Friday, March 20, 2026

TV REVIEW. NFVF's badly done 19th SAFTAs mirrors a haphazard film biz in crisis


by Thinus Ferreira

The National Film and Video Foundation's delayed, then rushed, then badly done broadcast of the 19th South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAs) was an embarrassment to the country's TV and film industry.

Yet, perhaps, in all its faults and haphazard on-air mistakes as it stumbles along, it needs to be this way, since it ironically, and unintentionally, mirrors a troubled and haphazard local film biz deeply mired in crisis.

Saturday night's 19th SAFTAs, organised by the taxpayer-funded NFVF and supposed to uplift and showcase the film and TV industry, showed SABC2 and Mzansi Magic viewers on DStv how the industry wasn't able to pull off a decent live broadcast ceremony about itself.

Once again produced by Black Swan Media and staged at the Gallagher Convention Centre in Johannesburg with a SuperSport outside broadcast unit, the 19th SAFTAs - which was supposed to end at 23:00, then envisioned 23:25, and then 23:45, ran long over what its length was supposed to be, eventually ending a few minutes before midnight.

By that time, capable host Anele Mgudlwa was really just speaking to the camera after the majority of the in-attendance audience had abandoned the room for the open bar and left a sea of empty seats.

Multiple times she had to call for whoever had to appear next from behind the stage, to hurry up. 

For a ceremony themed "One story, one industry, one future" the TV awards show story was often interrupted - including a break for a "live Lotto draw" (but only seen on one channel), interrupting the flow, narrative and tempo of the ceremony.

In what could have been a big celebration of the 50th anniversary of television in South Africa was reduced to a short insert, which could have been and should have been longer.

Meanwhile, the run-over-time night was padded with unnecessary inserts like "Afrikaans is 100" (which was last year) and felt out of place, especially when you need to shave off time. 

The 19th SAFTAs had Onke Dumeko as acting NFVF and acting SAFTAs committee chairperson, Relebogile Mabotja as executive producer, with Bruce Townsend as show producer and Eugene Naidoo as show director. Azania Muendane was creative producer, with Sive Black Rose Nkukwana as head of content.

An uninspiring square-themed stage design with a blocky, modular stage done by JDMUnlimited felt plain and boring - wasn't it possible to do more or be more inventive with a type of homage to 50 years of TV past, and future? 

The main mic was one length and those too short and too tall had no choice but to try do their best. 

Built-in irony abounded: Golden Horns were handed out to several recently cancelled and stopped shows. Recipients for shows from e'.tv's Scandal! and Kelders van Geheime, to the Showmax Original Youngins had the somewhat cringe-worthy task of thanking the very channels, platforms and people that actually ended them. 

While going to stage was a tribute to success and peer recognition, it also made the 19th SAFTAs feel like a eulogy for a very troubled industry.

As usual, fixable sound errors remained persistent throughout, as was the litany of small white squares with numbers on the backrests, showcasing empty chairs all through the night - even in the front row. 

So many film students with their own best garb, for a R100 gift card and a small meal would sit in an overflow room patiently, line up in a queue, and be willing to be sped to empty chairs as seat-fillers. Their biggest prize would actually be for the moment to sit for a few minutes next to a soap or film star they recognised and adore. So why isn't this done?

If floor managers for recorded shows ably fill all seats to make a show look popular and desirable to recipients of the illusion - the viewers watching - why isn't the floor manager at the SAFTAs doing this and the issue of many visible empty seats never solved?

Category presenters mangled the pronunciation of names across the spectrum, which they were seemingly never audibly told how to say, while several struggled to read. Multiple category winners were no-shows without explanation.

If category winners are organised and shipped in to be present, why the lack of columns on the Excel spreadsheet and check boxes on it with "presenter got a voicenote with names pronunciation", "presenter sent back voicenote audible test", "presenter passed"? It's so easy within the show production actionables to do. And yet ...

When the very people the NFVF and SAFTAs deem "fit" to be on stage to "showcase" and represent the industry can't get each other's names and shows right, what message is the NFVF and the industry sending to the industry and viewers? Because it comes across as one of carelessness.


The In Memoriam segment was done properly this year at the 19th SAFTAs.

All names of the dearly departed - although this segment to honour the dead was commercialised with a sponsor - were shown and legible. 

It was only marred by behind-the-scenes audio once again filtering through and that was audible alongside the song being sung. Who said : "No I didn't get anything"? Why wasn't that mic muted?

Speaking of sound, the echo viewers heard through the night is because the SAFTAs sound team was unable to properly separate the house mix (the sound attendees heard inside the venue) with the sound send as broadcast playout. 

It's something which actually "helped" since the playout audio channel apparently was muted sometimes, or something else was wrong, and then all viewers got was the muffled house sound from, for instance, a handheld mic that at least came through to viewers as well.

On almost every nominees introduction clip, the whole last part was muted with no sound. Bad mute button timing? 

A wall card graphic on the stage video wall would, for instance, read "Frank Opperman. Best actor in a TV". Who is supposed to check and double-check all of these sloppy, unnecessary mistakes like that the word "drama" is missing, and why isn't it done?

Host Anele deserves kudos for doing as well as she could to lift the weight of a live TV broadcast so wieldy not even Atlas can really carry it alone. 

As best she could, it was fully left up to her to be "bad cop" and interrupt and get some people off stage, or to move them, like the one Lifetime Achievement award recipient, Magic Hlatshwayo, who kept going and who she had to somehow stop.

