TERRIBLE news, but in what can only be described as a grave insult to South Africa's greatest public intellectual, the television channel Comedy Central Africa has given The Gareth Cliff Show the boot a mere six weeks after it launched because it failed to attract viewers.
This does not necessarily mean the show was rubbish, and I won't judge it on the one excruciatingly awful episode that I saw. In the interest of fairness, I will however point out that its producers went to some lengths to tell us that it was groundbreaking entertainment of an ambitiously derivative blonde sort and perhaps they even believed they were out there on the wilder frontiers of the culture. And why not, given the sort of self-importance that comes with the territory?
Like most TV that passes itself off as edgy and something of an envelope-pusher, the show was built around a deceptively simple premise. Cliff is a popular "radio personality" and youngsters enjoy listening to his witless babble because that is what they believe comedy to be - a lot of rude noise.
So wouldn't it be terrific if there was a TV show or "simulcast", as the professionals in reality programming are wont to call it, where the gormless prattle can be actually be "seen" at source in the form of moving lips and so forth?
A definite winner, the planning types would have thought. Comedy Central Africa moved Cliff to an earlier time-slot at the beginning of June, believing that viewers weren't watching the show because they were stuck in traffic on their way to school - where most of them won't have access to a television anyway. Then they discovered that nobody was watching at 6am either, because the little dears were still fast asleep.
Of course, there could be another reason why our youth don't want to watch Cliff, and that is because they're too busy dreaming about high-paying jobs with the government.