Tag: vuzu

  • The Creative Self, According to Scoop Makhathini

    Over December, Johannesburg is a city that empties. Residents escape to their family homes or holiday beaches, leaving the once-bustling metropolis surprisingly quiet. The Eastern Cape experiences a reverse effect as its towns and villages swell with relatives returning home. In Port Elizabeth, one of these returnees is Siyabonga Ngwekazi, who most of us know as Scoop Makhathini.

    A prolific television presenter, and a high priest of South African street culture, Scoop serves as a cultural medium, a multi-spectral prism of the country’s street artistry.

    Music and the arts, they come from this place that’s very godly, very heavenly’, Scoop says. Like any other medium, his talent has been to interpret the divine for an everyday audience; to draw linkages between past, present, and future; and to serve as an interpreter for the creative world.

    “I think that’s why I’m here — it’s to take these pieces, or blocks, of creative South Africa. Because I understand where they’re coming from. And I can chop it up into little bite-sized pieces for your mainstream audience to understand to be able to digest: to be able to understand the weird crowd, the off-centre crowd. In a medium that’s easy to them. Most creatives can’t speak about themselves. They can’t explain. It’s hard for them because they feel like they leave it all out on the canvas, or they leave it all out in the sculpture, or they leave it all out in the track. So analyzing them and getting someone to understand, ‘Oh this is why this person paints like this or uses these colours. Oh I get it. It’s also relatable to who I am’”.

    Often there is a chasm between Scoop’s TV audience, and the creative world he spends his time in, where so few people access media through television. His ability to reach across this gap, to a multiverse of audiences, is part his own artistry.  Anyone can be a TV presenter”, Scoop says, “but it’s about ‘What are you saying? Who are you speaking to?” In presenting, Scoop not only showcases local creativity to a mass audience. In doing so, he also interprets it, diagnoses it, and drives some of its biggest trends.

    Part of what allows Scoop to translate across diverse peoples and places is that he, like so many generations of men before him, moves in a cyclical way from Johannesburg to the Eastern Cape, and back.  Siyabonga grew up with three siblings. His mother was a teacher and his father a truck driver. He talks vividly about the bleak representations of black men in his 1980’s neighborhood: “the emerald green hat, the blue overalls, the checkered shirt, the denim jeans, and finally, “that boot”. “Those brown army boots with the steal toe that dads used to wear for MK or marches or toyi-toyi.” 

    street poem

    Amidst all this, Siya dug his dreams into hip-hop and basketball, reaching through his television screen for portrayals of powerful blackness, thousands of miles away. “Rap and [American] sports were the first time in the 80s you saw a black guy look like something. You saw guys with the cars and the clothes and the jewelry and the girls and the confidence and the bravado. That’s when you knew the difference between America and South Africa. And even though they were oppressed, at least they could be this.” It’s clear that from very early in Scoop’s life, clothes, television and street culture carried powerful identity politics, and emancipatory potential.

    Today, Scoop has 12 years of industry experience under his very-fashionable belt and a blossoming career.

    As a trend-spotter, pioneer, and supporter of the country’s creative industry, Scoop’s notoriety has come from his ability to bring attention to others. “I think it’s because when I started getting cred, I never kept it. I see who’s next. I hear who’s next. I’ve seen what notoriety can do for someone’s life. Be it bills, or be it the confidence, or be it helping out the family”.

    But there’s “this thing in Jo’burg”, he told me: “hoarding the props”. “People are very scared to tell someone how good they’re doing, or how that person inspired them, or how they’ve got respect for that person”. All for fear of losing their position. “When there’s nothing, it’s amazing how close everyone gets. But as soon as a breadcrumb lands in between two people, watch them scramble in the dark to find a crumb. Not even look for the loaf. Or the bakery.”

    Sccop makhathini bubblegum club

    Scoop’s vision now is retrospective, focusing his prism on the knowledges of his ancestral past.  “I’d really like to be home in Port Elizabeth, learning about how to slaughter a cow, how to clean its insides. From birth to death, I need to be able to recite which ceremonies need to be done, which liquor is needed, which rooms certain things are kept in.” 

