Jay-Z and legendary producer Rick Rubin are teaming up for JAŸZin8, an 8-part documentary series premiering on HBO Max this fall. And yes, this is as big as it sounds.
HBO Max dropped the announcement with a caption doing a lot of work: “Can’t knock the hustle.” That’s the name of Jay-Z‘s 1996 debut single. Using it here isn’t an accident. It’s a quiet signal that this series is going career-spanning and legacy-level from episode one.
Rick Rubin in this role is kind of a big deal. Here’s the short version. Rubin co-founded Def Jam Records in the 1980s and has produced some of the most acclaimed albums in music history. His work spans Johnny Cash to Kendrick Lamar. He hosts the Tetragrammaton podcast. It’s known for pulling unusually candid conversations out of artists. The kind they’d never give in a standard interview. His whole thing is creating space for people to actually talk.
Put him across from Jay-Z for eight episodes and you’ve genuinely got something.
Jay-Z has never been what you’d call an open book. He rarely gives interviews. He doesn’t do press tours. He controls his narrative carefully and deliberately. Signing on for a multi-episode conversation series isn’t something he does casually. That quiet fact is the real headline buried in this announcement.
The title JAŸZin8 puts his name and the number 8 together in a stylized format. Very on-brand. He’s spent 30 years making every detail feel intentional.
HBO Max hasn’t dropped a trailer or a specific premiere date beyond “this fall.” The announcement post pulled over 104,000 likes on Instagram. For a network post with zero footage attached, that’s a strong number. People aren’t just casually tapping the heart here. They’re paying attention.
That tracks. Jay-Z’s career is one of the most interesting in music history. He grew up in Marcy Houses in Brooklyn and built a global entertainment empire through Roc Nation. He’s a Grammy winner and a successful businessman. He’s been married to Beyoncé since 2008. For three decades he’s been at the center of some of the biggest moments in music and culture. There’s a lot of ground to cover.
Rubin is well suited to help cover it. Eight episodes is enough room to actually get somewhere, past the surface answers and into the real story.
No specific premiere date is set beyond the fall 2026 window. HBO Max hasn’t shared additional details. But the wait seems worth it.
JAŸZin8 is shaping up to be one of the most significant documentary announcements of the year. The only side-eye goes to HBO for making everyone wait until fall to actually watch it.