Multiple times, Anele had to wrangle the ill-fitted Gayton McKenzie, South Africa's minister of arts, culture and sports, who kept buzzing back on stage like a pesky mosquito you can't quite get rid of. 


Gayton McKenzie's presence and rhetoric were superfluous and vacuous. 

Cut out of the 19th SAFTAs ceremony and reduced to a one-minute recorded monodribble, it would have saved a lot of time and prevented his jarring, inappropriate jokes that didn't land and rambling remarks.

Probably Anele's most pointed and best barb of the night to the limelight-craving McKenzie, after some constant babbling and the umpteenth time of him spouting vapid promises to an industry tired of government rhetoric and no action, was: "I gave him that SAFTA for the lifetime achievement of promises. Promises, promises".

Even in the end credits with spelling mistakes and typos, viewers got "Nicola van Niekerk" at MultiChoice as part of the SAFTAs committee, and then again as "Nicola Auret" later as MultiChoice's executive head of programming. It's the same person. Who checks these things? And shouldn't the SAFTAs know? 

Do all these SAFTAs-involved people in the end-credits actually talk to each other? Sadly, it doesn't come across that way.

The 19th SAFTAs once again made MultiChoice, M-Net, the SABC, e.tv, TV channels like kykNET, Mzansi Magic, and streamers like Netflix look bad - and this is when they're supposedly working together on the SAFTAs.

Anele closed the broadcast, noting, "We all worry about how we're going to keep the industry afloat. Let's be an audience. The best thing we can do is support each other. Let's watch each other's projects." 

Perhaps a wounded industry needs a flawed SAFTAs broadcast. Perhaps, sadly, it's what the industry and viewers deserve.

Perhaps viewers need to see that the NFVF can't do the SAFTAs better because it is simply mirroring an industry on life support, battling to just keep breathing.


Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Canal+ to end Showmax subscriptions on 1 April 2026, will axe streamer on 30 April, as content moves to DStv Stream and later Canal+ app


by Thinus Ferreira

Canal+'s Showmax will end subscriptions for its doomed video streaming service from 1 April 2026 as Showmax content will temporarily be moved to DStv Stream, and later Canal+'s app, also known as Canal+.

Showmax will stop on 30 April 2026.

Earlier this month, Canal+ announced that it's ending the loss-making Showmax that it said could have destroyed MultiChoice.

Banks like Absa, Capitec, FNB and Discovery Bank have all stopped selling Showmax vouchers. 

Capitec has stopped all Showmax vouchers, while the others have stopped all three and six months vouchers but still offer one-month vouchers.

MultiChoice launched Showmax in August 2015. 

Showmax was relaunched in February 2024 in partnership with Comcast's NBCUniversal and Sky in the United Kingdom but immediately turned into a bottomless money pit as it failed to reach the lofty targets of aggressive subscriber growth that MultiChoice executives promised investors before the relaunch.

After its takeover of MultiChoice, Maxime Saada, Canal+ CEO, said the new owner realised that Showmax is a massive MultiChoice financial loss and failure that Canal+ had to get rid of. 

NBCUniversal has a 30% stake in Showmax and Canal+ has refused to say what it is paying NBCUniversal to end the disastrous partnership in the streaming service venture.

Some Showmax Originals have quietly been rebranded and will transition to some of M-Net's linear TV channels like M-Net, kykNET and Mzansi Magic, for instance the second season of the Canal+ and MultiChoice co-production Spinners that was filmed in Cape Town and specifically created for a Showmax audience. 

Wura, The Nigerian adaptation of Mzansi Magic's The River telenovela has for instance been rebranded as an Africa Magic Original from its fourth season that will debut on DStv's  Africa Magic Showcase and Africa Magic Family TV channels on 30 March and no longer on Showmax.     

"Showmax is starting a new chapter and your favourite shows are getting a shiny new home on DStv Stream. Even better, they'll be joining a bigger world of entertainment, all in one place," MultiChoice said on Wednesday evening in a message to Showmax subscribers.

This is, however, not the real new "one place". 

After the move of Showmax content to DStv DStream, the content will be moved again, once Canal+ rolls out its own Canal+ video streaming service in South Africa and elsewhere in sub-Saharan Africa within a few months.

31 March 2026 will be the very last day for subscribers to renew a Showmax subscription or to redeem any outstanding vouchers. From 1 April 2026, absolutely no new Showmax subscriptions and renewals will be available or work.

Existing Showmax subscribers will be able to continue watching content "as usual, until your subscription ends, or until the end of April 2026 - whichever comes first".

MultiChoice said in response to a media query that the "Showmax services closes on 30 April".


According to MultiChoice "Showmax Originals and more will be available to DStv Compact and DStv Premium satellite and streaming-only customers via the DStv Stream app", and noted that "more movies and series will be added over the coming weeks".


MultiChoice noted that "The stories that defined Showmax are not disappearing. Instead, they are finding a new home on DStv Stream, where a dedicated Showmax section inside the app brings together many of Showmax’s most acclaimed originals and fan favourites alongside the full live streaming experience available on DStv’s standalone streaming service".


"Showmax Originals and more will be available on DStv Compact and DStv Premium packages exclusively on DStv Stream."


"This move ensures that the award-winning African series remain widely available after the current Showmax service closes on 30 April, now within the broader DStv streaming experience."


In a prepared statement, Nomsa Philiso, director of content for general entertainment English and Portuguese-speaking territories at MultiChoice, said "Series like The Wife, Youngins, Devilsdorp, and Adulting, along with productions from Nigeria, Kenya and across the continent, were created through collaboration between MultiChoice’s content teams and local producers. That commitment to African storytelling does not change".


