Showing posts with label Generations The Legacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Generations The Legacy. Show all posts

Saturday, April 22, 2023

Veteran producer Mfundi Vundla to receive the Order of Ikhamanga in silver for work on SABC1's Generations.


by Thinus Ferreira

Veteran TV producer Mfundi Vundla (76) who created Generations: The Legacy, will receive the Order of Ikhamanga in silver from South Africa's presidency on 28 April for his work on the long-running SABC1 weekday prime-time soap opera.

The Order of Ikhamanga is a National Order granted by the country's president for achievements in arts and culture, journalism, sports, literature and music.

"Generations: The Legacy is proud to celebrate and congratulate our creator, Mfundi Vundla, being bestowed the Order of Ikhamanga in silver in recognition of his contribution to the arts and culture in South Africa," Morula Pictures says in a statement.

"Since the dawn of democracy Mfundi Vundla has been a stalwart and consistent creator of impactful stories that have shaped the aspirations and hopes of South Africans."

"His immense contributions a pioneer of uniquely South African soapies is being duly recognised and as Generations: The Legacy we cannot be prouder to be associated with such an iconic figure in the history of arts and culture," the production company says.

Recipients including Mfundi Vundla will receive their honours on 28 April 2023.

Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Generations The Legacy on SABC1 renewed for 2 further seasons while the SABC ponders whether SABC3's Isidingo is still needed.


The South African public broadcaster has renewed its one SABC1 prime time weekday soap Generations - The Legacy for two more seasons while the broadcaster remains silent over the fate of the long-running Isidingo on SABC3 facing possible cancellation.

Generations - The Legacy on SABC1 on Monday night continued uninterrupted despite an announcement three days earlier that it would go into reruns as part of  a "summer break" of old themed rerun episodes that was set to start on Monday - a plan which was abruptly scuppered.

Generations - The Legacy is SABC1 and South African television's second-most watched TV show and pulled 9.23 million viewers (25.7 AR / 65.4 share) during October.

The SABC dragged its heels in signing a new contract for a 6th season of Generations - The Legacy with Morula Pictures, owned by Mfundi Vundla, but finally did so on Monday 25 November.

Although the SABC on Friday announced that Generations - The Legacy would go into repeats on SABC1 from Monday and not revealing that it was because no further contract existed, a period of schedule padding with reruns didn't start on Monday at 20:00.

Instead a new first-run episode of Generations - The Legacy was broadcast on SABC1 after the SABC concluded a new 2-year contract with Morula Pictures.

At 20:05 the SABC in a statement said that "the SABC and Morula Pictures are pleased to announce that Generations - The Legacy has been recommissioned for two new seasons".

The SABC said that "Generations - The Legacy will continue uninterrupted and audiences will be spoilt with fresh episodes throughout December and the rest of 2020."

Neither Phillip Mabitsela, SABC1 publicist, nor Morula Pictures responded to media enquiries made since Friday.

Meanwhile questions continue to swirl whether the struggling prime time soap Isidingo - The Need on SABC3 is getting renewed of axed.

Neither the SABC nor Pomegranate Media have responded to media enquries seeking clarity over the future of Isidingo that is facing possible cancellation.

The longrunning local soap that has shed popular characters and viewers drew a paltry 957 500 viewers in October on SABC3 which remains the public broadcaster's biggest headache and struggling to make money as the SABC's only commercial TV channel.

The SABC has done away with and cancelled most of SABC3's high-cost, longrunning signature programming over the past three years including Days of Our Lives, The Bold and the Beautiful, High Rollers, 3Talk and its replacement Real Talk, as well as Top Billing.

Saturday, April 27, 2019

Letoya Makhene, allegedly tired of being 'micromanaged', out of SABC1's Generations as the latest actor to leave since the weekday local TV soap's 2014 relaunch.


Letoya Makhene is out of SABC1's Generations - The Legacy weekday soap as the latest actor to since the shutdown, and rejigged start-up in 2014 of the relaunched soap.

Letoya Makhene played the character of Tshidi Phakade that will exit the Morula Pictures produced soap during June 2019.

"I have loved every moment on Generations: The Legacy. This is such a bitter-sweet moment for me as I have come to love playing Tshidi Phakade. I will miss my colleagues and the friends I have made on the show. This is not goodbye, it's just, 'see you later'," says Letoya Makhene in a statement.

No reason for the actress' exit was provided by Morula Pictures.

According to sources, Letoya Makhene became tired of allegedly being "micromanaged and treated as an amateur so she decided to quit".

"Letoya Makhene is one of the most talented actresses I have worked with. She is highly professional and dedicated to her craft. We will miss her wit and sense of purpose," says Mfundi Vundla, Generations The Legacy executive producer, in a statement.

Thursday, May 5, 2016

Hijacked actor, Rapulana Seiphemo, returns to Generations The Legacy set, 'on my way to recovery' after car crash 'that could have destroyed me'.


The former Muvhango and current Generations The Legacy soap actor Rapulana Seiphemo is back on set after a horrific car crash in February when he crashed his vehicle with two hijackers in a shocking incident he now says "could have destroyed me".

Three people, including one of the alleged hijackers, died in the car crash on the N14 near Diepsloot when Rapulana Seiphemo who was held at gunpoint in his Audi A4, crashed the vehicle when he and the one alleged hijacker Tebogo Makunyane who sat in the front passenger seat, struggled for control over the steering wheel.

The Audi A4 crashed into a Toyota Corolla, killing Donovan van Zyl and Jacobus Coertze, as well as Tebogo Makunyane. Co-accused Nathi Msiza and Rapulana Seiphemo were rushed to hospital and Nathi Msiza was later arrested.

