Culture
IShowSpeed Celebrates Receiving Ghanaian Passport: “It’s a Big Flex”
Popular American streamer and content creator IShowSpeed (real name Darren Watkins Jr.) has reacted to being granted Ghanaian citizenship, describing the honor as “a big flex” on social media.
The announcement came on February 13, 2026, when IShowSpeed shared a photo of his newly issued Ghanaian passport on his Instagram and X accounts, captioning it:
“It’s a big flex.”
The passport features his full name, photograph, and Ghanaian national emblem, confirming his status as a citizen of Ghana.
The development follows the YouTuber’s high-profile visit to Ghana in early 2026, during which he toured several regions, interacted with fans, visited cultural sites including the Asenema Waterfall in Okere District, and expressed admiration for Ghanaian hospitality and food. His energetic live streams from Accra, Kumasi, and other locations went viral, drawing millions of views and significantly boosting Ghana’s visibility among younger global audiences.
IShowSpeed’s citizenship aligns with Ghana’s ongoing Historic Diaspora Community programme, which grants citizenship to individuals of African descent who can demonstrate ancestry or strong ties to the country. While it is unclear whether IShowSpeed applied through DNA evidence or other eligibility pathways, his public embrace of Ghanaian culture and repeated visits made him a popular figure during and after his trip.
The passport grant has sparked widespread celebration on Ghanaian social media, with many users hailing it as a major cultural and tourism win. Comments flooded in with phrases such as “Speed is now one of us” and “Ghana just gained a global ambassador.”
IShowSpeed, known for his high-energy gaming, IRL streams, and massive following (over 30 million subscribers on YouTube), first visited Ghana in January 2026 as part of a broader African tour. His enthusiastic content helped spotlight lesser-known destinations and reinforced the success of initiatives like “Beyond the Return.”
Culture
“Damn Right, I’m Coming Back to Ghana!”: IShowSpeed Responds to Mahama’s Presidential Shout-Out
American internet sensation IShowSpeed (Darren Watkins Jr.) is officially hooked on Ghana — and the feeling appears mutual, even from the highest office in the land.
In a clip that has taken social media by storm, President John Dramani Mahama gave a warm, humorous nod to the streamer’s viral Ghana trip during a recent public address.
Recounting how his own children excitedly showed him footage of Speed at a shea butter museum in the north, the President described the now-iconic moment:
“This young man was lucky. I saw him lying down and about 10 girls all with shea butter were massaging this boy… He opened his mouth as if he couldn’t breathe.”
The audience at the event where Mahama spoke erupted in laughter, but Speed — watching the clip later — couldn’t contain his delight.
“Oh, the president watched my streams, enjoying it,” he exclaimed, before emphatically declaring: “Damn right. I’m coming back.”
The exchange perfectly captures the ongoing love affair between IShowSpeed and Ghana.
Since his high-energy visit in January 2026 — where he toured Accra, tried local food, danced, visited cultural sites, and even received Ghanaian citizenship — the YouTuber has repeatedly expressed affection for the country, its people, and its culture. He has constantly declared his new Ghanaian name, Barima Kofi Akuffo, with pride to his millions of followers.
Fans on X, TikTok, and Instagram have dubbed the shea butter spa scene “the most Ghanaian welcome ever,” with memes, reaction videos, and calls for Speed to return flooding timelines. Many Ghanaians see his genuine enthusiasm as a major tourism win, especially among younger global audiences.
President Mahama’s light-hearted commentary acknowledges the impact of Speed’s visit. It reflects the warmth and hospitality that have made Ghana a growing favourite among diaspora travellers and international content creators alike.
Whether Speed makes good on his promise remains to be seen — but if the President’s massage story is anything to go by, Ghana is ready to roll out the red carpet (and the shea butter) again.
Arts and GH Heritage
Threads of Memory, Strokes of Now: A Guide to Ghana’s Living Art Scene
If you’ve ever stood far from home and felt a tug at the sound of a talking drum or the sight of woven colour, Ghana’s art scene will feel like a quiet homecoming.
The art world in Ghana is not usually behind white walls. It lives in courtyards, roadside workshops, coastal galleries and northern warehouses, many of which are rooted in memory, restless with new ideas. For those in the diaspora searching for connection beyond genealogy charts, Ghana’s arts and crafts offer something tactile, human, and deeply familiar.
Where It All Begins: Art as Language, Not Ornament
Long before galleries and residencies, art in Ghana was a way of speaking. Cloth, symbols, beads, wood and clay carried meaning—status, philosophy, faith, resistance. That legacy still shapes the country’s creative pulse today. What makes Ghana compelling is how effortlessly the old and the new share space. Tradition here adapts, questions, and sometimes argues with the present.
Accra: The Capital of Constant Reinvention
Start in Accra, where the art scene mirrors the city itself—layered, loud, reflective.

