Showing posts with label Tbo Touch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tbo Touch. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Tbo Touch to expand Touch HD in October with the launch of THD as a new video-om-demand service to take on competitors like DStv and Netflix.

Yet another new video-on-demand (VOD) service plans to launch before the end of 2018 with Thabo Molefe, better known as Tbo Touch, planning to start his THD service within months as a competitor in the tightly-contested space.

THD set for launch in October - an expansion of Tbo Touch's existing Touch HD online radio station - will compete with rival services like Naspers' Showmax currently run by MultiChoice, Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and DEOD in a field that already saw VIDI, Altech Node, MTN's VU and recently PCCW Global's ONTAPtv.com bail out and shutter.

In an interview with the website TechCentral, Tbo Touch said that he had secured millions of rand in seed investment from the Industrial Development Corporation (IDC). Pricing for THD will be released later, but the entrepreneur said his VOD service will offer video priced more aggressively than competitors and through apps and the internet.

Tbo Touch said THD will produce local documentaries, TV series and films as well as offer movies and series from Hollywood and that he also sees MultiChoice's DStv as a competitor "because of the abundance of choice we are offering on this platform as well as the quality".

"I have met numerous content creators, we have added 18 videographers and directors in partnership with the IDC. They have pumped good money into the business to accommodate our innovative plans for the next 24 months," Tbo Touch said.

Friday, February 2, 2018

Tbo Touch wants to replace axed ANN7 with his own TV news channel on DStv giving viewers a 'black millennial perspective'.


Digital radio entrepreneur Tbo Touch, whose real name is Thabo Molefe, says he is ready to replace the “Gupta-news” channel ANN7 that MultiChoice is dumping from its DStv satellite pay-TV platform at the end of July.

Earlier this week MultiChoice announced that it won’t be renewing its contract with ANN7, now owned by Mzwanele Manyi’s Afrotone Media Holdings after the Guptas offloaded their often derided and mistake-filled channel to him last year.


ANN7 has been competing with SABC News and eMedia Investment’s eNCA (DStv 403) as local TV news channels both carried on DStv. 

The other satellite TV services, StarSat and OpenView HD (OVHD) carry no local TV news channels. StarSat, that started out as TopTV, said before it’s launch in 2010 that it would start and carry a local TV news channel but then backtracked on the decision and said the costs of starting and running a 24-hour TV news channel is too expensive.

eNCA commands over 50% of the total TV news audience share, with all the other news channel combined having to share the rest of the 50% of viewers who tune to watch TV news. SABC News has around 24.5% of the news viewership, with ANN7 sitting with a paltry 13.6%. 

Interestingly MultiChoice pays ANN7 more despite its barely there ratings, than eNCA that’s the most watched TV news channel among the local and international TV news channels combined.

At MultiChoice’s press conference earlier this week where the company announced that it’s axing ANN7, MultiChoice SA CEO Calvo Mawela said that MultiChoice will be replacing ANN7 with a new majority black-owned local TV news channel.

Linear TV news channels are notoriously expensive to set up and run as one of the second most most expensive TV genres to broadcast besides sport – and doesn’t make any significant profit, with channels that take years to turn profitable, if ever. 

Even internationally seen TV news channels that are considered successful and “prestige” projects are essentially failures if you ask a chartered accountant – Sky News (DStv 402) from pay-TV operator Sky in the United Kingdom is for instance a loss-making operation and has been for years.

Tbo Touch however thinks he can make it work where ANN7 failed and where the SABC with its first try at a TV news channel – SABC News International that failed and that was also shuttered by DStv – struggled to find success.  

On social media Tbo Touch that runs Touch HD, said he “submitted my bid for the 24-hour news channel” and that his plan is to do a news channel that provides “news from a black millennial perspective”. Tbo said he’s waiting “patiently” for a call from MultiChoice’s boss, saying Calvo Mawela’s “got both [my] numbers”.

Monday, August 17, 2015

Greedy telebrities Minnie Dlamini, Khanyi Mbau, and Tbo Touch trash their names, brands, reputations for money in low-class Sanral e-tolls ads.