According to SABC1's Generations The Legacy Rapulana Seiphemo returned to set on Wednesday as the character of Tau Mogale.

"Our much loved Tau Mogale is back and we all very excited to have him back. As we all know the actor behind Tau Mogale, Rapulana Seiphemo, was in a car accident that nearly cost him his life. We would like to take this opportunity to thank you all for the well wishes and prayers," says the soap in a statement.

In an Instagram post, Rapulana Seiphemo shares a lengthy note about the incident that he says "could have destroyed me".

"As you all know by now, I went through a traumatic incident a number of months ago. I am well on my way to recovery; a recovery that would not have been possible without the thoughts and prayers of so many of you: my supporters, family and friends."

"I would like to thank you all from the bottom of my heart. It was something that could have destroyed me, but I hope and inspiration from all of you. I am blessed and grateful to be surrounded by all of you."

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Connie Ferguson dumps SABC1's Generations - again - as the actress says the productions of her Ferguson Films needs her 'undivided attention'.


Connie Ferguson is dumping SABC1's Generations - The Legacy - the second time she's exiting the Mfundi Vundla created weekday prime time soap.

Connie Ferguson who runs Ferguson Films with her husband Shona Fergusondropped Generations in April 2010 after 16 years but returned in late 2014 to help the relaunched Generations - The Legacy which never regained the soap's erstwhile popularity and viewership ratings.

Meanwhile Connie Ferguson who've started her own production company together with Shona Ferguson executive produced and starred in the drama Rockville for M-Net's Mzansi Magic (DStv 161) and is branching out with new Mzansi Magic drama Igazi.

Connie Ferguson basically returned for a year and a half to try and steady the retooled Generations - The Legacy but now she is leaving although exiting scenes have not been filmed yet.

Viewers, some fellow actors and industry insiders branded Connie Ferguson a so-called "sell-out" for returning to work on a South African TV production that they feel is exploiting actors and on-screen talent, after the firing of Generations' 16-actor principal cast in 2014 after they demanded better contracts.

"It is with great disappointment that we have to announce the departure of the much-loved Karabo Moroka, played by the talented Connie Ferguson," says the soap in a statement.

"She's working on a couple of projects that need her undivided attention and has asked to be released from her contract."

"Connie was a significant figure in the construction of Generations - The Legacy. I will be eternally grateful for that and her contribution to the growth of our industry," says Mfundi Vundla.

"Karabo is one character that set tongues wagging and her exit will be no different".

Monday, April 4, 2016

SABC1's on-screen PG13 over inappropriate-for-children Generations - The Legacy saved it from being fined by the Broadcasting Complaints Commission.


The Broadcasting Complaints Commission of South Africa (BCCSA) has found that a "PG13" on-screen advisory for an inappropriate episode of SABC1's Generations about snakes, bloodletting and sangomas saved the public broadcaster and channel from getting a fine.

Viewers, churches and the Traditional Healers Organisation alike have complained the last few months about Generations - The Legacy's witchcraft and sangoma storylines on SABC1.

Complaints - also including SABC2's Muvhango similarly incorporating witchcraft from a witch doctor and a zombie - centre around the content being inappropriate for younger viewers and that the SABC is "showcasing" African spirituality in a negative and derogatory manner.

Following complaints the BCCSA found that what the SABC is showing in Generations - The Legacy at 20:00 is "stressful to children" and that the public broadcaster was not allowed to do so - "adult content" can only be shown after at least 21:00 on free-to-air public TV channels after the so-called "watershed" time period.

"Broadcasters may include any topic in its programme, even satanism and witchcraft, although we do not make a finding that that satanism or witchcraft was part of the episode or not," the BCCSA said.

"What we are concerned about, is the effect of this episode on children. For young children the scenes of a sangoma performing rituals and especially the scene with the large yellow snake would surely be distressful."

"Had there not been a viewer advisory of PG13 the BCCSA would have found SABC1 in contravention of the code of conduct. The warning thus saved the broadcaster from a finding against it," the BCCSA ruled.

"One positive aspect that resulted from the hearing is that representatives of the SABC undertook to broadcast in future oral warnings over and above on-screen warnings under similar circumstances," the BCCSA said.

Monday, February 15, 2016

BREAKING. Generations soap star Rapulana Seiphemo critically injured, fighting for his life after horrific Valentine's Day car crash near Diepsloot.


Soap star Rapulana Seiphemo is critically injured after a serious car crash on Valentine’s Day and fighting for his life.

The 48-year old soap star, known for roles in SABC2's Muvhango and SABC1's Generations – The Legacy sustained critical injuries according to ER24 during the accident in which two other people were killed and four injured.

The accident happened on the N14 near Diepsloot, Johannesburg on Sunday.

The actor is currently in the Milpark Hospital in Johannesburg and will be undergoing surgery this afternoon.

"Rapulana Seiphemo, the actor who plays Tau Mogale has unfortunately been in an accident. He is however ercovering in a Johannesburg hospital," says Generations - The Legacy publicist Gaaratwe Mokheti.

"We would like to request that we all afford the family space to deal with the trauma, Rapulana is a fighter, he'll definitely pull through".

Thursday, February 4, 2016

'Escaped' yellow albino Ball python never went missing on the Generations The Legacy set; is with its handlers and will show up on SABC1 on Monday night.


A massive snake that was thought to have escaped inside the SABC on a TV set is safely with its snake handlers and SABC staff need not fear running into the lurking serpent.

SABC staff - referred to internally as "First Citizens" - are safe, with the snake that will make its debut on South African TV screens from this coming Monday.

