Showing posts with label Oprah Winfrey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oprah Winfrey. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Oprah Winfrey hospitalised with ‘very serious’ stomach issues.


by Thinus Ferreira

Oprah Winfrey has been hospitalised with "very serious" stomach issues, her friend Gayle King revealed.

Oprah Winfrey is now recovering after she was admitted to hospital for what her friend on Tuesday on the American morning show CBS Mornings described as "a very serious thing".

Winfrey (70) who recently appeared in public with a much thinner figure, in December revealed in a People magazine cover story six months ago that she is now taking weight-loss treatments like Ozempic which has since taken Hollywood and the world by storm. 

Her hospitalisation however doesn't have to do with taking the weight-loss treatments but with stomach flu.

"She had some kind of stomach thing - stomach flu - where stuff was coming out of both ends. I won't get too graphic," Gayle King said. "But needless to say, she ended up in the hospital - dehydration; she had an IV. So it was a very serious thing. She will be okay. I hope she's not mad at me for sharing that detail."

After Gayle King's on-air revelation, Oprah Winfrey's Oprahdaily Instagram account posted a statement, noting that "Oprah was scheduled to go on CBS Mornings today to announce her latest Oprah Book Club selection. When she came down with a stomach virus over the weekend, Gayle King - being the best friend she is - offered to make the announcement for her".

"We are happy to share that after receiving an IV due to dehydration at the recommendation of her doctor, Oprah is feeling much better. She is resting and feeling better every day. We wish her a speedy recovery".

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

Thin Oprah reveals her latest weight-loss secret.


A noticeably thin Oprah Winfrey (69), known for her decades-long up-and-down battle against the bulge has revealed her secret: She is now on weight-loss medication and not ashamed to say it.

Revealing her noticeably thinner frame in a purple dress at the film premiere of new version of The Color Purple that she produced after starring in the Steven Spielberg version in 1985, Winfrey said that she is "done with the shaming" and now using weight-loss medicine in combination with exercise to drop the fat and getting close to her goal weight.

In an interview with America's People magazine in its 13 December issue for its cover story, the media mogul opens up about her latest dramatic body transformation which is as striking as in 1988 when she famously carted a "fat wagon" on stage at her Oprah Winfrey Show to show off her thin figure when she announced that she did it using the liquid diet Optifast.

Thirty-five years later, there is now massive buzz globally about a new generation of weight-loss medications like Ozempic, Wegovy and Mounjaro, although Oprah has declined to mention specifically which one she is on although she is honest that she is now using it.

About her up-and-down weight, Winfrey says it has "occupied five decades of space in my brain, yo-yoing and feeling like why can't I just conquer this thing, believing willpower was my failing".

Now she "eats my last meal at 4 o'clock, drink a gallon (3.7 litres) of water a day and uses the WeightWatchers principles of counting points. I had an awareness of weight-loss medications but I felt I had to prove I had the willpower to do it. I now no longer feel this way".

In 2015 Winfrey bought a 10% stake in WeightWatchers International and also has a seat on the company's board of directors.

Her latest so-called "A-ha"-moment happened in July, when Oprah recorded a panel discussion show for her Oprah Daily "The Life You Want" series about weight loss.

She says that during the discussion, "I realised I'd been blaming myself all these years for being overweight and I have a predisposition that no amount of willpower of going to control".

"Obesity is a disease. It's not about willpower - it's about the brain," Winfrey notes, saying that she is now using medically prescribed weight-loss medicines and has "released my own shame about it".

"I now use it as I feel I need it as a tool to manage not yo-yoing. The fact that there's a medically approved prescription for managing weight and staying healthier, in my lifetime, feels like relief, like redemption, like a gift, and not something to hide behind and once again be ridiculed for. I'm absolutely done with the shaming from myself and other people and particularly myself".

About what she's using and her holistic slimming down routine, Oprah says "It's everything".

"I know everybody thought I was on it but I worked so damn hard. I know that if I'm not also working out and vigilant about all the other things it doesn't work for me".

Oprah says she is 7 pounds or 3.2kg away from her goal weight of 160 pounds (72.5kg) but that "it's not about the number - it was a second shot for me to love a more vital and vibrant life".

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Hello! M-Net secures Oprah’s Adele sit-down tell-all and One Night Only music special, will broadcast it as a 2-hour block on Monday 22 November from 7pm.


by Thinus Ferreira

Hello! M-Net has again secured a TV special coup and secured the Adele double-header with the pay-TV channel that will broadcast Oprah Winfrey's interview with Adele on Monday night 22 November at 19:00, followed by her Adele: One Night Only music performance.

Oprah's sit-down Adele interview and the music special will be broadcast in an uninterrupted 2-hour block on Monday night on M-Net (DStv 101), a week after the special was shown in America on Sunday night.

Adele performs unheard songs from her 4th studio album at the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles, as well as songs from her other 3 albums. The interview and music special will be available on DStv Catch Up after the linear broadcast. 

In her sit-down tell-all Adele and Oprah talk about her divorce, "terrifying anxiety attacks", weight-loss, Taylor Swift.

Saturday, March 13, 2021

Oprah’s TV special with Harry and Meghan draws 176 104 viewers in South Africa on M-Net, 'close to a million viewers across Africa'.


by Thinus Ferreira

In South Africa, Oprah Winfrey's sensational sit-down TV special with Prince Harry and Meghan that was shown on M-Net (DStv 101) on Monday night 8 March drew 176 104 viewers during its broadcast on the pay-TV channel.

