ZANEWS (now also known as Puppet Nation ZA) is a South African satirical puppet show first produced in 2008 by Both Worlds, a Cape Town based production company. The show is a daily and weekly satirical news programme in the form of a mock puppet television newscast and features on both the web and TV. ZANEWS features key local and international political figures and celebrities. For eight seasons, ZANEWS has been using its puppet cast as mouthpieces for satirical commentary on South Africa's public space.[1]

ZANEWS
Behind the scenes of a Tata & Tutu shoot with puppets of Nelson Mandela and Archbishop Desmond Tutu
Also known asPuppet Nation ZA
GenrePolitical satire
Created byJonathan Shapiro and Thierry Cassuto
Written byKaren Jeynes, Gilli Apter, Nkuli Sibeko Thierry Cassuto
Directed byAlex Fynn
Country of originSouth Africa
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons9
Production
Executive producersJonathan Shapiro and Thierry Cassuto
Production companyBoth Worlds
Original release
NetworkStar1 on StarSat

Inspired by the cult British television series Spitting Image along with the French equivalent, Les Guignols,[2] ZANEWS has been aired on the web and TV since 2009 on a range of media platforms, the most prolific of these being the show's online presence.[3] The show's motto of 'Make Laugh. Not War’ has perpetuated the show's portrayal of South African and international politicians and celebrities in its news format. The show is the only South African satirical puppet show, but is somewhat similar to the Kenyan produced The XYZ Show.[4]

In September 2016 it was announced that Puppet Nation ZA was a nominee for Best TV Comedy in the 44th International Emmy Awards.

History and development edit

ZANEWS started in 1997 when French producer Thierry Cassuto and South African cartoonist Jonathan Shapiro with the help of Jeffrey Fineberg from Spitting Image[5] made their first puppet of former South African president Nelson Mandela. "Shapiro was invited to a farewell garden party and sneaked the Mandela puppet in. He approached Mandela, much to the mirth of the members of government and politicians present and extended the puppet’s hand. Mandela didn’t miss a beat of course and shook the puppet’s hand saying: ‘Oh, I believe I have met this gentleman before’".[5]

The show launched its first season on the ZANEWS website and YouTube with the assistance of low cost airline Kulula.com. Cassuto and Zapiro spent years trying to shop ZANEWS to a variety of broadcasters. The show was commissioned by the national broadcaster but when they demanded editorial control the deal fell apart. “People aren’t ready for this,” was the message they got time and time again.[6] And this was incorporated into the script and the show's slogan of ‘Why are we doing this? Because here we can!'[7]

The storylines of Season 1 to 8 have developed along the lines of current news stories and events, with more characters being added to the show’s lineup. The eighth season of ZANEWS began in November 2014. The show's YouTube channel has over 4 million hits to date. ZANEWS is produced South Africa with puppet caricatures of mostly local politicians, celebrities and the everyman, bringing audiences a mix of the latest and most current events, parodying the formulaic style of media broadcasting.[8]

In 2012 the show began airing on TopTV's channel Top One,[5] a South African satellite TV service. hey also launched a bigger website, ‘ZANEWS Network’, meant to be the online portal for quality South African satire. The site hosts their weekly episodes and daily videos shows as well as the best satirical columns, fake news, cartoons and user-generated content. In the same year the co-creator of Spitting Image, Roger Law made a documentary for BBC Radio 4, entitled South Africa Spits Back. Law visited ZANEWS in South Africa to find out just how 'colourful comedy can get in the Rainbow Nation'.[9]

In November 2013, the show started its sixth season on StarSat (formerly TopTV) under the new title Puppet Nation. ZA[10]

Production edit

Shows are recorded and produced at the Both World's studios in Cape Town.[11] All departments, from management, writers, crew, and fabrication along with post-production and on-line management are found on these premises.

Puppet Nation is structured as a 30-minute news show and the turnaround time from script to online / televised broadcast is three working days, which means ZANEWS is able to produce a weekly news show that is extremely current, with close to 80 puppet caricatures of local and international celebrities. Justice Malala and Debora Patta host the show.

The characters consist predominantly of South African politicians with a growing number of international celebrities and sports personalities joining the ranks each year, namely individuals that would be likely to feature in the general news, the show is therefore structured as such.[5]

When the show first began, Tim Modise, as the news anchor, with the ‘ZANEWS team’, investigates the top stories of the day and interviews and engages with a number of prominent South African and foreign politicians, celebrities and sports stars as a news show would.[12] He was joined in Season 5 by firebrand reporter Debora Patta (whose strange orange skin tone the show makes fun of)[13] then by popular political analyst Justice Malala in season 6.

