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How Funny Is The New Africa Correspondent For Trevor Noah's 'Daily Show'?

South African comic Loyiso Madinga in Newtown, Johannesburg.
Nyamekela Nhlabatsi
South African comic Loyiso Madinga in Newtown, Johannesburg.

Trevor Noah isn't the only South African comic on The Daily Show roster.

This year, Comedy Central named some foreign correspondents to contribute to overseas versions of the show. And one of them is Loyiso Madinga, a 31-year-old stand-up comedian.

He'sriffed about interracial dating on South Africa's Got Talent, impersonated an annoying security guard for the comedy sketch show The Bantu Hour and in his one-man show Born Free-ish has poked fun at his strict dad, who hated idle hands: "As soon we saw [his] car coming ... you would just pick up a broom and start sweeping."

For the Africa broadcast of The Daily Show, Madinga covers topics like corruption in the South African government, colonialism and foreign aid. Video clips are uploaded on Comedy Central Africa's Facebook page.

On Tuesday, a new segment featuring Madinga — on China's increasing influence and flow of cash across Africa — was posted to the page. "Are we being colonized, or am I just being paranoid?" asked Madinga, as he walked through a "massive Buddhist temple in the middle of Beiji – I mean, Mpumalanga."

Over afternoon tea in Newtown, a neighborhood in central Johannesburg where Madinga is based, we spoke about African stereotypes and humor and his upbringing in a rural village. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

There are now two South Africans on The Daily Show. Are South Africans that funny?

We've been amazing for a long time across the arts. The [South African comedy] industry is world-class and we've grown so much. Comics fill up parks and theaters and [can] have careers.

You once said some people think Africa is about "bush and tribe and animal [with] war thrown in." What stereotypes do you think Americans have about Africa?

That is the perception of Africa in its entirety. We have disease, we have war and we have tribes and tribalism. The story about Africa and kwashiokor [a kind of deadly malnutrition] sold in the 1970s and the 1980s. The [media keeps] selling it to this day.

The problem, to quote author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, is the danger of a single story.

How can these misconceptions be dismantled?

By everybody being excellent in whatever they do. When Wayde van Niekerk [the world record holder in the 400-meter dash] breaks records, he may not change the entirety of South Africa. But some kid sees what's possible and they reach for that.

By Trevor getting The Daily Show, there are a thousand kids trying to do comedy because they believe in how great they can be. That goes for every sphere.

How do you dismantle those untrue images about Africa?

I don't. I go for the joke, I go for the laugh. I think there's a danger of comedy becoming a funny TED Talk if we're just out there to confront the issue all the time.

You grew up in a rural community. What was that like?

My dad was very strict and a very academic person, being a doctor. We had livestock — chickens, sheep — and fields to take care of. When my brother and I were not working, we enjoyed reading: George Orwell's Animal Farm, Eyes of Buddha by John Ball. I had a simple life. I fetched water from a tank and bathed in a waskom [washing bowl]. It's so quiet you can hear a conversation from about a kilometer away.

Where did you get your sense of humor?

My whole family is funny, including my grandmothers.

Your dad wanted you to get into engineering and medicine. What does he think about you being a comic?

I'm a comic. What is he going to say? My dad enjoys a good laugh but doesn't even like comedy. He doesn't like the idea of people trying to make him laugh.

But you like comedy.

I have always enjoyed making people laugh. I almost got expelled in [12th grade]. I wasn't a bad kid. I was a bit chatty. I want to go back to school and apologize to all my teachers but one.

When I found comedy, I immediately knew that this was I what I wanted. I just wanted to throw myself into it and become really good at it and do it until the day I die. I can do this even at 90 and in a wheelchair.


Shoks Mnisi Mzolo is an independent writer and researcher based in Johannesburg. A former Financial Mail staffer, his byline has appeared in the Mail & Guardian, Sawubona and Straits Times.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Shoks Mnisi Mzolo