There’s a reason why we hate Azande on Inimba.
It takes a great actor and a great script to create a villain so convincing that viewers struggle to separate fiction from reality.
For me, Siya Raymond’s portrayal of Azande is his best performance and the biggest highlight of his career so far. It’s the way he carries the character, the mannerisms, and everything that goes into fully embodying him.
His performance truly stands out, and as much as I hate to admit it, I can’t wait to see what more evil Azande does to make us loathe him even more and keep us talking as viewers. 😂
I love villains, but I draw the line at Azande. 😭😭🤚🏼
#InimbaMzansi
Boy mom discourse is born from women thinking mothers owe more solidarity to other women than their own sons. Girl dad is a compliment while boy mom is an insult.
On my way to church this morning, I saw so many runners on the road, without rain coats. And I knew that indeed, when you really want it, consistency and discipline take new forms.🔥🤟🏾🏋🏿♀️
Before you take any drastic decisions, remember how SABC 3 fired Katlego Maboe for cheating because her girlfriend decided to come to social media. They had to reinstate him . That's why is going to happen here.
The Lion, the Ants, and the Empty Feast
(An Aesop’s Fable for Shoprite and its Riders)
Once upon a time, a mighty Lion built a great feast for the forest.
He promised every creature a meal — fast, hot, and on time.
To make it work, he called upon the Ants, small and tireless,
to carry crumbs from dawn till dusk.
At first, the Ants were eager.
They sang songs of purpose, believing they were building something great.
But soon, the crumbs grew lighter, the path grew longer,
and the Lion’s roar — once a call to pride —
became a whip of pressure and impossible speed.
The Ants began to leave.
They were replaced by wanderers from faraway lands
who worked harder, longer, and for less. Often died.
The Lion looked at his feast — still grand, still fast —
and smiled as if nothing was wrong.
But the forest whispered:
“The feast looks full, yet the hands that built it are empty.”
In time, the Lion learned — too late —
that no empire stands on weary legs,
and no business thrives when its builders are broken.
A kingdom that forgets its workers will one day
have no one left to serve its table.
Moral:
A company that boasts of scale while its people struggle is not growing — it’s leaking.
True leadership begins not in the roar from the top,
but in the quiet dignity of those carrying the load below.