Showing posts with label #AMVCA2018. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #AMVCA2018. Show all posts

Thursday, December 19, 2019

Daddy-issues will surface in SABC2's new Sesotho telenovela Lithapo in January 2020 with newcomer Khojane Morai alongside veterans Joyce Skefu and Mangaliso Ngema.


by Thinus Ferreira

SABC2's new Sesotho telenovela, Lithapo starting in January 2020 will bring some new on-screen talent to TV screens in a story that will cast a spotlight on "daddy-issues" and oscillate between the rich-poor worlds of Sandton and Alexandra in Johannesburg.

Produced by Quizzical Pictures and with filming that started in early-October on location in QwaQwa and continuing in Johannesburg, Lithapo, will bring a story to free-to-air viewers that shares several similarities with M-Net's Impilo that was produced for Mzansi Magic (DStv 161) and its pay-TV audience in 2019.

Lithapo will start on Monday 13 January 2020 on SABC2 with three episodes per week from Mondays to Wednedays.

In Lithapo - meaning "ties that bind" - Lehlohononolo or "Nolo" for short (played by newcomer Khojane Morai) decides to leave QwaQwa after his mother dies suddenly.

He sets out to try and find the father he never knew and to claim his father's name, but finding his dad is a difficult task.

Nolo settles in Alex and quickly gets caught up in the dog-eat-dog world of a township that is on fire with protests and despair. Meanwhile, in the adjacent, wealthy Sandton lives the Hlongwane family whose lives are the opposite of Nolo's although their destinies are intertwined.

A love triangle develops when Nolo falls in love with Pabi (Katlego Nakedi) although their relationship is thwarted from the start as Nolo gradually discovers that his life has been a lie.

The Lithapo cast includes Joyce Skefu (Moipone), Seputla Sebogodi (Kabe), Mangaliso Ngema (Senzo) and Sthandiwe Kgoroge (Thandiwe), alongside Israel Zulu, Angela Sithole, Sibongile Nojila, Clementine Mosimane and Lebohang Msiza as Nkosana.

"SABC 2 is excited to welcome a brand new Sesotho telenovela aimed at captivating the audiences with authentic, local storytelling capturing the spirit of both our traditional rural communities in and the buzz of kasi life," says Jacqui Hlongwane, SABC2 programme manager.

"Viewers can look forward to seeing the difference of both the streets of QwaQwa and Sandton through the lens of an enchanting story."

"We are also excited that Quizzical Pictures gathered a strong cast and talent second to none. As SABC2 we also continue to keep our promise of bringing our audience more gripping drama in the 21:30 timeslot and we hope that Lithapo will deliver to both ours and the viewer’s expectations."

Siphiwe Hlabangane, Quizzical Pictures producer, says that "Telling a Sesotho story in a saturated telenovela market, we chose to tackle issues around class, sexuality, land and race head-on in the hopes that audiences would find the issues relevant, and the show entertaining, especially across the magnificent backdrop that is QwaQwa".

"From the very beginning of the writing process, we knew that something special was brewing and that this project would task us with the responsibility of enthralling, amusing, educating and entertaining our audience, all of which the script delivered."

Saturday, September 1, 2018

TV CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK. With M-Net and MultiChoice's 6th Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards for 2018 coming up, cue the fawning, superficial - and mostly non-existent - coverage by Africa's so-called entertainment journalists, quick to take selfies, but slow to actually report anything.


M-Net and MultiChoice's 6th Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards for 2018 is once again coming up as a so-called pan-African awards show that will be broadcast live tonight on M-Net's various Africa Magic channels on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform.

Get ready therefore for an avalanche of pre-coverage reports, incisive and comprehensive analysis, detailed think-pieces, interviews with the organisers, interviews with the MultiChoice and M-Net executives, interviews with awards show producers, some of the nominees, coverage of the nominees cocktail party, reports about what was said during the MultiChoice and M-Net executive panel discussion(s) with people like John Ugbe, Yolisa PhahleWangi Mba-Uzoukwa and Nkateko Mabaso that usually precede the event - as well as of course real-time coverage of the awards show, post-win interviews, the post award show press conference Q&A, award show reviews, and the informative post-award show analysis and recaps from the journalists who flew to Nigeria to cover the event at the Eko Hotel in Lagos.

Or not.

Quick to run for the liquor at the open bar till late night and working hard at hobnobbing for selfies with celebs, Africa's viewing public will very likely - as has been the case the past 5 years - once again be ill and under-served by the continent's so-called "entertainment press".

Journalists will likely once again be doing a very bad job when it comes to actually doing what they're supposed - and have been sent - to do, which is to actually cover the 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards.

