• MINISODE: Remember When South Africa Had Tennis Stars?
    Jun 4 2025

    Before tennis in South Africa became a ghost serve, we had Amanda Coetzer — 1.58m of giant-slaying grit — and Wayne Ferreira, the forever dark horse who outlasted most of his rivals. This episode looks back at the era when South Africans actually showed up on tour… and won.


    It’s part memory lane, part state-of-the-union — from Amanda’s wins over Hingis and Graf to Wayne’s marathon career (and hair!). Then we fast forward: what’s going on with Tennis SA today? Are rural kids even getting a shot at the baseline? What happened to Arthur Ashe Stadium in Soweto? Are we rising, or are we double-faulting as a nation?


    🎙️ No guests. Just vibes, receipts, and a mic — and, yes, I’ll be watching this drop while sipping espresso at Roland Garros. Kusazoba mnandi! ☺️


    🎾 Let’s get into it.


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    7 mins
  • MINISODE - Remember When… Musica Actually Stopped the Music?
    May 29 2025

    Before playlists and streaming apps, there was Musica. This episode dives into the rise and fall of South Africa’s once-iconic music retailer — from Saturday mall trips to hunt down your fave CD, to its unexpected shutdown in 2021.


    We talk about its evolution, what went wrong, and why its closure still stings for a generation who grew up browsing its shelves. Was Musica just another victim of digital disruption, or was it more than just a store?


    🎶 Whether you bought your first album there (shoutout KB’s Beautiful Vibrations) or remember getting lost in listening booths — this one’s for you.

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    6 mins
  • … South Africa Legalised Same-Sex Marriage?
    May 21 2025

    On 1 December 2005, South Africa’s Constitutional Court handed down a judgment that would forever change what love could look like under the law. The Civil Union Act — the first of its kind in Africa — gave same-sex couples the right to marry. But it didn’t happen quietly.


    In this episode, we go back to the fierce national debate, the homophobia disguised as tradition, and the courage of ordinary citizens who demanded equality. With reflections from key political figures like Hlomane Chauke and rare archival audio from Justice Albie Sachs, we remember the long walk to legal love — and why the fight still matters.


    🎧 This is Remember When... with Andile Ndlovu. A podcast about the moments that shaped us. Weekly episodes drop Wednesday and are available wherever you get your podcasts.


    The recording of Justice Albie Sachs, “Same Sex Marriage Decision in South Africa,” dated 9 April 2013 is courtesy of the University of Chicago Law School.

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    33 mins
  • … South Africa Saved the Indian Premier League (IPL)?
    May 14 2025

    UPDATE: The IPL will resume on 17 May 2025 - https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/articles/c2kq085wg0do.amp


    In 2009, just months before the soccer World Cup would put South Africa on the global stage, something wild happened: we hosted the entire Indian Premier League. Not a few matches — the whole damn tournament.


    It was last-minute. It was chaotic. It was brilliant.


    But behind the sixes, stadium fireworks, and Bollywood glamour was something else brewing: controversy, kickbacks, and cricket board politics that would soon explode — and eventually lead to a full-blown inquiry into Cricket South Africa (CSA).


    In this episode, we relive the highs, question the legacy, and look at where CSA stands today — from the chaos of the Nicholson Report to the revival powered by the Betway SA20.


    With clips, commentary, and one big question:

    Did saving the IPL almost break South African cricket?


    Clips courtesy of: Parliamentary Monitoring Group (pmg.org.za); Betway SA20/YouTube.


    Voice featured:


    - Chris Nenzani, CSA President (2013-2020)

    - Pholetsi Moseki, CSA Chief Executive Officer (2021 - )

    - Graeme Smith ( Betway SA20 Commissioner; former Proteas Test Captain)


    Please subscribe and rate this podcast, it certainly helps.



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    17 mins
  • … Hollywood fought over Mandela’s story?
    May 7 2025

    In this episode, US screenwriter Richard Wesley joins host Andile Ndlovu to reflect on the making of the 1997 Showtime film “Mandela and De Klerk”, starring Sidney Poitier and Michael Caine — a production that remains one of the most debated depictions of South Africa's transition to democracy.


    Wesley opens up about how he was approached to write the film, the research process he undertook, and what it meant to tell such a monumental story from abroad. He also addresses the backlash the film faced — particularly for being unauthorised and for casting foreign leads — and why, nearly 30 years later, the debate over who gets to tell Mandela’s story still resonates.


    This is an episode about authorship, legacy, representation, and reckoning with history through art.


    🎧 Topics Covered:


    How Richard Wesley came to write Mandela and De Klerk

    Meeting (or not meeting) Sidney Poitier and Michael Caine

    The backlash from South African audiences and the ANC

    Competing with Anant Singh’s “Long Walk to Freedom”

    Why Wesley stands by his work — and what he might do differently today

    Reflections on authorship and storytelling across borders


    Listen now and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.


    Instagram: @phuckyoairbrush


    Please reach out via email: andile.1987@gmail.com

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    39 mins
  • Remember When... Vulindlela College was our dream school?
    Jan 26 2021

    [Audio clip(s) courtesy: etv.co.za]



    Please! Did you heat that amazing theme song? It brings back so many memories of evenings spent on the couch in front of the TV, watching eTV’s youth drama “Backstage”.

    It's true, many of the guests who have appeared on this show are not always the most obvious or expected, but I went with a woman who, when things were falling apart both on-screen and behind the scenes at Backstage, embodied resilience and remained integral to the story.

    Grace Mahlaba (now the Creative Producer of #etvScandal) played Ipeleng Theledi right from the get-go, leading the young, beautiful and talented students of Vulindlela College - a school for the performing arts. It was almost like our FAME or in more recent times, Netflix’s Tiny Pretty Things. These students were ambitious and desperate enough for success to go for it no matter the ramifications. That was the same on Backstage. It was written by Collin Oliphant, who was at Mfundi Vundla’s Morula Pictures, and it introduced us Bonnie Mbuli who, believe it or not, was making her acting debut as the super bitch “Zandi”, there was Katlego Danke (currently on Gomora), Dini Nondumo (who’s now Head of Commercial Insurance at Standard Insurance Limited), and KB Motsilanyane (whose music I’ve always loved).

    Ipeleng ran Vulindlela with the help of Katlego Rathebe, Naomi Singh, and Charmaine Jacobs.

    I spoke to Grace Mahlaba about making the move to Cape Town to join the show, the shocking deaths of cast mates, the disruption caused by lawsuits between eTV and the show’s producers which a ultimately saw the show move to Joburg, and when she knew it was time to go.

    Enjoy!

    HOW TO REACH ME:

    Email: andile.1987@gmail.com

    Twitter: @vida15

    Instagram: @phuckyoairbrush

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    49 mins