afropolitannation Website: https://www.afropolitan.io Join the Network State: https://afropolitan.io/join Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter Community: https://afropolitan.io/community TIMESTAMPS 0:00 - "I haven't received any residual income from my music in Nigeria" 2:16 - Why music is extreme sports: "If you're not passionate, don't try it" 3:45 - What keeps Sarz going after two decades 6:02 - The broken royalty system in Nigerian music 9:25 - Reflecting on 8 years since "One Dance" 11:08 - Why Afrobeats can't scale: venues, economy, and infrastructure 14:18 - "If you explain Nigeria to someone and they understand, you didn't do a good job" 16:07 - The streaming economics: $3-5K per million US streams vs $300-500 in Nigeria 19:23 - Why Afrobeats artists are leaving Nigeria 22:31 - First time in the US: meeting Timbaland and learning to go global 25:03 - The power of collaboration vs. doing everything yourself 28:03 - How the Sarz x WurlD project came together 31:10 - Setting boundaries and knowing your worth 36:13 - The chaos of releasing an album with multiple artists 43:00 - How label politics strain creative relationships 45:43 - Is Afrobeats in trouble? The state of black music globally 51:54 - Partnering with United Masters and building Sarz Academy 53:44 - "I don't see myself as an OG—I still have so much to give" 56:27 - The reward for great work is more work 58:40 - What success has cost: family, relationships, introversion 1:01:47 - Timeline grief: mourning the version of yourself you left behind 1:05:53 - COVID as the reset: learning to slow down 1:08:52 - What Sarz is unlearning in this season 1:11:40 - AI and the future of music production 1:15:36 - Rapid Fire: favorite food, best beat, Cape Town love 1:18:54 - What would you pay for "One Dance" streaming rights today? 1:21:43 - Why "One Dance" made Sarz feel unreachable—and sparked his evolution 1:24:04 - From video game dreams to music: Sarz's origin story 1:26:00 - When his dad thought he was in a robbery gang 1:28:29 - The story behind "Beat of Life" 1:30:44 - Who should sit in this chair next? DJ Maphorisa | 1h 31m 41s | ||||||
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| 2/18/26 | Africans vs. Black Americans: The Toxic Truth About Our Divide | AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 200 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr We are told that the American Dream is a linear path: go to school, climb the ladder, and retire at 65. But for many, that path is becoming a hollow promise that drains your health and your soul. In an era of global connectivity, the most successful people are no longer following the old rules and they are reinventing what it means to be a professional, a mother, and a citizen of the world. Tenicka Boyd, an Emmy-nominated host and media strategist, joined us for a deep, vulnerable conversation on the "speed of life." From breastfeeding on the Obama campaign trail to becoming a top-tier digital creator, Tenicka has navigated the highest halls of power in Washington D.C. only to realize that true freedom looks very different than a title in the White House. This episode is a masterclass for anyone feeling "timeline grief", the pain of outgrowing a life you thought you wanted and a roadmap for those ready to embrace their identity as a global citizen. 🧠 WHAT THIS EPISODE COVERS This conversation explores the shifting dynamics of the African Diaspora and the "whitelash" against diversity in modern America. Tenicka breaks down the historical context of Black American identity, the systemic realities of the US credit system, and why Lagos Fashion Week is currently the "soul" of the global creative economy. We dive into the controversial "Foundational Black American" discourse, the psychological cost of hyper-capitalism, and why "by-continental" living is the ultimate ultimate flex for the next generation. 📍 WHERE TO FIND TENICKA Instagram: instagram.com/tenickab?igsh=MXN1a29yNnd5a3pyNg== Threads: https://www.threads.com/@tenickab?igshid=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ%3D%3D EPISODE SPONSORS Vban - Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com Risevest - Dollar-denominated investments in US stocks, real estate & fixed income: https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo - Book 1:1 calls with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/ 🎧 LISTEN ON OTHER PLATFORMS Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6YwRlkSOq8e35xU6bOp9pU Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afropolitan/id1808954585 👥 YOUR HOSTS Eche Emole — https://www.linkedin.com/in/eemole/ Chika Uwazie — https://www.linkedin.com/in/chikauwazie/ Book 1:1 with Eche: https://convo.vip/echeemole Book 1:1 with Chika: https://convo.vip/chikauwazie 🌍 STAY CONNECTED Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation/ Website: https://www.afropolitan.io Join the Network State: https://afropolitan.io/join Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter Community: https://afropolitan.io/community ⏱️ TIMESTAMPS 0:00 - Intro: Obama, Power & Humanity 2:00 - The State of Influencing in 2025 3:40 - Reinvention vs. Natural Evolution 4:41 - Being an Empty Nester at a Young Age 7:14 - The Trade-offs of Early vs. Late Parenthood 10:06 - Lessons from the Obama Administration 12:22 - From Grassroots Campaigns to Building Community 13:40 - How Politics Became the Family Business 15:36 - The Pandemic Pivot to Content Creation 18:01 - Breaking Down Black Lives Matter for a Global Audience 25:35 - The FBA Debate & Pan-African Identity 30:24 - Race vs. Class: America, Nigeria & the UK 34:53 - The DEI & "Woke" Backlash 38:17 - How Travel Shaped Her Identity 41:19 - Why She Started Coming to Africa 47:53 - Lagos Fashion Week & African Fashion's Global Influence 52:41 - Vulnerability as a Content Creator 54:40 - Timeline Grief: Mourning the Life You Imagined 57:27 - Outgrowing Parts of Influencing 1:03:56 - The Industry's Problem with Substance 1:04:30 - One Truth About America No One Wants to Admit 1:07:32 - The True American Dream is Outside America 1:14:05 - Rapid Fire Questions 1:16:00 - Who Should Sit in This Seat Next? | 1h 18m 34s | ||||||
| 2/11/26 | The $1 MILLION Retirement Trap: Why Inflation Destroys Your Wealth in 5 Years | 🎨 AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 200 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr Most people believe that building wealth is about how much you save. In reality, in a volatile economy, traditional saving is often the fastest way to lose your purchasing power. We have been conditioned to trust institutions that were never designed to outpace inflation, leaving an entire generation of Africans working harder for money that buys less every year. Eke Urum Eke, the founder of Risevest, joined us to dismantle the "learned helplessness" of the African financial experience. After moving from high-level consulting to the brutal reality of the tech trenches, Eke has spent the last decade building systems that allow everyday people to bypass local currency instability. This isn't just a conversation about an app; it is a masterclass on the mechanics of trust, the reality of "Pan-African" wealth, and why the current cultural approach to inheritance is a recipe for legacy failure. 📍 WHERE TO FIND EKE & RISEVEST Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rise.vest Website: https://risevest.