The 2-hour special internationally distributed by ViacomCBS Global Distribution was made available to not just DStv Premium subscribers but also DStv Compact Plus and DStv Compact subscribers and is getting a rebroadcast today, 13 March, at 16:00.

The TV special, fully-titled CBS Presents Oprah with Meghan and Harry will again be available to all three tiers of DStv subscribers.

The special lured 21.3 million viewers over three days in the United States on CBS according to Nielsen and has also surpassed 61 million viewers around the world, CBS said in a ratings press release on Friday.

In the United Kingdom Oprah's interview with The Duke and Duchess of Sussex pulled 11.3 million viewers on ITV, and in Australia the headline-grabbing special had 1.78 million viewers on Network Ten.

South Africa's 176 104 viewers, according to data requested and supplied by the Broadcast Research Council of South Africa (BRCSA), are those who watched the special live and viewing-on-same-day-as-live (VOSDAL) viewers, and doesn't include people who viewed it during its broadcast on DStv online.

A ratings breakout for the rest of Africa isn't available since several African countries don't have or don't accurate TV ratings measurement systems but the special that MultiChoice broadcast across sub-Saharan Africa on DStv in other major markets besides South Africa like Nigeria and Kenya, pulled a combined viewership of close to a million viewers for the programme in Africa.

M-Net told TVwithThinus that CBS Presents Oprah with Meghan and Harry "reached close to a million viewers across the African continent" but the Randburg-based pay-TV broadcaster didn't provide a specific ratings number or tally methodology.

Since Harpo Productions holds the streaming licensing rights to the interview special it isn't available on DStv Catch Up and has also not been available on any American streaming services.


Wednesday, March 3, 2021

M-Net bags the exclusive rights for Oprah’s Harry and Meghan tell-all TV special for Africa with DStv subscribers in South Africa that will see it on 8 March just 16 hours after America and before Britain.


by Thinus Ferreira

TVwithThinus can reveal that M-Net (DStv 101) has grabbed the broadcasting rights for Africa to Oprah Winfrey's exclusive sit-down TV special with Prince Harry and Meghan containing some shocking revelations and will show the 2-hour interview on Monday 8 March at 19:30 in South Africa. 

The TV special entitled CBS presents Oprah with Meghan and Harry that was originally meant to be 90-minutes has since been extended to 2 hours and will air in Africa on M-Net just 16 hours after it is broadcast in America on Sunday night 7 March in the United States.

In Australia the TV special will air on Network 10 and the United Kingdom the special will be seen on ITV at 23:00, which means that South African DStv subscribers will see the special and its contents 2 and a half hours before British viewers.

In CBS presents Oprah with Meghan and Harry, Oprah Winfrey will speak with Meghan The Duchess of Sussex in a wide-ranging interview covering everything from stepping into life as a Royal, marriage, motherhood, and philanthropic work to how she is handling life under intense public pressure.

Later, the two are joined by Prince Harry as they speak about their move to the United States and their future hopes and dreams for their expanding family.


In the CBS TV promo released for the special, Oprah makes sure to confirm with Meghan that "I just want to make it clear to everybody that there is no subject that is off-limits, and that one of the questions the talk show queen later asks Meghan is: "Were you silent or were you silenced?"

Later Oprah says "You've said some pretty shocking things here".

It's understood that the couple wanted ViacomCBS Global Distribution Group responsible for the TV special's international distribution, to find the best and most prominent broadcasters around the world who might be interested in showing their Oprah interview.

TVwithThinus first asked M-Net on 15 February whether it's secured the possible right or are interested in acquiring it and if it hadn't, whether it is something that M-Net is looking at getting. 

On Monday M-Net was asked again after insiders said that M-Net had indeed now reached out to ViacomCBS Global Distribution Group with the pay-TV broadcaster that was waiting to hear back from the distributor early this week.

Prince Harry and Meghan's last TV special, their personally-managed documentary, Harry & Meghan: An African Journey, that detailed their South Africa and Southern African visit was broadcast in November 2019 on ITV Choice, ITV Studios' TV channel that MultiChoice shuttered last year.

That special gave a behind-the-scenes look at the Sussexes visit and included the Dutchess of Sussex at the time opening up about her struggles with motherhood in the public eye for the first time.

With the defunct ITV Choice out of the picture, M-Net and BBC Studios' BBC Brit (DStv 120) were the natural two TV frontrunners to pick up the special for Africa with M-Net that closed the deal.

CBS presents Oprah with Meghan and Harry is produced by Harpo Productions with Terry Wood and Tara Montgomery as the executive producers and Brian Piotrowicz as co-executive producer.

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

TV NEWS ROUND-UP. Today's interesting TV stories to read - 28 July 2020.


Here's the latest news about TV that I read and that you should read too:


■ Cape Town musician (48) who allegedly raped and sexually assaulted a man (21) for 7 years didn't want eNCA (DStv 403) to film the court proceedings.

■ WarnerMedia is investigating the Ellen DeGeneres Show and its toxic work environment.
Warner Bros Television doesn't want to talk about it or the alleged racism and intimidation on set.


■ Netflix's new Transformers too dark.
Transformers: War for Cybertron Chapter 1: Siege animation series is a thin, rushed story.

■ Epidemic-themed films and TV series on the rise in China because of Covid-19.
Sløborn - the German-Danish TV series that was filmed in 2019 and foresaw Covid-19.
A Covid-19 vaccine drama also in development at HBO.

■ Vince McMahon explains the declining viewership of WWE wrestling.

■ What it's like being black in the British TV industry.
TV pledged to improve diversity before. Is this time different?

■ Is watching reality TV really all that bad for you?