Insiders gossiped that a snake brought onto the Generations - The Legacy set recently slithered off the SABC1 soap's set at Henley Studios at the public broadcaster's Auckland Park headquarters and mysteriously went missing.

While some people thought there was now a yellow albino Ball python loose inside the SABC, the snake was actually removed by its trainers, following the filming of scenes in November last year.

Fearful SABC staffers and soap stars who thought the snake had escaped, were assured that the snake was removed and never actually went "missing".

"It was a misunderstanding," says a spokesperson. "The snake has always been with its trainers and had left the premises when it was supposed to. The snake is well-trained and not poisonous". The snake is currently with its trainers and handlers.

SABC1 viewers will be able to see the snake when it makes its debut on Monday on Generations - The Legacy at 20:00 and will feature in the prime time soap as a constant feature for about three months.

An inyanga will drape the snake over Tshidi (Latoya Makhene) after she emerges from a bath drenched in blood as part of her new "secret weapon" on Monday night, as part of her and Gadaffi's plan to get spiritual protection from their enemies including her ancestors.

The snake is to protect Tshidi - something she's not allowed to tell anyone about - and she realises that she and Gadaffi are in over their heads. The inyanga then tells Tshidi that the snake will tell her when it wants to feed - and what ...

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Generations actress Manaka Ranaka drives over and kills a schoolgirl; Prehalin Naidoo who killed Simba Mhere claims his car had a mechanical fault.

The Generations actress Manaka Ranaka has knocked down and killed a schoolgirl in a car crash, while the speeding driver who killed the Top Billing presenter Simba Mhere on SABC3 claims his car was "faulty".

This part Friday the SABC1 Generations  -The Legacy actress Manaka Ranaka ran over and killed a schoolgirl on the R554 road to Leondale near the highway in Roodekop, according to the Ekurhuleni Emergency Services.

The 18-year old grade 12 girl, Millicent Mbonani from the Leondale High School died on the scene when Manaka Ranaka in her BMW crashed into her and killed her.

Manaka Ranaka will likely face a culpable homicide charge.

Meanwhile the speeding Preshalin Naidoo who killed Simba Mhere and Kady-Shay O-Bryan in January on the William Nicol Drive offramp from the N1 highway in Johannesburg in his Polo GTI, is claiming in court the accident happened because the vehicle was faulty.

Preshalin Naidoo in the Randburg Magistrate's Court claims he lot control of his speeding vehicle due to "a suspension problem" on the front right side of his car.

"To say mechanical failure is the cause at this late stage is disappointing news for the family without seeing any support documents," says Ryan Harrison, on behalf of Simba Mhere's family.

"There has never been allegations of mechanical failure of the vehicle."

Prehalin Naidoo is facing two counts of culpable homicide.

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Fourth actor exists SABC1's Generations The Legacy just months after the troubled Mfundi Vundla soap's reset.

A fourth actor is exiting the reset Generations The Legacy on SABC1, with Vuyo Dabula who is out just months after the show restarted with new actors when creator Mfundi Vundla fired the entire principal cast of 16 actors late last year.

Vuyo Dabula is the fourth abrupt departure from Generations The Legacy which lost its ratings dominance the past seven months.

Asanda Foji and Mary Gumede left the show a month ago. A blindsided Asanda Foji was fired and didn't even know about it, Mary Gumede couldn't come to terms and wanted out of her contract and Denise Zimba was fired from Generations The Legacy as well.

Now Vuyo Dabula who portrayed Gadaffi is also out, with the actor who also couldn't come to terms with the producers no longer prepared to stay with the weekday soap any longer since negotiations didn't work out.

The soap says "Vuyo will no longer be part of Generations The Legacy" in a statement.

"The actor requested to be released from his contract as he has other projects he would like to explore," says Gaaratwe Mokhethi, Generations The Legacy publicist in a statement.

"I think now is the right time to move on and do other things with the exposure the show has given to me," says Vuyo Dabula in the statement.

"Generations the Legacy has allowed me to take my acting craft to newer and better levels and I plan to take that into future characters I’ll be portraying."

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

SABC1's Generations The Legacy implores viewers to please stay and keep watching; Asanda Foji and Mary Gumede out in latest cast shake-up.


Generations – The Legacy cast members are out the door just seven months after joining the soap with the show now asking viewers to please stay tuned to the reset show watched by millions less viewers than before.

In October 2014 the beleaguered Mfundi Vundla soap Generations on SABC1 abruptly shut down production and restarted in December under a new name after firing the entire principal cast of 16 actors for demanding better contracts.

The shocking derailment of the SABC's biggest show and money-spinner as the public broadcaster's top executives failed to successfully intervene and keep the show on the air, sent shockwaves through South Africa's TV industry and inflicted big brand damage and reputational harm on the SABC, creator Mfundi Vundla, as well as the soap.

Generations – The Legacy has since been overshadowed by Uzalo, the Duma Ka Ndlovu and Gugu Zuma Ncube produced telenovela set and filmed in KwaMashu and on a Newlands sound stage in Durban.

Last month Uzalo for the first time started to pass Generations – The Legacy in the ratings race in an upward climb while Generations – The Legacy is still millions of viewers below its erstwhile perch as the most watched TV show in South Africa, a title it held for almost two decades.

Now the Generations – The Legacy producers, in a statement, are imploring viewers to stay tuned to the SABC1 weekday soap, saying "we promise new and exciting story developments will be taking place".

Asanda Foji, criticised by viewers for her stilted acting in the role of Simphiwe, has been cut with her contract which has not been renewed, with Mfundi Vundla expressing "well wishes for the talented actress".

Jaqui Archilleas, Generations – The Legacy commissioning editor, "praises Simphiwe for the value she brought to the show" in the statement.

