Jeen-yuhs A Kanye Trilogy S01e01 480p X264-msd May 2026

This is a P2P release. You’d typically find it on public or private torrent indexes. Always use a VPN, avoid suspicious “streaming” sites claiming to have this exact scene release, and scan any .exe files – legitimate releases are only video containers.


This specific file, due to its age and encoding, requires awareness:

✅ Very small file size
✅ Plays on any device (old PCs, tablets, phones)
✅ Good enough for viewing on small screens (phone, laptop)
✅ Includes original aspect ratio & progressive scan
✅ Decent stereo audio for dialogue/music mix jeen-yuhs A Kanye Trilogy S01E01 480p x264-mSD


Act 1 serves as the foundation of the trilogy, focusing on the concept of "Vision." Directed by Coodie Simmons and Chike Ozah, the episode utilizes footage shot over 20 years ago to document the early days of Kanye West’s career.

The narrative centers on a young Kanye West in Chicago around the year 2000—long before he was a household name. At this stage, West is known primarily as a producer for local acts and Roc-A-Fella artists, but he harbors an unshakeable belief that he is destined to be a world-famous rapper. This is a P2P release

| Parameter | Value | |-----------|-------| | Container | MKV or MP4 | | Video bitrate | ~300–500 kbps | | Audio | AAC 2.0 stereo, ~96 kbps | | Aspect ratio | 16:9 anamorphic | | Frame rate | 23.976 or 25 fps |


  • Run time: approx. 90 minutes

  • For S01E01 (~90 minutes), expected file size: ~450–550 MB. This specific file, due to its age and


    | Parameter | Value | |-----------|-------| | Resolution | 854×480 pixels (480p) | | Aspect Ratio | 16:9 | | Codec | H.264 / AVC | | Bitrate (typical) | 900–1200 kbps (variable) | | Profile | High@3.1 or Main@3.0 | | Frame Rate | 23.976 fps (NTSC film) | | Scan type | Progressive | | Source used | Likely 1080p webrip downscaled |

    Quality note:
    At 480p, fine textures (e.g., grain in archival footage, facial details) are softened. However, jeen-yuhs uses mixed sources — DV tapes, cellphone footage, professional cameras — so 480p actually matches some of the archival aesthetic reasonably well.