Besides the transition of Showmax content to the Canal+ app, Canal+ Africa is also working to extend the existing partnership with Netflix in Francophone Africa and to roll out the bundling of Netflix with DStv in South Africa and the rest of English-speaking sub-Saharan Africa.


In Francophone Africa, Canal+ and Netflix have a partnership since July 2025, whereby Netflix and access to it is bundled into certain premium Canal+ subscriptions at no extra cost, which is what Canal+'s plan is to do for MultiChoice's English-speaking territories as well.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

No, Checkers Sixty60 doesn't deliver by Airwolf helicopter and along the whole West Coast as ARB orders TikTok ad pulled


by Thinus Ferreira

One flight of fantasy that isn't true is Checkers' Sixty60 delivery ad on TikTok that shows it delivering orders by turquoise Airwolf helicopter to houseboats along the whole West Coast. 

South Africa's Advertising Regulatory Board (ARB) upheld a complaint after a consumer complained about "a floating house or houseboat situated on turquoise water somewhere on the West Coast".

In Checkers' TikTok ad, individuals are shown relaxing on the deck and in the water. During the scene, the occupants use the Checkers Sixty60 app to place a grocery order. The advertisement then shows a helicopter arriving to deliver the groceries to the boat".

The complainant who lives in St Helena Bay was upset and said Checkers "in fact do not deliver to 'somewhere in the West Coas. I am in St. Helena Bay, and they will not deliver to me, which is somewhere in the West Coast. They are also not offering helicopter delivery".


Checkers explained to the ARB that the ad formed part of its "Summer Delivered" campaign and intentionally used visual hyperbole, nostalgia, and creative licence.

"The depiction of a helicopter delivering groceries to a floating house is not intended to represent Sixty60’s actual delivery methods or geographic coverage," Checkers said, "but rather to convey the brand’s playful, aspirational tone".

Checkers said that "the imagery of a helicopter delivery and the ocean setting serves as a metaphorical storytelling device".

According to the retailer, the phrase "Summer delivered anywhere" is "figurative language designed to evoke the emotional freedom and spontaneity associated with summer, not a literal claim that Sixty60 delivers to all locations along the West Coast or to offshore environments." 

"The phrase is meant to evoke the emotional essence of freedom and joy... rather than as a comprehensive claim of service availability."

Checkers argued that a reasonable consumer "would not interpret the advertisement as promising helicopter delivery or delivery to remote coastal areas".

"Delivery is clearly disclosed within the Sixty60 app, ensuring that consumers have accurate information before placing an order" and that "there was no intention to mislead consumers. The advertisement contains no pricing, operational guarantees or factual claims about delivery coverage. Instead, it relies on exaggeration and nostalgic references, including the use of a Bell 222 helicopter reminiscent of the 1980s television series Airwolf, to create a humorous, light‑hearted summer narrative."

"There was no intent to mislead. The advertisement employs imaginative visuals that are widely accepted in advertising as a means to convey brand ethos and emotional connection."

The ARB said Checkers' helicopter delivery in the ad "is so far removed from ordinary grocery delivery (especially in the South African context) that its use in the advertisement is clearly hyperbolic".

"The advertiser’s explanation that the scene is a nostalgic reference to the 1980s television series Airwolf reinforces the creative and fantastical nature of the execution."

On the other part the ARB however, found "that while no reasonable consumer expects a helicopter delivery offshore, the advertisement communicates that any reasonable West Coast destination would be possible".

"This is due to the identification of a specific area, and the promise at the end of the advertisement of 'delivery anywhere'. A hypothetical reasonable consumer works from a presumption that most advertising is trying to communicate something about the product, and there can be no question that the communication of this commercial is that the advertiser strives to achieve delivery in the most extreme circumstances."

"It delivers 'anywhere', and specifically identifies the West Coast in this regard. If one then considers that, in fact, there are large parts of the West Coast that the advertiser does not deliver to, one is left wondering what the advertisement was actually trying to communicate," the ARB says.

"The Directorate, therefore, finds that the advertisement is likely to mislead the hypothetical reasonable consumer into believing that the advertiser offers delivery 'anywhere' along the West Coast."

The ARB found the Checkers ad in breach of Clause 4.2.1 of Section II of the Code and asked ARB members not to accept the ad with the claims "Somewhere on the West Coast" and "Summer delivery. Anywhere."

South Africa's parliament demands answers from Canal+ over film industry job losses caused by shutdown of MultiChoice streamer Showmax


by Thinus Ferreira

South Africa's parliament wants to look into how many job losses there will be in the country's film and TV industry because of Canal+'s shutdown of MultiChoice's video streaming service Showmax, with parliament's portfolio committee on communications set to do special oversight visits to MultiChoice and eMedia's e.tv as commercial broadcasters.

Canal+ announced it's shutting down Showmax and replacing it with its own Canal+ app, noting that the loss-making Showmax "would have brought down MultiChoice".

According to the agreement with South Africa's Competition Commission, Canal+ and MultiChoice are not allowed to do any retrenchments within MultiChoice for a period of three years from September 2025.

About shutting down Showmax, Canal+ in a statement said that "The decision to discontinue Showmax will not involve any retrenchments. The group will be engaging and supporting employees through various transition options".

While not allowed to get rid of Showmax staff, Canal+ Africa and MultiChoice are however, allowed to decrease the production spending budget or what was spent on productions that made shows specifically for the streamer as Showmax Originals, which might lead to fewer production companies having commissioned projects, and fewer overall people employed by those production companies.