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ekeurum Sign up: click.risevest.com/gb0g/ig 🙏 EPISODE SPONSORS Vban - Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com Risevest - Dollar-denominated investments in US stocks, real estate & fixed income: https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo - Book 1:1 calls with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/ 🎧 LISTEN ON OTHER PLATFORMS Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6YwRlkSOq8e35xU6bOp9pU Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afropolitan/id1808954585 👥 YOUR HOSTS Eche Emole — https://www.linkedin.com/in/eemole/ Chika Uwazie — https://www.linkedin.com/in/chikauwazie/ Book 1:1 with Eche: https://convo.vip/echeemole Book 1:1 with Chika: https://convo.vip/chikauwazie 🌍 STAY CONNECTED Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation/ Website: https://www.afropolitan.io Join the Network State: https://afropolitan.io/join Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter Community: https://afropolitan.io/community 🧠 TIMESTAMPS 0:00 - Introduction & Teaser 1:45 - The Opportunity to Create Wealth in Africa 4:02 - Underrated Industries to Invest In 6:30 - The Risevest Thesis: Betting Against the Naira 9:15 - How the Thesis Evolved: Acquiring Chaka 11:19 - Why Investing & Compounding Beats Saving 14:48 - Risevest vs Robinhood: Curated Investing 16:29 - Cultural Nuances of Building Fintech in Nigeria 19:20 - From Bicoins to Risevest: The Crypto Journey 20:20 - Why Africa Hasn't Built Generational Wealth 23:48 - How Women Can Protect Their Investments 27:24 - Demystifying Wills & Succession Planning 30:14 - Why Polygamy Complicates Wealth Transfer 33:59 - Family Wealth Stories: Lessons from Failure 36:10 - Educating Children About Family Business (GIGM Example) 38:34 - Dollar Hedging: Is It Permanent for Africans? 42:25 - Y Combinator Lessons: Build What People Want 46:46 - Hiring & Talent: What African Founders Get Wrong 49:14 - Advice for Nigerians Planning to Japa 51:05 - Adapting to the Nigerian Market After Living Abroad 55:57 - Nigerian Succession Stories: Pascal Dozie, GIGM & More 58:54 - Why Diaspora Remittances Don't Go to Investments 1:02:15 - The One Mindset That Unlocks Wealth 1:05:49 - The True Cost of Being a Founder 1:11:28 - Investing in Southeast Nigeria with Ike Eze 1:15:36 - Rapid Fire: Best Investment (Bitcoin at $90) 1:19:34 - Most Expensive Mistake & Leaving Bicoins 1:24:03 - Co-Founder Dynamics: Lessons Learned 1:28:26 - Who Should Be on the Afropolitan Podcast Next? | 1h 29m 59s | ||||||
| 2/4/26 | THE GREAT EXIT: Why Top Engineers are DUMPING Fintech for Hard Tech Startups | AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 200 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr Africa is frequently framed as a land of "potential," but what if the foundation of its security is fundamentally broken? In this episode, we sit down with Nathan Nwachukwu, the 22-year-old founder of Terra, who recently raised $11.75M from Silicon Valley giants like 8VC and Palantir's Joe Lonsdale. Nathan isn't just building drones — he's reframing the entire geopolitical future of the continent through Sovereign Intelligence. From surviving a near-death experience at 15 to building a multi-million dollar defense prime, Nathan breaks down why Africa must stop relying on foreign intelligence handouts, why the smartest minds are "wasting their time" on SaaS, and how first-principles thinking is the only way to spark a true African Industrial Revolution. TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 - Intro: Africa's $55B security market 1:17 - Does age matter when you've raised $11.75M? 2:11 - Biggest misconception about African defense 4:50 - What is sovereign intelligence? 6:55 - Why Africans should build hardware 9:43 - Why physics matters for Africa's future 11:33 - Security as the foundation — first principles 15:05 - Fundraising: African vs. Silicon Valley investors 17:15 - Why Silicon Valley understood first 20:16 - The $11.75M round — Joe Lonsdale leads 24:01 - US retrenchment & Africa's opportunity 28:33 - What happens when infrastructure is attacked 34:15 - Why engineers shouldn't waste time on apps 37:57 - Energy, communications, food — what needs builders 41:49 - Globalization vs. sovereign capability 48:51 - The near-death experience at 15 52:05 - "I'm scared of dying a nobody" 55:45 - What kind of person thrives at Terra 1:00:04 - Nathan's goal: Industrialize Nigeria 1:03:37 - Why Terra manufactures in Africa 1:07:45 - "Biggest company or biggest failure" 1:10:35 - Closing government contracts in Africa 1:16:30 - Rapid Fire 1:20:49 - How Russia-Ukraine changed everything SPONSORS: Vban - Made for Remote Work. Built for Africa. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com Risevest - Dollar-denominated investments in stocks, real estate & fixed income: https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo - Book 1:1 with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/ WHERE TO FIND NATHAN: Twitter/X: https://x.com/_kingnath Terra: https://x.com/terrahaptix Website: https://www.terraindustries.co/ LISTEN TO MORE: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Afropolitan Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6YwRlkSOq8e35xU6bOp9pU Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afropolitan/id1808954585 HOSTED BY: Eche Emole — https://www.linkedin.com/in/eemole/ Chika Uwazie — https://www.linkedin.com/in/chikauwazie/ STAY CONNECTED: Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation/ Website: https://www.afropolitan.io Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter Community: https://afropolitan.io/community | 1h 25m 40s | ||||||
| 1/28/26 | The Afrobeats Legend: I Had A Premonition & Saved My Team From A Plane Crash! | Iyanya sat down with The Afropolitan Podcast for one of the most raw, unfiltered conversations we've ever had. 17 years in the music industry. Project Fame winner. The man behind Kukere. And still here — still evolving. This episode covers longevity, reinvention, faith, fame, loss, addiction, therapy, and the real business behind building a lasting career in African music. Iyanya opens up about staying authentic, navigating superstardom, the moment Kukere almost didn't happen, financial mistakes during his peak years, and healing after losing his father, mother, and brother in two years. A masterclass on resilience, growth, and what it truly takes to survive and evolve while protecting your peace. Subscribe for more conversations documenting Black brilliance, culture, and the stories shaping Africa and its diaspora. 