    Always a medium, Scoop’s own reflections serve as a refracted mirror of a generation — their conflicts and their creativity.

    “I [like so many others] have learnt about Jordan’s and Nike which has nothing to do with me! I’ve been to a school where all I’ve learned has fuck all to do with me! So I just want to learn about me. It’s been such a long road travelled now. What I’m really yearning for is to stay next to my father and have him teach me how to be black again.”

    For Scoop, the biggest risk to the creative industry is the loss of self. Especially since, “the creative realm is just a realm in search of self. These kids think they’re searching for a label or a t-shirt. Everybody’s just searching for themselves”. And that ‘everyone’ includes Scoop Makhathini himself.

    I go to PE and it’s always where I learn how far I’ve drifted from being a normal person”. It’s clear that despite being a celebrity, and having unique access to ethereal artistry, Scoop remains deliberately (and sometimes controversially) committed to his own messy personhood. His Twitter feed and his show ‘Forever Young’ offer intimate access to Siyabonga the person, beyond Scoop the persona.

    “I think it comes from a place [of] just wanting to be a human being, to experiment, to have views, even though they’re wrong. So often [in the industry], people have to fight to get liked. Everyone likes being liked, but I think I also like being disliked, because at least then I don’t have to retain that approval”. 

    Although we expect celebrity role models to strive for exemplary leadership, there is something powerful in Scoop’s embrace of the imperfect: it gives others the audacity to lead when they might have once have been off-put by the pressure to be faultless.

    Like so many mediums before him, Scoop often speaks in metaphor. “I just like swimming upstream”, he says. “There’s not much to discover if I go that way with everyone else. There’s not much to discover about myself, about the world that we’re living in, about the people around me”.  And that is what creative ‘success’, he believes, should be about. “What really pains me?”, he says. “We’ll excel at so many things, but we will not excel at being ourselves”.

    scoop bubblegum club cover

    Photography by Jamal Nxedlana

    Assisted by Lesole Tauatswala

  • The incredible rise of Legend Manqele, redefining cultural production in South Africa and beyond

    “I would say to any up and comings- although we are all still up and coming- just fight for whatever… not even fight,  just be who you are. Whatever you’re trying to do, you already are. That’s why you get disappointed when you hear a ‘no’ or something… because you know that you already are. Start looking for platforms on which you can execute whatever you feel inside of yourself. And make sure that you know true love- whenever I receive love, I’m like, yoh… epic! I feed off of love and I really feel that if you work from that perspective, things will happen for you. If you do things with love, you always prosper and move forward in the direction you ought to move.”

    Legend Manqele

    It’s difficult to speak to Legend Manqele and to not feel inspired. Regardless of how high he has risen or how high he will still go, he takes the time to connect with you and your story, infusing the encounter with a sense of sincerity and purpose. He’s the ‘driven-man’, re-embodied in a form that cares less for external definitions and arbitrary constructions, than for the power of self-knowledge and a sense of what can be gained through the pursuit of a life in which you live, as much as possible, according to your own truth. It’s a startling revelation in a space like Johannesburg where people so often battle to come into their own light because of the artificial façades they figure as necessary for success. Legend’s story offers a different kind of vision, where multiple incarnations and abilities are nurtured and facilitated by the strength of setting the centre first.

    Legend was brought up by his Grandmother, until he was 13 years old, in eSinathingi, Pietermaritzburg, and although he can now occupy any boardroom with immense sophistication, presence, and perspective, he still speaks with reverence about the way those experiences shaped him; how they infused the beauty and complexity of simple rhythmic moments into his consciousness and evoked in him a sense of higher-calling. He left PMB for Durban as a teenager and so quickly developed a strong sense of independence. Although he describes himself as rather insular during this time, he speaks about some of his experiences there, as watershed moments. He tells me about his first unrequited love, which created an awareness of emotions and relationships being of a far more complicated, and authentic, order than the cookie-cutter, gift card clichés that are sold to us. He tells me about moving with a friend and his mother into the restaurants of fancy hotel spaces, how marching through corridors and occupying rooftops made him realise how so much operates on illusions of access, and drove home the fact that young people owe it to themselves to break those restrictive notions. He also tells me about working in retail after matriculating and noticing, from those experiences, the differences between selfish and selfless acts- how some people could so easily push badly-suited garments just to meet their targets, and how that didn’t sit right with him, when he was interested in the potential of more meaningful exchanges. It was perhaps this perspective that, one day, saw a prominent South African celebrity recognise and ask Legend to personally escort and assist her through the mall in order to find what she wanted. Legend tells me how that simple moment sparked a massive redefinition of understanding in his life; not only did it testify to the walls that can be broken down through perseverance, but it also affirmed the value of the qualities that he had begun to define himself by.  It was then that he knew he had to move to Johannesburg.

