Showing posts with label Siya Kolisi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Siya Kolisi. Show all posts

Saturday, October 26, 2024

The divorce announcement of Siya Kolisi and Rachel decoded


by Thinus Ferreira

On a surface-level, the shocking divorce announcement of South African rugby star Siya Kolisi and his wife Rachel appears to be just like all the other celebrity types going through a break-up or announcements of death, but this one is quite different - in a better way. 

Here is what you don't realise you're reading in that sad white-lettered Insta black block.


When Springbok rugby star Siya Kolisi and his wife Rachel on Tuesday in a monochrome sans serif type Insta post blasted out that they're getting divorced, the 6-sentence public notification seemed, on the surface, like all the other obligatory "bad news" announcements that famous people "growing in different directions" make.

Add to this same Whatsapp group the patronising death confirmations of celebrities which their PR reps and the family members of the famously-deceased so often make, suddenly pleading for privacy after extravagant fairytale lives lived in the public eye.

But wait. Something is missing from Siya and Rachel's divorce announcement - a word that often makes the media roll their eyes in newsrooms and which is anyway forever ignored by journalists, the news media and the adoring public alike: The word "privacy".

Instead, in Siya and Rachel's divorce trenody, another word in the place of privacy pops up. In fact, if you read carefully, you'll spot it twice: Respect.

First things first: Instead of tabloid press or entertainment news sniffing out the celeb couple's divorce news or unhappy marriage, the Kolisi pair got ahead of the news and announced their separation on their terms and first. 

There will now never be a google-indexed story or a wayback machine article noting "This or that publication heard that Siya and Rachel are getting divorced but when asked they haven't responded at the time of publication to media queries".

They told us. And First. They announced their news, to us, the adoring public, in the way that Catherine, Princess of Wales, earlier this year announced that she was diagnosed with cancer, or Celine Dion announced her stiff-person syndrome diagnosis: On their terms, and their news to tell, framed with thought and precision.

Strikingly, positively, it's very noteworthy what Siya and Rachel are Not asking for: Privacy.

Read carefully: They're kindly asking for ... respect. 

Their first paragraph starts with "We", and their last paragraph also starts with "We", while the middle paragraph contains the word "us". Both the first and second paragraphs end with the word "us". 

They're getting divorced but they're presenting unity - at least outwardly.

Their divorce message is also not one of pleading to be left alone - that they became rich and famous and showed us their Top Billing wedding but now want to hide and be left alone. 

They're in fact saying thank you: Thanking us for the attention, the love, the support and understanding. They're going through a divorce but they get that we as the public and we as the media can't and won't just suddenly switch off the attention they've courted for years. 

They're signalling that they're fine with continued attention - they're just asking for "respect" (not privacy!) in this next transition of their lives.

Many of the death, disease, unexpectedly bad news and shocking announcements from within the industrial celebrity complex these days are seemingly haphazardly done, rush-job sentences penned by A-listers or the people around them who pay scant attention to how properly formulate it for those who will have to absorb it and then quickly plastered across social media.

Siya and Rachel's divorce announcement in an Insta age, despite its shock value, however feels adult and like real words uttered by proper grown-ups who thought about what to say, and more importantly, how they want to say it.

It comes across as thoughtful and with every word carefully crafted. It's clearly designed to try and shape a quite different perception than the usual "We're confirming bad news because we must, we are famous, but now we want to be left alone and are running away from all of you".

Like a teacher giving a comprehension test lesson, count the use of plural within their painful message announcing that two people are breaking up and becoming single: "We, couple, friends, children". 

They're signalling that they will remain in a sense together (they actually say so in words - "We will continue to work together on the Foundation" - and that their relationship as a couple is changing, not ending). 

Importantly, they're not pushing us as public, media and fans away and shutting us out. They clearly get that we are interested and remain interested in their lives.

Siya and Rachel are saying they're grateful for our understanding, but also understand the position they're in with US: That it's been them together and now apart, but that the relationship between "them" and "us" as the public remains and will continue.

It's refreshing - if you can use a word like this when people are getting divorced - that famous South Africans are not jumping to the word "privacy" and that Siya and Rachel are deliberately steering clear of this hackneyed word (which is meaningless and won't be adhered to anyway) in a bad news announcement.

Quick quiz: What word appears the most in Siya and Rachel's divorce announcement? It's the word "love". 

"Love" appears in each of the first, second and third paragraphs, as well as the valediction right at the end: "With gratitude and love,". 

While the public and media will remain intensely interested in Siya and Rachel's unfolding divorce story - and while there will be no privacy and continued attention as they go through something awful that millions of people and families deal with - how can we not also give Rachel and Siya the only thing they're asking from us?

Just love. And respect.

Friday, May 31, 2024

SuperSport adds active rugby player Siya Kolisi as brand ambassador as MultiChoice and SuperSport ignore questions over conflict of interest.


by Thinus Ferreira

In a questionable move, SuperSport has added the still active rugby player Siya Kolisi as a SuperSport brand ambassador, with MultiChoice and SuperSport ignoring questions about creating a conflict of interest with the move.

SuperSport now pays Siya Kolisi to be a SuperSport brand ambassador. How will - or will - SuperSport do credible, critical commentary and reporting about Siya Kolisi and his on-field performance?