Also out is Mary Gumede who played Denise Zimba and who wanted to be released from her contract. "Her professionalism in aiding us to mount a new show was exemplary. We wish her the best in her endeavours," says Mfundi Vundla.


'We ask that our viewers stay tuned'
Generations – The Legacy is now asking viewers to please stay tuned to the soap.

"Our goal is in advancing the story and keeping our viewers entertained and that's the reason we keep introducing new and fresh stories," says Generations – The Legacy publicist Gaaratwe Mokhethi.

"We promise our fans stories that are filled with high drama and intensity, stories that will leave them begging for more."

"As we near the second half of this year, we have new and exciting storylines. Twists and turns that weren't expected are still set to take place. We ask that our viewers stay tuned to see how the story keeps developing."

The soap says Lebohang Mthunzi who plays Angela and Ivy Nkutha who plays Gog' Flo are not leaving.

"These two actresses will still be part of the upcoming season of Generations – The Legacy."


'Pity that Generations has failed to deliver'
"Uzalo has garnered a great following in a short time," Cheryl Dube, media strategist at Carat SA tells TV with Thinus.

"It's important to note that these two shows do not fall into the same timeslot, so it's not necessarily that Uzalo has taken viewers from Generations – The Legacy," she says. "It's a shock but definitely not a surprise that a new show has surpassed Generations."

"Viewers that Generations had lost have opted to watch other shows like Ashes to Ashes on e.tv as they both compete in the same timeslot and we have seen that Ashes to Ashes has also built up a strong and loyal following," says Cheryl Dube.

"The storylines for Uzalo and Ashes to Ashes reflect our society a lot better than Generations – The Legacy does at present."

"The characters are more relatable and exciting and it's such a pity that Generations – The Legacy has failed to deliver on this because it is something that they used to do well," says Cheryl Dube.

Friday, February 13, 2015

SABC1's Generations - The Legacy falls to 3,9 million viewers; industry wonders if 'numbers will go back up to 8 million again'.


The viewership erosion of what used to be the SABC and South Africa's most watched TV show, Generations – now retitled as Generations – The Legacy – continues, with the soap which has now dropped to 3,9 million viewers by last Friday, while industry experts wonder "if the numbers will go back up to 8 million" ever again.

Millions of viewers have abandoned the Mfundi Vundla produced soap on SABC1 after it returned, retooled with a new cast in December 2014, after an absence of two months following the SABC and MMSV Productions' firing of the entire principal cast in August 2014 for demanding their promised three year contracts and better remuneration. 

Viewers have since taken to the third season of SABC1's Skeem Saam, and there's also high buzz for SABC1's new telenovela Uzalo and e.tv's new local telenovela Ashes to Ashes starting on 2 March at 20:00 in the same timeslot as Generations – The Legacy

These new shows are all looking to cash in on the millions of viewers who no longer watch the damaged soap. 

The SABC moved Generations – The Legacy from SABC1 to SABC2 for the duration of the Afcon 2015 soccer tournament which further dampened the soap's ratings performance.

Generations – The Legacy's ratings fell further from 5,9 million just before the Afcon 2015 on SABC1 for viewers aged 15+  – the viewers most prized by advertisers and the TV industry and worth millions of rand in ad spend – to 4,7 million during Afcon 2015, and declined further to 3,9 million by this past Friday.

According to the latest consolidated ratings information this is how Generations – The Legacy did last week on SABC2 at 20:00:

Monday: 5,107 million
Tuesday: 5,084 million
Wednesday: 4,831 million
Thursday: 4,257 million
Friday:  3,998 million

Average audience for last week: 4,655 million


'Numbers aren't back to where they used to be'
"The numbers aren't back to where they used to be with a current weekly viewership of roughly 5 million," Cheryl Dube, media strategist at Carat SA told TV with Thinus.

"On Twitter and other social media people are still quite upset about the cliffhangers that the previous Generations left behind," says Cheryl Dube.

 "Perhaps the storyline needs to incorporate what happened to all our favourite characters like Queen, Dineo, Kenneth and Sibusiso who we left behind 'two years ago'."

Was it a mistake for the SABC to rush the new Generations back on air in December? The soap returned in the month of the year when available viewership is traditionally lowest, and the SABC knew that the just-returned soap would also be shifting TV channels a month later for Afcon 2015 as part of the SABC's "transversal strategy". 

Would it have been better for Generations' ratings to rather start the soap in February or March?

Cheryl Dube says "I believe that they wanted to get Generations – The Legacy back on air as soon as possible as Generations is one of their highest earning shows in terms of advertising revenue".

"So despite the time of year it was important to get it back on-air while interest was still high," says Cheryl Dube.

"Only time will tell if the numbers will go back up to 8 million per episode but it will be interesting to watch,” says Cheryl Dube.

TV with Thinus asked the SABC for comment regarding Generations – The Legacy’s viewership trends since the soap returned, and whether the public broadcaster has any context or perspective on the ratings but the SABC didn't respond to a media enquiry.

It's not clear what the SABC's new ratings expectation is for Generations – The Legacy and where it sees the viewership of the soap possibly stabilising.

This morning Hlaudi Motsoeneng, the SABC's chief operating officer (COO) at the TNA breakfast briefing told attendees that "Let me tell you, the new Generations is doing well. The Muvhango is doing well".

Monday, February 9, 2015

SABC1's new Uzalo telenovela says it's not Generations. 'We just have a specific story to tell in a specific place, very unique to itself.'


If there's hope for South Africa's local television industry - beyond mere advertiser-funded productions, product placement filled TV trash and bake a dozen cookie cutter reality shows - it's to be found in nifty new TV dramas like the SABC's new Uzalo telenovela starting tonight at 20:30 on SABC1.