Sixolise Gcilishe, Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) member of parliament, requested Khusela Sangoni-Diko, chairperson of the parliamentary committee, for an investigation of MultiChoice in terms of Showmax and the coming job losses for the local industry that its closure will cause, and what the impact will be for local TV and film production.

According to Sixolise Gcilishe, Canal+'s decision to shut down Showmax "raises significant concerns relevant to our committee's responsibilities, particularly regarding the support of the local creative industry, job retention, and adherence to transformation goals within our digital economy".

"Showmax has been crucial in contributing to our national identity and pushing the South African narrative by providing a platform for local producers, actors, writers and technical teams."

"Its discontinuation poses a serious risk of diminishing a critical distribution avenue for local content, potentially resulting in a cultural landscape overly influenced by international programmes."

We need to hear from MultiChoice about the future of local productions currently featured on Showmax and the status of existing production contracts. South Africa is grappling with severe unemployment."

"Any significant corporate changes by a major entity like MultiChoice will likely result in job losses, affecting not just the company but also the wider creative sector, including writers, directors, editors and freelance workers reliant on streaming services for income."

Sixolise Gcilishe says MultiChoice executives in their presentation to parliament must give a specific timeline and reasons for ending or restructuring Showmax, as well as a thorough assessment of the potential job losses - both at MultiChoice and also within the wider film and TV industry.

MultiChoice must also answer about the future of existing Showmax Original productions and the accessibility of these productions to South Africa's viewers.

According to Sangoni-Diko, the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa), as well as the Competition Commission, will brief the committee on Tuesday, 17 March, on the regulatory conditions, public interest commitments and the compliance requirements which are all linked to Canal+'s final approval for taking over MultiChoice.

"Following this, the committee is working on scheduling a special oversight visit to the broadcast sector on 31 March and 1 April 2026, covering e.tv, MultiChoice, and other commercial broadcasters."

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Cancelled shows win at NFVF's embarrassingly bad 19th South African Film and Television Awards (full winners list)


by Thinus Ferreira

The National Film and Video Foundation's belatedly held 19th South African Film and Television Awards, awkwardly awarded prizes to a litany of cancelled shows.

As an inept, mistake-riddled and badly done show which ran over by almost an hour on Saturday night as a live broadcast, the 19th SAFTAs, again produced by Black Swan Media, ironically held up a mirror of a troubled industry in crisis.

The director and TV, film and stage producer Bobby Heaney, involved with the MultiChoice Talent Factory (MTF) academy, as well as actor Magic Hlatshwayo, both received long-overdue Lifetime Achievement awards.

Multiple category winners were complete no-shows on stage at the 19th SAFTAs without any explanation.

Category wins went to channels like kykNET and Mzansi Magic on MultiChoice's DStv, Netflix, Amazon Prime Video's last local production in South Africa, the SABC, as well as e.tv.

Cancelled shows, from Youngins as a Showmax Original, to Scandal! and Kelders van Geheime on e.tv, and iThonga and Genesis on Mzansi Magic, collectively won several awards, leading to cringe-worthy recipients who had to thank their channels that cancelled them. 

The award-winning writer, director and producer Karen Jeyes from Both World Pictures, who accepted an award for the Amazon MGM Studios comedy series The Morning After, said: "Thanks Amazon Prime. Please come back and make more TV in this country".

Interestingly, Cara Roberts appeared on the SAFTAs stage twice on Saturday to accept awards on behalf of both her parents: First her dad Ian Roberts who was a no-show after winning for Best Actor in a feature film for A Kind of Madness.

She returned to stage to accept the posthumous win of her late mom, Michelle Botes, who clinched the award for Best supporting actress in a TV drama for the first season of Netflix South Africa's Afrikaanse drama series Tuiskoms.


Best supporting actress in a TV drama
Michelle Botes (Tuiskoms)
Production House: Infinity Films

Best achievement in sound - documentary
Pangolin: Kulu's Journey
Practitioners: Barry Donnelly, Corne Van Niekerk & Jabu Msomi
Production House: Water Creature Media

Best achievement in editing - documentary
Chasing the Sun 2
Practitioner: Christiaan Scheepers
Production House: T+W

Best achievement in cinematography - documentary
Pangolin: Kulu's Journey
Practitioners: Steven Dover, Warren Smart & Gareth Thomas
Production House: Water Creature Media

Best achievement in directing - documentary
Zef: The Story of Die Antwoord
Practitioner: Jon Day
Production House: Orange Films

Best documentary short
Mathonga Elizwe (Spirits of the Land)
Production House: Uhuru Productions

Best made for TV documentary or documentary series
School Ties
Production House: Idea Candy

Best documentary feature
Zef: The Story of Die Antwoord
Production House: Orange Films

Best children's programme
Behind the Rainbow
Production House: Storytown Productions

Best educational programme
Ingono Yomsamo
Production House: Barleader TV

Best factual programme
Confessions of an Assassin: Why I killed Chris Hani - An Annika Larsen Special Report
Production House: e.tv

Best competition reality show
Plaasjapie (Seisoen 2)
Production House: Afrokaans

Best structured soapie reality show
Young, Famous and African S2
Production House: Urban Brew Studios & APOP Media

Best structured or docu-reality show
Umkhonto Ogwazekhaya
Production House: Devandile Media

Best youth programme
On The Base Roundtable
Production House: VIS Studios

Best online content
Four Walls
Production House: Weldun Media

Best lifestyle programme
Elders: Ligtoringroete
Production House: Bonanza Films

Best current affairs programme
Carte Blanche
Production House: Combined Artistic Productions

