• Subscribe to our newsletter
The Media Online
  • Home
  • MOST Awards
  • News
    • Awards
    • Media Mecca
  • Print
    • Newspapers
    • Magazines
    • Publishing
  • Broadcasting
    • TV
    • Radio
    • Cinema
    • Video
  • Digital
    • Mobile
    • Online
  • Agencies
    • Advertising
    • Media agency
    • Public Relations
  • OOH
    • Events
  • Research & Education
    • Research
    • Media Education
      • Media Mentor
  • Press Office
    • Press Office
    • TMO.Live Blog
    • Events
    • Jobs
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • MOST Awards
  • News
    • Awards
    • Media Mecca
  • Print
    • Newspapers
    • Magazines
    • Publishing
  • Broadcasting
    • TV
    • Radio
    • Cinema
    • Video
  • Digital
    • Mobile
    • Online
  • Agencies
    • Advertising
    • Media agency
    • Public Relations
  • OOH
    • Events
  • Research & Education
    • Research
    • Media Education
      • Media Mentor
  • Press Office
    • Press Office
    • TMO.Live Blog
    • Events
    • Jobs
No Result
View All Result
The Media Online
No Result
View All Result
Home Broadcasting Television

Eish, another documentary? Yes, and we need it

Perspective is not a stylistic flourish. It is the spine (of the story).

by Renaldo Schwarp
October 6, 2025
in Television
0 0
0
Eish, another documentary? Yes, and we need it
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

South Africans know oversupply. Everyone’s got a braai – not all of them worth lighting the fire for. Everyone’s got a rugby hot take – not all worth hearing. And now, it feels like every other week there’s a new documentary dropping into our feeds, each one branded “unmissable.”

The reflex is understandable: roll your eyes, sigh, “Eish, not another one.”

But here’s the thing. The problem isn’t abundance. The problem is that too many of these films have forgotten the one thing that makes a documentary matter.

Not access, not polish – but perspective.

I’ve watched hours of raw footage collapse under the weight of good intentions. I’ve sat in boardrooms where executives mistake glossy visuals for depth, and more recently, as a juror for the International Emmy Awards, I’ve judged projects with all the right credentials (big subjects, big names, big budgets) that still evaporate. Forgettable as last week’s news ticker.

Because subject alone cannot carry a film. Perspective can. And when South African filmmakers get this right, the results are undeniable.

Take School Ties* (M-Net). On paper, it’s a study of our education system. But what makes it cut is the texture: a pause, an unspoken tension, the way perspectives refract until the subject is no longer just “schools.” Suddenly it’s about belonging, secrecy, and the quiet violence of power. You don’t just watch it; you feel implicated.

Or Chasing the Sun 2* (SuperSport), the Springbok saga’s sequel. It could’ve been a chest-thumping montage of tries and tackles. Instead, it digs. The crack in a coach’s voice. A jersey stitched with history, pride, and fracture. The film refuses to let rugby be “just a game.” It becomes a vessel for identity, trauma, resilience.

Both films prove my point: access is not intimacy. Information is not insight. Empathy cannot be manufactured in post-production; it’s earned by sitting inside the mess, letting contradiction and nuance do the heavy lifting.

As I recently re-discovered; perspective is not a stylistic flourish. It is the spine. Without it, even the grandest subject shrivels. With it, the smallest gesture (a look, a silence, a smirk) can shift culture.

I know this not only from watching but from making. In Young, Gifted & Queer, my latest documentary, the truth wasn’t in the polished sit-down interviews or sweeping cultural arguments. It was in a hand squeeze before coming out to family. In a laugh that cut through the heaviness. Those details carried more cultural weight than any statistic. They revealed not only what was happening, but what it feels like to live it.

And this is where South African storytellers have an edge, and it seems my fellow International Emmys juror tends to agree. We are a nation of jagged histories, layered identities, unresolved griefs. Our best documentaries don’t chase international trends – they tell stories from the marrow outwards. They don’t flatten. They cut to the bone.

So no, there aren’t “too many” documentaries. There are too many without teeth.

* School Ties is a 2025 International Emmy finalist for Best Documentary, while Chasing the Sun 2 is nominated in the Sports Documentary category. Winners will be announced on November 24, 2025, at the ceremony in New York.

