Showing posts with label Mzwanele "Jimmy" Manyi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mzwanele "Jimmy" Manyi. Show all posts
Thursday, February 22, 2018
ANN7's Midrand headquarters raided by immigration officials from the department of home affairs after Indian worker visas have apparently expired.
The Midrand headquarters of the controversial ANN7 (DStv 405) channel was raided by immigration officials on Thursday afternoon, the department of home affairs confirmed.
The surprise raid comes as the work visas of several ANN7 staffers from India, including several managers, had apparently expired.
Mzwanele "Jimmy" Manyi didn't respond to media enquiries about the home affairs raid on Thursday.
His Afrotone Media Holdings now owns the notoriously biased "Guptanews" channel on DStv that MultiChoice is shutting down at the end of July.
Fugitive Guptas as currently being hunted by South African law enforcement as they continue to evade the law that is looking for them due to their connection to widespread alleged "state capture" in South Africa.
The work permits of several ANN7 staffers from Indian, including multiple managers, have apparently expired, and they allegedly kept working.
ANN7 insiders said Indian workers were herded into the one green room where they were made to wait, while ANN7 staffers looked on.
ANN7 staffers said the home affairs check was "completely unexpected".
The department of home affairs in a statement said that it had conducted a "routine inspection" at ANN7.
"As part of its mandate, the inspectorate directorate of the department undertakes regular inspections on the basis of information provided to them, which information would demand a thorough investigation including in loco inspections."
"In this regard, our officials visited the ANN7 studios to verify information related to visas of certain individuals employed by the organisation".
"Once verified, the department will release the findings of the inspection."
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
The Big Debate bursts back onto the SABC, with - surprise! - Redi Tlhabi.
The Big Debate has suddenly burst
back onto the SABC, instantly becoming the biggest symbol of the public
broadcaster’s top executives to signal their serious effort to regain public
trust in its current affairs offering and to try and repair it severely dented
news output credibility.
As surprising and astounding, is that none
other that the veteran and extremely skilled presenter and interviewer Redi Tlhabi
is suddenly back as the moderator after she anchored the earlier seasons.
The Big Debate, with several significant
updates for the social media and internet age, made its 8th season
debut on the exact SABC TV channel – SABC2 – where it disappeared from exactly
four years ago.
Asked how the revival of The Big Debate on
the SABC came about, Thabiso Bhengu, senior content producer on the show, told
the SABC’s Morning Live this week that “when a notorious somebody left the
SABC, the SABC was happy to have us back”.
“And we’re happy to be helping the SABC to
become what it should be, which is the best public broadcaster in the world,”
he said.
In November 2013 The Big Debate – just before
it was supposed to start and with three episodes of its 5th season
already filmed – was abruptly yanked and permanently removed from the SABC2
schedule just days before broadcast, including an episode devoted to the
Marikana Massacre.
The debate show, from Broad Daylight Films
Foundation and and executive produced by Ben Cashdan, was culled from the SABC
airwaves on the direct orders of the then acting chief operating officer (COO),
Hlaudi Motsoeneng.
At the time Hlaudi Motsoeneng was only in the
beginning phase of what was to become a sweeping, widening and pervasive censorship
drive by the controversial executive.
His later-described “reign of terror” would
eventually see the SABC impose draconian newsroom censorship that extended to,
and ended with, his shocking ban in 2016 on showing visuals on SABC News of the
destruction of property and infrastructure during public protests.
The SABC said at the time that The Big Debate
was “incorrectly commissioned and compromised the editorial oversight of the
SABC newsroom”.
The SABC-neutered season of The Big Debate
was instantly picked up by eNCA (DStv 403) and e.tv that broadcast three
seasons of the lively town hall debate type show that ended with a 7th season in 2016 with Masechaba Lekalake as moderator.
A bold, brazen return
of free speech
Now The Big Debate is “back” on SABC2 as a
hard-hitting current affairs talk show that had no less than the topic of
“State Capture” for its first new episode.
It is something that would have been unheard
of on the SABC of just a year ago, with widely disparate guests on The Big
Debate ranging from Floyd Shivambu (EFF deputy president) and Mzwanele "Jimmy" Manyi
(ANN7 owner) to Vytjie Mentor (former ANC chief whip) – all sitting and
debating each other passionately in the black backdrop studio interspersed with
a few banners.
“We invited the president, we invited the
Guptas, we invited Brian Molefe, so that they can also contribute to this
narrative,” said Redi Tlhabi in a refreshing frankness on the SABC airwaves.
“They didn’t take up the invitation. When
people are not here it is not because we don’t want to hear them. But for some
reason they don’t want to participate in this debate,” she said.
With the show’s bold and brazen return, the SABC
is sending a very strong signal and a significant marker that the struggling
public broadcaster is working hard on turning around the erosion the past few
years of its current affairs programming and news, and the trust in it.
The Big Debate made its debut on Saturday
evening and surprised when it started with moderator Redi Tlhabi, who recently
left her perch behind the Radio 702 microphone and said that she plans to go to
America for further academic studies.
Redi Tlhabi was one of the original moderators of
the show’s early seasons before Siki Mgabadeli and
Masechaba Lekalake took over, with nobody that ever expected her to return.
As an assertive and extremely knowledgeable
and experienced interviewer, the well-liked moderator on Saturday evening
brought her credibility and cache to bear on the show, with Redi Tlhabi who
instantly elevated the SABC’s current affairs credibility despite The Big
Debate being slotted into a doldrum timeslot on television’s least watched day
of the week.
