When HBO trains its lens on an artist, it signals something beyond commercial success. It marks cultural permanence. On December 11, the network premieres "Music Box: Wizkid: Long Live Lagos," a documentary that chronicles one of Africa's most transformative musical exports. Directed by Karam Gill and executive produced by Bill Simmons, the film arrives at 9 p.m. ET/PT on HBO and Max, positioning Wizkid not merely as a pop star, but as an architect of global sound.
This isn't a vanity project. It's a portrait of movement, both literal and cultural. The documentary traces Wizkid's ascent from the dense, energetic streets of Surulere, Lagos, where he spent his teenage years crafting melodies that would eventually redefine African music's place in the world. The film culminates in his 2023 headlining performance at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, a historic moment that saw him become the first African artist to sell out the venue. Between those two points lies a narrative about migration, influence, and the recalibration of what global pop music can sound like.
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