Telebrities Khanyi Mbau, Minnie Dlamini and Thabo Molefe known as Tbo Touch are willingly inflicting untold brand damage to their own names and brands by appearing in cringe-worthy and badly produced adverts for Sanral in which they are paid to tell other people how good Gauteng's e-tolls are.

It's not clear for how much money Khanyi Mbau of e.tv's Katch It with Khanyi, the fading Minnie Dlamini of SABC1, and Tbo Touch who is clearly out of touch, were each paid to sit for the ghastly "pay your Sanral e-tolls" commercials.

People are now wondering just how desperate and cash-strapped the three really are to willingly stoop to such disastrous lows damaging their careers and credibility with their respective audiences.

Even more shocking is how Minnie Dlamini, Khanyi Mbau and Thabo Molefe would willingly and for pay attach their names to something riddled in controversy like Sanral's derided e-tolls service.

While Khanyi Mbau, Minnie Dlamini and Tbo Touch foolishly extol the virtues of e-tolls and are putting their own names and brands on the line in tone-deaf commercials, viewers are flabbergasted at how the telebrities are willing to damage their own reputations just to take cash from Sanral.

It's unintentionally hilarious as all three sell-outs admit in their badly done commercials with ridiculous scripts, to how they hate(d) e-tolls. But now they want you to pay.

People are wondering whether Khanyi Mbau, Minnie Dlamini and Tbo Touch are suddenly saying they are now in favour of paying Sanral's despised e-tolls because they themselves are just being paid to say so, since none of them did it for free as "public service announcements" out of the goodness of their hearts.

The three greedy celebrities gushing about e-tolls are blasted for their participation by the South African public, with people laughing at the poorly produced videos devoid of any authenticity.

"It really is quite a joke. This is an odious tax you're trying to sell Sanral, not toothpaste and stuff," says Wayne Duvenhage, the chairperson of The Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance (Outa).

"No amount of spin or celeb endorsement will sell a rotten system."

Sunday, October 23, 2011

REVIEW. Flash! gets a fail. How the second season of Flash! on SABC3 looks amateur, unfocused and without any depth.


To use the word trash would be too compulsively easy, but the second season of Flash! on SABC3 - the channel's reboot of its local weekly entertainment magazine show that had a first season in 2009 - seems to be not sure what it really wants to be.

Or maybe the show doesn't have the resources, skills, know-how and people to deliver the quality or the intention of what SABC3 said the new Flash! would be. The dismal and disappointing result is a Flash! that seems to run on the weak flash bulb of a disposable camera, instead of the power packing wattage of the external turbo battery that paparazzi use to capture their A list subjects in a glaringly-strong strobe flash.

The second season of Flash! with the highly ineffective and ill-suited presenter Tbo Touch comes across as a hollow echo chamber of rehashed ''heard it, seen it'' entertainment news. Add to that an in-studio celebrity interview segment that creates the impression that Flash! couldn't find enough news with which to fill the half hour show that was already slimmed down from the first season's hour.

To be fair (and actually be not to other shows that get a lot less time to make an impression): TV with Thinus waited three weeks to review the show, instead of rushing to judgement, desperately wanting Flash! to improve and get better.

Sadly Flash! has now clearly shown that the remainder of the mostly tepid second season's start is basically the stale mould of what the show will be: more over-exposure for the same rehashed stars (Uyanda Mbuli ... Really? Why?), more stereotypical celebrity coverage done with below standard production values, and no innovation, surprise, excitement or a new paradigm of what Flash! could actually have been for South Africa.

Why Red Pepper Productions chose Tbo Touch as Flash! presenter echoes the lack of discernment the production seemingly has regarding the content and entertainment news, and the approach to this genre and field. Does Flash! actually really grasp and understand the fundamentals of how this all works? It seems not.

Flash! seems largely oblivious to the machinations of the local celebrity complex - not only how to navigate it succesfully, but how to make editorial and management decisions that's cutting-edge, distinct and how to create something that's different to all the rest.

