logo
What's going on with Miss SA 2025? What to know about the pageant's postponement

What's going on with Miss SA 2025? What to know about the pageant's postponement

News246 days ago
The Miss SA 2025 pageant has been postponed.
This comes after the CEO has stepped down.
AFI also celebrated its new strategic journey with the pageant.
_________________________________________________________________
Sweeping changes and uncertainty have clouded the 2025 Miss South Africa (Miss SA) pageant.
The Miss SA Organisation has officially announced a postponement of its annual pageant, much to the confusion of the pageant's entrants and supporters. The finale event usually takes place in August of every year.
The organisation's statement reads, 'The Miss South Africa Organisation today announced the postponement of Miss South Africa from August to a later date in 2025, to ensure greater alignment with international and other global events.'
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Miss South Africa (@official_misssa)
Many were left unsurprised at the news of the postponement, since the delay of the Top 30 announcement raised questions after entries closed in April.
This announcement comes off the back of a number of changes Miss SA has undergone this year.
On 10 July, the organisation revealed that the CEO, Stephanie Weil, has left the organisation and stepped down from her position.
Miss SA's statement read, 'The organisers of Miss South Africa wish Stephanie Weil everything of the best with her new endeavours as an agreement has been reached that Ms Weil will be leaving the organisation after many years as CEO of Miss South Africa.
'Ms Weil will be staying on for as long as is required to ensure a smooth transition to new leadership and to ensure that the best interest of the Miss South Africa organisation are served.'
Africa Fashion International (AFI), the official fashion sponsor of the pageant, has taken the organisation under its wing and emphasised its continued partnership with Miss SA in a statement released on the same day.
'Africa Fashion International (AFI) and the Miss South Africa Organisation are proud members of a larger family owned group of companies, united by a shared vision for creativity and excellence,' AFI's statement read.
'As sister companies, we are excited to embark on this strategic journey together, leveraging our unique strengths to drive growth and innovation.'
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Africa Fashion International (@afi_sa)
In January 2025, Werner Wessels officially stepped down as the creative director of Miss SA, a role where he significantly helped shape the beauty pageant's presence on the global stage.
Werner's tenure included mentoring Miss Universe 2019 Zozibini Tunzi, Miss Supranational 2022 Lalela Mswane and Miss Universe 2017 Demi-Leigh Tebow, as well as being the creative mind behind the pageant's distinct styling and signature shoots.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Werner Wessels (@werner_wessels)
The Miss SA organisation's announcement of the pageant's postponement comes with its notice of expanding the organisation to include entrepreneurship, job creation, cultural awareness and social cohesion.
While 'further announcements will be made soon,' the organisation shares, many are left with confusion at the fate of the pageant's future.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rotterdam Unveils 2025 Hubert Bals Fund Projects
Rotterdam Unveils 2025 Hubert Bals Fund Projects

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Rotterdam Unveils 2025 Hubert Bals Fund Projects