The telenovela is shot entirely on location in the streets of KwaZulu-Natal's poor yet vibrant F-section of KwaMashu and on elaborate and finely detailed sets constructed within three months on a sound stage in Newlands in Durban.

It is production company Stained Glass Pictures' attempt to prove that local TV drama on South African television can be done successfully outside of Johannesburg.

Viewers will find the story instantly compelling when it kicks off at the time Nelson Mandela was released from prison. On 11 February 1990 at the Queen Anne hospital, two baby boys are born, but accidentally switched.

Now, 24 years later, they find themselves in very different circumstances without them - nor their "families" the Mdletshe's and the Zulu's - aware that they've got the wrong son.


Uzalo at 20:30 as the SABC and SABC1's first local telenovela is taking on Mzansi Magic's (DStv 161) popular Isibaya in the same timeslot and is getting a headstart on e.tv which is launching its first local telenovela Ashes to Ashes on 2 March at 20:00.

The producers are also adamant to stress that Uzalo - more akin to SABC1's popular youth drama Skeem Saam - is not going to be similar to the ratings damaged and reset Generations - The Legacy on the same channel.

"We've never worked from a departure point of 'We want to be different in this way' or we don't want to be associated with this or that. We just have a story to tell."

"It is a specific story, which happens in a specific place which is very unique to itself and we just want to tell that story the best way we can," says the production company headed by president Jacob Zuma's daughter, Gugulethu Zuma ka Ncube and Pepsi Pokane.

According to the producers, KwaMashu will be a strong "invisible" character in the telenovela written by playwright-producer Duma Ndlovu.

"KwaMashu is a character itself. It's a very specific place with its own type of feeling, it's own characters. In the story we really try to weave in KwaMashu as its own character so it's not just a story that could be set anywhere."

"You see it and you just know this really is KwaMashu. KwaMashu is such a hopeful, vibrant place with a character of its own."


"We value the stories that come out of KwaMashu; that come out of Durban; that come out of KwaZulu-Natal," says Maijang Mperwane, SABC1 channel head. "We will continue to strive to tell the different stories that out there in South Africa".

"We're the biggest channel in the country and its because of the audiences that come out of places like KwaMashu that we are who we are today".

"By having the production of a show like this in Durban, we're trying to say let us not sit in Johannesburg and try and tell stories that purport to have meaning out of other places. Lets rather go out there and do our research and make sure that whatever stories we tell are relevant, that they resonate with audiences and that viewers are able to watch and see themselves through the stories we tell," says Maijang Mpherwane.

"Now we're adding Uzalo to the mix. We've done many other stories and we will continue to do many other stories".

"Viewership numbers play a huge role in us determining whether a story is sustainable or not. Unfortunately we can't sit and say 'Whether I like the story or not' it will continue - what the viewers say ultimate is what matter."

"The performances that the cast put in, the work that the directors and the rest of the crew and writers have put in will be judged on Monday onwards. From then on viewers will be the judge whether the story stays or goes," says Maijang Mpherwane.

"We're looking forward as SABC1. We are confident that Uzalo is going to be a great story. We're confident that the response will be good."


"We got to Durban in September last year," says Gugulethu Zuma ka Ncube. "We've gone through the ups and downs of a new TV production, a new city - a city that isn't necessarily geared up yet for productions of this size, and we've made it work".

"We've come here and I'm proud to say that we've made it. We're excited. We're nervous about Monday to see what the rest of South Africa thinks of the work that we've done. It's the viewers ultimate who decide."

"So we're hopeful that viewers will like what they see and recognise the work that we've put in and Uzalo becomes a show that's not only here, but a show that's here to stay," says Gugulethu Zuma ka Ncube.

In an interesting departure and perhaps a first-ever for South African dramatic television (MasterChef SA on M-Net gives away food to charities but that's a reality show), Uzalo which just finished filming episode 24 out of over 300 half hour episodes, is doing - lets call it "corporate social investment" - at the very same time as the TV production.

While some TV shows sometimes leave behind donations or sets, Uzalo is doing community upliftment at the same time as it is battling grueling production deadlines to get episodes ready for delivery and play-out on SABC1.


The telenovela - which recreated on the Newlands sound stage the imagined interiors of some of the actual buildings used for the exterior shots viewers will see - has dramatically improved the real KwaMashu buildings.

On the corner of Zulu Road and Mgobhozi Road in KwaMashu the church not only has a new roof in the place of the old one which leaked but also new doors. There's also a green lawn and a landscaped garden.

Across the road in the garden of the yellow house exterior that's used to show where the Mdeletshe's "live", new plants are also in full bloom.

It's 27 degrees but in the streets little children run and play and stare in amazement. I take my only can of LiquiFruit out of my shoulder bag and give it to two small boys. "Share-share," I say.

They run away. Happy that television decided to come to KwaMashu on such a hot day.


ALSO READ: Review: SABC1's new telenovela, Uzalo, is light on soap, heavy on conflict as a more "mature" Soul City that's less preachy, more dramatic.
ALSO READ: Uzalo set visit reveals some on-set secrets behind the scenes of SABC1's new KwaMashu telenovela.

Thursday, January 29, 2015

BREAKING. e.tv's new local telenovela to be named as Ashes to Ashes officially, will star SABC's former Generations cast and "regenerate 8pm" on e.tv.


You're reading it here first.

I can reveal that e.tv's new local telenovela starting on Monday 2 March at 20:00 will officially be named as Ashes to Ashes.