Like democracy the first live broadcast
episode of The Big Debate was a loud, zany, almost ungovernable, glorious mess.
Sound and some other production problems
didn’t dim the cacophony of voices, all excitedly reaching for the roving mic
and speaking up with varying opinions while the positive and critical comments of
viewers scrolled by.
Some people unexpectedly got up and walked
off set despite the floor manager telling them to remain seated. Cellphones
rang. It was the most alive, unvarnished and authentic a current affairs TV viewers
have seen on the SABC in years.
Big changes
Although already done by commercial
broadcasters but with the resource scarce and cash-strapped SABC lagging behind,
The Big Debate’s latest season marks a dramatic departure from existing SABC
current affairs shows, and is a big improvement and a big step forward for SABC
public audience interaction and participation.
For the first time, The Big Debate, done from
Shine Studios in Johannesburg, is being broadcast live. It enables social media
users to interact directly with the show by sending comments and questions that
are being scrolled on screen.
With studio guests sitting in the show’s
well-known five-ringed seating pattern, The Big Debate, besides being shown on
SABC2, is also being simulcast at the same time on SABC News (DStv 404), as
well as on the SABC radio station, SAfm, unlocking bigger public broadcasting
synergy.
After the scheduled hour long episode of the show
is over, The Big Debate now also continues seamlessly for another hour as a
streaming show on YouTube with the various studio guests answering questions
and making more comments.
The show also has a call-in hotline for the
first time with viewers who can leave Whatsapp voice notes with the producers
saying they’re listening to each and every one of them.
Also back, in a sense – and helping to
elevate the SABC’s quality of broadcasting although they’re not working for the
SABC – are several SABC and SABC News veterans working behind the scenes on the
production, like Crystal Orderson for instance as one of the content producers.
The new The Big Debate season on the SABC
will cover several topics that might seem mundane or well-worn if the show were
broadcast elsewhere but that are literally breath-taking and highly notable
given that it will be on the public broadcaster.
Upcoming issues that will be tackled include topics
like radical economic transformation (“RET”) this Saturday and in 2018 even the
controversial nuclear deal.
SABC2 will broadcast a second episode of The
Big Debate this coming Saturday and then go on a production hiatus before
returning in February 2018 for the remainder of the season.
Sunday, November 19, 2017
MultiChoice to drop Guptas' controversial ANN7 channel from DStv in June 2018 according to reports; says it's not currently negotiating to keep ANN7 on DStv.
With Sunday newspaper reports saying that MultiChoice plans to drop the controversial ANN7 (DStv 405) channel from its DStv bouquet in June 2018 when the existing contract expires, MultiChoice on Sunday told TVwithThinus that MultiChoice has not been approached by ANN7 for renewal of the contract and that MultiChoice is not in possible renewal negotiations.
On Sunday the Afrikaans Rapport newspaper reported that the biased so-called "news" channel, slammed for driving racial division in South Africa and known for its ongoing litany of on-air blunders and mistakes, will disappear from DStv during June when the current contract between MultiChoice and ANN7 expires.
Afrotone Media Holdings is now the new holding company for ANN7 and The New Age with Mzwanele "Jimmy" Manyi as executive chairman.
So far more than 12 500 DStv subscribers have signed an online petition at petitions24.com .
The thousands of angry people are demanding, and explaining why, they want MultiChoice to get rid of ANN7.
DStv subscribers are saying that they don't want to be forced to pay for a channel where money is paid by MultiChoice to the highly controversial Gupta family whose involvement with South African State Capture has been exposed, and that is damaging South Africa with biased so-called "news".
In the past week The Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse (Outa) also asked MultiChoice boss Mark Rayner in an open letter to get rid of ANN7 and to come clean about MultiChoice's dealings with ANN7.
Further leaked emails from the Gupta leaks two weeks ago have shed further light on the insider contract negotiations and dealings between MultiChoice and ANN7, with MultiChoice paying hundreds of millions of rand of DStv subscribers' money to ANN7 for the channel to provide its distorted so-called "news" coverage.
On Sunday Rapport said that MultiChoice will dump ANN7, primarily due to the ongoing brand damage ANN7 is inflicting on the DStv brand by proxy.
According to the report MultiChoice has not Mzwanele "Jimmy" Manyi, nor has he made any effort yet to get in touch with MultiChoice.
ANN7 that has been used for personal on-air vendettas against politicians not aligned with the tarnished president Jacob Zuma, has also been a bottom-feeder in terms of TV news channel ratings on DStv.
MultiChoice in a quick response to a media enquiry on Sunday morning told TVwithThinus that it is not currently negotiating to keep ANN7 on DStv.
"We have a legally binding channel carriage contract for the ANN7 channel."
"We cannot comment on the terms of the contract (including the duration of the agreement) as it is subject to confidentiality clauses."
"We have not been approached by the owners of ANN7 for the renewal of the contract and we are not in negotiations for the renewal of that contract. Timelines for negotiations for the renewal of contracts vary from contract to contract and are dictated by different situations and circumstances."
"We are furthermore unable to cancel a contract prior to its expiry unless there is a clear breach of that contract."
"As we have stated previously, DStv is a platform that relays many local and international news channels, representing a wide spectrum of views - for instance SABC News, eNCA, ANN7, CNN, Sky News and many others."
"We don't have editorial control or any involvement in running the operations of any of these news channels, including ANN7."
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