The Herald (South Africa)

Smile, this is the Rainbow Nation

- Nora Shelly

Making fun of whites’ struggle to pronounce words such as “Mpumalanga” is not racist‚ the advertisin­g watchdog said.

An Eskom radio ad that poked fun at coloured‚ black‚ white and Indian accents drew a complaint from listener Andre Stuart‚ who was offended by a jab at the white male’s pronunciat­ion.

He said the commercial was unlawful based on race as it asserted that “white people do not know how to pronounce Mpumalanga”.

But the Advertisin­g Standards Authority said Stuart had had a sense of humour failure.

“The fact of the matter is that many first-language English and Afrikaans speakers do struggle with the ‘mp’ sound‚ and the result is amusing to other groups‚” the ASA directorat­e said in its ruling. “To highlight this in a humorous way is not offensive or discrimina­tory.”

The advertisem­ent‚ which aired on East Coast Radio in KwaZulu-Natal‚ said: “Like a plumber needs a crack‚ ag sies man [a coloured male accent imitated].

“Like a politician needs a struggle accent‚ actually [a black male politician accent imitated].

“Like a tea cup needs a doily [a white woman’s accent imitated].

“Like white people need to know it’s not Maphumalan­ga‚ but Mpumalanga [a white male’s accent imitated].

“Like Zulus need to be told‚ Lalela la‚ it’s not Limpompo but Limpopo [a Zulu male accent imitated].

“Like real bunny chow needs cold toilet and all‚ right! [an Indian male accent imitated].”

The voice-over then states: “Like we in Mzansi need electricit­y. Electricit­y proudly brought to you by Eskom.”

Eskom said the commercial was meant to be parody and satire.

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