Best made-for-TV movie
Mr Easy Loo
Production House: Black Brain Pictures

Best international format
Deal or No Deal Celebrity
Production House: HBC Broadcast Solution

Best entertainment programme
Yash'ingoma season 3
Production House: Skepe Entertainment and Urban Brew Studios

Best variety show
Unfollowed Season 2
Production House: Goat

Best achievement in make-up and hairstyling - TV comedy
How to Ruin Love season 1
Practitioner: Bongi Mlotshwa
Production House: Burnt Onion Productions

Best achievement in wardrobe - TV comedy
The Morning After
Practitioner: Mariechen Vosloo
Production House: Both Worlds Pictures

Best achievement in sound - TV comedy
How to Ruin Love season 1
Practitioner: Guy Steer
Production House: Burnt Onion Productions

Best achievement in art direction - TV comedy
The Morning After
Practitioner: Kate Van Der Merwe
Production House: Both Worlds Pictures

Best achievement in editing - TV comedy
The Morning After
Practitioners: Björn Johansen & Gordon Midgley
Production House: Both Worlds Pictures

Best achievement in scriptwriting - TV comedy
Magda Louw
Practitioner: Desire Gardner
Production House: Homebrew Films

Best achievement in cinematography - TV comedy
Mabaso Family Reunion
Practitioner: Gaopalelwe Kabe
Production House: Black Brain Pictures

Best achievement in directing - TV comedy
Magda Louw
Practitioner: Johan Nel
Production House: Homebrew Films

Best achievement in make-up and hairstyling - TV drama
Reyka season 2
Practitioner: Theola Booyens
Production House: Quizzical Pictures

Best achievement in wardrobe - TV drama
Niggies
Practitioner: Mariechen Vosloo
Production House: Wolflight Films

Best achievement in art direction - TV drama
Catch Me A Killer
Practitioner: Warren Gray
Production House: Local Motion Pictures

Best achievement in special effects (SFX) in hair and make-up - TV
White Lies
Practitioner: Natasha du Toit
Production House: Quizzical Pictures

Best achievement in sound - TV drama
White Lies
Practitioners: David Oosthuizen, Declyn Strydom
Production House: Quizzical Pictures

Best achievement in original music/score - TV drama
Niggies
Practitioner: Pierre Henri Wicomb
Production House: Wolflight Films

Best achievement in an original song - TV drama
White Lies
Practitioners: Edward George King, Charl-Johan Lingenfelder
Production House: Quizzical Pictures

Best achievement in editing - TV drama
GO!
Practitioner: Jeremy Briers
Production House: Ten30 Pictures

Best achievement in visual effects (VFX) – TV
Soon comes night
Practitioner: Shaun Hillary
Production House: Ochre Media

Best achievement in cinematography - TV drama
Reyka season 2
Practitioner: Tom Marais
Production House: Quizzical Pictures

Best achievement in scriptwriting - TV drama
Law, Love & Betrayal (LLB)
Practitioners: Alex Xolo, Lwazi Mvusi, Dorette Nel, Chisanga Kabinga & Oratile Mogoje
Production House: Ramathesele Media and Communications

Best achievement in directing - TV drama
Catch Me A Killer
Practitioners: Rene van Rooyen, Brett Michael Innes
Production House: Local Motion Pictures

Best achievement in make-up and hairstyling - TV soap/telenovela
Skemergrond
Practitioners: Waldemar van Rensburg
Production House: Penguin Films

Best achievement in wardrobe - TV soap/telenovela
Genesis season 1
Practitioners: Sylvia Gegana
Production House: Singavision Productions

Best achievement in art direction - TV soap/telenovela
Suidooster
Practitioner: Beatrix van Zyl
Production House: Suidooster Films

Best achievement in editing - telenovela
Youngins
Practitioners: SC Nhlumayo, Natalie Varoy, Siwelile Mbanjwa, Lubabalo Mayaba, Nandi Mehlomakulu, Nonhlanhla Nxumalo
Production House: Tshedza Pictures

Best achievement in original music/score - telenovela
Youngins
Practitioner: Brendan Jury
Production House: Tshedza Pictures

Best achievement in an original song - telenovela
Kelders van Geheime
Practitioner: Loki Rothman
Production House: KFilms

Best achievement in sound - TV soap/telenovela
Blood Legacy
Practitioner: Lubabalo Bozo
Production House: Gambit Films

Best achievement in scriptwriting - telenovela
Inimba
Practitioners: Siphosethu Tshapu, Kirsten Adams, Sacha-ann Stokes, Nombulelo Mcwerah, Khanyisa Jali, Vanishia Kisten, Sinethemba Keleku, Mpolokeng Hope Bogatsu, Sibusiso Kumalo
Production House: The Milton Empire

Best achievement in cinematography – telenovela
Blood Legacy
Practitioner: Sunel Haasbroek
Production House: Gambit Films

Best achievement in directing - telenovela
Suidooster
Practitioner: Pieter Francois Retief Scholtz
Production House: Suidooster Films

Best achievement in directing - TV soap
Scandal!
Practitioners: Sithembiso Mathenjwa, Antony Coleman, Philasande Malunga, Sphamandla Ngcobo, Christo Davids, Mamohato Askew
Production House: Ochre Media

Best achievement in make-up and hairstyling - Feature film
The Fix
Practitioner: Nicola Roodt
Production House: Crave Pictures

Best achievement in costume design - Feature film
Just Now Jeffrey
Practitioner: Danielle Knox
Production House: Bioscope Films

