The Citizen (KZN)

ORCHIDS AND ONIONS

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Brendan Seery

ANN7’s TV commercial, on other hand, fails to answer a crucial question.

One of the greeting card platitudes that annoys me is the one that says: “You can be anything you want to be.” No, you can’t. Simply wishing desperatel­y that I could be an opening batsman in a Test at Lord’s is not going to make it happen.

When I was at school, I faced our first team bowler once: I didn’t even see the balls he bowled. I closed my eyes and the first one went for four. The next one took out my middle stump and almost killed me.

So, my cricketing spirit may be willing, but my cricketing flesh is weak.

However, I do really like stories of a good idea coupled with the sort of determinat­ion that can change a life, or lives.

So I was taken by the story of how Richard Maponya, wellknown and successful businessma­n, got his start in life.

According to a new video produced by Nedbank, his story goes back to 1952, when he was living in Soweto and feeling frustrated because the milk he bought from the local shop went off quickly.

So, he came up with the idea of paying local kids with bicycles to collect and deliver the milk to township residents every day before dawn.

And so the Maponya business empire was born.

I have no idea whether the story is true or not, but it does have a ring of authentici­ty about it.

It also makes the point clearly that having a little money, and looking after it, can give you the start in life you dream of. And a bank can help you there, says Nedbank, as it asks: “What possibilit­ies do you see with the money that’s in your hands?”

I love an ad for ANN7, the Gupta TV channel. It attempts, cleverly it thinks, to rework the old saying, “hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil”.

But it all falls apart because they ignore the logical progressio­n in the last part of the saying. So, their ad goes: “Hear evil, see evil...” and then describes how they will hear and see the evil and report on it.

However, the logical progressio­n of that phrase should have been “speak evil”, shouldn’t it?

And given their links with the Guptas and Bell Pottinger, and the nightly propaganda they spout, that’s probably closer to the truth than they would admit.

For bastardisi­ng a saying and turning it into something that can actually bite you back, you get an Evil Onion, ANN7.

Industry Insider writes: “I would like to nominate this poster for an Onion award. Christmas advertisin­g seems to be happening earlier every year. Attached is a photo of a poster from my local Pick n Pay. It immediatel­y annoyed me as it had Christmas on it and it is early August.”

Looking closer at the image, the word “messenger” is spelt incorrectl­y. And the messaging doesn’t make sense.

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