Peter Ayeni, social innovator and software engineer has announced the official launch of PartyJollof Africa, a digital platform designed to transform how African movies and television shows are discovered, documented, and accessed worldwide. The platform will officially go live on April 6, 2026.
PartyJollof Africa is an African-first movie and TV discovery platform built to centralize information about the continent’s rapidly growing entertainment industry.
It provides structured data on African films and television content, including cast and crew profiles, trailers, posters, awards, box office performance, ratings, reviews, and industry news.
The inspiration for PartyJollof Africa came during a historic moment in Nollywood. When filmmaker Funke Akindele’s A Tribe Called Judah became the first Nollywood film to surpass N1 billion at the Nigerian box office, Ayeni searched online for more information about the film and the people behind its success.
He found that despite the global influence and growth of African cinema, details about many films and actors, like cast photos, biographies, and full production credits, were fragmented, incomplete, or missing entirely. Rather than highlight the problem, Ayeni decided to build a solution.
Over the past two years, Ayeni and his team have developed one of the most comprehensive structured databases dedicated to African movies and television.
PartyJollof Africa serves a wide range of stakeholders, including film audiences, filmmakers, journalists, researchers, and industry professionals who rely on accurate and accessible information about African storytelling and the people behind it.
The platform consolidates previously scattered information into a single discovery hub, allowing users to explore films, actors, industry news, and box office insights. By doing so, it aims to significantly improve global discoverability and visibility for African films and creators.
The platform operates around four key pillars: discoverability, helping audiences find African movies and shows from blockbuster releases to hidden gems; community, creating a space where fans, critics, and creators can engage through ratings, reviews, and discussions; accessibility, making reliable information on African entertainment available worldwide; and support for creators, giving filmmakers and actors a platform where their work is documented, archived, and celebrated.
For Ayeni, PartyJollof Africa is more than just a technology platform. “African stories deserve to be seen, understood, and celebrated globally,” he said. “PartyJollof Africa is our contribution to building the digital infrastructure that makes that possible.”
Peter Ayeni is a technology entrepreneur passionate about the intersection of storytelling, data, and digital innovation. Inspired by Toni Morrison’s quote, “If there’s a book you want to read but it hasn’t been written yet, then you must write it,” Ayeni created PartyJollof Africa as the platform he wished existed.
With academic training in computing, IT security, and business from Informatics Education Singapore, SMC Switzerland, and the Kellogg School of Management, his mission is clear: to help African stories gain the recognition they deserve by building the digital infrastructure that allows them to be discovered globally.
PartyJollof Africa will officially launch on April 6, 2026, offering audiences around the world a comprehensive hub for discovering and celebrating African films, television shows, and creators.
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