Rathanda, please help. Mabuti Charles Nkomo (29) is sleeping on the streets near John Vorster Police Station in Newtown. He says he has Matric, speaks fluent English, and mentioned siblings Thokozile and Lethabo. If you know his family, please help reunite them.
A character becomes unforgettable when the actor behind it disappears so completely that all you see is the life unfolding on your screen.
That is what Africa Tsoai has achieved.
For years, he has carried the role of John Maputla with conviction, discipline and authenticity, turning an ordinary family man into one of the most recognised characters on South African television. Whether the story demands wisdom, vulnerability, frustration or quiet strength, he delivers every moment with a sincerity that keeps audiences invested.
His journey stretches far beyond Skeem Saam. From his leading performances in Mokgonyana Matswale as Tsokotla to Bophelo ke Semphekgo, Africa Tsoai has consistently demonstrated that lasting success is built on talent, dedication and respect for the craft.
Great actors do more than entertain. They create characters that become part of our daily conversations and memories, reminding us why powerful storytelling matters.
Today, let's celebrate Africa Tsoai for the years of commitment he has given to South African television and for the remarkable performances that continue to inspire audiences across the country. May his journey continue to open even greater doors, and may his legacy keep growing with every role he takes on.
Meet the $3.5K Chinese EV Ram truck! What? I'm sure it has built in cameras to s*py on us 🤣! Would you get one? For that price, I think i will get one! Would you?
.@ishowspeedsui started slow. In 2016, he launched a YouTube channel to publish gaming videos of NBA 2K and Fortnite. Few followed. Five years later he gained momentum when TikToks of his wild gaming outbursts went viral.
He soon pivoted to soccer content, collaborating with superstars including Cristiano Ronaldo. Next came travel content with tours like Speed Does America and the Speed Does Africa.
Read more about this year's #ForbesTopCreators: https://t.co/CzD26jfPM1
📸: Dimitrios Kambouris via Getty Images
In 1940, a pair of identical twin boys were born in Ohio and placed for adoption just weeks after birth. They were sent to different families who had no contact with each other. Neither family knew much about the other. Each set of parents, independently, chose to name their new son James.
The two boys grew up in separate homes, in separate towns, living what appeared to be entirely separate lives. But as researchers would later discover, the parallels running through those lives were almost impossible to believe.
Both boys went by the nickname Jim. Both married a woman named Linda, then divorced her. Both then remarried a woman named Betty. Both had a son and named him James Alan. Both owned a dog at some point in their childhood and gave it the same name: Toy. Both had worked in law enforcement. Both drove the same model of Chevrolet. Both had built a white bench around a tree in their backyard.
Neither Jim knew the other existed until 1979, when they were 39 years old and finally reunited.
The case of James Springer and James Lewis, known ever since as the Jim Twins, became one of the most studied examples in the history of twin research. University of Minnesota researchers used their reunion as a landmark moment in understanding how much of human personality, preference, and behavior is shaped by genetics rather than environment.
Two men raised by strangers in different towns. Same name. Same marriages. Same dog. Same sons. Same bench in the backyard.
Some things, it turns out, run deeper than circumstance.
A 15 year old is trying to get justice for her 6 year old sister who was graped by their transport driver. They live with their grandma, the perpetrator and his sister are threatening them. Im not popular but please share so this lands on the right people.Shes been trying since June.