■ British government plans to ban junk-food TV commercials before 9pm in the United Kingdom.
Could force deep cuts at TV channels already struggling with revenue because of Covid-19.

■ Nostalgic TV revivals lean into a generational divide.
Just who are these new TV adaptations of 1990's book series actually for?

■ Veteran Uganda journalist Basajja Mivula arrested at Baba TV.
Dictatorial Uganda government also arrest 4 comedians over YouTube skit criticising the government.

■ Oprah Winfrey to discuss race in America in a new series, The Oprah Conversation, for Apple TV+.

■ Filthy mouth: Upcoming Chucky horror series has the most "f-'s' on TV to give.
Raspy trash-talker Brad Dourif back to voice the evil doll.

■ Halo TV series well into filming of the first season.

■ "Free Netflix for a Year" phishing scam will hijack your bank account.
- Meanwhile paying Netflix on time raises your credit score.

■ As mom cries, teenager spends thousands on ...

Friday, June 12, 2020

Discovery Inc. to show Oprah's TV special about race relations across its channels in South Africa and Africa on Sunday night, adds lead-in special The Murder of George Floyd A Nation Responds to Investigation Discovery schedule.


by Thinus Ferreira

Oprah Winfrey's TV special on race relations in the United States with lessons and insight for a global audience will broadcast as a simulcast showing this Sunday on Discovery Inc.'s Discovery Channel, TLC and Real Time TV channels in South Africa and across sub-Saharan Africa, while the ID: Investigation Discovery will show another TV panel discussion special just before this, The Murder of George Floyd: A Nation Responds, on Sunday night.

OWN Spotlight: Where Do We Go From Here? will be shown on Sunday 14 June at 20:55 simultaneously on the Discovery Channel (DStv 121), TLC (DStv 135) and Real Time (DStv 155 / StarSat 162), with Part 1 and Part 2 of the two-part special that was broadcast this past week in America that will be shown back-to-back for a duration of 1 hour and 50 minutes.


From her home in California, Oprah talks to a wide range of black thought leaders, including filmmakers, journalists, and historians about race and racism in America to try and answer the question of "what's next?"

OWN Spotlight: Where Do We Go From Here? will have individual repeats during next week but on the TLC and Real Time channels only.


Investigation Discovery TV special added
Discovery is also adding The Murder of George Floyd: A Nation Responds that will be shown on ID: Investigation Discovery (DStv 252) this Sunday at 20:10, leading into Oprah's OWN Spotlight: Where Do We Go From Here?.

With ID's Tony Harris as the presenter, this panel discussion will look at America's police violence, law enforcement reform and activism across the United States, with prominent voices discussing the recent events and looking at how America and the world can take tangible actions to make long-lasting change.

The discussion will revolve around the topics of pervasive racism, police violence and what it will take to make this watershed moment expand to better equality everywhere.

Panellists in The Murder of George Floyd: A Nation Responds special include Yamiche Alcindor (PBS Newshour correspondent and NBC & MSNBC political contributor), Kevin Davis (former Baltimore police commissioner) and Lurie Favors (racial justice attorney, author and activist).

Also included are Redditt Hudson (co-founder of the National Coalition of Law Enforcement Officers for Justice, Reform and Accountability) and Deray, McKesson (civil rights activist and organizer of Campaign Zero).


The panellists have an open conversation about the murder of George Floyd, what societal failings led up to this moment, the heightened call to end police violence against citizens, and what change needs to look like.

"This conversation will not be comfortable, but it will be open, honest and informative. Black Americans have expressed this outrage before, and now is the time to listen and learn what actions must be taken to move our country forward," says Investigation Discovery.

"The arc of the moral universe is bending right before our eyes with this huge, global outcry for change. Now is the time to continue to push the discussion forward," says Tony Harris.

"This panel includes leaders who are entrenched in this movement, some with varying viewpoints, and I’m proud to share their thoughts with ID's viewers."


ALSO READ: Oprah Winfrey asks where we go from here in a new 2-part TV special about race that Discovery Inc. will broadcast globally including Africa on DStv and StarTimes.

Monday, June 8, 2020

Oprah Winfrey asks where we go from here in a new 2-part TV special about race that Discovery Inc. will broadcast globally including Africa on DStv and StarTimes.


by Thinus Ferreira

In response to the continuing civil unrest in America after the tragic murder of George Floyd by police, Oprah Winfrey will moderate a brand-new, 2-night TV special OWN Spotlight: Where Do We Go From Here? that will be available to watch for free online and that will also be broadcast in South Africa and across sub-Saharan Africa on Discovery Inc.'s pay-TV channels on MultiChoice's DStv and StarTimes' StarSat.

OWN Spotlight: Where Do We Go From Here? will debut on Tuesday 9 June with Part 1, and Part 2 on Wednesday 10 June. Besides being shown on Oprah's OWN channel in the United States, it will also stream for free on OWN's YouTube channel, Facebook and Instagram.

Discovery Inc. tells TVwithThinus that it also plans to premiere the special on the TLC (DStv 135) channel and then give the 2-parter a second broadcast on the Real Time (DStv 155 / StarSat 162) channel in South Africa and across Africa. Dates and times are not yet known.

Oprah Winfrey will hear from a range of black thought leaders, activists and artists about systematic racism and the current state of America.

In OWN Spotlight: Where Do We Go From Here? she will talk to filmmaker Ava DuVernay, politician Stacey Abrams, Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones, Color of Change founder Rashad Robinson, historian Ibram Kendi, Rev. Dr William J. Barber II, professor and author Jennifer Eberhardt, actor David Oyelowo and journalist Charles M. Blow.

