Posts in Category: Television

Smash Afrika Takes the Reigns as New Host of Big Brother Mzansi Season 5!

Johannesburg, 21 November 2024: Mzansi Magic is excited to announce Smash Afrika as the new host of its highly anticipated reality series Big Brother Mzansi as it makes its grand return for season 5. With his vibrant personality and undeniable charisma, Smash is set to breathe new life into the show and take Big Brother fans on a thrilling ride.

Smash, whose real name is Afrika Mdutyulwa, is no stranger to the limelight. Hailing from Bloemfontein, this fireball has dominated radio and TV for many years. From his early days on YFM to hosting Massive Music on Mzansi Magic and Channel O, Smash has become a household name with his infectious energy. His voice has been a staple on 5FM and he’s had crowds buzzing as an MC at some of Mzansi’s biggest events including Rocking the Daisies, Black Coffee’s Block Party and the DStv Delicious Festival.

With his natural flair for entertainment and passion for storytelling, Smash has captured the attention of South Africans with his natural charm and dynamic presence. He brings years of experience in media and a deep understanding of South African culture. Now, he’s ready to step into the role of host for Big Brother Mzansi, guiding viewers through every challenge, elimination, and dramatic moments.

“I’m beyond grateful and honestly speechless because this opportunity was always meant to be. Looking back at my journey in radio and TV, it feels like everything I have done has been leading to this moment. I may not have shouted it from the rooftops or had it on a vision board, but deep down, I knew something big was coming,” says an excited Smash.

As the new host, Smash Afrika will guide viewers through the twists, turns, and drama that define the Big Brother Mzansiexperience. The show’s return is expected to bring fresh surprises, new housemates, and many thrilling moments, as fans are invited to tune in for what promises to be an action-packed season.

And what is he most looking forward to? “I’m hyped for the experience ahead and can’t wait to bring that energy to the audience at home and to the housemates whenever I can. I want to make sure everyone walks away feeling something good. The feel-good host is here baby! Let’s get it!”

So, Mzansi, get ready for an unforgettable season filled with drama, high energy, and all the excitement that comes with Smash Afrika at the helm. This is going to be one wild ride – don’t miss it!

For Big Brother Mzansi updates and more go to Big Brother Mzansi or join in the conversation by using the hashtag #BBMzansi on our social media platforms Facebook, XInstagramTikTok and YouTube or Mzansi Magic FacebookXInstagram,  and TikTok

It’s not reality TV. It’s HBO. Jerrod Carmichael Reality Show now on Showmax

Now streaming on Showmax, Jerrod Carmichael Reality Showis a darkly funny documentary series about the Emmy-winning comedian’s tumultuous quest for love, sex, and truth. The HBO Original had its world premiere at SXSW in March 2024 and is now coming express from the US to Showmax on Wednesdays. 

The first episode kicks off in the build up to the 2022 Emmy Awards, where Jerrod was nominated for his guest appearance hosting Saturday Night Live for the first time, as well as for Writing for Rothaniel, his Bo Burnham-directed comedy special where he came out as gay publicly. 

Since winning the Emmy for Rothaniel, Jerrod has gone on to host the Golden Globes, won a Writers Guild of America Award, and been nominated for the Black Reel Award for Outstanding Breakthrough Performance for Poor Things, which went on to win four Oscars. 

At the start of his reality show, Jerrod is trying to “selfTruman Show myself” while aiming “to remain being truthful on camera” – which, as he jokes in the trailer, “is cool until you have a reason to lie.”

As his experiment in radical honesty begins, he’s scrambling to find a date to the Emmys, even auditioning options on Grindr, while grappling with two key relationships in his life: his disapproving mother and his crush, Grammy winner Tyler, The Creator. 

He decides to confront Tyler, The Creator, on camera, about why their friendship hasn’t been the same since Jerrod admitted he’d developed feelings for him. Watch:

At the same time, he’s trying to avoid his mother, a conservative Christian struggling with her son’s sexuality. Trigger warning: the trailer cuts straight from her trying to pray the gay away with her son to her telling him she loves him… Trailer:

https://youtu.be/KkTqP_prC8I

The Real Housewives this is not; comparisons are being made instead to other genre-bending, meta reality shows like Nathan Fielder’s The Rehearsal. To update that old tagline: “It’s not reality TV. It’s HBO.”