Best achievement in production design - Feature Film
Just Now Jeffrey
Practitioner: Kerry von Lillienfeld
Production House: Bioscope Films

Best achievement in special effects (SFX) in hair and make-up - Feature Film
The Fix
Practitioners: Nicola Roodt, Clinton Aiden Smith
Production House: Crave Pictures

Best achievement in sound design - Feature film
The Fix
Practitioners: David Oosthuizen, Geoffrey Kock
Production House: Crave Pictures

Best achievement in editing - Feature film
Death of a Whistleblower
Practitioner: Eva Du Preez
Production House: Known Associates Entertainment

Best achievement in original music/score - Feature film
A Kind of Madness
Practitioner: Loki Rothman
Production House: Wolflight Films

Best achievement in an original song - Feature film
Sabbatical
Practitioners: Bokani Dyer, Siyabonga Mthembu
Production House: Diprente

Best achievement in visual effects (VFX) – Feature film
The Fix
Practitioner: Kelsey Egan, George Webster, Sam Alessandri, Charles Tait, Andre Steyn, Lee Gemmell, Phillip Keong, Randall Makhanya, Tristan Brown, Mike Louw
Production House: Crave Pictures

Best achievement in cinematography - Feature film
Death of a Whistleblower
Practitioner: Devin Toselli
Production House: Known Associates Entertainment

Best achievement in scriptwriting - Feature film
A Kind of Madness
Practitioner: Christiaan Olwagen, Wessel Pretorius
Production House: Wolflight Films

Best student film
Leapt Niches
Institution: The Animation School

Best animation
Jungle Beat 2 The Past
Production House: Sunrise Animation Studios

Best supporting actress in a TV soap
Vele Manenje (Skeem Saam)
Production House: Peu

Best supporting actor in a TV soap
Litlhonolofatso Litlhakanyane (Scandal!)
Production House: Ochre Media

Best supporting actress in a telenovela
Zenande Mfenyana (Inimba)
Production House: The Milton Empire

Best supporting actor in a telenovela
Anele Matoti (Gqeberha - The Empire)
Production House: Tshedza Pictures

Best actress in a TV soap
Londeka Sishi (Scandal!)
Production House: Ochre Media

Best actor in a TV soap
Aubrey Poo (Generations: The Legacy)
Production House: MMSV Productions

Best actress in a telenovela
Nelisiwe Sibiya (iThonga)
Production House: Tshedza Pictures

Best actor in a telenovela 
Bonko Khoza (iThonga)
Production House: Tshedza Pictures

Best TV soap
Scandal!
Production House: Ochre Media

Best telenovela
Youngins
Production House: Tshedza Pictures

Best supporting actress in a TV drama
Michelle Botes (Tuiskoms)
Production House: Infinity Films

Best supporting actor in a TV drama
Jabulani Mthembu (Catch Me A Killer)
Production House: Local Motion Pictures

Best actress in a TV drama
Gail Mabalane (Unseen - season 2)
Production House: Gambit Films

Best actor in a TV drama
Frank Opperman (Nêrens, Noord-Kaap season 2)
Production House: Nagvlug Films

Best TV drama
Reyka season 2
Production House: Quizzical Pictures

Best supporting actress in a TV comedy
Shoki Mmola (How to Ruin Love season 1)
Production House: Burnt Onion Productions

Best supporting actor in a TV comedy
Tobie Cronjé (Pronk Primêr)
Production House: Sonvelt Media

Best actress in a TV comedy
Desire Gardner (Magda Louw season 2)
Production House: Homebrew Films

Best actor in a TV comedy
Hannes van Wyk (Magda Louw season 2)
Production House: homebrew films

Best TV comedy
The Morning After
Production House: Both Worlds Pictures

Best short film
Why The Cattle Wait
Production House: Zarafa Pictures, Yellowbone Entertainment

Best supporting actress in a feature film
June van Merch (Die Kwiksilwers)
Production House: Sanktuary Films

Best supporting actor in a feature film
Neels van Jaarsveld (Snake)
Production House: Known Associates Entertainment

Best actress in a feature film
Sandra Prinsloo (A Kind of Madness)
Production House: Wolflight Films

Best actor in a feature film
Ian Roberts (A Kind of Madness)
Production House: Wolflight Films

Best achievement in directing - Feature film
Death of a Whistleblower
Practitioner: Ian Gabriel
Production House: Known Associates Entertainment

Best feature film
Death of a Whistleblower
Production House: Known Associates Entertainment

Best natural history and environmental programme
Day of the Dragon
Production House: Earth Touch

Best TV presenter (public vote)
Fezile Mkhize (Top Travel)
Production House: Cardova Productions

Most popular TV soap/telenovela (public vote)
Inimba
Production House: The Milton Empire

Lifetime Achievement awards
Bobby Heaney
Magic Hlatshwayo


Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Conservation biologist Dr Steve Boyes on new National Geographic documentary film Ghost Elephants: 'We look for historical genetic connections'


by Thinus Ferreira

Just like the iconic scene from the first Jurassic Park movie, where a real T-Rex ends up in the visitor's centre main rotunda in its massive glory as a banner glides down, Dr Steve Boyes stands in front of a display of an elephant at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C., in Ghost Elephants.

But he isn't after a dinosaur.

The South African National Geographic Explorer and conservation biologist is trying to track down a creature far more elusive. 

In Ghost Elephants, a new documentary film from acclaimed director Werner Herzog, Dr Steve Boyes - a real modern-day Indiana Jones - goes to the museum's rotunda, and later into its archives to extract a DNA sample, to examine "Henry", the largest elephant ever killed.