"I've been having private conversations with friends and thought leaders about what's next and where we go from here," says Oprah Winfrey in a statement. "I thought it would be both of interest and service to bring their ideas, concerns and comments into a national spotlight."

David Zaslav, president and CEO of Discovery Inc., says "There is no one like Oprah to bring us all together at this critical moment in our history to offer insights, perspective and action".

"We are honoured to partner with OWN and use our global reach to amplify this important discussion about the global issues of economic and social justice and equality to a potential audience of one billion people across more than 200 markets in a way that only Discovery can."

OWN Spotlight: Where Do We Go From Here? is executive produced by Oprah Winfrey and Tara Montgomery.

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Coronavirus: From Oprah and the African Children's Choir to Archbishop Thabo Makgoba join The Call to Unite global live-stream event.


by Thinus Ferreira

Oprah Winfrey, the African Children's Choir, Archibishop Thabo Makgoba, Julia Roberts and a growing list of headliners are joining to take part in a new global live-streamed event, The Call to Unite, this weekend to uplift and inspire people amidst the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic.

The Call to Unite will be live-streamed in English at www.unite.us as well as on the social media platforms of Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn and others. It will run for 24 hours, starting on Saturday morning, 2 May at 02:00 (South African time SAST).

The event will feature a special opening hour by Tim Shriver, the longtime chairperson and CEO of the Special Olympics, with people like Oprah Winfrey, Eckhart Tolle, T.J. Jakes and former American presidents.

Throughout the 24 hours, leaders and entertainers will joint frontline heroes and citizens from around the world by performing a song, teaching something, sharing a memory, or announcing a commitment to action.

"Today, billions of people around the world are isolated and anxious because of the Covid-19 pandemic - unable to gather with loved-ones, go to work, or even mourn those they've lost," says Call to Unite.

"Still, in this moment of isolation, millions are rising to the occasion by showing each other love and support in countless ways. The Call to Unite is a celebration of those acts of humanity, and an invitation to the world to join in lifting one another in this moment of need."


The Call to Unite will feature a growing list of people, including the African Children's Choir, Alanis Morissette, Archbishop Thabo Makgoba, BeBe and CeCe Winans, Biso Tutu-Gxashe, Deepak Chopra, Eva Longoria, LeAnn Rimes, Mandy Moore, Maria Shriver, Marianne Williamson, Marie Kondo, Naomi Campbell, Ndaba Mandela, former American president George W. Bush, Quincy Jones, Rob Lowe, Shaka Sisulu and many more.

"All participants will be providing the world with hope and inspiration, purpose and directive, laughter and light," says The Call to Unite.

"Whether a story, sermon, meditation, poem, dance, song, practice, talk, call to inaction or call to action, they each will offer their unique gift to the world at a moment in which we need each other more than ever before."

Monday, March 23, 2020

Coronavirus: Oprah tries to bring calm over corona, starts new Apple TV+ show, Oprah Talks Covid-19.


by Thinus Ferreira

Oprah Winfrey has launched a new remotely done talk show, Oprah Talks Covid-19, on the Apple TV+ video streaming service to help with the global conversation around the novel coronavirus and to try and "lift the human spirit" amidst the rising anxiety and uncertainty about the spreading global pandemic.

"In this series, Oprah has remote conversations with experts and everyday people to provide insight, meaning and tangible advice for the human spirit," says Apple TV+.

Oprah's guest in the first episode is the British actor currently working in the United States, Idris Elba who last week revealed that he has been tested positive for the Covid-19 virus, along with his wife Sabrina Dhowre.

"Like millions of people all over the world, I've been staying safer at home for over a week now. I know a lot of people are feeling stressed, overwhelmed and uncertain," says Oprah. "Because of that, I want to offer some hope and gather thoughtleaders and people going through it to add some perspective."

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

The Oprah Winfrey Show returns ... as a podcast.


by Thinus Ferreira

The Oprah Winfrey Show is coming back ... as a podcast.

Oprah Winfrey is giving the world what they need -  a chance to re-experience, or enjoy for the first time, episodes of her long-running TV talk show which is rolling out as podcast episodes from 3 March.

"Oprah is opening the vault - 25 years of legendary interviews, A-ha moments, ugly cries and unforgettable surprises," a video promo notes.



Ten episodes from the 4 500 episode archive will be made available from 3 March followed by a new episode from the Harpo vaults released weekly.

The initial episodes that will revolve around special guests like Dr. Phil, Dr. Oz and the financial guru Suze Orman who all got their start on Oprah's couch and will touch on topics ranging from drug addiction and divorce to weight-loss and race relations.

"As we head into a new decade, it’s a great time for fans of The Oprah Winfrey Show to revisit the joy, laughter and inspiration that kept us all tuning in daily for 25 years," says Tina Perry, OWN president, in a statement.

"The Oprah Winfrey Show The Podcast is the perfect opportunity to look back and reflect, take stock of how we've grown and to be reminded that we're all in this together."

The Oprah Winfrey Show The Podcast will be available on Apple Podcasts and other podcast platforms, and listeners can subscribe here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-oprah-winfrey-show-the-podcast/id1499860465.

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

How a 7de Laan producer and Isidingo writer helped to save Oprah.


A 7de Laan producer and an Isidingo writer have helped to save Oprah.

After a man in Centurion heard a faint noise last Saturday and investigated, Lucius Fred discovered a newborn baby in a plastic shopping bag when he decided to investigate and found the child in a bloody bag with her umbilical cord, according to reports.