If you've seen this year's movie Morning Glory you'll understand Flash!. In the movie about a struggling 4th rated American morning show it's not that they're not really trying hard to do a good show; it's that they don't know how. Sadly Flash! is the same as what you've seen on television before and done better. It's ... lame. And Tbo Touch is hands-obsessed - more animated and arm-jutting intense than an over-zealous infomercial host.

Within 3 episodes Flash! has already made changes. Gone is the iPad as if to say ''We're connected. But not that connected''. The flimsy, transparent and round perspex table (copied much from E! News?) that wobbled as much in the first episode as the content, got lifted markedly higher by the 3rd episode.

The wider angle, bluer hue backdrop has been adapted for more close-up filming and a more boxed-in look reminiscent of 80s MTV done-on-the-cheap music news shows. Also gone are the pink overlights. Following after the sleek, high gloss production values of Entertainment Tonight, Flash! looks amateur, unfocused, and without depth compared to the daily and slickly-produced V Entertainment on Vuzu (DStv 123).

In the past three episodes of Flash! on-screen titles and the little wording there is, are misspelled, from basic show names such as ''Erfsonders'' to a litany of famous names like ''Leeanne Mannas''. The production seems not at all concerned to check what it types. And who's ''Mica Stefano"? From the first episode and continuing in every episode thereafter, it's given the show an immediate credibility problem. It's downright embarrassing for an entity who wants to play and report on the local entertainment scene but can't get the basics right.

Something else Flash! don't get is the power of the Flash! microphone. It's given willy-nilly to trash that don't deserve it. Flash! flouts the basic, unwritten rule of celebrity coverage: You control the access and the coverage and you ''extend'' it to those who deserve it.

To push a Flash! microphone into various paws holding it, cheapens the recipe. It creates the impression that the show is without discernment and will put any B grade and lower fame whore on television if they will please just give Flash! a soundbyte - even if, as viewers saw - they don't even know for what show it is.


The irritating and petite-fake Flash! roving field reporter Roxy Burger, is mostly better at making nasal noises like a content walrus that finally reached the shore, rather than preparing beforehand and asking insightful questions to try and get celebrities to reveal information that the viewer don't already know.

Where she's paid her dues to do red carpet coverage is unsure but she comes across as incompetent to do so and channels an inexperienced, younger Ursula Stapelfeldt when she used to do TV1 holiday afternoon programming live from the sea shore.

The second season of Flash! gets a passing grade on two things. Firstly, the show references other TV shows and stars not on SABC3 and not on the SABC. That is wonderful and commendable. The show instantly communicates non-verbally to the viewer that the show is aware that the viewer knows more and has a wider choice of entertainment options, but that the show is willing to try and follow and serve the viewer by bringing news from all entertainment spheres.

However Flash! should drop ripping off E! segment ideas like ''Shortest Hollywood marriages'' which makes it seem as if the show isn't able to get enough local and new entertainment news. Appoint or get some real journalists to get original scoop, actually get out of the newsroom and Flash! studios and go find real news (yes. it takes hard work). 

The best bit so far (sadly seemingly a once-off): the ''Flash Fashion'' critique with the camp-du-jour Mac De Gorgeous. It was novel, it was entertaining, it was perfect for Flash! and not something done elsewhere. This could actually make for a great permanent weekly insert.

Flash! is pre-empted from the SABC3 schedule and will only be back again on 4 November (with less inane B lister coverage. Lets hope).

Monday, October 3, 2011

BREAKING. Tbo Touch to return to television as the presenter of the 2nd season of Flash! on SABC3 from this Friday.


Tbo Touch (who's real name is Thabo Molefe) and who is a former SABC1 Live presenter will be the new presenter of the second season of Flash! starting this Friday at 21:00 on SABC3.

Incidentally Tbo Touch was named by Flash! during its first season as one of the best South African couples together with Thuli Thabethe.

ALSO READ: Back in a Flash! SABC3's local weekly entertainment news show set to return for a second season of 26 half hour episodes from October.
ALSO READ: The 2nd season of Flash! on SABC3 starting 7 October will be ''shorter, a lot pacier'', and will ''set the agenda for showbiz news before it's read in the Sunday newspapers.''