Temba Bavuma: We just didn’t pitch up today
Proteas captain Temba Bavuma has admitted that his team was outplayed by the Australians in the third and final One Day International, as they went down by a massive 276 runs.
Filmmaker and YouTube creator Dan Mace's latest film is a hard-hitting documentary that dives into the heart of Cape Town’s deadly taxi wars, bringing viewers behind the veil of South Africa’s most volatile transport system.
No stranger to bold storytelling, this could be Mace's most dangerous project to date.
From the corridors of law enforcement to the frontlines of taxi turf battles, Mace weaves a tension-filled narrative that confronts the official system - The City of Cape Town - and the perceived lawlessness - the taxi industry itself.
“This isn’t just a story - it’s a war zone with routes, rifles, and rivalries. We filmed in places most wouldn’t dare go,” says Mace, founder of JOE Films, whose fearless lens turns chaos into cinematic urgency.
With high-stakes access, unflinching interviews, and gritty vérité footage, the film delivers investigative filmmaking at its finest, leaving audiences with racing pulses and serious questions about the power dynamics on South Africa’s roads.
Viewer discretion advised. This is not for the faint-hearted.
Proteas captain Temba Bavuma has admitted that his team was outplayed by the Australians in the third and final One Day International, as they went down by a massive 276 runs.
From the soulful strength of “I Am Enough” to the unfiltered vulnerability of “Cried”, Ranwin Le-Roy has never been afraid to show us his heart.
Rassie van der Dussen was a notable absentee when the Proteas squads for the white ball tour of England was announced Saturday morning, while Prenelan Subrayen has also been left out pending the results of his independent test for suspect bowling action.