JAŸ-Z And Rick Rubin Bring HBO Docuseries To TV This Fall

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Def Jam Party - Lyor Cohen and Russell Simmons Reunite with Def Jam's Original Co-Founder, Rick Rubin

(NO TABLOIDS) Jay-Z & Rick Rubin during Def Jam Party - Lyor Cohen and Russell Simmons Reunite with Def Jam's Original Co-Founder, Rick Rubin at the B Bar in New York City, NY. (Photo by Kevin Mazur/WireImage)

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The eight-part series, executive-produced by Shawn Carter himself, is a study in how the Brooklyn rap icon has long used selective access as a form of power.

HBO announced Wednesday the forthcoming documentary series JAŸ-Z In 8, an eight-part conversation between Jay-Z and Rick Rubin debuting this fall on HBO and streaming on Max.

Rubin, who directed the acclaimed McCartney 3,2,1 and produced JAŸ-Z's "99 Problems" for The Black Album in 2003, both directs and serves as executive producer alongside Shawn Carter and actor-filmmaker Daniel Kaluuya. Producers include Leila Mattimore and David Rohde under Rubin's Tetragrammaton banner.

The official teaser, released the same day, runs 41 seconds. JAŸ-Z’s opening line: "Everyone had the same experience, except I was the one that could stand on the soapbox and, like, articulate what we were going through."

Rubin responds: "Without the pain, you wouldn't have done the work."

JAŸ-Z: "The pain, we don't say it's necessary, we don't say you need it, but if it's there — you use it."

Then "Can't Knock the Hustle" plays out, and the teaser ends. No release window beyond "this fall." No further detail.

JAŸ-Z does not go on the interview circuit. As Reasonable Doubt marks its 30th anniversary, Roc Nation launched free immersive pop-ups in DUMBO, Brooklyn, and Manhattan's Lower East Side.

JAŸ-Z also made an appearance at the DUMBO activation, giving fans direct access in a way that has been relatively uncommon throughout his career. When he does grant an interview, it tends to function less as routine promotion than as a cultural event.

His March 2026 GQ sit-down with Frazier Tharpe, the first major interview he had given in years, generated a news cycle that ran for days, producing viral clips on the allegations levied against him, his "2026 is all offense" declaration, and his candor about the Kendrick Lamar and Drake beef.

His New York Times Popcast conversation produced its own wave of widely shared moments.

JAŸ-Z has given relatively few interviews throughout his career, but each one has generated sustained media coverage. The rarity of those conversations has contributed to their significance within both the music industry and popular culture.

JAŸ-Z in 8 unfolds across eight episodes, with JAŸ-Z serving as an executive producer in addition to being its central subject. That dual role positions him as a participant in shaping the project's direction and presentation.

JAY-Z (left) and Rick Rubin (right) sit across from one another during a conversation featured in the upcoming eight-part HBO documentary series JAY-Z in 8.

Courtesy HBO

The series also reunites him with Rick Rubin, whose interview style has long emphasized extended, in-depth conversations with influential artists, making the pairing a natural fit for the format.

The announcement lands at a specific moment in JAŸ-Z’’s public calendar. He has been marking the 30th and 25th anniversaries of Reasonable Doubt and The Blueprint with a series of shows and activations, and recently headlined The Roots Picnic in Philadelphia, his first headlining domestic performance in over seven years.

Yankee Stadium dates follow July 10 and 11, with Paris on September 19 and Los Angeles in October.

JAŸ-Z In 8 debuts this fall on HBO.

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