Parody ‘Zol’ song proves popular among South Africans
Updated | By Breakfast with Martin Bester
The government made an unexpected u-turn on the sale of cigarettes last week, saying the sale of tobacco products would remain illegal during level 4 of the lockdown.
Nearly two weeks ago, President Cyril Ramaphosa indicated that the contentious ban on the sale of cigarettes would be lifted when level 4 of the lockdown kicked in.
But that is no longer the case.
Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma pointed out that the smoking of 'zol' also promotes the spread of the coronavirus.
This has left many South Africans hot under the collar.
READ: Heated cigarette ban debate between listeners
“Even those who do zol. Sometimes when they zol they put saliva on the paper and then zol and then share that zol and it means if one of them has the virus, they are moving saliva from one to the other," Dlamini-Zuma said.
This gave South African DJ Max Hurrell the perfect chance to remix the audio into a catchy song widely spread by South Africans.
Show's Stories
-
Proof that children mirror what they see adults doing
This kid tries to drink water like a tequila shot...
The Workzone with Alex Jay 1 year, 2 months ago -
If you fail your driver's exam, don't do what this man did
A man who failed his driver's exam decided to hire a 'body double' to at...
The Workzone with Alex Jay 1 year, 2 months ago