Separated from the news show is the Tata and Tutu skit which involves a parody of Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu discussing the events of the day but also offering their opinions on these current issues and regarded as the 'moral voices'.[7][12]

On a number of occasions, the puppet cast has been joined by well known comedians along with their real-life counterparts. Season 4 saw a number of these ‘in the flesh’ shows in which certain politicians and celebrities featured in the show along with their puppet counterparts. Most striking of these episodes were those of Premier of the Western Cape and official opposition leader Helen Zille[14] and, at the other end of the political spectrum, Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU)’s General Secretary Zwelinzima Vavi, who interacted with their puppet counterparts.[5] News anchor Tim Modise, radio DJ Gareth Cliff, sportsman Pieter de Villiers and comedians Riaad Moosa, Marc Lottering and Nik Rabinowitz also featured on the show.

In 2010 ZANEWS collaborated with a South African band Freshlyground on their music video for their song "Chicken To Change".[15] The video was nominated for "Music Video of the Year" at the 17th Annual South African Music Awards (SAMA) sponsored by MTN.[16] The government of Zimbabwe banned Freshlyground over the music video because it portrays its president Robert Mugabe as a chicken afraid to relinquish power.[17]

In August 2014 ZANEWS released a parody of ‘Wrecking Ball’[18] by Miley Cyrus. The video starred the puppet of South Africa's Public Protector, Thuli Madonsela, and the lyrics were written by popular South African comedian, Deep Fried Man. The video received over 122 000 views between its release and February 2015 and received massive media attention, with Thuli Madonsela herself discussing it on eNCA.

Broadcast dates edit

Series

Season Year Dates No. episodes
Season 1 2008 - 2009 6 Oct '10 - 18 Dec '09 44 Ep
Season 2 2010 23 Feb - 28 May 51 Ep
Season 3 2010 7 Sep - 26 Nov 48 Ep
Season 4 2011 - 2012 6 Sep - 9 March 70 Ep
Season 5 2012 - 2013 7 Aug - 1 March 100 Ep
Season 6 2013 - 2014 9 Nov - 4 May
Season 7 2014 10 May - 1 Nov
Season 8 2014 - 2015 8 Nov - 2 May
Season 9 2015 9 May - 31 Oct

Since 2009 the show has been broadcast through a variety of media platforms. These are on certain television channels, Summit TV, TopTV and Cape Town TV.[19] And the show has its own home on the ZANEWS website, YouTube channel, Twitter and Facebook page.

In 2012 ZANEWS started their new website, which featured satirical content from all around South Africa. The site became more interactive, with visitors being able to sign up as 'Bloody Agents' and featuring columns from 'Agent Provocateurs' such as Andrew Donaldson, Chester Missing, Ndumiso Ngcobo, Marianne Thamm, Ben Trovato and Political Agony Aunt Zama Ndlovu. The site also featured satirical cartoons from Zapiro, Brandan and Gado.

Awards edit

2010: Adfocus Newsmaker of the year[20]
2010: South African Blog Awards: Winner, Best South African Podcast Video Blog[21]
2010: Bookmark Awards: Best Online Video, Best use of Video/Audio (incl. podcasts)[22]
2010: Handspring Awards for Puppetry: Best Design[23]
2011: DMMA Bookmark Awards: Silver Winner in Category: Editorial (media- news, magazines, radio and TV stations/networks), Bronze Winner in Category: Podcasts and Videocasts[24]
2011: South African Blog Awards: Runner up in Best Political Category Awards[25]
2012: Bookmark Awards: Best Editorial Team
2012: Bookmarks: Bronze in Core Award for Websites/Microsites/Mobisites – Specialist Publisher Sites
2012: Bookmarks: Bronze in Integrated/Mixed Media – Multi-platform Publisher
2012: Bookmarks: Silver Craft Award for Editorial[26]
2013: South African Film and Television Awards: Best Ensemble in a TV Comedy
2013: SAFTAs: Best Editor of a TV Comedy
2013: SAFTAs: Best Art Direction of a TV Comedy[27]
2014 South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAS) – Best TV Comedy
2014 South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAS) - Best Director in a TV Comedy
2014 South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAS) – Best Writing Team in a TV Comedy
2015 Bookmark Awards: Gold in Core Award for Websites/Microsites/Mobisites – Specialist Publisher Sites [28]
2015 Bookmark Awards: Best Editorial Team
2015 South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAS) - Best TV Comedy [29]
2015 South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAS) - Best Achievement in Directing – TV Comedy
2015 South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAS) -Best Achievement in Sound – TV Comedy
2015 South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAS) -Best Achievement in Original Score -TV Comedy
2015 South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAS) -Best Achievement in Art Design Production – TV Comedy
2015 South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAS) -Best Achievement in Make-Up and Hair Styling – TV Comedy
2015 South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAS) -Best Achievement in Costume Design – TV Comedy