The telenovela of 104 episodes and set in the world of funeral parlours (hence the title) will star cast members of the former Generations on SABC1 - who will now be seen in the same timeslot as before but on e.tv - part of what e.tv cheekily calls "the regeneration of 8pm".

e.tv has not said anything about Ashes to Ashes or confirmed the name - which should not be confused with a former BBC drama series.

With Ashes to Ashes at 20:00 e.tv plans to inflict as much damage as possible on the SABC's now vulnerable and reset Generations - The Legacy which got a tepid reception from viewers after the principal cast was dumped by MMSV Productions and the SABC in October 2014 and which has plunged in viewership.

e.tv will use its soap Scandal! at 19:30 to help boost the viewership for Ashes to Ashes, serving as the lead-in programming for the telenovela, and is also moving its main news bulletin to 20:30 as the lead-out programme on weeknights.

Ashes to Ashes will be broadcast Mondays to Thursdays on e.tv with an official name, cast and story announcement expected soon.

UPDATED 11:14 - There it is. In a press release issued just issued e.tv says its "brand-new telenovela Ashes to Ashes, a first for e.tv takes over the 20:00 slot on Mondays to Thursdays for a whopping 104 episodes."

Ashes to Ashes on e.tv will premiere on Monday 2 March. Veteran actor Patrick Shai has been announced as one of the lead actors. Also get ready to welcome back familiar talent on a mysterious journey back to the smalls screen".

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

BREAKING. SABC admits new Generations The Legacy on SABC1 is a ratings dud; says president Jacob Zuma covered excessively because he's president.


In what the SABC billed as the "first" in a new series of "quarterly media briefings"by the South African public broadcaster's famously matricless chief operating officer (COO) Hlaudi Motsoeneng and other SABC executives, the SABC admitted that the "new" and reset, yet struggling, Generations - The Legacy on SABC1 is a ratings dud and defended its excessive positive of president Jacob Zuma, saying it's "because he is the president".

The SABC also decided to ask South Africans to pay their SABC TV licences, despite being unable to tell the South African government and parliament in October 2014 what it did with R3.39 billion which the SABC classified as "irregular spending" over the past three years.

Although planned longer in advance than just a day, the SABC only alerted the South African press yesterday at 15:30 about "the corporation's first quarterly media briefing" scheduled for 11:00 today at the SABC's Aucklandpark headquarters.

Newsrooms with full news diaries and limited capacity journalists scrambled to suddenly designate journalists to cover the SABC briefing on Wednesday morning.

The SABC admitted for the first time that its reset soap Generations - The Legacy is suffering in the ratings and is far off from its previous incantation, as first reported by TV with Thinus a month and a half ago in December 2014, as the soap sagged and shed millions of viewers.

Generations - The Legacy returned on 1 December 2014  to SABC1 after abruptly ending production in October when MMSV Productions and the SABC fired the entire principal cast and reset the soap with new actors. Viewers and critics blasted the show who've since tuned out in droves.


Veronah Duwarkah, the SABC's group executive in charge of television, and Hlaudi Motsoeneng admitted at the SABC's quarterly briefing that Generations - The Legacy is down from its erstwhile ratings glory and suffered a significant viewer decline.

"It's not doing as great as it was previously," said Veronah Duwarkah.

"Generations may not do well but we believe it will improve. We are able to generate revenue here, but I cannot tell you how," said Hlaudi Motsoeneng.

The SABC blamed the AFCON soccer tournament being broadcast on SABC1 with Generations - The Legacy shunted to SABC2 for the ratings drop (although the ratings fell immediately in December 2014 long before AFCON started), as well as load shedding with Eskom being unable to provide electricity to TV households.

Yet the SABC knew long in advance that it had secured the rights for AFCON, but still went ahead to start Generations - The Legacy during December - traditionally the lowest viewing period per year.

The SABC also decided far in advance to move the troubled Mfundi Vundla production to SABC2 in January 2015 just a month after it started again on SABC1 in December 2014, although SABC executives could have known from past experience with its so-called "transversal strategy" that a programming change within a month would negatively impact on a soap like Generations' viewership figures.

Hlaudi Motsoeneng defended the SABC's large and excessive coverage of president Jacob Zuma who is basically daily the lead story on the SABC News' TV news bulletins.

"When we deal with content within the organisation, there is no way where we ignore the president of the country," said Hlaudi Motsoeneng.

"He's getting more time because he is the president of the country," said Hlaudi Motsoeneng. "We always do that, because he is running the country. When the president talks, everything he does affects all of us. If you want to be president tomorrow, we will do the same thing for you".

The SABC and SABC News didn't cover or report on any of these two issues out of its own quarterly briefing today on SABC television or TV news, deliberately choosing to only focus on and report that Hlaudi Motsoeneng is asking viewers to pay their SABC TV licences.

The SABC said nothing about when the SABC's general entertainment TV channel is set to start on MultiChoice's DStv, which was supposed to start in December 2013, and which has now been delayed for over a year.

The SABC said nothing about why the SABC has not complied with the High Court order that Hlaudi Motsoeneng should be suspended "immediately" and which was handed down at the end of last year.

The SABC didn't want to talk about Siyaya, the new pay-TV consortium set to launch soon and which scooped up the rights to Bafana Bafana matches which used to be broadcast on the SABC.

Hlaudi Motsoeneng said "I do not want to talk about Siyaya. We have a relationship with Safa South African Football Association) and we have a team talking to them".

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

BREAKING. Concern over shocking viewership plunge as SABC1's Generations takes a ratings nosedive to 4.1 million viewers in primetime.


You're reading it here first. 

