A documentary film on the life of hip hop artist and rapper YoY o Honey Singh is set to arrive on Netflix, the streaming platform announced yesterday.
Billed as a “bare-it-all docu-film”, the project will see Yo Yo Honey Singh deep-dive into life and sudden disappearance at the peak of his career that startled the industry and fans, garnering intense media attention.
It will capture the rapper’s personal and professional journey, with behind-the-scenes moments straight from Hirdesh Singh, better known by his stage name Yo Yo Honey Singh, himself alongside sit-downs with his family members, friends and music collaborators who have been by his side through it all, PTI reported from Mumbai.
Yo Yo Honey Singh said he has spoken about his personal and career issues in the media before but has never been able to “bare it all”.
“I have received tremendous love from my fans, and they deserve to know the whole story.
“This Netflix docu-film will give everyone an honest and sincere account of my life, my upbringing, where I’ve been and my current journey to return stronger,” said the musical artist, known for songs such as ‘Brown Rang’, ‘Desi Kalakaar’, and ‘Lungi Dance’, in a statement.
The documentary is directed by Mozez Singh and produced by Guneet Monga and Achin Jain of Sikhya Entertainment, the banner that recently bagged an Oscar for ‘The Elephant Whisperers’.
Monga said she always wanted to explore Yo Yo Honey Singh’s “tumultuous journey with fame” that had intrigued the entire country.
Amazon Ads India head outlines 2026’s 5 brand-consumer connect trends
IBDF & 14 industry bodies led multi-body coalition bats for consent-led AI copyright rules
JioStar VC Uday Shankar to deliver keynote at New Delhi AI Summit
Govt. issues stringent 3-hour content takedown rule for SM firms
Guest Column: Budget’s policy interventions to boost Orange Economy
TV Today Network reports Q3 net loss of Rs.14 lakh
India showcases cinema, innovation at Berlin Film Market
‘Ragini 3’ to blend horror, humour with Tamannaah, Junaid
YouTube to launch cheaper TV bundles in US 