Renaldo Schwarp is a journalist, filmmaker, and senior content strategist. He has created two award-winning documentaries, including his latest Young, Gifted & Queer currently streaming on Showmax. Schwarp was also recently selected as a juror for the 2025 International Emmy® Awards. His work spans storytelling across TV, digital, and film, with a focus on culture and identity.


 

Tags: Chasing the Sun 2documentariesdocumentaryDSTVEmmy AwardsfilmmakingM-NetRenaldo SchwarpSchool TiesSuperSport

Renaldo Schwarp

Renaldo Schwarp is the Digital Lead at Jacaranda FM. He is also a weekend host on the station and presents a show on Afrikaans TV channel kykNET & Kie. He has previously worked as a content producer and strategist for news and lifestyle titles within the Media24 stable.

Follow Us

  • twitter
  • threads
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Kelders van Geheime: The characters are here

Kelders van Geheime: The characters are here

March 22, 2024
Dissecting the LSM 7-10 market

Dissecting the LSM 7-10 market

May 17, 2023
Keri Miller sets the record straight after being axed from ECR

Keri Miller sets the record straight after being axed from ECR

April 23, 2023
Getting to know the ES SEMs 8-10 (Part 1)

Getting to know the ES SEMs 8-10 (Part 1)

February 22, 2018
Sowetan proves that sex still sells

Sowetan proves that sex still sells

105
It’s black. It’s beautiful. It’s ours.

Exclusive: Haffajee draws a line in the sand over racism

98
The Property Magazine and Media Nova go supernova

The Property Magazine and Media Nova go supernova

44
Warrant of arrest authorised for Media Nova’s Vaughan

Warrant of arrest authorised for Media Nova’s Vaughan

41
Eish, another documentary? Yes, and we need it

Eish, another documentary? Yes, and we need it

October 6, 2025
G20 takes up media-related concerns

G20 takes up media-related concerns

October 6, 2025
Google dodges anti-trust bullet

Google dodges anti-trust bullet

October 6, 2025
Sunday World sold

Sunday World sold

October 3, 2025

Recent News

Eish, another documentary? Yes, and we need it

Eish, another documentary? Yes, and we need it

October 6, 2025
G20 takes up media-related concerns

G20 takes up media-related concerns

October 6, 2025
Google dodges anti-trust bullet

Google dodges anti-trust bullet

October 6, 2025
Sunday World sold

Sunday World sold

October 3, 2025

ABOUT US

The Media Online is the definitive online point of reference for South Africa’s media industry offering relevant, focused and topical news on the media sector. We deliver up-to-date industry insights, guest columns, case studies, content from local and global contributors, news, views and interviews on a daily basis as well as providing an online home for The Media magazine’s content, which is posted on a monthly basis.

Follow Us

  • twitter
  • threads

ARENA HOLDING

Editor: Glenda Nevill
glenda.nevill@cybersmart.co.za
Sales and Advertising:
Tarin-Lee Watts
wattst@arena.africa
Download our rate card

OUR NETWORK

TimesLIVE
Sunday Times
SowetanLIVE
BusinessLIVE
Business Day
Financial Mail
HeraldLIVE
DispatchLIVE
Wanted Online
SA Home Owner
Business Media MAGS
Arena Events

NEWSLETTER SUBSCRIPTION

 
Subscribe
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Copyright © 2015 - 2023 The Media Online. All rights reserved. Part of Arena Holdings (Pty) Ltd

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • MOST Awards
  • News
    • Awards
    • Media Mecca
  • Print
    • Newspapers
    • Magazines
    • Publishing
  • Broadcasting
    • TV
    • Radio
    • Cinema
    • Video
  • Digital
    • Mobile
    • Online
  • Agencies
    • Advertising
    • Media agency
    • Public Relations
  • OOH
    • Events
  • Research & Education
    • Research
    • Media Education
      • Media Mentor
  • Press Office
    • Press Office
    • TMO.Live Blog
    • Events
    • Jobs

Copyright © 2015 - 2023 The Media Online. All rights reserved. Part of Arena Holdings (Pty) Ltd

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?