🔗 Follow Iyanya IG: https://www.instagram.com/iyanya X: https://x.com/iyanya 🔗 Follow Afropolitan IG: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast X: https://x.com/afropolitan LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation Web: https://www.afropolitan.io Community: https://afropolitan.io/join 🎧 Listen Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afropolitan/id1808954585 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6YwRlkSOq8e35xU6bOp9pU 💼 Sponsors VBan (use code AFROPOLITAN): https://vban.com Inverroche Gin: https://www.inverroche.com Risevest: https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo by Afropolitan: https://convo.vip 🎨 AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 200 pieces. Application only: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr TIMESTAMPS 00:00 – Intro: Talk-singing vs. real singing 00:38 – Loss, betrayal, and rebirth 02:18 – Welcome 02:40 – Being original and authentic 03:52 – First US tour (2013) 05:17 – American vs. Nigerian fans 06:30 – Advice to younger artists on fame 07:53 – The business of music 08:24 – The importance of guidance 10:05 – Falling out and reconciling with Ubi 11:04 – Creative freedom vs. business 13:30 – Growth from Project Fame to now 14:46 – The R&B side of Iyanya 16:17 – "You're singing it too much" 18:02 – Why African artists must adapt 20:18 – New album and his father's legacy 20:44 – Losing his father, winning Project Fame 22:15 – Mentorship from elder artists 24:26 – Sound Sultan's advice 26:08 – Doing TikToks and staying humble 26:55 – Fame as addiction 30:04 – Timeline grief and healing 31:23 – Losing three family members in two years 33:03 – Thoughts on therapy and faith 34:00 – Healing through prayer 38:59 – Cash flow lessons from peak years 39:37 – Ownership, investments, legacy 41:25 – Government appointment in Cross River 43:09 – Afrobeats going global 46:27 – Early US tours and empty venues 49:27 – Why artists need teams 53:19 – The real story behind Kukere 55:02 – Almost quitting before Kukere 59:24 – Ghana's role in Kukere blowing up 1:01:03 – Trusting your partner's vision 1:02:51 – Competition vs. collaboration 1:04:42 – Tekno's work ethic 1:06:47 – Surviving the Dana Air crash 1:08:58 – Relationships, privacy, fame 1:12:10 – Celibacy and honesty in dating 1:16:41 – Longevity in music 1:18:12 – Legacy toast 1:20:13 – Rapid fire questions 1:22:38 – Who's next: Moter Black & Seyi Vibez | 1h 24m 15s | ||||||
| 1/21/26 | Africa Is Not “Potential: Here’s Why Investors Are Already Winning | AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 200 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr $750,000 became $40 million in six years. That's what happens when you stop betting on Africa's "potential" — and start betting on what's already working. Ibrahim Sagna managed $37 billion at Africa Eximbank. Then he left to build Silverbacks Holdings. 10 exits since 2019. Flutterwave at 24x. Lemfi at 29x. Moov at 5.1x. His thesis? Possible → Probable → Inevitable. In this episode, we break down why Africa has been profitable for centuries, why capital has always known it, and why founders and investors are finally structuring exits that prove it. From colonial extraction to modern venture capital. From seven cars to forty thousand. From early-stage angels to billion-dollar platforms. We cover how African startups move from possible to inevitable, why distribution beats raw talent, and why storytelling is one of the most undervalued assets on the continent. For founders, operators, investors, and anyone tired of hearing that Africa is still "loading." It's not. About Ibrahim Sagna Ibrahim Sagna is Executive Chairman of Silverbacks Holdings, a private investment firm allocating capital across tech, entertainment, and sports. Since 2019, the firm has delivered 10 profitable exits. Before Silverbacks, Ibrahim spent 26 years at Africa Eximbank running the investment banking division. He also hosts the In The Valley podcast. Landmark investments include Moove — a global mobility fintech backed by Uber, operating in 29+ cities across five continents — and Wave Mobile Money, backed by Stripe. FOLLOW THE GUEST Ibrahim Sagna Linkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/in/ibrahimsagna?utm_source=share&utm_campaign=share_via&utm_content=profile&utm_medium=ios_app Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/ibrahimsagna?igsh=em56c2pzZmlreWhx Twitter - https://x.com/ibrahimsagna?s=21&t=g8hW-h3DHs2_PEEsZXCnvw Silverbacks Holdings Linkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/posts/silverbacks-holdings_work-hard-activity-7224762396614000640-po9Z?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_ios In the Valley Youtube - https://youtube.com/@in_thevalley?si=U9bElCNHygbokIwP In the Valley Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/in.the_valley?igsh=NDhlZ2NlaWdpdGl0 FOLLOW AFROPOLITAN Twitter: https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation/ Website: https://www.afropolitan.io Join our community for exclusive updates: afropolitan.io/community Get email updates: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter Listen to more Afropolitan Podcast episodes: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Afropolitan Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6YwRlkSOq8e35xU6bOp9pU?si=b3a132f9afb3459f&nd=1&dlsi=32c01e3224ac4c64 Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afropolitan/id1808954585 SPONSORED BY VBan – Borderless banking for Africa’s digital workforce Use code AFROPOLITAN → https://vban.com Inverroche Gin – South Africa’s premium craft gin blending heritage botanicals with innovation https://www.inverroche.com Risevest – Invest globally in dollar-denominated stocks, real estate & fixed income https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afrop... Convo by Afropolitan – Book 1-on-1 calls with Africa’s boldest thinkers https://convo.vip TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Why Africa is not “potential” 01:25 Why colonization proves long term value 02:01 Capital extraction then and now 02:56 The Silverbacks Holdings thesis explained 03:57 How African founders scale globally 04:52 From luck to preparation in venture 05:51 Possible vs Probable vs Inevitable 07:41 How SPVs create focused conviction 08:40 Why global expansion signals inevitability 10:06 Real exit multiples from African startups 11:05 Liquidity as a storytelling engine 12:32 From likable to adored brands 13:56 Why Apple behaves like a religion 15:21 Elevating African companies through narrative 17:19 How secondary exits actually work 18:46 Inside the Move investment story 21:41 Solving Uber’s real problem 24:34 Distribution as the real moat 27:08 From seven cars to 40,000 29:04 Becoming a truly global company 30:30 Brands that achieved cultural dominance 33:22 Why African culture is always exported 38:13 Building IP in film and media 39:16 Finding a 1.6 billion person niche 41:12 Culture investing with global reach 45:00 What DFIs actually do 52:10 Why refining beats raw talent 56:41 Who controls the story controls value 59:37 Almost dying and staying uninterrupted 01:08:11 Finding your superpower 01:27:07 Why Africa has always been actual 01:31:01 The next generation sees no limits | 1h 34m 37s | ||||||
| 1/14/26 | Sofi (The Odditty): Being Yourself Will Cost You Everything (But It’s Worth It) | In this episode of The Afropolitan Podcast, we sit down with Sofi, one of the most compelling African women creators shaping culture across the diaspora, to unpack the real cost of authenticity, freedom, and building a life on your own terms. Known online as The Odditty, Sofi opens up about choosing self expression over approval, walking away from expectations placed on African women, and turning her personality into a powerful platform. From viral moments to $25K brand deals, from being silenced to owning her voice, this is a raw, unfiltered conversation about identity, trauma, money, boundaries, and becoming unapologetically yourself. This is not an influencer highlight reel. This is a survival story. We talk about the African creator economy, monetising authenticity, being underestimated, navigating family pressure, womanhood in public, and why being different is no longer a weakness but an advantage. This episode explores: • Why being yourself often comes with backlash, loss, and resistance • How Sofi turned authenticity into real income and global opportunities • The hidden cost of being a woman online, especially as an African creator • Why African creators are finally winning and what most people missed • Identity, self worth, trauma, healing, and choosing freedom anyway If you are a creator, founder, artist, or