    Legend Manqele 4 BUBBLEGUM CLUB

    Legend landed in Hillbrow from Durban in 2009. Within the first two days of arriving, he hit the streets, walking first to Rosebank in order to suss-out further retail opportunities there. However, being, since his school days, enamoured with cultural production and particularly with acting, Legend then set out for Randburg, where he knew that Urban Brew was operating. After positioning himself within a studio audience, Legend began inquiring how things actually functioned. It was then that he encountered the Producers who immediately picked up on his infectious energy and sincere enthusiasm. This ensured that he was offered a contract of employment within his first few weeks of arriving in JHB. The rest, as they say, is history… as Legend has now gone on to establish himself as one of South Africa’s most prominent young cultural producers. He has landed several high-profile acting jobs, most recently featuring in E.TV’s popular drama series Umlilo; has established the Marvin online magazine; and has founded his own production company, BarLeader.

    Legend is an initiator who isn’t prepared to settle for substandard. He recognises tensions inherent in the corporatisation of creativity but because his priorities are so focussed, he is able to employ the business-savvy required in order to make-real the vision of creating proudly South African content; content where the majority are no longer whitewashed off screens or reduced to stereotypical projections that just don’t resonate with peoples’ lives. BarLeader is about recognising the potential of others and Legend draws on his own experiences of being mentored in order to invigorate and encourage his own team. While many companies simply cut-and-paste ‘human-centred’ notions over their pre-existing models, Legend has operated with an ethos of love, from the ground… up. BarLeader has a radically collaborative perspective in relation to the rest of the often confined and ego-driven industry, as Legend believes it is through these exchanges that South Africa will be enabled to create and push content that finally begins to reflect the incredible vitality of this country. His focus is also on increasing the visibility of, and speaking with, other African countries as cutting-edge cultural producers, and BarLeader has already begun to establish connections with Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Kenya.

    Legend observes that cultural production is necessarily a youth-driven process and it is political; we often come to know of and imagine spaces through the ways the youth occupy, document and disseminate information about them. BarLeader is driven by this youthful energy (which Legend is quick to point out, is more about a perspective/positioning than a particular age-bracket) because this Production House recognises that this is where the redefinition happens, that it is from here that the beautiful scripts will finally emanate. The youth hold incredible power in producing and consuming their own content, and in not always looking towards greener grass growing somewhere else, but in watering their own spaces until they explode with abundance. They know how to create this even when supportive systems are lacking; they’re working their day jobs, running their blogs, writing their stories, throwing their parties, and generally operating well beyond predefined work hours. If they’re eating cereal for supper it’s because their priorities reach far beyond the imposed structures… they are investing now in the creation and realisation of new and better worlds, where existing means more than being echoed in hollow representations or simply getting by. Legend is one of these trailblazers and he is creating systems to propel this work forward, elevating himself in order to lift others with him… taking on and off suits and reassembling professionalism as an entirely new kind of Kingpin.

    Legend Manqele 4 BUBBLEGUM CLUB 5

    Editorial image credits

    Photography: Andile Buka

    Styling: Jamal Nxedlana

    Image 1:

    Legend wears Adidas tracksuit. All accessories The Source 

    Image 2:

    Legend wears Leather shirt jacket from CityHall. All accessories The Source 

    Image 3:

    Legend wears Leather trenchcoat from CityHall, retro tracksuit top by Puma, jogging pants by (Nike) Jordan and trainers by Nike