
South African creative, Maverick Seizure, introduces a new platform and infrastructure company built for photographers, videographers, designers, musicians, and the next generation of global creators.
After three years of development behind the scenes, South African creative entrepreneur Michael Kgotso Aphane – professionally known as Maverick Seizure – has officially launched ZeZe Global, a new creative technology and production company built to help creators grow, connect, and own more of their work.

Built for all creatives including photographers, videographers, designers, musicians, creative directors, digital storytellers to name a few within the creative ecosystem and industries; ZeZe Global aims to give creatives better tools, stronger networks, and more control over how their work is shared and monetised.
“They built the industry on our backs. We’re building the next one on our terms.”
For Aphane, the launch is deeply personal.
His journey started in Soweto in 2017 with a camera and a growing curiosity about how culture moves across the world. What began as photography slowly opened doors into music, fashion, nightlife, and global creative spaces.
Over the years, Maverick documented major moments in African music and youth culture, working around artists, festivals, and creative communities across South Africa, Europe, and the United States.
He photographed and documented cultural figures such as Moozlie, Yanga Chief and the late AKA during an important era in South African hip-hop. Through connections withBas and the wider Dreamville network, he later found himself inside international creative spaces like Dreamfest in North Carolina and backstage environments connected to artists such as Drake and 21 Savage.
He also collaborated with Mixmag on documentary work exploring global club culture, while contributing visually to Desiree’s reinterpretation of Nina Simone’s Four Women.
While moving through these spaces, Aphane began noticing the same problem everywhere – creatives were shaping culture, but rarely owned the systems behind it.
Many creators continue to struggle with an inconsistent income, lack of access, poor infrastructure, and limited ownership over the value they help create. As visibility grows, so do the challenges. This observation has become the foundation for ZeZe Global.
In 2023, Aphane shifted his focus from documenting culture to building tools for the people creating it.
For the past three years, he has quietly developed ZeZe Global in stealth – creating a platform designed to help creatives manage their work, build trusted identities, connect with opportunities, distribute content globally, and eventually access financial tools built specifically for the creative industry.
Rather than focusing only on content creation, ZeZe Global is focused on the systems around creativity – visibility, ownership, collaboration, trust, and long-term growth.
“Creativity, paired with the right systems, can transform not only industries, but entire realities,” says Aphane. “From the grassroots of Soweto to world stages, we’ve seen what African creativity can do. Now it’s time for creators to have systems that truly support them.”
The launch comes at a time when African music, fashion, art, and storytelling continue to shape global culture at an unprecedented level. ZeZe Global says its mission is to support that momentum by building technology and opportunities that help creators grow sustainably while keeping ownership closer to the people creating the culture itself.
The company’s newly launched waitlist gives early supporters access to platform updates, product releases, and future opportunities within the ZeZe Global ecosystem.
Follow @maverick.seizure for all updates and information on early access to ZeZe Global.
ZeZe Global is here – be sure to get on the waitlist now.
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