anyone trying to live honestly in a world that rewards conformity, this conversation will stay with you. Welcome to The Afropolitan Podcast, where African stories are told with honesty, depth, and pride. Follow Sofi (The Odditty) Instagram https://www.instagram.com/the_odditty/ Website https://theodditty.com/ 🔗 Follow The Afropolitan Podcast Instagram https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast Twitter https://x.com/afropolitan LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation Website https://www.afropolitan.io Community https://afropolitan.io/join Newsletter https://afropolitan.io/newsletter Sponsored By VBan The borderless banking app built for Africa’s digital workforce Use code AFROPOLITAN https://vban.com Inverroche Gin South Africa’s premium craft gin https://www.inverroche.com Risevest Invest globally in dollar denominated stocks, real estate, and fixed income https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo by Afropolitan Book 1 on 1 calls with Africa’s boldest thinkers https://convo.vip TIMESTAMPS 00:00: Intro 01:42 Why now is the best time to be an African creator 02:38 Telling African stories beyond suffering 03:06 Monetising being odd instead of fixing yourself 03:35 Blogging, early creation, and finding a voice 04:35 The first brand deals and learning your worth 05:28 How Sofi landed a $7,500 Home Depot deal 06:46 Why representation and visibility matter 07:15 What African parents expect versus reality 08:39 Sexual harassment and leaving Nigeria 10:59 Moving to America and unlearning shame 11:50 Viral moments and the birth of The Odditty 12:47 Choosing creativity over law school 14:16 Family pressure, money, and misunderstanding 15:44 Paying the price for freedom 16:43 Being ostracised for being yourself 18:06 Therapy, healing, and reclaiming power 19:30 Viral videos and what happens after 22:40 Why viral moments are not the goal 24:05 Building community over chasing attention 25:32 Boundaries, friendships, and creator burnout 28:41 Business boundaries and saying no 30:58 Being underestimated and weaponising softness 32:53 “She won’t last long” and proving them wrong 35:13 Creator politics, envy, and extraction 35:39 The business of content creation explained 38:28 Managers, agencies, and skin in the game 40:51 Why representation must work for you 44:00 The New York apartment controversy 45:52 The rat race and redefining success 47:44 Choosing freedom over lifestyle validation 50:43 Turning 30 and rewriting the dream 53:37 Race in America versus class in Nigeria 01:01:20 Why African creators would win faster at home 01:04:33 Lagos creator economy frustrations 01:07:41 Why Sofi started her podcast 01:10:28 Shame, sex, and breaking taboos 01:13:46 Processing trauma and delayed healing 01:16:33 Taking power back 01:19:40 Boundaries and self respect 01:21:34 Rapid fire questions 01:23:43 Who should be on the podcast next | 1h 28m 06s | ||||||
| 1/7/26 | Austin Avuru: We Were Taught To Leave. But Nobody Taught Us How To Build Back Home | Austin Avuru at Afropolitan Live | Building Institutions That Last in Africa AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 200 pieces. Application only. Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr In this episode of The Afropolitan Podcast, we sit down with Austin Avuru—Nigerian geologist, entrepreneur, and co-founder of Seplat Petroleum—to explore what it really takes to build institutions that last in Africa. From his early years at NNPC to co-founding one of Nigeria's most successful indigenous energy companies, Austin shares a rare long-term perspective on discipline, governance, succession, and the hidden cost of success. This is not a hype story. It is a builder's story. We discuss why most African businesses collapse after the founder exits, why managing success is harder than starting from nothing, and why building in Nigeria is difficult but absolutely possible. 🔗 FOLLOW AFROPOLITAN Website – https://www.afropolitan.io Instagram – https://instagram.com/afropolitan Twitter – https://twitter.com/afropolitan Book 1:1 with Eche – https://convo.vip/echeemole Book 1:1 with Chika – https://convo.vip/chikauwazie SPONSORS VBan – Use code AFROPOLITAN → https://vban.com Inverroche Gin → https://www.inverroche.com Risevest → https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo → https://convo.vip TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Intro 0:45 What it really takes to build in Nigeria 1:36 Discipline, focus, and one step at a time 2:18 Would he still choose Nigeria today 2:48 Starting his career at NNPC 3:49 Founding Platform Petroleum 4:36 Co-founding Seplat and acquiring Shell assets 5:02 Why Seplat listed on the London Stock Exchange 5:14 "We listed to save the company from ourselves" 5:47 Managing success as the biggest risk 6:27 Why African companies don't survive founders 7:47 Why Platform Petroleum still exists today 8:27 What NNPC represented in the 1980s 10:08 Comparing NNPC to Saudi Aramco 11:06 Losing his father at age six 11:36 His mother's role in shaping resilience 12:59 Returning to his childhood school after 60 years 14:14 The missed opportunity to go abroad 17:49 Acquiring IOC assets with audacity 18:50 Negotiating directly with Shell 19:41 Convincing global investors 20:42 Almost failing the LSE listing 22:06 How trust unlocked approval 24:36 Rebuilding market confidence 25:54 Scaling from 22K to 100K barrels/day 27:00 Why scaling breaks businesses 29:00 Choosing the right partners 30:23 When to walk away 32:04 Why indigenous entrepreneurs must step up 35:47 What a family office really is 36:25 Why he refused to write a will 37:00 Structuring wealth to avoid conflict 40:09 Lessons from the Dangote refinery 44:08 Energy transition and Africa's right to develop 47:49 What a just transition really means 50:35 Wealth discipline and philanthropy 53:23 Advice to Africans in the diaspora 55:35 Why Afropolitan exists 57:30 Rapid fire 59:39 Biggest hiring mistake 1:00:10 Best business advice received 1:01:26 One word for the diaspora: "It's possible" 1:02:05 Leaders he wants to see next 1:03:22 Final reflections on legacy | 1h 05m 37s | ||||||
| 12/31/25 | This Artist Walked Out of University… Then Built a Global Art Career From Nothing | Aunty’s is a limited sculpture collection by Anthony Azekwoh, released in collaboration with Afropolitan. We are placing 200 sculptures from the collection. Acquisition is by application only. This is not a traditional purchase. Each piece is placed intentionally. Applications can be submitted here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr In this episode of The Afropolitan Podcast, we sit down with Anthony Azekwoh, a Nigerian visual artist and sculptor redefining how African memory, culture, and identity are preserved through art. This conversation introduces Aunty’s, a sculpture collection rooted in reclaiming African history after centuries of cultural theft — beginning with the looting of the Benin Bronzes in 1897. Rather than waiting for restitution, this episode explores what it means to rebuild African memory through ownership, craft, and contemporary creation. Anthony breaks down his creative process, from sketching and digital sculpting to producing physical sculptures in Nigeria using bronze, marble dust, and fiberglass. He reflects on the role of “aunties” as cultural archivists, the importance of joy and celebration in African storytelling, and why African homes can become modern museums. The conversation also goes deeper into Anthony’s personal journey. He speaks candidly about leaving university, navigating