Welcome to ClubZella!
We’re the creative powerhouse behind Orisha Warz; comic where culture, legends, and epic storytelling collide.
But we’re more than just a comic house. ClubZella is a community for creatives where music, arts, and technology come together to shape the future.
Follow us for:
Exclusive sneak peeks into Orisha Warz
Creative showcases
Music and art collabs
Podcasts and interviews with big names
And of course; quality entertainment.
This is only the beginning. Are you ready to join the movement?
#ClubZella #OrishaWarz #AfricanComics #Art
we’ll dropping the fourth issue of Orisha Warz tomorrow on https://t.co/i7m2hz6LoS if you like African stories, by African artists, then check us out, you’ll love it💙🕹️
We’re excited to announce that @CHOPSTIIIIX will be on the ClubZella podcast tomorrow talking about everything from making it in music to comic books lore we promise you didn’t know all on our YouTube channel tomorrow. See you soon
from music to comics; this friday, the ClubZella podcast is back with the Grammy award winning producer @chopstiiiix !!! it’s about to be insane, subscribe to the youtube 🔥🎹💭🏆
from music to comics; this friday, the ClubZella podcast is back with the Grammy award winning producer @chopstiiiix !!! it’s about to be insane, subscribe to the youtube 🔥🎹💭🏆
Who is Sango? The African Renaissance Man muse is the Orisha of fire, thunder, lightning, virility, dance, drumming, strength and justice. A true Renaissance man, to listen to the new song click the link below
https://t.co/Sx21PBWICV
At a time when failure feels permanent and public, the act of returning carries a different kind of weight. Not as nostalgia, but as intention.
On April 1, Kanye West’s “Ye: The Homecoming” performance centered around a massive globe, over 50 feet in diameter. It wasn’t just spectacle. It was symbolic. A literal world rebuilt on stage, controlled, reimagined, and presented on his own terms. For an artist with an undeniably turbulent public history, the performance felt less like a comeback and more like a reassertion of creative power.
At the same time, Artemis II represents a different kind of return. Decades after Apollo 17, humanity is once again reaching toward the Moon, not to repeat the past, but to do it with greater precision, deeper understanding, and new ambition. The mission promises not just technical advancement, but a renewed perspective, offering vivid new images of space that reconnect us to both our history and our future.
Both moments, though worlds apart, reflect the same underlying idea: progress is rarely linear. It is built on iteration, on revisiting what has been left behind, and on the willingness to try again under new conditions.
Whether through art or science, the drive to rebuild, refine, and reimagine is what continues to push humanity forward. Not perfectly, but persistently.
And sometimes, that’s what it means to do it right.