They no longer like you Karabo. TV with Thinus can reveal that the SABC's reset primetime soap Generations The Legacy on SABC1, once the unassailable viewership behemoth of South African television, is in a shocking ratings tailspin, going down fast and losing millions of viewers as its former TV audience flee the new iteration which started on Monday last week and is now down to just 4.1 million viewers.

Meanwhile major concern is mounting over what was once the SABC's now apparently broken crown jewel and what it means for the South African TV industry, the public broadcaster and advertisers.

While returned stars like Connie Ferguson and Rapulana Seiphemo have been branded "sellouts" by viewers, the former loyal and large Generations audience who made the show the most watched programme on South African television are also turning their backs on the inexperienced actors roped in at short notice and the new story.

Generations The Legacy which started on SABC1 at 20:00 last Monday after a two month absence lured an unimpressive 7.5 million viewers, shedding a whopping million viewers to 6.5 million on Tuesday, fell to 6.1 million on Wednesday, dropping to 5.4 million on Thursday and plunging to an unprecedented 4.1 million viewers aged 15 and older this past Friday according to the latest consolidated ratings information.

Monday: 7.5 million
Tuesday: 6.5 million
Wednesday: 6.1 million
Thursday: 5.4 million
Friday: 4.1 million

Viewership is generally lower on Fridays but not for this 20:00 timeslot on SABC1 which is now averaging only an eye-popping 5.9 million viewers.

Generations The Legacy now pulls lower numbers than the third season of Skeem Saam which replaced it in the 20:00 timeslot for two months.

The soap is in fact no longer the most watched programme on South African television, with SABC1's longrunning Soul City and SABC2's weekday Venda soap Muvhango both now vying for the ratings champ crown, each roughly pulling in 4.5 million viewers.

MMSV Productions, caustic executive producer Mfundi Vundla and the SABC, in a controversial move, fired the entire principal Generations cast in August after they embarked on a stayaway after numerous requests for the three year contracts the SABC's Hlaudi Motsoeneng promised them in June 2013 and which never materialised, as well as the residuals from rebroadcasts and resales of the soap their existing contracts called for but which they'd never received over decades.

"Having been South Africa's top rated soap for several years now, the power that Generations had was unparalleled," Cheryl Dube, media strategist at Carat SA told TV with Thinus on Wednesday.

"We all know that the relationship that people have with their soapies. Such a significant dip in viewership for this particular timeslot and show is concerning not only for the SABC but for advertisers as well who invest a lot of money to reach this particular audience because they are aware that it performs well," says Cheryl Dube.

It now appears that millions of viewers feel robbed of a show that they loved. "Now to build up that kind of loyalty and rapport again is tough," says Cheryl Dube.

"Perhaps it does not show a lack of interest but rather the sense of loyalty that people had towards the old version of the show. After 20 years of watching a story, building relationships with the characters and engaging every day to all of a sudden having the soap end abruptly with so many cliffhangers and unanswered questions about the characters that South Africa loved so much - that's just reckless, especially for such a popular show," says Cheryl Dube.

"The new story line is completely new, so building that relationship again will be difficult for some but you do have those die-hard supporters who still love the Generations brand," says Cheryl Dube.

Meanwhile in the TV waters the sharks are circling having smelt blood. e.tv will attack SABC1 and the 20:00 timeslot early in 2015 with its own telenovela blatantly pitting it against Generations The Legacy in the same timeslot with its buoyant soap Scandal! on a viewership and critically acclaimed rise serving as the lead-in.

"I believe that this is an optimal time for the likes of Skeem Saam, Isidingo, Muvhango and Mzanzi Magic's Isibaya to capitalise on their already existing popularity," says Cheryl Dube.

"These shows have been scheduled in such a way as not to clash with the monster that was Generations in terms of viewership because they would most likely suffer. But it looks like people are now looking for alternatives and now is the time to do it," she says.

Friday, December 5, 2014

BREAKING. SABC1's returning Generations The Legacy underwelms with 7.5 million viewers; loses 1 million viewers by Tuesday.


Has the Morokas lost their pulling power? The ratings are in and the debut episode of the "new" Generations The Legacy on SABC1 on Monday night managed to pull an underwhelming 7.5 million viewers when the retooled primetime soap returned to South African TV screens with a new cast after an absence of two months.

South Africa doesn't have consolidated overnight TV ratings and on Tuesday the SABC lied when SABC spokesperson Kaizer Kganyago boasted the next day and claimed that "over 10 million people were watching. This has never happened before. The highest it averaged before this was 8.6 million."

Actually only 7,528 million people tuned in according to the now available audience ratings for Monday - on par with what the soap had before.

It still makes Generations The Legacy the most watched soap, the most watched local TV production, and the most watched TV programme overall on South African television.

MMSV Productions and executive producer Mfundi Vundla fired the principal cast in August following a strike after months of waiting for their 3 year contracts which was promised to them in July 2013 by the SABC and which didn't materialise.

Mfundi Vundla then replaced the principal cast with inexperienced new actors, with the first new episode on Monday night on SABC1 which drew a tepid reception from viewers and TV critics.

Why the 7.5 million viewers are noteworthy and actually underwhelming is that, given the months of banner headlines and insatiable coverage about the soap's behind-the-scenes meltdown, the level of interest would have spurred once-off sampling and people tuning in out of curiosity.

If the 7.5 million viewers who were attracted to the debut episode already include those non-core viewers who sample and then quickly flee - similar to American television where a big-buzz show lure a huge initial audience and then level off - it means that Generations The Legacy might struggle to regain or retain its former ratings glory.

Industry watchers expected a bigger number - and are also puzzled as to why the SABC decided to bring back Generations in December - a doldrum time of year when the available audience starts to level off - instead of January 2015.

