
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
The Man Who Built Afrobeats' Visual Empire Just Revealed How Africa Can Own Its Future
🎬 Clarence Peters didn't just direct music videos—he architected the visual language that made Nigerian culture irresistible to the world. In this masterclass conversation, the legendary director behind Wizkid's "Holla at Your Boy," Davido's breakout hits, and Burna Boy's global ascension breaks down the real economics of cultural dominance.
This isn't just another interview. It's a blueprint.
From surviving the "lost decade" of the 90s that nearly killed Nigerian creativity, to building billion-dollar brands with zero government support, to walking away from music at his peak—Clarence reveals the strategic thinking behind every frame that helped Afrobeats conquer the world.
🔥 The insights that will change how you think about African creativity:
Why Nigeria's 40 million diaspora is the world's most powerful marketing network
How the creative industry achieved 100% growth for 17 consecutive years
The fatal mistake of throwing away institutional knowledge during rapid change
Why "I don't shoot music videos, I shoot brands" became his million-dollar philosophy
The real reason Nollywood's golden era ended (and how to bring it back)
Why film is the only art form that can export the complete African experience
The quote that broke the internet: "We have 40 million people in the diaspora. What international do you want to give me? I have a virus in every single country. The moment I create something that they can be proud of, there is no better marketing than that."
This conversation reveals the untold economics of how disadvantage becomes dominance, why authenticity is strategy, and what it really takes to build cultural empires that last.
Whether you're a creative professional, entrepreneur, or anyone trying to understand how African culture conquered the world, this is your roadmap.
🤝 Want to connect 1:1 with Africa's boldest thinkers? Book a 15-minute convo on convo.vip with leaders like Iyinoluwa Aboyeji, Asa Asika, and more.
đź”” Subscribe for more conversations with the architects of African excellence
📱 Follow us: @afropolitanpodcast
🎧 Listen: Apple Podcasts | Spotify
đź“© Partnerships: [email protected]
📍CHAPTERS
00:00 – Intro
01:17 – The truth about Nigeria’s creative industry
03:04 – Clarence’s childhood, legacy, and early rejection of the industry
06:17 – Building his own name away from his parents’ fame
09:19 – Working 3 film sets daily: Clarence’s production bootcamp
13:45 – What really happened to Nigeria’s artistic golden age
17:00 – How the 1990s created a generation of distrust
20:00 – From 419 to Afrobeats: Our cultural rebirth
26:40 – Why Nigeria never found balance after the 1970s
31:24 – Clarence on how Afrobeats really scaled globally
35:21 – Music vs structure: The cost of lack of infrastructure
40:33 – How SA & the West outmaneuvered Nigeria on rights
44:19 – “The international market is not your friend”
48:53 – What ruined Nollywood’s golden era?
51:38 – The elitist mindset that discarded home video culture
55:09 – The real cultural reset we need
59:27 – Why the West will always try to remix what we build
1:02:25 – Only film can export the full Nigerian experience
1:05:36 – Clarence on studios, real estate, and true film power
1:10:02 – Why he had to shed music to rebuild film
1:13:44 – His bonds with Davido, Wizkid & Burna Boy
1:16:53 – Why music videos lost to content creators
1:25:16 – The future of music video production & brand alignment
1:29:00 – “If I don’t build it, I don’t eat”: The burden of being a builder
1:33:47 – The danger of ignoring domestic platforms
1:35:00 – Final reflections on legacy and Nigerian innovation
5
33 ratings
The Man Who Built Afrobeats' Visual Empire Just Revealed How Africa Can Own Its Future
🎬 Clarence Peters didn't just direct music videos—he architected the visual language that made Nigerian culture irresistible to the world. In this masterclass conversation, the legendary director behind Wizkid's "Holla at Your Boy," Davido's breakout hits, and Burna Boy's global ascension breaks down the real economics of cultural dominance.
This isn't just another interview. It's a blueprint.
From surviving the "lost decade" of the 90s that nearly killed Nigerian creativity, to building billion-dollar brands with zero government support, to walking away from music at his peak—Clarence reveals the strategic thinking behind every frame that helped Afrobeats conquer the world.
🔥 The insights that will change how you think about African creativity:
Why Nigeria's 40 million diaspora is the world's most powerful marketing network
How the creative industry achieved 100% growth for 17 consecutive years
The fatal mistake of throwing away institutional knowledge during rapid change
Why "I don't shoot music videos, I shoot brands" became his million-dollar philosophy
The real reason Nollywood's golden era ended (and how to bring it back)
Why film is the only art form that can export the complete African experience
The quote that broke the internet: "We have 40 million people in the diaspora. What international do you want to give me? I have a virus in every single country. The moment I create something that they can be proud of, there is no better marketing than that."
This conversation reveals the untold economics of how disadvantage becomes dominance, why authenticity is strategy, and what it really takes to build cultural empires that last.
Whether you're a creative professional, entrepreneur, or anyone trying to understand how African culture conquered the world, this is your roadmap.
🤝 Want to connect 1:1 with Africa's boldest thinkers? Book a 15-minute convo on convo.vip with leaders like Iyinoluwa Aboyeji, Asa Asika, and more.
đź”” Subscribe for more conversations with the architects of African excellence
📱 Follow us: @afropolitanpodcast
🎧 Listen: Apple Podcasts | Spotify
đź“© Partnerships: [email protected]
📍CHAPTERS
00:00 – Intro
01:17 – The truth about Nigeria’s creative industry
03:04 – Clarence’s childhood, legacy, and early rejection of the industry
06:17 – Building his own name away from his parents’ fame
09:19 – Working 3 film sets daily: Clarence’s production bootcamp
13:45 – What really happened to Nigeria’s artistic golden age
17:00 – How the 1990s created a generation of distrust
20:00 – From 419 to Afrobeats: Our cultural rebirth
26:40 – Why Nigeria never found balance after the 1970s
31:24 – Clarence on how Afrobeats really scaled globally
35:21 – Music vs structure: The cost of lack of infrastructure
40:33 – How SA & the West outmaneuvered Nigeria on rights
44:19 – “The international market is not your friend”
48:53 – What ruined Nollywood’s golden era?
51:38 – The elitist mindset that discarded home video culture
55:09 – The real cultural reset we need
59:27 – Why the West will always try to remix what we build
1:02:25 – Only film can export the full Nigerian experience
1:05:36 – Clarence on studios, real estate, and true film power
1:10:02 – Why he had to shed music to rebuild film
1:13:44 – His bonds with Davido, Wizkid & Burna Boy
1:16:53 – Why music videos lost to content creators
1:25:16 – The future of music video production & brand alignment
1:29:00 – “If I don’t build it, I don’t eat”: The burden of being a builder
1:33:47 – The danger of ignoring domestic platforms
1:35:00 – Final reflections on legacy and Nigerian innovation
62 Listeners
115 Listeners
353 Listeners
885 Listeners
7,713 Listeners
381 Listeners
526 Listeners
128 Listeners
353 Listeners
168 Listeners
96 Listeners
99 Listeners
34 Listeners
56 Listeners
71 Listeners