religious institutions, financial instability, NFT booms and crashes, payment barriers for African creatives, and what it took to rebuild after hitting financial rock bottom. This is a rare, unfiltered look at what it means to build art, business, and legacy from Africa — without permission. Legal Disclaimer: The opinions, statements, and views expressed by guests appearing on the Afropolitan Podcast are solely their own and do not represent the views, opinions, or positions of Afropolitan, its hosts, affiliates, or employees. Any claims or characterizations made by guests regarding third parties, including institutions or organizations, are the guest's personal opinions and should not be interpreted as statements of fact endorsed by this platform. TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 - Intro & Teaser: Anthony on making his first million through prints 1:28 - Welcome & Introduction to the Aunties Sculpture Collection 1:47 - The History: 1897 Benin Bronze Looting & Cognitive Colonization 2:39 - Why Aunties Matter to African History 3:15 - Anthony Explains Why He Created the Aunties Collection 4:05 - The Design Philosophy: Circles, Triangles & Making African Shapes Iconic 5:06 - Creative Process: How an Idea Becomes a Sculpture 6:33 - Bringing Production Home to Nigeria (3D Printing & Bronze from Benin) 7:15 - "We Are Our Own Museums Now" - Art Living in Homes Worldwide 9:01 - Disconnection from African Art History & Discovering It Abroad 10:55 - What Anthony Wants People to Feel When They Own an Auntie 12:25 - Connecting the African Diaspora Through Art 13:04 - Playing Eternal Games with Eternal People 16:23 - Anthony's Origin Story: Starting as a Writer Who Taught Himself to Draw 16:50 - Why He Left Covenant University (The Full Story) 19:52 - Peak NFT Boom & Figuring Out How to Make Art a Living 24:28 - Emeka's Story: How He Got Himself Rejected from Faith Academy 31:06 - The Covenant University Experience & Institutional Control 35:39 - Biggest Misconceptions About Monetizing Art 37:16 - The Red Man Painting & First Million Naira Moment 38:45 - "You Can't Game the System" - Why Hit Paintings Can't Be Predicted 39:16 - How NFTs Changed Everything for African Artists 41:38 - Payment Rails Nightmare: PayPal Holding $10K for 6 Months 43:43 - Why Crypto is a Lifeline for African Creators 45:00 - Dad's Reaction to the Art Money Coming In 47:11 - The Sculpture Business Failure: Starting 2024 at -$20K 53:38 - Clearing 100 Million Naira by December 54:49 - Is Web3 Dead? (Anthony's Take) 56:06 - How Anthony Got Into NFTs & First Sale Story 59:57 - The Crypto Crash: Losing $20-30K Overnight 1:02:49 - Business Opportunities in the Art World 1:05:28 - Loneliness in Building an Art Business 1:11:14 - Rapid Fire Questions (Favorite Nigerian Dish, Mythical Figure, Books, Movies) 1:15:22 - "There's No Plan B" - Compounding on One Thing 1:15:48 - 50 Years From Now: "The Greatest Ever" 1:16:20 - Gatekeeping in the Art World 1:17:27 - Tattoo Stories & Parent Reactions 1:23:01 - Who Should Be on the Afropolitan Podcast? (Rema's recommendation) | 1h 23m 42s | ||||||
| 12/24/25 | The Man Behind “No Turning Back” How a Gospel Song Went VIRAL Before Release | Gaise Baba How a Gospel Song Went Viral Before Release Faith Discipline and the Untold Story of “No Turning Back” In this episode of The Afropolitan Podcast, we sit down with Gaise Baba, one of the most important voices shaping Afro Gospel, to unpack the real story behind how his song “No Turning Back” became a global movement before it was ever officially released. From organizing free concerts while broke, to navigating criticism from the church, personal grief, and long seasons of obscurity, Gaise Baba shares a raw and honest journey built on faith, discipline, and conviction. This conversation explores how preparation meets purpose when nobody is watching. We dive into: How “No Turning Back” went viral on TikTok and Instagram before release, and why timing mattered more than strategy The real economics of gospel music in Nigeria, and why African artists are quietly out earning Western counterparts Faith versus logic in creativity, business, and decision making The backlash around modern gospel music and how Gaise Baba stayed rooted through criticism What it really means to build while broke, unseen, and underestimated This episode goes beyond music. It is about identity, discipline, legacy, grief, and cultural influence. If you are a creator, artist, founder, or someone navigating purpose in a noisy world, this conversation will stay with you. Welcome to The Afropolitan Podcast, where African stories are told with honesty, depth, and pride. Follow Gaise Baba Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gaisebaba/ Subscribe to Afropolitan Podcast For more unfiltered conversations with Africa’s boldest builders and storytellers. Twitter – https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation/ Website – https://www.afropolitan.io Join the Network State – https://afropolitan.io/join 🔗 Community – afropolitan.io/community Newsletter – afropolitan.io/newsletter Sponsored by: VBan: The borderless banking app built for Africa’s digital workforce. Use code AFROPOLITAN to sign up → https://vban.com Inverroche Gin: South Africa’s premium craft gin that fuses heritage botanicals with innovation. Discover more → https://www.inverroche.com Risevest — Invest globally in dollar-denominated stocks, real estate & fixed income. Sign up → https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo by Afropolitan — Book 1-on-1 calls with Africa’s boldest thinkers. Visit https://convo.vip/ Listen Everywhere: YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@Afropolitan Spotify – https://open.spotify.com/show/6YwRlkSOq8e35xU6bOp9pU Apple – https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afropolitan/id1808954585 Hosted by: Eche – https://www.linkedin.com/in/eemole/ Chika – https://www.linkedin.com/in/chikauwazie/ 0:00 - Intro & Teaser 2:09 - How Gaise Baba Got Into Gospel Music 4:24 - Personal Faith Journey & Encounter at 18 5:57 - Navigating Criticism of Modern Gospel Sound 9:08 - The Light Up Movement: Free School Concerts 15:42 - Advice for Creators Building in Obscurity 18:27 - No Turning Back: The Viral Rollout Strategy 22:51 - The Song Blew Before It Was Released 25:00 - The Unlikely Collaboration with Lawrence Oyor 29:02 - Shooting the Music Video with 1,000+ Church Members 36:24 - How the Lawrence Oyor Collaboration Happened 41:02 - Understanding the Gospel Music Industry Economics 44:29 - Nigeria as the New Frontier for Worship Music 52:06 - Moving by Faith: Organizing Events with Nothing 57:05 - Lessons from Berklee College of Music 1:03:06 - Why Light Must Operate in Darkness 1:09:05 - Christians Need to Be at the Table 1:17:17 - Losing His Mom & Releasing No Turning Back 1:25:01 - The Spiritual Regiment That Prepared Him 1:26:12 - Advice for Young Men Finding Their Way Back to God 1:34:48 - Rapid Fire: Favorite Food, Gospel Song & Artists 1:38:28 - Who Should Be on the Podcast Next: Soji Labby | 1h 39m 35s | ||||||