The International Film Festival Rotterdam (IFFR) has unveiled the projects that will receive this year's grants from its Hubert Bals Fund (HBF), which supports films from less-developed regions. The fund picked 15 feature projects from more than 900 submissions, selecting work from filmmakers from across Africa, Asia, the Middle East and the Americas. This year's selection includes the first HBF-backed project from Tanzania, the satire Last Cow from director Amil Shivij, whose feature debut Tug of War screened in Toronto in 2021 and was Tanzania's official Oscar submission. It was picked for this year's Locarno film festival and will screen in the Open Doors sidebar. More from The Hollywood Reporter Imax Quarterly Revenue and Profit Rise Amid Hollywood's Theatrical Comeback Ukrainian, Iranian Docs, Kenyan Sci-Fi Set for Venice Days Lineup Golshifteh Farahani to Receive Locarno Excellence Award Davide Campari Other African projects this year include Mwadia, a magic-realist drama on Mozambique's colonial past and present trauma; the feature debut of documentary filmmaker Inadelso Cossa (The Nights Still Smell of Gunpowder); Tears, the debut feature from Rwandan director Moise Ganza; and Coumba, the new film from Senegalese director Mamadou Dia, whose HBF-backed debut, Nafi's Father, won the Golden Leopard at the 2019 Locarno film festival and was Senegal's official entry for the Oscars. IFFR alumni talent can be found throughout this year's selection, with new features from Syrian director Farida Baqi (The Rapture), Indonesia's Timoteus Anggawan Kusno (Orphaned Atlas), Kazakhstan filmmaker Renata Dzhalo (Nobody to See Us), Malaysian director Amanda Nell Eu (Lotus Feet) and Brazil's Stephanie Ricci (Boca da noite) among the 2025 HBF recipients. The selected directors will receive a €10,000 ($11,760) grant each to help develop their projects into finished features. In addition to its regular fund, the HBF launched two new development schemes this year. Together with two-time Oscar winner Cate Blanchett, the HBF in January announced the Displacement Film Fund, offering grants of €100,000 ($104,000) each to five filmmakers, displaced by war or conflict, to make original shorts. A jury, made up of Blanchett, Wicked star Cynthia Erivo, documentarians Jonas Poher Rasmussen (Flee) and Waad Al-Kateab (For Sama), director Agnieszka Holland (Green Border), Rotterdam festival director Vanja Kaludjercic, activist and refugee Aisha Khurram and Amin Nawabi [alias], the LGBTQ+ asylum seeker who was Rasmussen's inspiration for his Oscar-nominated documentary Flee, announced the first fund grantees in Cannes this year. Also in Cannes, the HBF announced a cooperation with the three leading Brazilian film promotion bodies — Spcine, RioFilme, Projeto Paradiso — launching HBF+Brazil: Co-development Support, a three-year initiative to provide early development funding for up to nine fiction films, with €10,000 ($11,760) grants each. The submission deadline for HBF+Brazil projects, on is Sept. 15. Full list of 2025 Herbert Bals Fund development support projects Amateur, Carlos Díaz Lechuga, Cuba, SpainThe Appalling Human Voice of the Animals, Neritan Zinxhiria, Greece, AlbaniaBoca da noite, Stephanie Ricci, BrazilCoumba, Mamadou Dia, SenegalGirl With a Camera, Xiaoxuan Jiang, Hong Kong, ChinaThe Immigrants, Suman Mukhopadhyay, IndiaLast Cow, Amil Shivji, Tanzania, CanadaLotus Feet, Amanda Nell Eu, MalaysiaMoto, Chris Chong Chan Fui, MalaysiaMwadia, Inadelso Cossa, MozambiqueNobody to See Us, Renata Dzhalo, Kazakhstan, France, MoldovaOrphaned Atlas, Timoteus Anggawan Kusno, IndonesiaThe Rapture, Farida Baqi, Syria, Lebanon, Germany, NetherlandsTears, Moise Ganza, RwandaWhere Shadows Wait, Arya Rothe, India, Italy Best of The Hollywood Reporter The 40 Greatest Needle Drops in Film History The 40 Best Films About the Immigrant Experience Wes Anderson's Movies Ranked From Worst to Best Solve the daily Crossword

Nigeria's C.J. 'Fiery' Obasi Created This Spot, and Two More, for Locarno Pro's Open Doors (Exclusive)
Nigeria's C.J. 'Fiery' Obasi Created This Spot, and Two More, for Locarno Pro's Open Doors (Exclusive)

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Nigeria's C.J. 'Fiery' Obasi Created This Spot, and Two More, for Locarno Pro's Open Doors (Exclusive)

