Entertainment
MultiChoice Partners Udemy to Empower Customers

In a move to empower customers across the continent with impactful and functional skills, Africa’s leading entertainment provider, MultiChoice, is partnering with Udemy, a global leader in online learning, to provide access to thousands of high-quality courses to enable DStv and GOtv customers to invest in their personal and professional development.
For years, the DStv and GOtv platforms have provided viewers with world-class edutainment, with content catering to personal growth for all ages. In addition to sport, local programming, news and general entertainment, customers of MultiChoice, Africa’s Most Loved Storyteller, can access educational content on Discovery, Nat Geo Wild, History Channel, DaVinci Kids, BBC and many more channels. The partnership with Udemy will continue MultiChoice’s mission to positively contribute toward well-informed and progressive customers.
Udemy’s diverse course catalogue includes over 183,000 online courses provided by more than 65,000 instructors in 75 languages. The platform is user-friendly and simple to navigate with a flexible format that allows learners to access a wide variety of courses at their own pace, with personalized recommendations and paths that maximize learning.
While their respective platforms are distinct, MultiChoice and Udemy have a shared mission of providing a vast range of accessible content which enriches the lives of a broad audience with diverse interests and needs. This fitting collaboration will serve customers with a passion for learning.
“We’re very excited to partner with an innovative and purposeful platform like Udemy, especially as the world shifts to an online learning future,” said John Ugbe, Chief Executive Officer of MultiChoice Nigeria. “We are constantly seeking ways to enrich and progress the lives of our valued customers and tapping into learning and development is a natural next step. Investing in the future of our continent is a top priority and we are proud to be able to collaborate with another platform that values the accessible advancement of our customers as much as we do.”
“As a global learning platform, our mission is to provide access and create new opportunities for learners around the world, across a wide range of content areas and at all levels of expertise,” said Llibert Argerich, Senior Vice President of Marketing at Udemy. “MultiChoice has a long history of prioritizing learning, and we’re proud to be working with them to unlock new possibilities for learners across the continent.”
Whether customers are professionals looking to improve their technical skills, or students wanting to complement their studies, Udemy offers thousands of fresh and current courses ranging from learning a new language to playing a new instrument, to coding, data science, and business leadership, including free courses on topics like blogging, personal productivity, and meditation. Udemy’s content is created by real-world practitioners with a pulse on the latest technologies and business strategies. The courses vary in experience levels, so customers can find a subject that is suited to their skills and ambition.
Customers can begin their learning journey by registering on www.udemy.com and enrolling in affordable courses that suit their learning requirements.
Entertainment
The Evolution of Home Viewing in Nigeria
There was a time in Nigeria when watching movies at home wasn’t strictly a “home” experience. People rented VHS tapes and later DVDs from local video clubs around the neighbourhood, and in many cases, viewing extended to video centres or where groups gathered to watch films and sports. It was a shared setup shaped by access, availability, and a very communal way of consuming entertainment.As time went on, analogue television became the main form of home viewing. Families would gather around a single TV set in the living room, with limited channels and fixed programming schedules. Content was not really something you chose; it was something you aligned your day around. Antenna adjustments were part of the routine, and despite the limitations, TV became a central part of everyday household life.The introduction of satellite and pay-TV services marked a major shift. Viewers suddenly had more control, more variety, and more access. Local and international content expanded significantly, covering movies, sports, news, and entertainment in a way that changed viewing habits from passive scheduling to active choice.This is where platforms like GOtv became relevant in the Nigerian context. By making premium entertainment more affordable and widely accessible, GOtv helped bridge the gap between content quality and everyday households. It wasn’t just about more channels; it was about making consistent access to entertainment more realistic for a wider audience.Today, home viewing has become more flexible and audience-driven. People are no longer tied to fixed schedules; viewing is now based on preference, timing, and convenience. At the same time, shared viewing still exists, especially around live sports and major TV moments, where entertainment becomes a collective experience again, just in a more modern form.From rented tapes and video centres to satellite TV and now more structured, accessible entertainment platforms, the evolution of home viewing in Nigeria has been a steady shift toward more choice and control. Throughout that journey, GOtv has remained part of the ecosystem, supporting how everyday audiences access and experience entertainment at home.