He thought the baby was dead but immediately called his employers Allyzander Fourie, a writer on the SABC3 soap Isidingo, and Roelien Spruyt, a producer of the SABC2 soap 7de Laan. They also thought the baby was already dead when they arrived on the scene but then Roelien Spruyt heard a noise - the baby was still alive.


Roelien told Rapport newspaper that she opened the bag again and pressed the baby against her, summoning the neighbourhood watch and a paramedic with an ambulance from Kalafong who gave the baby an oxygen mask before taking her to hospital.

The baby has been named Oprah, after Oprah Winfrey, "because she's a miracle" said Roelien Spruyt.

"I hope that one day she can attend the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls. Hopefully she can walk and one day ask 'do you have a little place for me?"

According to statistics more than 3 000 babies are abandoned annually in South Africa by their mothers and left for dead with the most who don't survive.

Roelien told eNuus "that I just saw this little face in the darkness. In this bag. With these small little fists. And all the way I said 'Just don't die. Don't die.' "

"Because she didn't have a name I wanted to give her a strong name. There are several people who would now like to adopt her".

Wednesday, May 1, 2019

Oprah Winfrey has quit America's version of Carte Blanche: Never a good thing 'to be told I have too much emotion in my name'.


Oprah Winfrey has quietly quit America's version of Carte Blanche after being told she's too emotional and must "flatten" herself, saying "it's never a good thing when I have to practice saying my name and have to be told that I have too much emotion in my name".

In a new cover story interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Oprah Winfrey who has worked as a contributor since 2017 for the American investigative and current affairs show 60 Minutes on Sunday nights, reveals that she left over creative differences.

Besides her involvement with her OWN channel, magazine, South Africa school and other projects, she is now working with Apple on an upcoming series looking at mental health with people like Prince Harry, as well as a revived streaming version of her Oprah book club and possible a new streaming talk show interview series.

About removing herself from 60 Minutes she says "How should I say this? It's never a good thing when I have to practice saying my name and have to be told that I have too much emotion in my name… I think I did seven takes on just my name because it was 'too emotional'. I go, 'Is the too much emotion in the Oprah part or the Winfrey part?"

"They would say, ‘All right, you need to flatten out your voice, there's too much emotion in your voice.' So I was working on pulling myself down and flattening out my personality - which, for me, is actually not such a good thing."

Oprah says she told 60 Minutes bosses that "I was going to be working with Apple and that it didn't mean I would never do something [for 60 Minutes anymore] but I would probably be taking all of my energies and putting them into whatever I wanted to do at Apple."

When Oprah joined 60 Minutes in early 2017, she said "I'm so excited and proud to join forces with this historic news programme, which for me represents the bastion of journalistic storytelling. At a time when people are so divided, my intention is to bring relevant insight and perspective, to look at what separates us, and help facilitate real conversations between people from different backgrounds".

About her announcement and appearance at Apple recently she tells the magazine that "I was at Apple the other day, and this young girl just started shaking and crying".

"She said, 'But you don't understand'. I just took her by the arms and I said, "Are you okay?' And she said, 'You don't understand'."

"I go, 'Yeah, I do.' She goes, 'No, but you don't.' I go, 'Yeah, I do. I raised you. You came home from school and there was nobody home, right? Every day, four o'clock, I was there."

" 'Yes, yes, you raised me.' That warms my heart. There's a whole generation of people who are, like, 30, and that was their life. And now I also get "My mom loves you," and I go, 'And you don't?"

Monday, March 25, 2019

Apple takes on Netflix with its Apple TV+ video streaming service and help from stars like Oprah Winfrey, Jennifer Aniston and Steven Spielberg.


Apple is taking on Netflix in the video streaming wars with its new Apple TV+ streaming service that will launch later in 2019.

Apple TV+ will give users access to a bunch of new drama series, films and documentaries currently in development and in production, in partnership with marquee banner-names ranging from Oprah Winfrey and Jennifer Aniston to Steven Spielberg, J.J. Abrams and M. Night Shyamalan.

As was expected from Apple's "Show Time" media announcement it made Monday evening in its Steve Jobs Theatre at its Apple Park headquarters in Cupertino, California and streamed worldwide, Apple is entering the subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) market to compete against the likes of Netflix and Amazon Prime Video with its own roster of high-quality original TV and film content.

Apple is upgrading its Apple TV app that will include Apple TV Channels and that will start in May 2019 in more than 130 countries, with Apple that will announce the pricing of its Apple TV+ pay-TV service later in the year.

Apple TV+ bosses Jamie Erlicht and Zack Van Amburg said that users will be able to stream watch shows or download them, entirely ad-free, with more content that will be added monthly.

Apple has already spent more than $1 billion to produce over 20 drama series and comedies, as well as films and documentaries to create its first-ever slate of Apple Originals, with more on its way.

"Our vision for the Apple TV app is to bring together your favourite shows, movies, sports and news and make them available on all of your devices," Tim Cook, Apple CEO, said.



Apple played both a black-and-white vignette of all the stars, producers, writers and directors talking about the creative process(above), as well as a short sizzle-reel teasing some of its upcoming content (below).



Steven Spielberg is the executive producer of a new reboot of his former science fiction anthology series for Apple, Amazing Stories.

Jennifer Aniston, Reese Witherspoon and Steve Carell will star in The Morning Show, a backstage drama series following the behind-the-scenes conflict at an American breakfast show, with the show that has a two-season 20-episode order.

Jason Momoa and Alfre Woodard have starring roles in the 10-episode See, a science fiction drama series set hundreds of years in the future where what's left of mankind lost the sense of sight and only a few people who still believe that mankind once had the ability to see with their eyes.

Kumail Nanjiani is doing an anthology series Little America about immigrants.