| 12/17/25 | TRACY NWAPA: The Money Risk That Defined Her Nightlife Business Career | In this episode of Afropolitan Podcast, we sit with Tracy Nwapa, Nigerian entrepreneur, interior designer, and founder of Interior Culture by Obiageli, Slice Lagos, Pavilion a as she opens up about building culture, losing everything, and starting again in Lagos. From dominating Lagos nightlife during Detty December to navigating betrayal, co-founder conflict, and walking away from a business she built from the ground up, Tracy shares the unfiltered realities of hospitality, ownership, and resilience in Nigeria. We explore how Tracy went from media and broadcast journalism to interior design, restaurants, and nightlife, why hospitality is one of the hardest businesses in Lagos, and what it truly takes to build experiences that people remember. This conversation goes beyond nightlife. It’s about purpose, feminine leadership in male-dominated industries, building with integrity in broken systems, and why Nigeria still feels like home despite the chaos. If you’re an entrepreneur, creative, builder, or part of the African diaspora thinking about coming back home, this episode will challenge how you think about success, ownership, and resilience. Welcome to The Afropolitan Podcast where African stories are told with honesty, depth, and pride. 🔗 FOLLOW THE GUEST Tracy Nwapa Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/ 🔗 FOLLOW AFROPOLITAN Website – https://www.afropolitan.io Instagram – https://instagram.com/afropolitan Twitter – https://twitter.com/afropolitan Community – https://afropolitan.io/community Newsletter – https://afropolitan.io/newsletter SPONSORED BY VBan – Borderless banking for Africa’s digital workforce Use code AFROPOLITAN → https://vban.com Inverroche Gin – South Africa’s premium craft gin blending heritage botanicals with innovation https://www.inverroche.com Risevest – Invest globally in dollar-denominated stocks, real estate & fixed income https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo by Afropolitan – Book 1-on-1 calls with Africa’s boldest thinkers https://convo.vip 0:00 - Introduction 2:00 - What People Get Wrong About Hospitality in Lagos 4:07 - How Tracy Dominated Lagos Last December 7:00 - Being a Woman in a Male-Dominated Industry 8:00 - How Tracy Stumbled Into Hospitality 11:28 - Advice for Diaspora Entrepreneurs Moving Back to Nigeria 15:04 - What Nigeria Offers That Nowhere Else Does 19:29 - Getting Into Interior Design Business 25:55 - The Interior Design Business Model in Nigeria 32:04 - Parents' Reaction to Her Success 33:37 - Co-Founder Conflict & Walking Away from Slice 42:57 - The Moment She Decided to Build Again 48:00 - The Role of Rage in Rebuilding 52:46 - Dealing with Betrayal from Staff 57:01 - The Fundraising Journey 1:00:32 - Introducing CUSP: Luxury West African Fine Dining 1:05:02 - Introducing FOMO: The Future of Nightlife 1:08:51 - Retirement Plans from the Nightlife Business 1:21:36 - Rapid Fire Questions 1:29:06 - Meeting FOMO Prime (The Robot) 1:33:00 - Closing & Who Should Be Next | 1h 33m 20s | ||||||
| 12/10/25 | TAYO AINA's Passive Money Blueprint: A Business Career That Funds World Travel | In this episode of The Afropolitan Podcast, we sit with one of Africa’s biggest creators, Tayo Aina, to unpack the truth behind building a global creative career from Lagos. From driving Uber without knowing how to drive, to teaching himself filmmaking, to fighting immigration systems across Africa, Tayo’s journey is the blueprint for the next generation of African storytellers. We discuss the moment J. Cole’s visit to Lagos changed his life, how MrBeast discovering his videos shifted his global visibility, and the hidden mechanics behind building a world-class YouTube career from Africa. We break down the real challenges African creators face brutal CPM disparities, visa walls, platform discrimination, and the hidden costs of chasing a dream in a system not designed for you. But we also explore the beauty, the innovation, the hunger, and the global ambition that make African creators unstoppable. This conversation goes beyond content. It’s about identity, economic mobility, purpose, migration, belonging, and the future of Africa’s attention economy. If you’re a creator, builder, founder, or diaspora kid navigating your own journey, this episode will speak to you. Welcome to the Afropolitan era where Africans tell their stories with power, pride, and global influence. Follow Tayo Aina Tayo Aina YouTube – https://youtube.com/@TayoAinaFilms Instagram – https://instagram.com/tayoainafilms Twitter – https://twitter.com/tayoainafilms Subscribe to Afropolitan Podcast For more unfiltered conversations with Africa’s boldest builders, thinkers, and creators: Twitter – https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation/ Website – https://www.afropolitan.io Community – https://afropolitan.io/community Newsletter – https://afropolitan.io/newsletter Sponsored by VBan – Borderless banking for Africa’s digital workforce. Use code AFROPOLITAN → https://vban.com Inverroche Gin – South Africa’s premium craft gin blending heritage botanicals with innovation. https://www.inverroche.com Risevest – Invest globally in dollar-denominated stocks, real estate & fixed income. Sign up → https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo by Afropolitan – Book 1-on-1 calls with Africa’s boldest thinkers. Visit https://convo.vip 0:00 - Airport strip search story 2:01 - What people misunderstand about being a creative 3:27 - Origin story: Uber driver days (2017) 4:39 - Learning to drive on the job 6:58 - First YouTube videos documenting Lagos 9:40 - Income from Uber driving 11:00 - The breakthrough moment decision 12:04 - Security issues and leaving Lagos for Abuja 13:05 - First wedding shoot and transition to video production 13:28 - Jékýllí concert video that got 1M views 15:07 - First monetized video (real estate content) 15:56 - The YouTube PIN verification problem (couldn't access money until 2020) 18:06 - Wema Bank sponsor ad 19:03 - Content creation as a business 21:00 - The attention economy explained 22:29 - Translating the world as an African creator 25:23 - San Francisco experience and observations 27:10 - First country visited: Russia (2018 World Cup) 29:02 - Starting full-time YouTube (August 2019) 32:27 - Advice for starting a YouTube channel 36:00 - Discovering CPM rate disparities 39:23 - Monetization challenges in Nigeria vs. US 42:20 - Making videos for US audiences 47:27 - Ethiopian airport discrimination experience 50:03 - South African visa issues 51:45 - Getting St. Kitts passport decision 56:27 - Moving to Portugal (2 years ago) 1:01:26 - Quality of life comparison: US vs Europe 1:04:02 - Why creators should build products not just views 1:09:00 - Baroche sponsor ad 1:09:56 - Rise Vest sponsor ad 1:11:38 - Convo sponsor ad 1:11:52 - Rapid fire questions begin 1:15:07 - Moving back to Nigeria conversation 1:27:00 - YouTube Creator Academy (training 3000+ people) 1:30:00 - Future plans: real estate and production studio 1:42:00 - Final question: Who should be on the podcast next | 1h 42m 06s | ||||||
