Audio By Carbonatix
The government is set to establish the National Creators Academy as part of its 24-hour economy agenda, aimed at nurturing a new generation of Ghanaian creatives in music, film, fashion, digital media, animation, and cultural performance.
The Academy, a flagship programme under the broader SHOW24 initiative, will provide industry-aligned training that incorporates modern creative tools such as artificial intelligence (AI), augmented and virtual reality (AR/VR), mobile editing, streaming platforms, and digital monetisation.
It will also focus on cultural literacy, grounding participants in Ghana’s rich storytelling heritage.
“SHOW24 will establish the National Creators Academy as a flagship institution to train a new generation of Ghanaian creatives in music, film, digital media, fashion, animation and cultural performance. Training will be industry-aligned and incorporate modern creative tools including AI, AR/VR, mobile editing, and streaming, business and digital monetisation skills, cultural literacy grounded in Ghana’s storytelling traditions.
The programme will be designed intentionally to achieve regional spread and not be concentrated in a few big cities. Programmes will include production labs, industry internships, and creator collectives. Special tracks will support university graduates and informal creators to transition into professional creative careers,” a document sighted by myjoyonline.com states.
The Academy will operate on a decentralised model, ensuring that all regions of Ghana benefit. It will offer pathways for both university graduates and informal sector creatives seeking to formalise their careers.
The 24-hour economy policy, championed by government as a way to drive economic activity beyond traditional working hours, aims to create jobs and enhance productivity through continuous operation across various sectors, particularly in culture and tourism.
Another project to be embarked on by government under the SHOW24 initiative is to repurpose the National Cathedral site into a National Cultural Convention Centre. That proposed centre is expected to serve as a major venue for hosting exhibitions, concerts, and cultural events, complementing the work of the Academy and positioning the creative arts as a central pillar of Ghana’s economic transformation.
Latest Stories
-
Deputy Transport Minister praises MPS investment at Tema Port
34 minutes -
Nearly 3,000 patients a day face corridor care in NHS
35 minutes -
US dismantles West African birth tourism network, revokes over 100 visas
51 minutes -
Author urges Ghanaians to reconnect with their roots at launch of Amane Adesa: Of Monsters and Gods
52 minutes -
Afoko donates 400 bags of cement, GH¢30,000 towards completion of Volta NPP head office
1 hour -
Health Ministry backs conviction of man who assaulted midwife at Tema Community 22 Polyclinic
1 hour -
Greater Accra REGSEC lists flood-prone areas as GMet forecasts 100–150mm rainfall in June
1 hour -
Suppliers to picket Education Ministry over GH¢50m Free SHS debt
2 hours -
Fisheries Minister cracks down on premix fuel overpricing and mismanagement of community funds
2 hours -
From unsafe sanitation to thriving businesses: How SNV is changing lives in Nandom
2 hours -
Operationalise Trede Agenda 111 Hospital to ease pressure on KATH – Dr Kingsley Agyemang urges government
2 hours -
Ghana Water Ltd inaugurates Governing Council for Water Institute
2 hours -
Agbodza raises alarm over traffic light board theft in front of police headquarters
2 hours -
See the areas that will be affected by ECG’s planned maintenance on Thursday (June 11, 2026)
2 hours -
2 rescued alive after road crash on Kpeve–Peki highway
2 hours