Oprah Winfrey took to the Apple stage at the end, announcing two documentary projects, as well as a plan for an Apple-Oprah book club, saying she decided to team up with Apple TV+ "because they're in a billion pockets y'all".

"The Apple platform allows me to do what I do in a whole new way – to take everything I've learned about connecting to people to the next level. Because they're in a billion pockets y'all," said Oprah.

"The whole world has them in their hands and that presents a major opportunity to make a major impact. I'm proud and honoured to be part of this platform. My intention is to illuminate consciousness and create greater awareness with leaders, artists and newsmakers."



Oprah's Book Club returns
Oprah Winfrey also plans to relaunch and return her Book Club made famous by her TV talk show.

"I want to convene a meeting of the mind connecting us through books. For me there is nothing more thrilling than being transported by a brilliant book."

"The only other thing more gratifying than an extraordinary read is being able to share that experience with others, and we're going to do just that by building the biggest, the most vibrant, the most stimulating Book Club on the planet!" Oprah Winfrey exclaimed.

"Imagine where Apple stores stream a conversation with the author and me, live across all devices, across all borders, uniting people to stories that remind us that no matter who you are, or where you are from, every man, woman and child looks up in awe at the same stuff."

"For as long as I remember, I had this dream for us all to someday realize that deep potential that we're all each born to, abides in every soul; I know this to be true."

"My deepest hope is that we all, humans, get to be the fullest version of ourselves as human being, to join in the mission and vision for our common good, to leave this world more enlightened, kinder and better than we found it, and to move together one billion-plus strong into a future of our own design, all connected through Apple!"

Sunday, December 2, 2018

MultiChoice reveals it will only broadcast 25 minutes on DStv of Beyoncé and Jay-Z at the Mandela 100 Global Citizen Festival 2018 on Sunday and not their whole performance.


MultiChoice has revealed that it will only be broadcasting 25 minutes on its DStv satellite pay-TV service of the on-stage appearance of Beyoncé and Jay-Z today that will form part of the Mandela 100 Global Citizen Festival 2018 from the FNB Stadium and not their whole performance.

The event is set to be broadcast by MultiChoice's DStv, YouTube, Twitter, the SABC's SABC1 and Viacom International Media Networks Africa's (VIMN Africa) TV channels, MTV (DStv 130) and MTV Base (DStv 323).

MultiChoice has the responsibility to film and produce the event and to provide the live broadcast to the South African public broadcaster, as well as other international broadcast partners.

The South African comedian Trevor Noah will co-host the Mandela 100 Global Citizen Festival with a string of international bold type names ranging from Naomi Campbell, Dave Chappelle, Sir Bob Geldof, Gayle King, Tyler Perry and Forest Whitaker, set to appear, and with Oprah Winfrey who will do a keynote address about Nelson Mandela and his legacy.

South African stars like Bonang MathebaNomzamo Mbatha are also part of the appearance list.

Stars like Beyoncé and Jay-Z, Cassper Nyovest, D'banj, Ed Sheeran, Eddie Vedder, Femi Kuti, Kasey Musgraves, Pharrell Williams, Chris Martin, Sho Madjozi, Tiwa Savage, Usher and Wizkid are set to perform, but MultiChoice revealed that it will only broadcast 25 minutes of Beyoncé and Jay-Z, not not their whole performance.

On Twitter MultiChoice warned DStv subscribers, saying "we will be airing the entire concert but only 25 minutes of the Beyonce and Jay-Z performance" because "the full performance of Beyoncé and Jay-Z is exclusive to those who have earned their tickets to be inside the stadium on the day".



A production staffer involved with the Mandela 100 Global Citizen Festival died on Saturday after the rigger plunged to his death, although the concert will go ahead despite the tragedy and loss of life.

The as yet unidentified man die on Saturday at the FNB Stadium doing rigging work for one of the production partners involved.

Thursday, November 29, 2018

Oprah Winfrey inspires South Africa and its youth in a stirring Madiba tribute speech: 'Never give up.'


In an hugely inspirational keynote address on Thursday afternoon in Soweto, Oprah Winfrey, who jetted to South Africa for her 36th visit, got several standing ovations for her stirring speech that was broadcast live on television, telling South Africa’s downtrodden youth to never give up, to be resilient and to find their strength in telling their stories.

Oprah Winfrey spoke at a packed auditorium in a Soweto event organised by the Nelson Mandela Foundation, entitled "Is’thunzi Sabafazi" (Dignity of Women).

Speaking about her 10 days she got to spend with Nelson Mandela before she built her Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls school, Oprah Winfrey said "we are Mandela children, and we are his legacy. And his legacy speaks to us each time we choose unity over division. His legacy speaks to us each time we decide that we are going to fight for equality over domination and love over hate".

"The spirit of him abides with every man, every woman who listens with humility; everyone who says yes to breaking down a barrier, and not to putting up a wall. Who educates, rather than retaliates. He is with us every single time everybody casts a vote for democracy and casts a vote for freedom – he lives," said Oprah Winfrey.

About her school she built in 2007 she said "I built a school to give girls who look like me, who came from backgrounds like me, who didn't have the means but had the brainpower and the will to succeed, I wanted to give those girls a chance".

"And I will say that the experience of watching these daughters of South Africa find their voice and find their grace has made me think long and hard about the universe that our young leaders and graduating into today."

Some of the girls, many of whom were in the audience on Thursday, she said have gone on to graduate from universities in the United States, two graduated at Oxford, some from the University of Johannesburg, from NMMU, UCT, Wits, Pretoria, Stellenbosch and one just graduated as the first doctor from the University of Stellenbosch who got a standing ovation.