The unusual reality show currently has a rare 100% critics’ rating on Rotten TomatoesTime says, “Jerrod Carmichael Reality Show makes reality TV – hilariously, painfully – real again,” while The Hollywood Reporter says, “I laughed and covered my eyes in mortification in equal measure — and since I finished my screeners, I haven’t stopped thinking about it.” 

Details of future episodes are still under wraps, although we know Jerrod confronts his problem with fidelity in episode 2, tries to make up for being a bad friend in episode 3, and attempts to reconcile with his father during a four-day road trip in episode 4. 

Stream on Showmax: 

https://www.showmax.com/za/stream/shows/jerrod-carmichael-reality-show/abf36f11-139a-33b0-b558-db106e139858

House of the Dragon flies express to Showmax from 17 June 2024

House of the Dragon S2 | Express from the US | Mondays from 17 June

The second season of House of the Dragon flies express to Showmax and M-Net from 17 June 2024. The Emmy-winning first season was named Best TV Series – Drama at the 2023 Golden Globes and Best TV Series at Rotten Tomatoes’ Golden Tomato Awards for the best reviewed show of 2022.  

Based on George R.R. Martin’s Fire & BloodHouse of the Dragon is set 200 years before the events of Game of Thrones and tells the story of House Targaryen.

Matt Smith is back in his Critics Choice-nominated role as Daemon Targaryen, as is Emma D’Arcy in her Golden Globe-nominated role as Rhaenyra Targaryen. Olivia Cooke, Eve Best, Steve Toussaint, Fabien Frankel and Rhys Ifans also return.

New cast this season include BAFTA nominee Abubakar Salim (Father in Raised by Wolves) as Alyn of Hull, Gayle Rankin (Sheila the She-Wolf in GLOW) as Alys Rivers, Freddie Fox (Slow HorsesThe Great) as Ser Gwayne Hightower, and Kieran Bew (Bill O’Hara in Warrior) as Hugh.

Watch the Season 2 Green trailer here:

Watch the Season 2 Black trailer here:

Larry David on Curb Your Enthusiasm

For Immediate Use

The Emmy- and Golden Globe-winning comedy series Curb Your Enthusiasm is coming back to Showmax this week for its 12th and final season, with five episodes available from 15 March 2024 and new episodes on Fridays.  

Seinfeld co-creator Larry David stars as an over-the-top version of himself in the iconic HBO comedy, which continues to prove how seemingly trivial details of day-to-day life can precipitate catastrophic chains of events. 

“As Curb comes to an end, I will now have the opportunity to finally shed this ‘Larry David’ persona and become the person God intended me to be – the thoughtful, kind, caring, considerate human being I was until I got derailed by portraying this malignant character,” says Larry. “And so ‘Larry David,’ I bid you farewell. Your misanthropy will not be missed. And for those of you who would like to get in touch with me, you can reach me at Doctors Without Borders.”

Curb Your Enthusiasm also stars Jeff Garlin (The Goldbergs), Susie Essman (Broad City), Cheryl Hines (Suburgatory), J.B. Smoove (Mapleworth Murders), Richard Lewis (Anything But Love), Ted Danson (The Good Place), Vince Vaughn (Wedding Crashers), and Tracey Ullman (Tracey Ullman’s Show). This season’s cameos include South African Sharlto Copley (District 9), Jimmy Kimmel, Bruce Springsteen, Sienna Miller, and Dan Levy. 

We caught up with Larry to find out more about the final season, which currently has a 95% critics’ rating on Rotten Tomatoes and is in IMDb’s 20 Most Popular TV Shows globally, with an 8.8/10 rating after 12 seasons that puts it at #61 on their all-time Top-Rated TV list. 

Did you ever imagine when you did the pilot for Curb Your Enthusiasm that it would last anything like this long?

After the show got picked up for a season, my agent said to me, “Hey, you can do ten seasons of this.” I said, “Are you out of your mind? Ten seasons?! Are you crazy??” And now here we are, twelve seasons later.