MultiChoice Africa once again jetted a bunch of the continent's journalists to the awards show to attend it in person, reportedly from countries including Malawi, Kenya, Tanzania, Namibia, Zambia, Uganda and Ghana.

MultiChoice Ghana dispatched William Asiedu (president of the Arts Writers Association of Ghana), so-called celebrity journalist Mustapha Nii Okai Inusah known in showbiz circles as "Attractive Mustapha", Annastacia Delali Sika of Graphic Showbiz, Gloria Akpene Nyarku known as "MzGee", David Bhone Dzata of Multimedia, Christopher Sowah of EIB/CypressGhana.com and NII Amah Dagadu to "cover" the 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards.

No South African journalists covering the 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards have been included, with the Nigerian-heavy awards show that continues to make a feeble attempt to include under-represented Southern Africa and South Africa nominees in some categories as the ceremony's try at appearing inclusively continental at least in a theoretical sense.


How many print articles, reports and real-time reporting will there be this year about the usually mistake-riddled awards show and its track-record of dubious and laugh-out-loud bad production values?

Judging by previous years, not a lot - and what there might be will once again lack real depth, insight, and actual news value.

The number of articles and coverage about the 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards will likely once again be very little compared to what there should be, given the number of journalists and press physically attending and invited by MultiChoice and flown from various African countries specifically to cover it.

In America and Europe with awards shows, the group of reporters are actually expected to work and do stuff - meaning file multiple reports beforehand, during and afterwards, and actually be in the pen next to the red carpet, sitting in the awards show, be at the press conference afterwards and asking real questions, and doing post-show recaps.

Not in Africa though, and not the Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards where the majority will once again likely do little to nothing on Saturday night, and be more interested about how to get to the bar quickest at the post awards show afterparty.

What coverage there will be, will be the usual fawning, superficial coverage - red carpet pics, winners' lists and little else.

From the post awards show press conference - if there is even still such a thing - there will be little to no actual coverage as in previous years since the bulk of the journalists attending simply can't bother and can't bother to even ask questions.

The biggest problem however is the non-existent coverage - and it will again be so again this year 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards: Journalists who attend and end up doing absolutely nothing but with M-Net and MultiChoice who keep inviting them.

This/they  does/do a huge disservice to viewers and the public who they are there to represent.

Where are the stories from the invited and attending journalists who should carry the responsibility of reporting about this awards show, about how the categories and nominees this year compare and stack up, and incisive analysis of the overall award show?

Where are the arts and film criticism about aspects of the awards show, the process, the nominees, and the ceremony about this year in particular that should already have been published as a primer before tonight's broadcast?

Where are the reporting about the 2018 Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards cocktail party for nominees and what happened there?

Where are the reporting and criticism from Africa's so-called entertainment journos that an award show that calls itself "viewers' choice" once again cut down viewers' actual choice to just 7 out of 27 categories from the already paltry 16 in 2017 - with viewers literally just "choosing 25% of the actual winners?

The bad and basically non-existent publicity from M-Net and Africa Magic isn't a reason for reporters not to cover something, or not to cover the Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards properly.

Reporters should still be doing real reporting, asking for comment, making media enquiries and be asking, asking asking.

Back in January I reported that the Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards isn't scrapped despite Nigerian trash reporting erroneously claiming that the AMVCAs has come to an end.

Shoddy reporting like the lack of coverage and bad reporting from journalists who attend go beyond not caring, and not knowing.

For the bulk of these journalists its about not wanting to know and not caring to know or to do better - not caring to research, and not caring to do actual real arts, entertainment and TV and film journalism.

With little real background in covering TV, film and awards shows, I've seen it happen time and time again.

They get seduced by hotel stays where they buy into a sudden "holiday" over work mode, get overwhelmed by the hype and glitz and the superficial spectacle instead of being used to it and actually hunkering down, working the room at awards shows and press conferences and doing interviews, and what they should - representing their readers.

Perhaps M-Net and MultiChoice should consider some type of a compulsory "mini master class" in arts journalism and TV and film criticism as an afternoon class for the media who are invited to this Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards.

South Africa's brilliant veteran journalist and writer Gwen Ansell for instance would be absolutely perfect, and has done just such a one or 2-day courses and lectures in arts journalism for several years at the Cape Town International Jazz Festival.

In the past this journalist attended these classes for two years and what Gwen Ansell said, her terrific notes and quick-course material, and what she instills in journalists' minds about entertainment writing, doing reviews and arts coverage even in just an hour or two, is the type of thing that Africa's mostly clueless entertainment reporters desperately need more of to do their jobs better.

Arts journalism standards in Africa are decrepitly low - the level of which will again, sadly, be on full display tonight when you wonder where the actual real (non-existent) coverage of the Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards is.