For Coconut Kelz, the stage name for Lesego Thlabi’s award-winning portrayal of a white woman trapped in a black woman’s body, poking fun at privilege offers a robust mode of social critique that digs beneath the surface layer of South African society, revealing the contradictions that continue to shape our disparate realities more than 20 years after the dismantling of apartheid. Thlabi has frequently stated that her goal from the outset of her career was to engage a politically responsive comedy, one that refuses to turn its back on the prejudices and injustices that the vast majority of South Africans face daily.
, was an instant hit and Tali Babes, as she is affectionately known, became a household name. As the streaming views kept climbing, so did her social media following and loyal fan base.
Tali undoubtedly nailed the social media fame game and conquered TV too – and her career was skyrocketing. Soon rumours began to swirl online that the newly married Tali might have a bun in the oven. But the socialite refused to address the rumours until recently when Showmax announced that a second season of Tali s docu-series would be coming to the local streaming service. There’s more to this story