STRANGE reports reach us at the Mahogany Ridge from crusty Kelvin Grove, the Newlands playground of vintage toff totty, the gin-blossomed classes and the elite of Bournemouth.
It was here that Julius Malema launched an alleged "charm offensive" at a Cape Town Press Club function on Thursday and called on his largely white and somewhat aged audience to bankroll opposition political parties in order to prevent the country from collapsing into a one-party state.
Malema was echoing an earlier appeal for donations by Western Cape Premier Helen Zille to bolster the Democratic Alliance's court review into the National Prosecution Authority's 2009 decision to drop corruption charges against President Jacob Zuma on the eve of elections because of possible political interference.
Given that Zille is probably Waspish Kelvin's number one pin-up model, the Economic Freedom Fighters commander-in-chief was always going to win over his audience as he came out to bat 100 percent for the white Madam and her party which had spent about R10m in court battles to get their hands on the tapes.
As he put it, "[Zuma's] troubles are too many. Helen Zille is on his neck with the (spy) tapes, asking for money. Please give her money!
"Democracy must be financed. I am saying because we're meeting here in a building that reflects old money, my suspicion is that there might be some money here and therefore we'll have to tap into those coffers and get some resources, not for EFF but for democracy . . . Let's support parties that are going to give the ANC hell in parliament - for the next five years they must know it's not going to be an easy thing."