Get ready for a fiery edition of Open Doors, the Locarno Film Festival's Locarno Pro-organized co-production platform and talent development program for filmmakers from regions where artistic expression is at risk! The 23rd edition, the first of a multi-year focus on the African continent, now has a first trailer, created in collaboration with Nigerian director and writer C.J. 'Fiery' Obasi. It is one of three spots that he created and that will be presented before each Open Doors screening and on the festival's social media channels. More from The Hollywood Reporter Rotterdam Unveils 2025 Hubert Bals Fund Projects Imax Quarterly Revenue and Profit Rise Amid Hollywood's Theatrical Comeback Ukrainian, Iranian Docs, Kenyan Sci-Fi Set for Venice Days Lineup Obasi, also known as 'Fiery' or 'The Fiery One,' won the Boccalino d'Oro at Locarno 2021 for his film Juju Stories. His latest film, Mami Wata (2023), premiered at Sundance and became Nigeria's official entry for the 2024 Academy Awards. 'I've been a long-time fan of the Locarno Film Festival and what they stand for within the arthouse cinema world,' said Obasi. 'I thought it would be a cool idea to sort of usher in this new crop of African filmmakers to the glorious Locarno Film Festival with visuals that speak to the diversity of the talent, perspectives, and possibilities that the 42 eligible countries present.' The filmmaker explained the idea behind the clip this way: 'The beautiful flags of the eligible countries are reflected on the faces of the people we see in the spot. I therefore titled The Colors That Bind Us. It's the age-old idea of 'Unity in Diversity' — this time presented through stories and through cinema.' And he highlighted: 'In some of the spots, images of Senegalese writer and director Ousmane Sembène and Malian filmmaker Souleymane Cissé are projected onto the actors' faces and bodies — almost as a way of saying: they're here with us. They are watching us.' The spot was filmed in Kigali, Rwanda. 'Though we originally planned for one, I ended up being so inspired during the shoot that I filmed a couple more ideas with the actors and models,' Obasi explained. 'When I edited the footage, I came up with three 30-second spots instead of just one.'Giona A. Nazzaro, artistic director of the Locarno Film Festival, recalled: 'I first met C.J. Obasi in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso. He was presenting an early version of what would later become Mami Wata, which went on to win at Sundance. His Hello, Rain had struck me like a lightning bolt — an authentic epiphany. We had the pleasure of featuring him in competition with the anthology film Juju Stories, and he later returned to Locarno as a jury member.'Concluded Nazzaro: 'His ability to weave ancestral elements into a contemporary, modernist gaze is unmatched. The way he reimagines African cinema of the past, merging it with the technologies of the present, is undoubtedly one of his most innovative and forward-looking contributions to contemporary filmmaking. The Open Doors trailers were directed and edited by Obasi under his Fiery Film moniker. They were produced by Oge Obasi, with Imitana Productions serving as the line producer. Sound Design is courtesy of The Fiery One, with music by Jean Abbey. 'Following a three-year cycle dedicated to Latin America and the Caribbean, the Open Doors program now turns its attention to the African continent for the upcoming four editions, offering a platform for emerging voices through its Projects, Producers, and Directors programs,' Locarno Pro organizers said. 'Open Doors provides comprehensive training, mentoring, and networking opportunities, alongside public screenings and events during Locarno Pro,' which runs Aug. 7-12 during the 78th edition of the Locarno festival. Check out the first Obasi spot below. Best of The Hollywood Reporter The 40 Greatest Needle Drops in Film History The 40 Best Films About the Immigrant Experience Wes Anderson's Movies Ranked From Worst to Best Solve the daily Crossword

South Africa Approves $5.3 Billion Guarantees for Transnet Debt
South Africa Approves $5.3 Billion Guarantees for Transnet Debt

Bloomberg

time8 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

South Africa Approves $5.3 Billion Guarantees for Transnet Debt

South Africa's government approved 94.8 billion rand ($5.3 billion) in guarantees to further support state-owned rail and port operator Transnet SOC Ltd. The allocation includes 48.6 billion rand to ensure all of the company's debt redemptions will be covered over the next five years, the Department of Transport said in a statement on Sunday. The other 46.2 billion rand is to mitigate the risks of credit-ratings downgrades on Transnet's debt.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store