Directed, written and narrated by Werner Herzog, and produced by Ariel León Isacovitch and Herzog, Ghost Elephants is from Sobey Road Entertainment, The Roots Production Service and Skellig Rock.

Ghost Elephants is available on Disney+ and premieres on National Geographic Wild (DStv 182) on Wednesday, 11 March at 18:00 and in the forest of Angola, Dr Steve Boyes is determined to prove their existence.

With the film's release comes the coffee table book "Okavango and the Source of Life" by Dr Steve Boyes, which expands the journey beyond the documentary film, with more than 100 striking photographs, detailed maps, and Boyes’ personal reflections from years of gruelling expeditions to the Angolan headwaters of the Okavango. 

During the course of Ghost Elephants, Dr Steve Boyes and a crew travel into the mysterious Angola highlands searching for proof of the existence of a missing "tribe" of large elephants - part legend, part hope, part superstition and part of Africa's unsolved secrets: The ghost elephants of Lisima.

Teaming up with fellow National Geographic Explorer Kerllen Costa and three KhoiSan master trackers – Xui, Xui Dawid, and Kobus – they venture into a world where technology fails and that requires human eyes and human intuition to try and track down the potential living descendants of the largest land mammal ever recorded.


I had the opportunity to speak to Dr Steve Boyes about Ghost Elephants and got to ask him two questions.

"For National Geographic, this year is the 10th anniversary of the Okavango Wilderness Project," he says, giving a "bigger picture" overview of what he's been busy with.

"We have discovered and documented over 275 new species through science, new populations of endangered species up in these same highlands in Angola, working with the local Luchazi, the Chokwe and the Mbundu hunters and traditional leaders there," Dr Steve Boyes told me.

"So this is a long-term programme and we work across genetics, environmental DNA, detailed river surveys and storytelling to explain those findings to not just people in Angola and in Africa, but people globally, since science needs translation".


Seen done in Ghost Elephants, I also asked him to weigh in on modern humanity's ability to use things like supercomputers to do genetic analyses from a 70-year-old elephant skull and make genetic comparisons that help in these scientific quests and, although not out in the real world, aid scientists in finding proof of things we never would have been able to get before.

"We have the largest freshwater fish collection in the Southern hemisphere, so we can now employ new technology to help us. With one litre of water, we can tell you every single fish that's been in it during the last two weeks," he explains.

"Computers are allowing us to do this - taking air samples, taking water samples, we can tell you everything. So these databases we already use, and as computing power increases, our opportunities for analysis increase."

"What we're really doing is to look at all of the elephants across Africa - they're all split up now from each other, disjunct from each other."

"And we look at historical genetic connections, where corridors need to be created to connect them again, to see how these animals moved around 100 years ago. And all of that is told through genetics."

"Science advances," Dr Steve Boyes tells me.

"A lot of my expeditionary work, we consider ourselves as working for future scientists. We take simple water samples and have a water bank that we keep for scientists in 2050 who might be looking for something. The advance of science is moving really quickly."


Ghost Elephants is on Disney+ and premieres on National Geographic Wild (DStv 182) on Wednesday, 11 March at 18:00.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Gus O'Brien upped as new NBCUniversal International Networks boss from April


by Thinus Ferreira

Gus O'Brien is replacing Ken Bettsteller, with NBCUniversal Media Group moving him to president of International Networks and direct-to-consumer (DTC) from 1 April, as Ken Bettsteller is replaced and shifted to an advisory role.

NBCUniversal is also expanding Hendrik McDermott's scope, who has been leading Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) Networks & DTC, to now oversee all international DTC operations as managing director for international DTC & EMEA, as well as Canada. 

NBCUniversal Networks & DTC runs the international versions of TV channels like Universal TV, Studio Universal, Telemundo, Bravo, DreamWorks and the aggregation service Universal+, which are available in South Africa on DStv through Canal+'s MultiChoice.

Matt Strauss, NBCUniversal Media Group chairman, in a statement in a press release, says, "Our International Networks & Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) portfolio brings some of our most beloved brands to audiences around the world, including a suite of popular networks, the hybrid linear/non-linear service Universal+, and the all-reality SVOD service Hayuu."

"Gus is a worthy successor to Ken Bettsteller – who has been a formidable leader in our company for over two decades – and I'm excited for Gus to bring his innovative leadership to the broader group, working with the international management team to further strengthen and support these brands."

Monsters In Africa: Why the continent waits for its own global fantasy and sci-fi breakthrough


by Thinus Ferreira

While Netflix's Squid Game did it for Asia and put Korea on the global map for genre content, the Nordics found success mining folklore, and Latin America booms with producing "telefantasy", the one continent that is still waiting for its local Wakanda-like breakthrough on the worldwide stage is Africa.

While Africa is rich in stories, folklore, writing talent and creativity, the execution and production in successfully birthing an African-type of Squid Game that garners global appeal has so far remained elusive.

In September 2024, MultiChoice's Showmax, which Canal+ is now shuttering, released Subterranea, Kenya's first-ever sci-fi series as a psychological thriller that never would have seen the light of day if it weren't for the African streaming service that took a big swing with the Nairobi-based Kibanda Pictures on the bunker-set series.

When it comes to quality, engrossing and smart science fiction and fantasy, home-made in Africa and resonating with global viewers, Nosipho Dumisa-Ngoasheng, says the lack of buzzed-about genre content is because Africa underestimates itself.

