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Money Zoe Turns “Big Haiti” Into a Statement and an HBO Max Moment

Some records don’t just drop; they arrive with purpose. That’s the energy Money Zoe brings on Big Haiti,” a bold, pride-heavy record that feels like a flag in the ground: for heritage, for hunger, and for what happens when preparation finally meets the right opportunity.

Born in Elizabeth, New Jersey with family roots in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Money Zoe isn’t chasing a trend as much as he’s building a lane. And “Big Haiti” is the kind of track that makes it clear: he’s not here for quick applause; he’s here for longevity.

Money Zoe didn’t start music with a ten-year roadmap. It began the way the real stuff often does—organically, as an outlet. But as time passed, the outlet turned into passion… and the passion turned into something deeper: purpose.

That mindset matters, because you can hear it in how he talks about the craft. There’s a spiritual foundation behind the grind; like he’s not just making songs, he’s stewarding a gift.

When you ask artists about influences, they usually name legends. Money Zoe goes a different direction: his biggest influence right now is his team, and the creative chemistry they share.

At the center of that is producer O&OBeats, a collaborator he’s known for years. Life moved them around, but when they reconnected, it was like no time passed. Same instincts. Same creative language. Even better execution.

That “we’re just getting started” feeling is real when the work keeps leveling up.

The hardest part, he says, is keeping the will to push when the numbers aren’t moving the way you want; money, motion, brand recognition, all of it. The test is whether you stay disciplined when things feel slow.

And his recent season hasn’t been light. Money Zoe shared that he lost his grandmother to dementia, a loss that hit deep and left him not quite feeling like himself. Still, he frames it as a chapter, not the whole story, and the mission now is bouncing back and making her proud.

Even with his Jersey upbringing, Money Zoe says the city didn’t “shape his sound” in the typical way. Instead, it shaped his mentality.

He points to how New Jersey talent often gets overlooked, and how that lack of recognition can either break you or harden your focus. In a scene that can fall into “crabs in a barrel” energy, his approach is simple: become your own influence; move with vision, discipline, and purpose.

Money Zoe doesn’t claim separation with ego—he claims it with range. He credits God first, then gets specific: he can shift tones, write across styles, build melodies, mentor, and even ghostwrite. Recently, he says he made his first go-go record, and it came naturally—another proof point that he’s not boxed into one sound.

That versatility is key, because the bigger he thinks, the more lanes he’s trying to occupy.

Here’s the headline moment: “Big Haiti” (produced by O&OBeats) has been featured in the HBO Max television series Heated Rivalry, with streaming and publicity now active.

The placement came through Push Audio, led by Scott Dudley, who Money Zoe credits for being solid from day one—standing on his word, delivering results, and helping turn a connection into a real milestone.

For independent artists, sync placements aren’t just “a look”—they’re leverage. Proof of professionalism. Proof the music translates beyond the algorithm. And “Big Haiti” doing that work is a major signal.

Even with momentum building, Money Zoe is clear: music is only one piece.

He’s creating across formats; records for video games, commercials, indie brands, YouTube platforms, and children’s educational content, while also writing and developing for other artists. Outside the booth, he’s serious about fitness as a lifestyle and future platform, with plans to expand into acting, modeling, tattoos/visual art, and eventually motivational projects like training programs, nutrition books, and resilience-driven lifestyle storytelling.

The theme stays consistent: adapt, elevate, succeed.

With 2026 in view, Money Zoe is lining up releases that match his ambition:

  • New album: 4 Da Baddies; slated for Valentine’s Day (February 14, 2026)
    • International Afrobeats project: Passport Dreams: produced by O&OBeats, built around a global vision
  • And one more “iconic” concept he’d rather reveal than explain; something designed for bigger rooms and bigger decisions.

His message is direct: never give up, never retreat, stay original, move with faith, protect your purpose. Chase what you love relentlessly, stay grateful, and live with intention—because tomorrow isn’t promised.

And if “Big Haiti” is the foundation stone, the blueprint looks serious.

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