Several radio stations have given their drive-time shows a shake-up as the national average of time spent listening to radio drops. Matebello Motloung reports.
Some big-name media professionals have recently taken to blogging. Matthew Buckland reports.
<i>City Press</i> editor Mathatha Tsedu’s vision of creating a "distinctly African" newspaper is finally paying off. For the first time in four years, it sold more than 200,000 copies. Matebello Motloung asks him why this strategy failed with the <i>Sunday Times</i> and where he is taking his newspaper.
Fred Khumalo reminisces about the good old days of typewriters and wonders he should bow to pressure to start his own blog. <
A well-known research company is contemplating a study that looks into the similarities between blacks and Afrikaners, which are many, according to Matebello Motloung. She touches on some she’s picked up over the years.
Congress of South African Trade Unions president Willie Madisha confirmed on Wednesday that he had handed over a R500 000 donation to South African Communist Party general secretary Blade Nzimande. ”I am willing to go to the courts to prove that indeed this did happen,” Madisha said.
Since she was sacked, former deputy minister of health Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge has received unprecedented support. This reflects respect for her work in the health portfolio and serious concern about the manner in which the president exercised executive power when he fired her, writes Fatima Hassan and Mark Heywood.
Financial markets the world over are once again in turmoil. The successive international financial crises of the 1990s, and of 2001, demonstrated that we live in an age of volatility. These events prompted emerging market economies to work hard to improve their national balance sheets by adjusting their fiscal, monetary and exchange rate policies, and to promote economic diversification, writes Lesetja Kganyago.
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At the very moment when it should be offering a different approach to politics, the SACP has got itself into a right pickle on the money front. With Thabo Mbeki doing his very best King Lear impression — minus the truculent daughters, but replete with one-eyed errors of judgement — SACP general secretary Blade Nzimande is no less on the back foot.