Bonang swears at blogger for calling her a 'rent a black' and puppet

28 November 2014 - 13:26 By Times LIVE
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Bonang Matheba showed off her black Range Rover when she uploaded an image to her Instagram account. Queen B said she was pictured with her ride for a photo shoot.
Bonang Matheba showed off her black Range Rover when she uploaded an image to her Instagram account. Queen B said she was pictured with her ride for a photo shoot.
Image: Via Instagram.

Bonang Matheba has broken her own 'no response to criticism' rule to react to a blogger who said she was merely being used as a 'rent a black' and puppet to up publicity for Glamour magazine after they placed her on the cover.

In a litany of tweets, Matheba took on Phil Mphela, a blogger who wrote on his Facebook page that he was unimpressed with Bonang scooping the first black cover of Glamour Magazine South Africa.

Mphela said he would not jump on the bandwagon to 'celebrate' as he did not believe it was worth it.

"I actually found it insulting to black talent that everyone thought this was some history making milestone. Ya'll know I am team Bonang all the way. However, my love and respect for the industry comes first and this racist exploitation of black faces in the magazine industry is abhorrent.

"Black magazines do not pay black celebrities for covers. White magazines only use people like Bonang on their covers when they need publicity...You are all just puppets including people like Bonang who have essentially become "rent a black" talent."

In response, Matheba swore at Mphela, telling him 'o tlo nyela' (you will sh*t) and calling him out for referring to her as a puppet.

 

“I will not allow you to diss black people, including myself, when we already have to work fu**** hard”.

It seems Matheba has since deleted the tweets, which comes as no surprise as she broke her own rule. Speaking to True Love magazine, Matheba said she never responds to criticism, preferring to ignore disparaging tweets, comments and articles.

"I understand the media monster I'm dealing with, I know how it works. I choose not to respond. By responding you make it an even bigger problem. You get misinterpreted. But I won't lie, it really does hurt and affect me," she said.

More tweets from Matheba and Mphela below.

 

 

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