Near Independence Square, the Art Centre in Accra hums with movement. This isn’t a museum experience; it’s a conversation. Carvers shape masks in real time, traders argue prices with humour, and every stall tells a story of lineage and labour. It’s the first place where art feels less like display and more like family business.
A quieter but no less powerful stop is the Nubuke Foundation.
Set away from the city’s rush, it offers space to think. Exhibitions here are thoughtful, sometimes unsettling, often intimate—perfect for anyone curious about how Ghanaian artists are interrogating identity, migration, and memory.
The Ano Institute of Arts and Knowledge

Just a short drive away, the Ano Institute of Arts and Knowledge deepens the experience. Part archive, part exhibition space, Ano invites visitors to slow down and listen to oral histories, visual essays, and stories that don’t always make it into textbooks.
Gallery 1957

For a polished counterpoint, Gallery 1957, tucked inside the Kempinski Hotel Gold Coast City, presents African contemporary art with global confidence. Its where Ghanaian creativity meets the international art circuit, without losing its grounding.
Artists Alliance Gallery

Along the coast, the Artists Alliance Gallery feels expansive in every sense. Three floors of paintings, sculpture, and traditional objects unfold like a visual archive of West African creativity—ideal for anyone wanting breadth and depth in one visit.
Art Africa Gallery

And in East Legon, Art Africa Gallery offers an intimate encounter with works that speak across generations, blending the past with present-day realities.
Kumasi and the Ashanti Heartland
Leaving the coast for Kumasi is like stepping into the spiritual engine room of Ghanaian art. The Art Centre in Kumasi showcases mastery in wood, clay and textile traditions that have shaped Ghana’s visual language for centuries.
Bonwire Kente
Just outside the city lies Bonwire, where Kente is not fashion but inheritance. Watching the weavers work is a reminder that skill is memory passed hand to hand—something no factory can replicate.
Northern Ghana: Art as Architecture and Activism

In Tamale, the Red Clay Studio reshapes what an art space can be. Created by Ibrahim Mahama, it fuses installation, architecture, and community life. Here, art doesn’t just comment on society; it builds within it.
Why This Matters
To walk through Ghana’s art spaces is to confront questions many in the diaspora carry quietly: What did we inherit? What was interrupted? What can still be reclaimed? These galleries and craft centres don’t offer neat answers—but they offer something better: dialogue.
Ghana’s art scene isn’t asking to be admired from a distance. It invites touch, debate, memory, and return. And for anyone tracing their way back—culturally, creatively, or emotionally—it offers a map drawn not in ink, but in clay, cloth, wood, and bold new ideas.
Festivals & Events
Style of Ghana Returns: Second Edition Promises Spectacular Celebration of Culture and Fashion
Experience an elegant celebration of Ghanaian fashion, culture, and creativity with Style of Ghana by D’Marsh’s highly anticipated second edition.
The second edition of Style of Ghana by D’Marsh is set to light up Accra on Saturday, February 21, 2026, bringing together designers, creatives, fashion enthusiasts, and cultural advocates for an elegant evening that blends Ghanaian heritage with contemporary style.
Organised as a premium showcase of local talent, the event will feature stunning runway presentations highlighting culture-rich designs, innovative craftsmanship, and the fusion of tradition and modern elegance.
Attendees can expect a curated selection of Ghanaian designers presenting collections that celebrate national identity while pushing creative boundaries.

The programme begins with a Cocktail Reception at 4:00 PM, offering guests a relaxed networking opportunity in a sophisticated atmosphere, followed by the Main Showcase at 6:00 PM in the scenic Amphitheatre of Alliance Française.
Tickets are available now via dial 71333*998#.
The event continues to build on the growing momentum of Ghana’s fashion and creative economy, which has seen increasing global recognition through platforms such as the Year of Return, Beyond the Return, and international fashion weeks. It also reinforces Accra’s rising status as a hub for African design and cultural storytelling.
Source: Alliance Francaise
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