Generations The Legacy already took a dive in the second episode on Tuesday on SABC1, dropping a million viewers.

"As expected from the reaction from viewers there was a drop in viewership between the first and the 2nd episode," Cheryl Dube, media strategist at Carat SA tells TV with Thinus.

"Episode one of Generations The Legacy saw approximately 7 528 000 viewers aged 15 and older, or 23 AR's (audience rating)."

"This is on par with the average episode of the previous Generations which saw an average audience of 7 440 000 viewers in its final three months," says Cheryl Dube.

"Episode two of Generations The Legacy saw 6 523 000 - an 19.9 AR."

The TV biz is now waiting to see where Generations The Legacy will stabilise which will determine the new ad rate and spot price the SABC's sales devision will be able to charge for 30 second commercials during the timeslot which has been the public broadcaster's most expensive.

BREAKING. It's war: e.tv pitting its brand-new telenovela Gold Diggers in 2015 against SABC1's Generations The Legacy at 20:00.


You're reading it here first. 

The first really big South African TV battle of 2015 is already filling the trenches: I can reveal that e.tv is preparing for a full-on assault on the SABC's restarted Generations The Legacy with its own brand-new local telenovela entitled Gold Diggers which is plans to deliberately broadcast from next year in the ultra competitive timeslot of 20:00 directly opposite the damaged Mfundi Vundla soap.

e.tv declined to give or confirm the Gold Diggers name, but TV with Thinus is told the new e.tv telenovela with the working title of Gold Diggers, and which might change, is produced by Clive Morris Productions and that there will be 104 episodes.

There's no specific starting date yet for Gold Diggers (not to be confused with the Channel O show Gold Diggerz) which is expected to be around February 2015.

e.tv confirms that Gold Diggers "will be aired at 20:00 from next year", pitting its hot new local production against the SABC1 heavyweight which fired its entire principal cast in August and returned at the beginning of this month getting a lukewarm reception from viewers and critics due to inexperienced, young actors.

Sources say e.tv is gunning for Generations and the 20:00 timeslot. "The absence of Generations on SABC1 for two months from screens and the drop in ratings clearly showed that viewers are willing to look elsewhere".

"Generations, especially after everything that happened, revealed that it's no longer invincible. Viewers want riveting drama, compelling characters and addictive stories as recent telenovelas have proven," says an insider.

"The 20:00 timeslot is cut-throat but there's no longer just one must-see offering. Viewers [will] respond to a great story told well with characters you can't look away from. Millions of free-to-air viewers want quality drama which is lacking in primetime at 20:00. This is war. One not taking prisoners."

The e.tv soap Scandal! from Ochre Moving Pictures which is celebrating its 10th anniversary and just killed off a major character and is planning new offshoot story lines similar to the current prison drama for 2015, will serve as the lead-in for the new telenovela.

SABC2 is also working on producing a new local telenovela for 2015.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

New 'clowns' on SABC1's 'boring' Generations The Legacy 'will be thrown away as well,' by Mfundi Vundla, warns NFPYM party.


As viewers and critics on Monday night and today panned and savaged SABC1's reset primetime soap Generations The Legacy now filled with clearly inexperienced actors, the National Freedom Party Youth Movement is urging for a viewer boycott and warning the new actors that executive producer Mfundi Vundla will throw them away as well once he's done with them.

On Monday night SABC1 aired the first "new" episode of Generations, now entitled Generations The Legacy after a two month absence due to a forced shutdown of the primetime soap, South Africa's most watched TV programme.

The production which only started filming again on 27 October grinded to a halt after a scandalous implosion in August when the principal cast of 16 experienced actors balked and walked away from the MMSV Production.

For more than a year they pleaded for their promised three year contracts and back payments for rebroadcasts as promised by the SABC in July 2013 by the public broadcaster's famously matricless acting CEO, Hlaudi Motsoeneng.

The cast, organised as the Generations Actors Guild, took the production company and the SABC to the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) and court.

On Monday night viewers blasted the returned soap on social media for being boring and uninteresting, mocked the lack of experienced actors and Mfundi Vundla for getting rid of the old cast who were better, and with several vowing to never watch again.

Viewership figures for Monday's night's first new episode will be available this coming Monday.

Now the National Freedom Party Youth Movement secretary-general Maria Busi Tshabalala has called for a boycott of the soap and for viewers to stay away from SABC1 and the "clowns" of Generations The Legacy.

"We are very disappointed at the manner in which the SABC and the big-headed Mfundi Vundla handled the matter of the ex-Generations actors".

"We strongly believe that not watching this soap will show the SABC and Mfundi Vundla that we mean business when we demand that they bring back our talented actors".

The NFPYM also had a warning for the inexperienced Generations The Legacy actors who took the jobs of the experienced and fired cast during open auditions.

"To the clowns who agreed to work in this new boring soap, we warn them that once Mfundi Vundla has used them, he will throw them away as well and look for new buffoons."

"As the NFPYM we are not apologetic in our firm support of the axed actors. We are 100% behind them and we call on all South Africans to do the same by boycotting Generations."

Monday, December 1, 2014

SABC News reporter Chriselda Lewis makes a cameo in reset Generations on SABC1; 'covering' Paul Moroka tomb stone unveiling.


Between covering the real news SABC News reporter Chriselda Lewis took time off to make a cameo appearance in the first episode of the reset Generations, now entitled Generations The Legacy on Monday night on SABC1.

Doing a straight-to-camera reporting piece, Chriselda Lewis held a SABC microphone with a SABC outside broadcast van or OB unit parked strategically, with SABC logo visible, in the background.

Of course no other real-life news and media brands were seen in-show at the fictional unveiling of Paul Moroka's tomb stone.