In October 2015 it was announced that Puppet Nation ZA was a nominee for Best TV Comedy in the 43rd International Emmy Awards.

References edit

  1. ^ Davis, Rebecca (5 August 2012). "ZA News: Return of the puppets". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  2. ^ Davis, Rebecca. "ZA News: Return of the puppets | Daily Maverick". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  3. ^ Waal, Mandy De. "ZA News and the irony of local satire facing extinction | Daily Maverick". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  4. ^ "'No one is safe, but everyone is welcome': ZANews now on TV - Memeburn". Memeburn. 2011-09-02. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  5. ^ a b c d e de Waal, Mandy (2011-03-03). "ZA News and the irony of local satire facing extinction". Daily Maverick. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  6. ^ Listening Post. "Greece: Is the media part of the problem? - Listening Post". Al Jazeera English. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  7. ^ a b "Cnn Visits Zanews Studios". YouTube. 2010-06-01. Retrieved 2013-04-09.
  8. ^ "Africa | SA launches satire in cyberspace". BBC News. 2009-10-08. Retrieved 2013-04-09.
  9. ^ "BBC Radio 4 - South Africa Spits Back". Bbc.co.uk. 2013-03-30. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  10. ^ "Puppet Nation ZA aired this weekend". www.bizcommunity.com. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  11. ^ "ZA News: A Molotov cocktail in the making | News | National | Mail & Guardian". Mg.co.za. 2009-10-06. Retrieved 2013-04-09.
  12. ^ a b "Internet goes where TV fears to tread with ZA News". News24. Retrieved 2022-11-20.
  13. ^ "Debora Patta puppet to join ZA News". News24.
  14. ^ Theresa Smith (2011-12-02). "Zille in on being butt of ZANews joke - Tonight TV & Radio". IOL.co.za. Retrieved 2013-04-09.
  15. ^ "Freshlyground & ZA NEWS - Chicken to Change (OFFICIAL RELEASE)". YouTube. 2010-09-01. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  16. ^ Marshall, Anton. "Best Video 2011 Sama noms". Channel24. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  17. ^ Laing, Aislinn (2010-09-10). "Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe bans Freshlyground music group over 'chicken' song". Telegraph. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  18. ^ "Thuli Madonsela - Wrecking Ball". YouTube. 2014-08-04. Retrieved 2015-04-28.
  19. ^ Munyaradzi Vomo (2011-04-14). "ZA News treading water - Tonight TV & Radio". IOL.co.za. Retrieved 2013-04-09.
  20. ^ "Adfocus – Financial Mail " Blog Archive " Sampson wins AdFocus Lifetime Achievement plaudit". Adfocus.co.za. 2010-11-25. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  21. ^ "SA Blog Awards". SA Blog Awards. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  22. ^ "Bookmarks 2010 winners showcase growth, vibrancy of SA online media". DMMA. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  23. ^ "Growing the Industry - Handspring Puppet Company". Handspringpuppet.co.za. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  24. ^ "Bookmarks Awards 2011 Winners!". DMMA. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  25. ^ "SA Blog Awards". SA Blog Awards. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  26. ^ "The Bookmarks: Celebrating excellence in digital media". The Media Online. 2012-11-02. Retrieved 2013-04-22.
  27. ^ "The 2013 Non-Fiction & Technical SAFTA winners List". allafricancinema. 2013-03-16. Retrieved 2013-04-09.
  28. ^ "IAB SA ANNOUNCES 2015 BOOKMARKS AWARDS WINNERS". IAB. 2015-02-19. Retrieved 2015-04-28.
  29. ^ "South African Film & Television Awards Winners 2015" (PDF). NFVF. 2015-02-19. Retrieved 2015-04-28.

External links edit