The Twitter account has made the effort to monitor the billionaire’s movements, as well as his flight data, which led him to make some changes.
Rolls-Royce, one the biggest players in the luxury automobile game, has released its first “super coupe” – a fully electric two-door vehicle.
Who knew that playing games with the financial system would lead Boris Becker down a path to becoming a health and wellness shaman?
The South African model has been doing her thing again, posing it up in a range of costumes designed by herself for the launch of her new resort collection.
‘Now Twitter is alight with stories about his prima donna antics seeping into his work at ‘The Late Late Show With James Corden’.
It has become so bad that the JSE-listed residential property developer Calgro M3 is trying to pull out of KZN entirely, hoping to trade out two projects it has already started.
Whenever the Earth’s population comes up as a topic of discussion, it almost always raises eyebrows and conjures a sense of genuine concern for many people.
Things changed in the early hours of this morning (October 18) following more breakdowns at Eskom’s power stations.
Mansa Musa wasn’t afraid to show off his wealth, even embarking on a lavish pilgrimage to Mecca with a flurry of decorated fans.
The pharmaceutical giant may be navigating choppy waters, however, its captain and leader Ivan Saltzman is hoping to use the winds of change to sail through this storm.
The 81-year-old rocked nothing but a simple white apron in a promotional video for Green Mountain Coffee, making waves on social media with her thirst trap.
Today we’re celebrating three South African women who achieved under-the-radar gold medals this year.
September was a bumper month for local manufacturers selling vehicles abroad. Ford, in particular, will be chuffed.
For years, it’s been an open secret that David Beckham, OBE (Order of the British Empire), would love to be Sir David Beckham.
Netflix said in 2019 that it would remain advertising-free but a number of factors have led to a walking-back of that promise.
When the Supreme Court of Appeal ruled on the long-running trademark dispute between Polo South Africa and Ralph Lauren earlier this year, we thought that was the end of that. We were wrong.
Globally, if you want to rank among the top 1% of earners, you need to be pulling in serious dough. In South Africa, the world’s most unequal society, that’s not exactly the case.
After load shedding was suspended over the weekend, interrupting our longest continuous run in history, it’s back to business as usual.
Prinsloo and his colleague, Lloyd Mtombeni, became overnight heroes last May when they prevented a potential cash-in-transit heist.
Diane Hendricks had a child at age 17, worked as a Playboy Bunny to pay her bills, and beat cancer twice en route to racking up her riches.
This week, Damien Hirst began burning hundreds of his own artworks after selling a series of non-fungible tokens (NFTs).
Heidi and her daughter, Leni, starred in a campaign for Intimissimi, an Italian label most famous for its lingerie range.
She said she is quite happy to still be in New York, despite being on house arrest, burdened by an ankle monitor, and banned from social media.
FNB’s redesigned logo launched last week and it’s fair to say the general reaction leant heavily towards ridicule.
Pretending to lead a glamorous life on social media is basically par for the course these days but it was a different story in 1998.
Jeffrey Dahmer kept a few horrendous souvenirs from his multiple killings, which included a series of infamous, and truly disturbing Polaroid photos that he kept next to his bed.
Christo Wiese and Markus Jooste are never going to share a friendly beer again and the former has some choice words for his one-time protégé.
HBO’s star-studded social satire is taking us along for a Sicilian vacay with a whole new cast and all of the usual drama.
The device found under the driver’s seat of Eskom CEO André de Ruyter is either a sophisticated bugging tool or something as routine as a panic button.
The group is going for the publisher of the Daily Mail’s jugular, alleging scandalous breaches of privacy, such as phone tapping, car burglaries, and bugging their homes.