Entertainment
AMVCA 12 Unveils Week-Long Celebration of African Film, Culture, and Creative Expression
The Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards (AMVCA) returns for its 12th edition with an expanded, week-long lineup of events under the theme “Honouring Craft, Celebrating Culture.” This year’s edition is set to spotlight the richness of African storytelling, recognise industry excellence, and celebrate the continent’s vibrant creative spirit.Scheduled to take place from May 6 to May 9, 2026, AMVCA 12 will bring together filmmakers, actors, creatives, and culture enthusiasts from across Africa for an immersive celebration of film, television, and cultural expression.The week kicks off on May 6 with Young Filmmakers’ Day, a platform dedicated to nurturing emerging talent and fostering the next generation of African storytellers. The event will feature masterclasses, panel sessions, and networking opportunities designed to equip young creatives with the tools and insights needed to thrive in the industry.On May 7, the spotlight shifts to Icons Night, an evening dedicated to celebrating industry veterans and trailblazers whose contributions have shaped the African film and television landscape. This night underscores the “Honouring Craft” pillar of this year’s theme by recognising the legacy and excellence of pioneers in the creative space.The celebration continues on May 8 with the much-anticipated Cultural Night, a vibrant showcase of Africa’s diverse heritage through fashion, music, food, and performance. As a true reflection of “Celebrating Culture,” the event highlights the beauty, identity, and traditions that define the continent.The week-long festivities will culminate on May 9 with the prestigious Awards Night, where outstanding achievements in film and television will be recognised across multiple categories. The ceremony promises an unforgettable evening of glamour, entertainment, and recognition of excellence within the African entertainment industry.The AMVCA 12 Awards Night will air live across all Africa Magic channels from 7:00 PM (WAT), bringing the excitement of the celebration to audiences across the continent.With this expanded format, AMVCA 12 continues to evolve beyond an awards show into a dynamic platform that honours craftsmanship, celebrates culture, and amplifies African voices on a global stage.
Entertainment
Beyond Awards Night: How AMVCA Intentionally Celebrates Every Layer of the Industry
There’s a bigger truth at the heart of every award season: an entire industry can’t be neatly packaged into a list of winners and nominees.It’s just not that simple.There are too many moving parts. Too many stories. Too many people doing the actual work on screen, behind the scenes, in rooms nobody sees, on sets that don’t trend, on projects that don’t always make the final cut of conversations.And yet, that’s what most award shows try to do. Wrap everything up in one night. Hand out plaques. Roll credits.But the Africa Magic Viewers’ Choice Awards (AMVCA) approaches it differently, and that difference shows in how the entire week is designed.Because instead of compressing the industry into one moment, AMVCA stretches it out. It creates space. It acknowledges that different parts of the industry need different kinds of recognition.Take Young Filmmakers’ Day, for example. This is not about who has “arrived.” It’s about who is coming. The ones still figuring it out, still building, still trying to get seen in an industry that doesn’t always make room easily. This day shifts the focus from applause to access. It says the future of the industry deserves its own spotlight, not as an afterthought, but as a starting point.Then there’s Icons Night, and this is where memory comes in. Because long before the current wave, before the buzz, before the visibility, there were people who held things together. Who created, contributed, and carried the industry in ways that don’t always translate into award categories. AMVCA makes room for that kind of recognition too, the kind that isn’t about competition but about contribution.Cultural Night does something else entirely. It reminds you that beyond the films and the series and the technical credits, there’s identity. There’s heritage. There’s a deeper layer to the work being celebrated. It’s expressive, it’s vibrant, it’s fun, but it’s also grounding. Because storytelling doesn’t exist in isolation; it’s shaped by culture, by language, by lived experience. And this night leans fully into that.And then, finally, Awards Night. The part everyone shows up for. The glamour, the wins, the reactions, the moments that will dominate timelines. It’s the culmination, the high point.But when you look at everything that happens before it, you start to realise something important:The awards are just one piece of the puzzle.What AMVCA gets right is understanding that the industry is not one story, it’s many stories happening at once. Some loud, some quiet. Some celebrated, some overlooked. And if you’re going to truly honour that, you have to go beyond a single night.So instead of trying to make everything fit into one frame, AMVCA expands the frame.And in doing that, it doesn’t just celebrate winners. It celebrates the work, the people, and the layers that make the industry what it is.