At what point did you decide that this was going to be the last season of Curb Your Enthusiasm?

I can’t remember. I think before we wrote it, I knew it was going to be the last one. We’ve been at it a long time. I’m getting old, as is the cast, and nature has a way of telling us to stop.

But you’ve changed your mind before. Like at the end of Season Five when you died and went to heaven…

Yeah, I’m always afraid I can’t write another one. So, I did think it was the last one, but this time it IS the last one.

No one can ever accuse you of avoiding the big issues of our time, and you have a scene involving a trans character in one episode, for example. Do you think you can get away with almost anything because the tone of the show is so playful?

It’s just a question of how you handle stuff. When you see something funny, you forget how you’re supposed to think.

You famously write an outline for each episode and the dialogue is then improvised. Are there specific lines in the script you write or is it really all improvised on the day?

Well, there’ll be lines in the outline that we come up with that we like and that we feel we should say at some point. But to tell you the truth, a lot of times I’ll be in make-up and I don’t even know what we’re shooting. And so I’ll say to somebody, “Can I read an outline? What are we doing?” And that’s as much thought as I put into it. It just makes it more spontaneous and more fun to try and make it up on the spot. But in every scene, we have to move the story along, too. So there are a lot of points that have to be addressed. And the cast is really good at moving the story along.

There are many hilarious scenes at the golf club this season. Are you actually any good at golf?

No, I’m very mediocre, as I am at most things. And I’m not being modest. It’s too hard. And it’s bad for a marriage.

There are some scenes with Richard Lewis this season that get even deeper into that friendship than ever… did it feel that way to you?

In Season Eleven when we were at the political rally, arguing about something idiotic, and Tracey Ullman was sitting behind us and I said [to Richard], “When are you going to die?” I mean, there’s nobody else in the world I could have said that to. It just came out in the scene. And because we’re so close and we’ve known each other so long, it’s just the kind of friendship where you can say anything and not have to worry that you’re going to hurt the person’s feelings. So, we get to do things like that, and it just makes the show better. And you can see how tight we are during our scenes, right? We have that friendship rhythm.

Do you have a favourite guest star?

Well, Tracey [Ullman] was pretty great. But I don’t like to do a list like that just in case I make other people feel bad. See, I’m a sensitive guy!

How does Tracey Ullman feel about being the embodiment of Larry’s absolute physical disgust?

I think she loves it. She embraces it. Working with her has been one of the highlights of the series, for me.

When you wrote that character, did you have her in mind?

I didn’t. But after it was done, I remembered that she played Betty Friedan in this television show [Mrs. America]. And I remember thinking that yeah, that’s kind of what this character should be like…

Was it emotional for you when you filmed the final scene?

No. It was for a lot of people. But not for me. There’s something obviously wrong with me.

Do you know what you’re going to do next?

I really don’t know what I’m going to do, honestly. I have an office and it can’t just go to waste. When I was in college and people asked me what I was going to do when I got out, I said, “Something will turn up.” That’s how I feel now.

Watch the S12 trailer here:

Sidebar: 

“Prett-ay, prett-ay, prett-ay good.”

Larry David’s favourite episodes include:

• S8: Ep 3: Palestinian Chicken

• S2: Ep 7: The Doll

• S5: Ep 8: The Ski Lift

• S10: Ep 7: The Ugly Section

• S8: Ep 9: Mister Softee

Bonko Khoza on playing a serial killer in Red Ink

Having won a SAFTA and becoming a household name as Mqhele in The Wife, Bonko Khoza is back on Showmax as Napoleon Dingiswayo, aka The Butcher, in Showmax drama series Red Ink, adapted from Angela Makholwa-Moabelo’s bestselling novel.

The eight-part thriller, of which new episodes land every Tuesday, tells the story of journalist turned publicist Lucy Khambule (SAFTA nominee Nqobile Nunu Khumalo), who is approached by Napoleon, an imprisoned serial killer who wants her to tell his story.