Why did SuperSport decide that it's okay to sign an active player as a SuperSport "brand ambassador" when and while SuperSport is also in the game of commenting and talking about active rugby players?

Since Rendani Ramovha took over as new SuperSport CEO following a lot of turmoil behind-the-scenes at SuperSport, SuperSport no longer seems inclined to respond to media queries. SuperSport was asked about the apparent conflict of interest in a media query and decided to ignore it.

A week ago SuperSport in a press release announced that the former Springbok rugby captain who is currently playing for French club Racing 92 is now getting paid to be an official SuperSport brand ambassador.

This move makes it unlikely that SuperSport will ever say anything critical of Siya Kolisi as their official brand ambassador or will tone down anything "negative" about his gameplay, decisions, on-field mistakes or anything else that might be true or fair, but not deemed "positive".

"It is such an honour for me to be a brand ambassador for SuperSport, to join such an incredible team of people who are responsible to bring the world's best sport to the continent," Siya Kolisi said in a prepared quote in the press release. 

"I've always said I want to impact as many people as possible, whether on or off the rugby field, and this is another way to reach people across the continent and hopefully make a mark and inspire people."

Siya Kolisi is represented by Roc Nation Sports International.

Rendani Ramovha, SuperSport CEO, is also quoted in the press release saying "Siya Kolisi is someone who truly embodies the meaning of being a champion and we are extremely proud to welcome him to the World of Champions".

Sibusiso Mjikeliso, SuperSport spokesperson, was asked twice in a media query about the perception of a conflict of interest and how SuperSport will do independent and credible coverage, commentary and reporting on the gameplay of someone who is also a brand ambassador of SuperSport.

Sibusiso Mjikeliso didn't respond.

On Tuesday this week, MultiChoice was asked why SuperSport doesn't respond to media queries. 

Keabetswe Modimoeg, MultiChoice corporate affairs and stakeholder relations group executive, didn't respond to the media query.

Friday, December 10, 2021

Siyamthanda TV special from SABC Sport about Springbok captain Siya Kolisi to broadcast on SABC2 on 11 December, 'one of the most shocking interviews I've ever done,' says presenter Thomas Mlambo.


by Thinus Ferreira

SABC2 will broadcast Siyamthanda on Saturday 11 December at 18:30, a TV special from SABC Sport about the Springbok captain Siyamthanda "Siya" Kolisi's earlier life and his journey to the top of rugby.


The 48-minute TV special is a co-production between SABC Sport and Red Bull Media House, featuring people who have made a key contribution to his life.

In Siyamthanda, Siya Kolisi sits down with his close circle of friends and family to talk about his journey from the dusty streets of Zwide and Grey Port Elizabeth to leading the Springbok team to victory in the 2019 Rugby World Cup.

Siyamthanda is anchored by SABC Sport presenter Thomas Mlambo who had spent the day with Siya Kolisi, his close friends and family, including teammate Bongi Mbonambi at 50 on Gugs in Gugulethu.

"It was one of the most open and in some ways 'shocking' interviews I've ever done because of what Siya reveals. I was genuinely shocked at how hard his life has been and what he has overcome; ultimately I was inspired," says Thomas Mlambo in a statement.

The TV special also touches on the more difficult elements of growing up in the township as well as the pressures of success and the responsibility Siya Kolisi assumed when he took on his role as captain of the South African national rugby team.

"I'm not perfect but I can't afford to disappoint society and the young children who look up to me," Siya Kolisi says in the Siyamthanda TV special.

"Representation is everything. I believe in shared leadership; I do not know everything. If I could change anything from when I was a kid, it's the mindset. That's where you either make it or don't make it."

Tuesday, December 11, 2018

Openview's new black-and-white TV commercial with Siya Kolisi and Wayde van Niekerk features a people's movement building a free TV mountain.



eMedia's free-to-air satellite TV service, Openview, has made a black-and-white TV commercial with Springbok captain Siya Kolisi and Olympian athlete Wayde van Niekerk to underscore the growing movement of free-to-air digital television in South Africa.

The "TV Free and Proud" advert that was filmed in Johannesburg and conceptualised and produced by Sugar Ray Leonard & Partners and directed by Tebogo Malope, director at The Star Film Company, has people in various setting staring at TV screens with pay-TV channels until they unplug it and start moving, en masse, with the TV sets outside.

It leads to a movements of people stacking their TV sets in a heap on the Nelson Mandela Bridge in downtown Johannesburg.

More than 150 extras, including e.tv staff, took part in the commercial.

"The team at eMedia really put us through our paces in terms of carving out the positioning for Openview," says Marlin van Noie, Sugary Ray Leonard's chief creative officer.

"We finally got to the 'freedom of entertainment', and it felt right for Openview to be the liberator of free - the brand for the people."

Director Tebogo Malope says "the team at eMedia are creative, and they are also plugged into the streets. They are about the people, and they are about creative work like this. I realised I am in a space with kindred spirits who understand how to make work that resonates with our people."

Openview has just passed 1.5 million activated set-top boxes (STBs) this month and currently carries 20 TV channels and 8 radio stations.

"For the first time in the South African landscape there is world-class television in high-definition (HD) for free," says Khalik Sheriff, the new eMedia Investments' CEO.

"Don't tell anybody I didn't warn you. Even if you don't believe me today, in a few years from now, we will all be watching Openview."