Mail & Guardian

Broadcast lessons from Fart Hare

- Hansie Smit

When I heard the SABC was banning any broadcast of violence, I immediatel­y turned off Tom and Jerry and switched to the public broadcaste­r to be educated on pacifism and how to solve society’s problems by not showing society’s problems.

As a thirtysome­thing male, I bought into the concept because I’m still feeling the effects of the apartheid government’s ban on porn that set me up for a life of celibacy free from the evils of sex. Sadly, despite their efforts, I figured it all out when in my late teens I noticed condom dispensers in public toilets and discovered late-night porn on trailblazi­ng e.tv.

Today, however, I have no problem believing the SABC can prevent me from performing violent acts for the rest of my life.

Just like the previous regime, the public broadcaste­r has the backing of the ruling party. Plus, they’re going from strength to strength under Hlaudi Motsoeneng, who said his organisati­on had a mandate to educate the people that they, ironically, aimed to fulfil with self-censorship — or a broadcast ban, as he put it.

I’m always up for education so I took a seat in front of my TV and was immediatel­y treated to top-notch, 100% South African content covering the news with a slight fear of protest and a distinct ANC flavour.

On SABC 2, born-and-bred South Africans Helen Zille and Solly Msimanga stood side by side in front of puddles of mud ineffectua­lly, though peacefully, solving the problem of puddles of mud in townships simply by standing in front of puddles of mud in townships.

The next clip illustrate­d the deficienci­es of peaceful warmongeri­ng as it broadcast Julius Malema inciting violence in muted tones in front of an audience; the two members shown appeared to be uninterest­ed and not thinking of anything in particular.

The broadcast suddenly moved to a prize-giving ceremony of sorts rewarding school pupils who appeared to belong to some kind of peace corps or possibly passed a crowd control test. Miraculous­ly, Motsoeneng received an award but was not present, so his certificat­e was calmly walked off screen, presumably to be delivered by white pigeon.

The message was clear: all is fine in a country that just last week appeared to be burning to the ground. Zille and company are campaignin­g, but not to any great effect, and Motsoeneng is raking in the awards.

Reassured, I switched to the SABC’s sister network, ANN7, which ran a belated report on centenary celebratio­ns at “Fart Hare” in Alice, reaffirmin­g my belief that our news channels knew what they were doing and that the Eastern Cape education department did, in fact, have a wicked sense of humour. The schooling continued later that evening, when I was given a lesson on how to interrupt someone mid-sentence by SABC2 producers cutting to commercial­s for the 10th time during Person of Interest.

In the ad break, people literally flipped over cars in Outsurance’s latest ground-breaking spot. They were clearly bending reality to fulfil their own perverted agenda, which is not something I expected to see on a stateowned broadcaste­r committed to providing citizens with the know-how on how to deal with life’s problems.

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