Red Ink is a partnership between Makholwa-Moabelo’s Britespark Films and Bomb Productions. This marks the first Showmax Original from Bomb, who made DStv’s most-watched drama series, Shaka Ilembe, as well as classics such as Venice winner Yizo Yizo, Oscar nominee Mandela, Sundance winner Amandla: A Revolution In Four-Part Harmony, and SAFTA winners like Isibaya. SAFTA winnersZeno Petersen and Adze Ugah (both directors on Shaka Ilembe) direct Red Ink, which is executive produced by Makholwa-Moabelo, Oscar nominee Angus Gibson, and Emmy nominee Desiree Markgraaff. 

Xabiso Ngqabe caught up with Bonko to ask how he brought a killer to life.

Tell us about your character, Napoleon.

He’s a convicted serial killer and rapist who had this massive body count back in 2010. He’s killed so many women and severed their heads.

I hope audiences resonate with the humanity that I’ve tried to wrap him in. He is vulnerable, gullible, and capable of love and compassion.

How did you approach your audition? 

Angus Gibson has quite a fluid casting process. I’ve known him for a while, but we’ve never got the opportunity to work together. 

I tried to craft something that would be in a different direction from what South Africa has seen me as.

Books have followings and people who have read them, so when it comes to doing justice to an adapted character, it’s really about being specific to the book and the existing text.

What conversations did you and Angela Makholwa-Moabelo have regarding the story?

Angela really gave me the freedom to interpret the character and create something special. Most days we were just chatting away and laughing. I’d like to think we’ve become friends. She’s an amazing author but an even more amazing person with the kindest heart. Honestly, we hardly spoke about the story – everything I needed was already in the book.

What has playing Napoleon taught you about the mind of a serial killer?

There’s a show called I Am A Killer, which talks about this person’s past and what led to them being like this. In the beginning it’s told through his point of view, and he talks about his background. Then, in the other half of the show, his victims give accounts of what happened.

I’ve got a child now and when I see her, she’s an angel. It would be crazy for anyone to intentionally raise a killer like Napoleon. Nobody is born evil. Every serial killer was once a child with a dream. It’s the world that changes us.

Did you have to go through physical and mental training to fully embody this character?

I Am A Killer has six seasons and my wife would tell you I’ve watched every season. Psychologically I was able to take on the job.

Physically, we had to make choices about his weight. He’s in prison for 13 years so what does that look like? I lost around 15 kilograms. I hardly ate on set. 

And we started creating things that are unique to him; these facial and neck twitches. So I had to get used to that and timing those in the performance.

What was the most challenging thing about playing this character?

It’s the idea of how people will wonder how I’m so comfortable playing this. For some people, even crew members, it got too real and I just wonder what they think of me. “Is he also crazy?”.

How did you leave Napoleon behind at work each day?

I’m able to pack the character away and bring him out when I need to because I create him so far from me. Me and Napoleon are worlds apart. Napoleon is easy – you put on overalls and some glasses. You switch on to the things you switch on.

But my life at the moment is so hectic that it was hard to switch Bonko away from the work. I’ve just had a kid, I just moved houses, so I have a lot on my mind. It’s just exhaustion, something I can’t run away from. How are my eyes going to look white when I haven’t slept (more than) four hours?

What did you do to get the chemistry with the actors you worked with?

Napoleon is a very isolated character so I didn’t really have to build chemistry with anyone; I was no one’s love interest and nobody’s best friend.

But in the beginning [with Nqobile Nunu Khumalo as Lucy] we had a lot of big setups to create a foundation. It was really about getting to know each other, sharing a bit about our personal lives and our process, just trying to make sure she feels safe in terms of the work environment, respected and appreciated.

How was it reconnecting with Kwenzo Ngcobo and Abdul Khoza (both from The Wife) on the show?

It’s beautiful. Kwenzo is one of my best friends. We see each other all the time.

Then Abdul, our past four jobs have been together sinceThe Wife and we still have more work together on the way. He brings out the best in me and I also try to push him to a place where he can see the best in himself.

Whenever I’m on a call sheet with them, I know I gotta bring my A-game.

Who should watch Red Ink?

People who love crime thrillers and have an appetite for a thriller/horror series, will definitely enjoy the show. 

I think humanising the characters in their situation is what’s going to set this show apart. Get into the mind of a killer!

I also hope it just shines a light on issues of gender-based violence. 

Watch the trailer:

Join the conversation: #RedInkShowmax