
“Long Live Lagos is more than a documentary. It’s a movement. A celebration. A declaration of identity. A raw, cinematic truth from one of Africa’s biggest music exports — Wizkid.”
In just three days, Wizkid’s Long Live Lagos will be unleashed, and already, the air is buzzing with anticipation. But this isn’t just another music documentary, no. This is Wizkid lifting the veil on what it means to create art that transcends borders, language, and pain. This is about Lagos. This is about pride. This is about reclaiming the narrative — on our terms.
For more than a decade, Ayodeji Ibrahim Balogun, better known as Wizkid, has remained a boundary-pushing artist. From Ojuelegba to the O2 Arena, his sound has carried the soul of Lagos, woven with Afrobeat, sweat, ambition, and magic. But Long Live Lagos goes deeper. It peels back the layers of celebrity, the Instagram filters, the stadium lights — and reveals the Lagos that raised him, the Lagos that still lives in him.
The G.O.A.T. Returns Home
Wizkid isn’t just telling his story ,he’s telling our story.
Through lens and rhythm, Long Live Lagos shows the world the heartbeat of Nigeria’s commercial capital. It’s gritty. It’s beautiful. It’s loud. It’s proud. From smoky street corners to high-rise dreams, from studio booths to danfo buses every frame is soaked in authenticity.
This isn’t the Lagos of tourist brochures. This is the real deal.
And it’s coming from the one artist who has always made it clear: “You can’t take Lagos out of me.”
Music That Moves the World
The documentary also reminds us of the power of music and art to shift global perception. For years, Africa was seen through a narrow, often negative lens. But artists like Wizkid are changing that. Not through politics or diplomacy, but through vibes — through beats, lyrics, visuals, and collaborations that make the world dance.
Essence wasn’t just a hit. It was a cultural reset. A reminder that we have something the world craves soul.
With Long Live Lagos, Wizkid turns the camera back on the people who shaped him and gives them the mic.
No Wizkid FC Should Have Less Than 1000 Followers!
This isn’t just a documentary launch, it’s a rallying cry.
To every die-hard fan, every Wizkid FC member, now is the time to show out. If you ride for Wiz, if you’ve ever argued about his discography at 2am, if you’ve ever screamed “Starboy dey for you!” then you already know what to do.
📢 Reply to this tweet with #WizkidLongLiveLagos.
🔁 Retweet.
👥 Follow everyone who likes, retweets, and comments.
💥 Let’s grow. Let’s dominate the timeline. Let the world feel us.
This isn’t just promotion. This is about community. If you’re part of the Starboy Nation, then your network should reflect the movement. No fan left behind. No follower count too small.
Because Wizkid isn’t moving alone he’s moving with us.
Ready for the Drop?
The countdown has begun. In just three days, Long Live Lagos will arrive. And when it does, it’s not just a documentary you’ll be watching — it’s a legacy unfolding in real time.
So lace your boots. Charge your phones. Clear your schedule.
History is about to be made.
Long Live Lagos. Long Live Wizkid. Long Live the culture.
Written By Joe Brens
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