"I have right now 191 girls in college," Oprah Winfrey said, "20 of them in the United States".

"So here is my hope – not just for my girls, but for South Africans and human beings everywhere: I hope that we are able to continue to create a culture that recognises the responsibility that we have to one another."

"I know everybody can't build a school but you can take care of the person who is closest to you. You can help."

"You can ask the question how can I be used for something greater than myself? And in doing that, you align with Madiba's vision – both compassionate and practical. He knew that if one of us is wounded, all of us bleed. He knew that if one of us is lacking, all of us are somehow affected."

"We all need to roll up our sleeves wherever you are, whatever you can do, and begin to build a new future."


Never give up
"I want to say a word to the young dreamers of this nation. Madiba said a winner is a dreamer who never gives up," said Oprah Winfrey.

"I realise that the statistics are abysmal, that you're still the most vulnerable in the labour market with more than one in every three of you out of work. Do … not … give … up. Find a way,” she stressed amidst loud applause.

"I want you to know that your day will come. It's coming, it’s on its way, because of you. And I want you to know that I applaud your resilience."

Oprah Winfrey said it's one of the things she admires most about South African and the country's youth.

"The remarkable thing about every single girl who come to my school is all the trials and traumas they've been through. Most girls have experienced 6 major traumas by the time they get to my school and in spite of that they still rise."

"And so I say to all the young people, you too can rise. You are capable, you are brimming with the wisdom of all who came before you."


Tell your story
Oprah Winfrey said "tell your story. One of the things I've learnt from all of the girls at my school is when they came to my school they had such shame about their stories."

"Now we have a policy at my school that we are a trauma informed school, that knows and recognises that there's power in the story – that the story can liberate you: That everything that has ever happened to you, no matter how devastating, how matter how sorrowful, now matter how challenging – there is not one thing that happened to you, that did not also happened for you."

"Everything that has ever happened has happened to build your strength. And that strength equals power."

"So when you've been so so many trials and so many tribulations, what it does to you if you allow yourself to open up to the story that has come before you, what happens is it gives you power."

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

TV NEWS ROUND-UP. Today's interesting TV stories to read from TVwithThinus - 3 April 2018


Here's the latest news about TV that I read and that you should read too:

■ Why the massive ratings of the Roseanne reboot is a big deal for TV.
- The ABC network in America held an executive meeting the day after Donald Trump got elected and asked themselves what audiences they're not serving well as execs tell The New York Times about why the Roseanne reboot was made.
- The Roseanne reboot is funny "but I'm not going to keep watching problematic pop culture". And the announcement of a Roseanne second season is "imminent" according to sources. And then a late Friday announcement from ABC that it's renewed.
MUST READ: The Roseanne revival shows how broadcast TV can survive in the streaming age: "Things that bring people together for a shared experience - that's what we do best."


■ International TV news channels like Russia's RT, China's CGTN and France24 went dark on 1 April in Washington, DC in America - and here's the reason.

■ The regular original actress Willa Holland who've played Thea Queen (Speedy), Oliver's younger sister for 6 seasons in Arrow seen on M-Net (DStv 101), is done with the show. The executive producer says it's been planned since the 4th season.


Suzie Hardy who says she was sexually harassed and sexually assaulted by Ryan Seacrest of E! (DStv 124) and ABC's new American Idol, has now filed a police report and says "everyone in Hollywood who stands by Ryan now is choosing not to believe me".


■ American TV reporter for FOX Sports hit in the eye by a baseball in Atlanta and her eye socket broken.

■ The new CBS crime drama series Instinct apologises to FOX's Bones for blatant plagiarism and copying in what is just its 3rd episode.

■ Oprah Winfrey is deliberately moving her OWN network into scripted series, exclusively selecting black creators.

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

Friend Gayle King reveals Oprah Winfrey was told to cut her stirring Golden Globes speech and went over time: 'She knew exactly what she wanted to say'.


Oprah Winfrey's longtime friend Gayle King revealed that Winfrey went long over time in her electrifying acceptance speech at the 75th Golden Globes but that the award show's producers didn't dare cut her.

Oprah Winfrey's stirring speech as she accepted the Cecil B. DeMille award, led to a worldwide avalanche of calls for her to make a run for American president in 2020, although Gayle King, a presenter on the American channel CBS's morning show CBS This Morning, said Oprah is “not going to be running for president,” although she is now “intrigued” by the idea.

“I absolutely don’t think that her position has changed,” Gayle King said and added that Oprah didn't write and do the speech because she wanted to come across as being presidential.

Asked who wrote that speech, Gayle King said "Oprah crafted that speech, she knew how she wanted to start. This is the thing for her: She knew exactly what she wanted to say, and she knew how she wanted to say it."

"She crafted the speech, she talked to an editor at the [O] magazine, and the two of them came up with it, but Oprah put down exactly what she wanted to say. Those were all her words," said Gayle King.

"She writes her 'What I know for sure' column every month in the magazine, she's a very good writer. We all know she's a very good talker. And so I think it was a home-run on many levels."

"Being in that room was electrifying. It was the right person, giving the right speech at the right time. She wanted that moment to be more than women wearing black dresses of solidarity. She really did want to speak to young girls, she really did want to say 'enough already', and I think she delivered on all that in a very eloquent way".

"People said she wrote that speech as a launching pad for what she wants to do. That's absolutely not true," said Gayle King.

"She worked on it, she rehearsed it, she practised it - I was a practise audience member. And I have to say I knew the speech was going to be powerful just when she was reading it to time."