| 12/3/25 | Ex–Silicon Valley Engineer: The Brutal Truth About African Fintech They Don’t Want You To Know | Tayo Oviosu, founder & CEO of Paga, one of Africa’s most successful mobile money companies processing over $20 billion in transactions, joins The Afropolitan Podcast for a rare, unfiltered conversation on fintech, leadership, diaspora identity, and building in Nigeria through crisis, chaos, and conviction. From leaving a stable career in the US to pioneering digital payments in a pre-fintech Nigeria, Tayo shares the untold story behind Paga’s early struggles, near-death moments, and the strategy that turned it into one of Africa’s biggest financial infrastructure companies. More than entrepreneurship, this episode explores the psychology of resilience, navigating naira devaluation, regulation, global perceptions of Africa, and the emotional weight of building for 200 million people when systems are broken. He opens up about: ✦ What Silicon Valley still gets wrong about Africa ✦ The hidden cost of building in Nigeria, power, security, FX, people ✦ Why diaspora identity is an advantage, not a conflict ✦ Lessons from raising capital before “African tech” was a thing ✦ Why fintech in Africa isn’t a product, it’s infrastructure ✦ What the next decade of African money will look like ✦ Why founders burn out and how to stay sane in unstable markets If you’re a founder, operator, investor, or future builder across Africa and the diaspora, this is a masterclass in vision, endurance, and building systems that outlive you. Follow Tayo Oviosu LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/oviosu Twitter – https://x.com/tayoov Subscribe to Afropolitan Podcast For more unfiltered conversations with Africa’s boldest builders, thinkers, and creators: Twitter – https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation/ Website – https://www.afropolitan.io Community – https://afropolitan.io/community Newsletter – https://afropolitan.io/newsletter Sponsored by VBan – Borderless banking for Africa’s digital workforce. Use code AFROPOLITAN → https://vban.com Inverroche Gin – South Africa’s premium craft gin blending heritage botanicals with innovation. https://www.inverroche.com Risevest – Invest globally in dollar-denominated stocks, real estate & fixed income. Sign up → https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo by Afropolitan – Book 1-on-1 calls with Africa’s boldest thinkers. Visit https://convo.vip Book 1:1 with Eche - https://convo.vip/echeemole Book 1:1 with Chika - https://convo.vip/chikauwazie TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Intro 02:18 Leaving the US: The Moment Tayo Realized He Had to Build for Nigeria 05:02 Nigeria’s Cash Chaos: The Origin Story Behind Paga 08:44 How to Raise Money When No One Believed in African Startups 12:33 Regulators, Rejections and Early Paga Near-Failures 16:11 Why Payments in Africa Requires Infrastructure Not Just an App 19:52 How Diaspora Identity Became Tayo’s Hidden Advantage 24:31 Surviving Nigeria’s Naira Crisis, FX, Inflation and Founder Psychology 28:46 Hiring in Nigeria Talent, Trust, Burnout and High-Performance Teams 33:12 The Harsh Reality of Building a Business in Nigeria 36:48 Why Paga Succeeded When So Many African Fintechs Failed 41:20 Africa’s Money Future, Digital Wallets and Financial Inclusion 45:55 How Founders Stay Sane While Building in Dysfunction 50:22 Competing With Banks, Telcos and Big Tech in Emerging Markets 55:03 Government, Regulation and Playing the Long Game 01:00:44 The Chaos Years, Power, Security and Founder Sacrifice 01:05:39 What Silicon Valley Still Misunderstands About Africa Raising Global Capital Today vs Ten Years Ago 01:15:58 Africa’s Fintech Wave Is Just Beginning 01:20:36 What Founders Need to Win, Discipline, Clarity and Survival Tactics 01:25:18 Should Diaspora Africans Move Back, Tayo’s Unfiltered Advice 01:29:43 What Tayo Would Tell His 25-Year-Old Self 01:34:02 The Next Decade of African Innovation 01:38:27 Final Reflections and Closing Thoughts | 1h 48m 24s | ||||||
| 11/26/25 | Why 82% of YouTube Creators Will Never Make Real Money | FOLLOW ADETUTU Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/ Woof Studios – (add link) SUBSCRIBE TO AFROPOLITAN PODCAST For more unfiltered conversations with Africa’s boldest builders, creators, and storytellers. Twitter – https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation/ Website – https://www.afropolitan.io Join the Network State – https://afropolitan.io/join Community – https://afropolitan.io/community Newsletter – https://afropolitan.io/newsletter Book 1:1 with Eche - https://convo.vip/echeemole Book 1:1 with Chika - https://convo.vip/chikauwazie Listen to more Afropolitan Podcast episodes: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Afropolitan Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6YwRlkSOq8e35xU6bOp9pU?si=b3a132f9afb3459f&nd=1&dlsi=32c01e3224ac4c64 Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afropolitan/id1808954585 Hosted by Eche — https://www.linkedin.com/in/eemole/ Chika — https://www.linkedin.com/in/chikauwazie/ This episode is sponsored by: Vban, short for VIRTUAL BANK ACCOUNT NUMBER is the borderless banking app built for Africa’s digital workforce. Use the code AFROPOLITAN to sign up: https://vban.com Inverroche Gin, South Africa’s premium craft gin that fuses heritage botanicals with innovation. Discover more: https://www.inverroche Risevest, a digital wealth-manager connecting you to global, dollar-denominated investments in US stocks, real estate & fixed income. Use this link to sign up: https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo by Afropolitan – Book 1:1 calls with Africa’s boldest thinkers. https://convo.vip/ TIMESTAMPS 00:00 Intro 00:28 Why now is the moment for African creators 01:25 How creators actually get paid in Nigeria 02:23 Why multinational brands don’t spend in Africa 03:41 Why African creators earn less than US creators 04:40 The new money in social commerce, affiliates & merch 05:09 How global creators build multi-country audiences 06:03 Why Nigerian filmmakers win, distribution secrets 07:01 Why she deeply cares about creators 08:56 What creators misunderstand about YouTube money 10:22 Why tech companies deprioritise Africa 11:44 Ranking TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn 14:36 Why YouTube is still the best platform in 2025 17:38 Why TikTok grows fastest (but pays least) 18:06 Breaking banking & payment barriers on the continent 20:02 Why African storytelling hasn’t broken globally 22:33 How she took creators to Cannes Lions 25:48 Inside the YouTube Plugged In event 29:07 Leaving Google: the real story 32:22 The business model behind WOLF Studios 33:43 Which industries pay creators the most 38:02 How to manage brands, teams & bad stakeholders 40:50 Building structure as a creator 41:45 How Afropolitan can scale globally 44:27 Why WOLF Studios rejects certain creator verticals 48:29 The future of licensing, web series & Nollywood 55:21 Should Nollywood charge micro-fees? 57:46 Why FOMO is the missing monetisation lever 01:00:26 What TV stations will pay creators for 01:02:19 The trillion-dollar opportunity in social commerce 01:05:24 Final toasts 01:06:17 Why RiseVest matters 01:07:13 Rapid Fire 01:11:22 Creator burnout & how to reinvent 01:13:18 Final message | 1h 15m 17s | ||||||
| 11/19/25 | He Left Johns Hopkins to Transform Africa’s Healthcare & Built a $243M Empire | Dr. Julius Oni, orthopedic surgeon, investor, and co-founder of Excite Capital, joins The Afropolitan Podcast to reveal how he left Johns Hopkins Hospital to transform Africa’s healthcare system—and why Nigeria is now one of the most powerful emerging markets for medical innovation, investment, and talent. From building a $243M real estate portfolio to returning home to tackle Nigeria’s $2B medical tourism gap, Julius opens up about the discipline, sacrifice, and purpose behind choosing legacy over comfort. He breaks down what it truly takes to move back, build systems in Africa, and deliver world-class care in a market where 220 million people are served by fewer than 500 orthopedic surgeons. He opens up about: ◼️ Why Nigeria’s $2B medical tourism crisis is Africa’s biggest opportunity ◼️ The business model behind building sustainable healthcare in emerging markets ◼️ Leaving a top U.S. hospital to pursue purpose — not prestige ◼️ How he built financial freedom through real estate before moving back ◼️ What African professionals must understand about risk, faith, and