The Journal
Notes from the Afrobeats era and the systems behind the culture.
An archive of reflections, interviews, and field notes from the work of building culture at scale. Less hype, more infrastructure. Less headlines, more legacy.
Reflections on Leadership, Influence and Diaspora at MIPAD’s New Year’s Lunch
At MIPAD’s New Year’s Lunch at The Africa Centre, I was reminded that influence is not defined by visibility, but by responsibility. The conversations reinforced a lesson I’ve learnt building SMADE across the diaspora: effective leadership is about managing difference with clarity, patience, and purpose.
I Cleaned the Same Stadiums I Would One Day Fill.
A reflection on culture, belief, and responsibility, written after a conversation with Adesope Olajide on Martell’s Swift Conversations. From undocumented survival to global stages, this journal explores what it really took to build Afrobeats before the applause arrived and why unity, ownership, and depth matter more than hype.
Carrying the Work Forward: A 2025 Reflection on Afrobeats, Africa, and Leadership
2025 asked for steadiness more than speed.
It was a year shaped by quiet pressure, growing responsibility, and moments of reflection that didn’t announce themselves loudly. From beginning the year in Rwanda, standing at the Genocide Memorial, to watching Afrobeats take up space on the world’s biggest stages, this reflection traces a season of transition, faith, and carrying the work forward with care. It’s about leadership formed through culture, dreams realised and released, and learning to move into what comes next without losing what came before.
What the AJ accident reveals about Detty December: On loss and the systems we rely on
This reflection is shared in care, from the perspective of cultural operators with a responsibility to think beyond moments and toward systems.
Diaspora Roundtables: Beyond Detty December
December proves demand every year. What it doesn’t build on its own is continuity. Diaspora Roundtables exists to hold the conversations that don’t fit on a stage — about legacy, partnerships, safety, and the systems required to move African culture from moments into lasting infrastructure.
The GTBank Concert, Accra — Scale, Sound, Safety, and the Infrastructure Questions We Need to Answer
Accra has proven it can gather people at scale. The GTBank concert made that undeniable. A free stadium show, tens of thousands in attendance, and a city operating at full cultural intensity.
But scale increases responsibility proportionally. Crowd safety, infrastructure, and operational discipline are no longer secondary concerns. They are the difference between moments and systems.
What happens next will determine whether Accra’s cultural dominance translates into sustainable growth, or remains a seasonal peak without the structures to carry it forward.
December in Ghana: Culture, Scale, and the Work of Legacy
Yesterday, I joined Channel One TV in Accra for a conversation about Afro Nation, December in Ghana, and the work that follows moments of cultural growth.
When culture grows faster than structure, the task is not to slow culture down. The task is to build fast enough to hold it.
Legacy is not presence. It is what remains because something once passed through.