"Before [the time] when she was there at rehearsal, they told her she had to cut 3 minutes out of it because it was 6 minutes long. They said 'You have to cut it to 3 minutes'."

"And Oprah said if it was any other night than this one, I could do that, but I don't plan on cutting it".

"As it turned out - with all the applause - it went 9 minutes. And I think the producers thought that was worth going late for," said Gayle King.

Monday, January 8, 2018

Watch Oprah Winfrey's powerful 75th Golden Globes speech receiving the Cecil B. DeMille award that gets Hollywood on their feet: 'At this moment there are some little girls watching as I become the first black women to be given the same award'.


Entertainment and talk show legend and philantropist Oprah Winfrey got rousing applause and brought Hollywood to their feet on Sunday night at the 75th Golden Globe Awards in Los Angeles with her moving speech accepting the Cecil B. DeMille award, saying she knows that somewhere little girls are watching as she becomes the first black woman to get this award.

Oprah Winfrey also said "we all know the press is under siege these days".

"But we also know that it is the insatiable dedication to uncovering the absolute truth that keeps us from turning a blind eye to corruption and to injustice, to tyrants and victims and secrets and lies".

"I want to say that I value the press more than ever before," said Oprah Winfrey.

"What I know for sure is that speaking your truth is the most powerful tool we all have. And I'm especially proud and inspired by all the women have have felt strong enough, and empowered enough, to speak up and share their personal stories."

"Each of us in this room are celebrated because of the stories that we tell. And this year we became the story.But it's not just a story affecting the entertainment industry, it's one that transcends any culture, geography, race, religion, politics or work place".

"I want to express gratitude to all the women who have endured years of abuse and assault because they, like my mother, had children to feed and bills to pay and dreams to pursue".

"They're the women whose names we'll never know. They are domestic workers. And farm workers. They are working on factories and they work in restaurants and academia, and engineering, and medicine and science and they're part of the world of tech, and politics and business, athletes in the Olympics and soldiers in the military".

"And there's someone else: Recy Taylor. A name I know and I think you should know too."

"In 1944 Recy Taylor was just walking home from a church service she attended in Alabama when she was abducted by six armed white men, raped and blindfolded by the side of the road; coming home from church".

"They threatened to kill her if she ever told anyone. But her story was reported to the NAACP where a young worker by the name of Rosa Parks became the lead investigator on her case and together they sought justice".

"But justice wasn't an option in the era of Jim Crow. The men who tried to destroy her were never prosecuted. Recy Taylor died 10 days ago, just shy of her 98th birthday."

"She lived, as we all have lived, too many years in a culture broken by brutally powerful men. For too long women have not been heard or believed if they dared to speak their truth to the power of those men. But their time is up," said Oprah Winfrey.

"And I just hope that that Recy Taylor died knowing that her truth - like the truth of so many other women who were tormented in those years - goes marching on."

"It was somewhere in Rosa Parks' heart almost 11 later when she made the decision to stay seated on that bus, and it's hear with every women who chooses to say #MeToo, and every man who chooses to listen."

"In my career what I've always tried my best to do - whether on television or through film - is to say something of how men and women really behave, to say how we experience shame, how we love and rage and how we fail and how we retreat, persevere and how we overcome."

And I've interviewed and portrayed people who had withstood some of the ugliest things life can throw at you. But the one quality all of them seem to share is an ability to maintain hope for a brighter morning - even during our darkest night."

"So I want all girls here now, to know that a new day is on the horizon, and when that new day finally dawns, it will be because of a lot of magnificent women, many of whom are right here in this room tonight, and some pretty phenomenal men, fighting hard to make sure that they become the leaders who take us to the time when nobody else has to say #MeToo again," said Oprah Winfrey.

Monday, December 4, 2017

Discovery buys majority control of the Oprah Winfrey Network; extends her deal to remain as CEO of OWN through at least 2025.


Discovery Communications has increased its stake in Oprah Winfrey's Oprah Winfrey Network (OWN) by buying majority control and extending her deal to remain as CEO of OWN through at least 2025.

The new deal means that Oprah Winfrey is losing control in her own TV channel but it comes at a hefty price tag of $70 million paid by Discovery Communications to Harpo Inc., that is upping its stake from its 50/50 joint venture started in 2008 by adding another 24.5%.

Discovery will now own more than 70% of OWN.

While OWN isn't available as a separate TV channel in South Africa, OWN programming is played out in programming blocks on Discovery Networks International's TLC Entertainment (DStv 135) carried on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform in South Africa and across Africa.

"Ten years ago, Oprah and I began to imagine what a network, inspired by her vision and values, could mean to viewers across the United States," says David Zaslav, Discovery CEO and president in a statement announcing Discovery's majority interest stake in OWN.

"In an increasingly crowded landscape, OWN has emerged as the leading destination for African-American women and one of the strongest superfan brands across all screens and services."

"This transaction allows Discovery and Oprah to unlock more value from our partnership; extends once more her commitment to the network; and lets us continue our strong work together to nourish OWN viewers with the content they love."

Oprah Winfrey says "creating OWN and seeing it flourish, supported by Discovery and a rapidly growing group of the finest storytellers in film and television, is one of my proudest achievements".

"I'm thrilled with the network's success and excited about this next chapter in our partnership."

"Together, we'll continue to inspire our viewers with real-life stories that are emotional and entertaining, connecting them to each other and to their greatest potential."

Erik Logan, OWN president says "I'm excited for OWN to be part of Discovery in a deeper, more meaningful way and for the opportunity this unlocks for our future".

"Our network has achieved what most people thought was impossible and as we look toward the future, now more than ever, we are poised for continued success."