purpose ◼️ How Excite Capital grew to $243 million while empowering the diaspora If you’re a builder, investor, or African professional planning your “move back,” this episode will give you the frameworks, courage, and clarity to build boldly. Follow Dr. Julius Oni: Instagram – instagram.com/doctorjko Exsite Capital – https://www.xsitecapital.com Oni Clinic - https://www.oniclinic.com Subscribe to Afropolitan Podcast For unfiltered conversations with Africa’s boldest builders and visionaries. Twitter – https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation/ Website – https://www.afropolitan.io Newsletter – https://afropolitan.io/newsletter Sponsored by VBan – The borderless banking app built for Africa’s digital workforce. Use code AFROPOLITAN → https://vban.com Inverroche Gin – South Africa’s premium craft gin rooted in heritage botanicals. Discover more → https://www.inverroche.com Risevest – Invest globally in U.S. stocks, real estate & fixed income. Sign up → https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo by Afropolitan – Book 1-on-1 calls with Africa’s boldest thinkers. Visit → https://convo.vip/ Listen Everywhere: YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@Afropolitan Spotify – https://open.spotify.com/show/6YwRlkSOq8e35xU6bOp9pU Apple – https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afropolitan/id1808954585 Hosted by: Eche – https://www.linkedin.com/in/eemole/ Chika – https://www.linkedin.com/in/chikauwazie/ Book 1:1 with Eche - https://convo.vip/echeemole Book 1:1 with Chika - https://convo.vip/chikauwazie 📍Timestamps 00:00 Intro: Africa’s Healthcare & Future of Medical Innovation 00:21 Nigeria’s $2B Medical Tourism Problem 01:47 The Reality of Bone Setters & Healthcare Gaps 04:10 Why Healthcare in Africa Is a Long-Term Investment 05:04 The Insurance Divide & Business Opportunity 07:24 Reversing Medical Tourism — Nigeria as a Health Hub 09:44 Why U.S. Healthcare Costs 4× More 11:31 The Long Game: Building Quality Medical Systems 13:23 Why He Chose Medicine & Orthopedics 17:31 Purpose Awakening: The Moment Everything Changed 19:51 Leaving Johns Hopkins to Serve Nigeria 23:42 Building Financial Independence Before Returning 26:06 Choosing Purpose Over Comfort 28:02 The Role of Privilege, Luck & Faith 30:25 Finding a North Star to Guide Your Decisions 33:10 Vision Frameworks for African Professionals 36:31 The Truth About Patient Trust in Africa 38:24 Performing Surgery on Presidents & Public Figures 45:26 The Mental Discipline Required in Surgery 51:06 Afrobeats, Black Coffee & Music in the OR 52:35 Nigeria’s Healthcare Renaissance 55:52 IVF, Sickle Cell, and Medical Breakthroughs in Africa 59:15 The Post That Went Viral: Moving Back to Nigeria 01:02:24 Staying Focused Amid Criticism 01:06:07 Building Excite Capital to $243M 01:20:59 Understanding Multi-Family Real Estate 01:25:19 How Black Professionals Can Build Wealth Together 01:27:33 Afropolitan Toast Segment 01:28:57 Rapid Fire: Culture, Legacy & Identity 01:33:57 Who Julius Wants Next on Afropolitan | 1h 35m 47s | ||||||
| 11/12/25 | David Oyelowo: We’re Not Asking to Be Seen, We’re Taking the Camera | David Oyelowo, award-winning British actor, producer, and founder of Mansa, the streaming platform reshaping Black storytelling, joins The Afropolitan Podcast to discuss why Africa and platforms like AFRIFF (Africa International Film Festival) are paving the way for the next global film powerhouse. From his Oscar-nominated role as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Selma to produce the first major screen adaptation of Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart with Idris Elba, David reveals the truth about Hollywood, representation, and building a platform that returns creative ownership to Black filmmakers worldwide. He opens up about: ◼️ Why now is the greatest moment in history to be an African filmmaker ◼️ The rise of Mansa and how he raised $8 million to build a Black-owned streaming platform ◼️ The truth about Hollywood gatekeepers and why he built his own house ◼️ How he secured the rights to Things Fall Apart and why it must be filmed in Nigeria ◼️ Lessons on grief, faith, and family and why excellence is the best weapon against prejudice If you’re a creator, filmmaker, or visionary shaping culture from Africa and the diaspora, this episode will inspire you to build systems, not seek permission. Follow David Oyelowo Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/davidoyelowo/ Mansa – https://www.mansaplatform.com Subscribe to Afropolitan Podcast For more unfiltered conversations with Africa’s boldest builders and storytellers. Twitter – https://x.com/afropolitan Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/afropolitannation/ Website – https://www.afropolitan.io Join the Network State – https://afropolitan.io/join 🔗 Community – afropolitan.io/community Newsletter – afropolitan.io/newsletter Sponsored by: VBan: The borderless banking app built for Africa’s digital workforce. Use code AFROPOLITAN to sign up → https://vban.com Inverroche Gin: South Africa’s premium craft gin that fuses heritage botanicals with innovation. Discover more → https://www.inverroche.com Risevest — Invest globally in dollar-denominated stocks, real estate & fixed income. Sign up → https://click.risevest.com/gb0g/afropolitan Convo by Afropolitan — Book 1-on-1 calls with Africa’s boldest thinkers. Visit https://convo.vip/ Listen Everywhere: YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@Afropolitan Spotify – https://open.spotify.com/show/6YwRlkSOq8e35xU6bOp9pU Apple – https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/afropolitan/id1808954585 Hosted by: Eche – https://www.linkedin.com/in/eemole/ Chika – https://www.linkedin.com/in/chikauwazie/ 📍 CHAPTERS 00:00 Intro 00:45 Why Now is the Greatest Moment for African Filmmakers 03:10 How Technology Solved Piracy & Changed Nollywood 06:00 Representation & Dreaming in White: The Power of Narrative 08:00 Becoming the First Black King at the Royal Shakespeare Company 10:30 Playing Dr. King and Shifting Global Perception 14:00 Founding Mansa: The Netflix for Black Stories 18:00 Building a Streaming Platform from Nigeria 21:30 Raising $8 Million for Mansa & The George Floyd Moment 25:00 The Hardest Lessons in Building Tech as a Creative 28:00 Trade-Offs, Resilience & Reinventing Yourself 31:00 Why Mansa Chose an AVOD Model & Free Access 33:30 Hollywood Gatekeepers & Proving the Diaspora Market 36:00 Selma, The Butler & The Reality of Being “Undervalued” 38:30 Black Lives Matter: Missed Opportunities and Systemic Cycles 42:00 Reclaiming Our Stories Beyond Slave Narratives 46:30 The Fall of Hollywood & Why Africa is Next 49:00 Navigating Gatekeepers & Building Your Own House 52:00 Things Fall Apart with Idris Elba 56:00 Black British vs Black American Actors Debate 59:00 The Future of African Cinema & Ownership 01:02:00 Authenticity, Resources & Legacy in Storytelling 01:06:00 Convincing the Achebe Family & Shooting in Nigeria 01:10:00 Advice to His Son: Excellence vs Nepotism 01:11:30 Selma & Oscar Snub: Turning Pain into Purpose 01:14:30 Timeline Grief & Losing His Mother 01:19:00 Why He Makes Films for Legacy and Home 01:22:00 Reparations, Heritage & Black Brilliance 01:25:00 Favorite Food, Directors & Dream Projects 01:32:00 Who He Wants Next on the Afropolitan Podcast 01:33:30 Legacy, Faith & The Future of Black Cinema | 1h 41m 02s | ||||||
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6 placements across 6 markets.
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6 placements across 6 markets.
