Daily Maverick

The South African S*** Show is back at it and better than ever!

Spoiler alert: in the upcoming season of this gripping show, viewers will discover the reason for former president Jake Z’s new wave of popularity: a leaked virus that causes a countrywid­e memory loss pandemic

- SATIRICALL­Y SPEAKING Malibongwe Tyilo Malibongwe Tyilo is associate editor of Maverick Life.

As season 30 of The South Africa S*** Show (Sass) draws to a close, I simply do not understand how none of the major streaming services has picked up this groundbrea­king and emotional State-capturing television offering.

While writers and directors on inferior shows continue to stick with the dated formula of genre filmmaking, I’ve heard from a very reliable source that, every morning, the Sass head writer walks into the writers’ room, takes one last swig and tells his team of scribes, “Hold my beer pot”, then lets out a burp, filling the room with the nourishing aroma of recently brewed umqombothi (traditiona­l beer).

The potent fumes inspire all in the room; minds are expanded, genre boundaries are incinerate­d and Emmy Award-worthy creativity abounds.

Take, for example, the show’s recent foray into the fantasy-sci-fi-horror-drama genre. The writers’ room draws on themes initially explored in the 2004 cult classic, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, in which Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet play a couple who get their memories of each other erased in order to move on from their turbulent relationsh­ip, only for fate to conspire another meeting between the two, as strangers once again, seemingly keen on giving toxicity another go.

Sass takes this relationsh­ip dynamic to a new, bigger, better and wholly original level, as a toxic romance between the fictional populace and a former president is rekindled and doused with extra paraffin.

The former president, a previously disgraced character, an ex-con and an underappre­ciated inventor of antiretrov­iral crystal showerhead­s, is none other than Jake Z, once thought relegated to the past and likely to spend his golden years relaxing firepoolsi­de, if not meditating in the soothing solitude of prison.

Not so, as the brilliant writers’ room would have it: Jake returns with more wives and children than his biblical namesake.

I’ve been lucky enough to get a preview of upcoming season 31 episodes. Spoiler alert: as viewers of the show will soon find out in the season’s big reveal, there’s a perfectly logical reason for Jake’s new wave of popularity. It seems a dangerous experiment­al

It seems a dangerous experiment­al virus escaped from a Kwazulunat­al lab, leading to a countrywid­e memory loss pandemic and people showing symptoms of Stockholm syndrome

virus escaped from a Kwazulu-natal lab, leading to a countrywid­e memory loss pandemic and people showing symptoms of Stockholm syndrome.

It later turns out that the lab’s scientists leaked the virus, and they were working with Jake all along.

The show is obviously (and very cleverly) using the fictional character of Jake Z – played by a very talented and well-cast actor, I must say – to comment on events in the real world, such as the brain-melting mystery of the return of Trump in the West, or the return to power of the once exiled dictatoria­l Marcos family in the Philippine­s.

And, as with Trump in the real world, no amount of effort to remind the fictional populace of Jake’s past – the corruption, the stolen money, the institutio­ns destroyed, the court cases, the poverty... None of this seems to work against this new virus.

The show’s archivists, investigat­ors, prosecutor­s and journalist­s, all in one way or another having held the responsibi­lity of guarding, defending and regularly disseminat­ing a truth serum once believed to be highly effective against similar outbreaks of the whattheact­ualfuck family of viruses, find themselves at an impasse.

No amount of truth serum seems to work against the memory loss and Stockholm syndrome induced by this new areyoufuck­ingkidding­me strain of the virus.

As Jake continues on his antihero’s journey, inching ever closer to the seat of power and further away from accountabi­lity, some had hoped that, because he is an ex-con, the country’s Constituti­on and laws would have proved to be an obstacle in his path.

Not so, as revealed in this week’s episode – the fictional electoral courts have cleared the way for the man to pursue the country’s top seat.

Has the virus spread to the courts as well? Personally, I would advise against this sort of speculatio­n. I’m normally pretty good at predicting story twists and turns. Admittedly, I’ve only seen a few of the next season’s episodes, but even I am dumbfounde­d. I am simply blown away by this show. How do they do it? How do they straddle the fantasy sci-fi genres and realism so convincing­ly?

It’s almost prescient how well it is written. In Sass, you’ll find themes and plots reflecting just about every major sociopolit­ical trend that exists in the real world at the moment, but blown up, clowned up and exaggerate­d for dramatic effect.

Unemployme­nt? Hold my beer pot… Poverty? You know nothing, Jon Snow… Crime and corruption? The writers’ room has you covered.

All this in a show built around a country populated by some of the loveliest, friendlies­t and most helpful and neighbourl­y characters. True “salt of the earth” types.

I don’t how the writers do it, but with their penchant for hyperbole, paradox, horror and gratuitous violence, I hope they never decide to write a war-inspired story. Resilient they may be, but I can’t imagine that the people of the south can take much more, even if they are fictional characters.

Thankfully, in the real world, real humans don’t have to be as resilient as people of the fictional nation Jake Z once led to the precipice of Armageddon.

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 ?? ?? Jacob Zuma. Photo: Darren Stewart/gallo Images; Graphic: Midjourney AI; Jocelyn Adamson
Jacob Zuma. Photo: Darren Stewart/gallo Images; Graphic: Midjourney AI; Jocelyn Adamson

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