The South African writer, director and producer who co-founded Gambit Films, says, "I have many opinions on this".

She spoke as a panellist at the 8th Joburg Film Festival in Johannesburg, South Africa, where she implored Africa's biz to take a new look at genre content and to take the risk with sci-fi and fantasy stories, and to start trying it out on a small scale.

While  Comic Con Cape Town is set for 30 April and Comic Con Africa 2026 is marked for 24 September in Johannesburg and while both fan-driven events on African soil have found success and support from sci-fi and fantasy lovers, the content and stars it rests on are primarily international. 

"This is for me where I think it's a case of 'don't under-estimate our audiences'. I think in this particular area, I do feel we have under-estimated our audiences," she says.

"2009's District 9 science fiction action film from Neill Blomkamp came out several years ago. If you asked me what film I wish I had been a part of, that would be it without a question," Dumisa-Ngoasheng noted.

"While it wasn't a South African production in that it wasn't a South African company or South African studio or anything like that, what it did highlight is that our audiences are absolutely hungry for it. Our audience absolutely wants it. And then nothing."

"When District 9 came out, I was absolutely convinced that it was the dawn of a new era - that something new was coming. We had big things we were pitching. We had all or spec sci-fi's. And then the conversations were always ''Our audiences don't understand it'. Which I don't believe."

"We've seen it time and time again - scifi and fantasy as genre work. I think the misconception and where we falter is in thinking it requires a crazy budget because it requires a crazy, massive world and everything is big."

"I think it comes back to the same thing about knowing what you won't compromise on. There is nothing wrong with starting small, for example, an Ex Machina. Her. These are grounded scifi's where yes, the budgets in Hollywood are spent on Joaquin Phoenix and so on but we don't have to do that."

"It takes a high concept, that is grounded with an element of these genres, that we slowly start to explore and that we start to play around with and take some risks. It's also a question of who do we take risks with? Who has already displayed an understanding of the genre?"

Dumisa-Ngoasheng says "What I also think sometimes happens if we are navigating and going into genres with partners who haven't necessarily attempted it even on a small scale, then there's a higher risk, as opposed to 'maybe they have shorts that have already been done in this way.' Maybe the story isn't so good but the technical is good - let's partner with a great storyteller or use a piece of IP to build the thing."

"I can't stress enough how I feel there's an audience, myself being one of those audience members, who are greatly underserved in the genres of sci-fi and fantasy. I mean fantasy! Africa's storytelling is grounded in fantastical stories but we never get to go there." 

TV CRITIC's NOTEBOOK. Netflix SA did nothing for One Piece season 2 to properly liaise with media. And now wants what, coverage?


by Thinus Ferreira

On Sunday, 8 March, just after having held a wonderful Netflix mixer event during the 8th Joburg Film Festival in Sandton, Netflix South Africa had a media premiere for the second season of One Piece at The Ostrich open-air event field near Philadelphia in Cape Town.

With some of the local actors and international stars flown in, Netflix's PR company Lucky 8 in South Africa did absolutely nothing to alert or communicate beforehand with several South African news media about the One Piece screening and fan event who would have done something, would have arranged interviews or would have, at the very least, been alerted and have liaised with Netflix about the show.

It's not the media's responsibility to know, with no information or communication, what is happening or what Netflix SA is doing or rolling out content-wise. 

Netflix has a publicity division tasked to contact and communicate with media, and pays money to PR companies, like Lucky 8 (previously it was Eclipse Communications) in South Africa to actually liaise, partner with, and talk and communicate about Netflix content and media events, screenings and interviews.

Why is this not happening properly?

After covering the 8th Joburg Film Festival last week extensively for several media outlets, including going to the Netflix mixer event in Sandton, it was hugely disappointing to discover that suddenly Netflix had a One Piece event as a screening, fan event and media premiere, but that nobody from Netflix or Lucky 8 ever bothered to reach out to tell about it.

At the most bare-bones basic level, the expectation is that people paid to communicate should do so - in whatever area - to liaise about what opportunities exist to work together, what interviews may or may not be possible and for the media to know what is going on and happening.

Now Netflix and a PR company like Lucky 8 presumably want coverage for One Piece's second season filmed in Cape Town, South Africa at Cape Town Film Studios. 

The big question is: How? From what? When? 

How are journalists and media supposed to create something or coverage, or the type of coverage that works for their publications, and presumably for Netflix SA and Netflix globally, from out of nothing and no communication beforehand? No heads-up? No PR at all?

American actors like Julia Rehwald and Joe Manganiello, Callum Kerr from Scotland, and writer and producer Joe Tracz were in South Africa for Sunday's One Piece screening, alongside the South African actors appearing in episodes of this second season like Alan Foulis, Jazzara Jaslyn, Anton Jeftha, Aiden Scott and Ty Keogh, who portrays the character of Dalton.

Where (when?) was the One Piece season 2 press day for South Africa? Were there round-table interviews held? Where are all those interviews, assuming there were press opportunities?

What happened at Sunday's One Piece event? What was said there by whom, and the cast?

Somebody who did attend on Sunday told me Jeanne D was the MC.

On Monday morning, I asked publicist Sethu Colo at Lucky 8 about this, but a day later haven't heard back anything.

I also asked several other journalists and media in South Africa - also covering film and TV sphere - if they had ever heard anything from, or about the second season of One Piece, beforehand, or about the screening. They all said no.

Sadly, it's once again an opportunity lost for Netflix, for One Piece as a production and a show, as well as for South African media, to try and cover something where it's win-win-win, instead of lose-lose-lose.