73-year-old Gavin Watson, the CEO of Bosasa, has been killed in a car accident.
What do you do after two terms as president of the US? Apparently, you drop a massive amount of money on a very fancy house.
Just when you think you might have seen the back of load shedding, it looks set to rear its ugly head once more.
You may want to settle in, because any list of Trump’s gaffes is going to be a lengthy one. It’s quite something to see them strung together like this.
The Administrative Adjudication of Road Traffic Offences Bill includes a demerit system that could hold serious implications for South African motorists.
Hong Kong residents feel that their democratic freedoms are under threat, and they aren’t going down without a fight.
Thanks to a new law recently signed into existence, millions of South Africans could find themselves debt-free.
During a rally in Manchester, New Hampshire yesterday, Donnie was quick to attack a protester about his weight.
When law enforcement searched the New York home of Jeffrey Epstein, they were greeted by a rather strange painting of Bill Clinton.
Minister of Health Zweli Mkhize has proposed a bill that would bring universal health care to South Africa, which has led to some angry responses.
John Oliver had a lot to say in his Sunday episode about one of the world’s most outlandish leaders.
Epstein was “unresponsive” when he was discovered in his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center at around 6:30AM on Saturday.
When news broke that Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in his cell over the weekend, the conspiracy theorists went into overdrive.
Zelda la Grange met Nelson Mandela for the first time in the Presidential Office in 1994, and spent much of the next 19 years by his side.
As America processes yet more mass shootings, one man’s response to a debate about gun violence has become a trending meme.
Turkmenistan’s president is alive and well, and performing various bizarre acts in a video designed to show his country that he is not dead.
The rest of the world has spent the last few days watching America react to more deadly mass shootings, and Trevor can’t quite make sense of it all.
Richard Poplak, the Daily Maverick’s most sharp-tongued assassin, has really gone to town on what he reckons is the slow death of South African democracy.
The latest entry to the illustrious club is New South Wales minister for sport, John Sidoti, who clearly needs to brush up on his football skills.
Hearing this October 1971 exchange between the then-current American president and a future president is pretty jarring.
Donald loves to play the blame game, with Barack Obama an easy punching bag. Surely he can’t be serious about the White House aircon, though?
Everybody knows about the 27s and the 28s, but what about the gangsterism in the highest offices of the land?
Apparently, Donald Trump was not only a first responder at the World Trade Centre on 9/11, he even “helped a little bit”. Enter the memes.
John Oliver and ‘Last Week Tonight’ returned with a bang, focusing on how Boris Johnson has succeeded – “not despite his bumbling persona, but often because of it”.
At the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) meeting this weekend, the gloves really came off. At least Ramaphosa feels like he’s sitting pretty.
Steps to make land expropriation without compensation a reality were put on hold during the national elections, but now they’re back on track.
Boris Johnson is officially the UK’s new Prime Minister, which necessitates a meeting with the Queen and saying a few words about the “doomsters and gloomsters” out there.
On Tuesday night, Trump appeared at a student summit hosted by the conservative group Turning Point USA. Somebody managed to slip a different seal under the radar.
It appears that Home Affairs officials all over the country don’t believe that women have a right to keep their birth surnames when they get married.
Almost three months after Mueller’s Special Counsel released its report into Russia’s election interference and possible obstruction of justice by President Trump, he will publicly testify in front of Congress.