There are some South African online moments that feel tailor-made for group chats, and this is one of them.
This week, Sizwe Dhlomo had social media in stitches after weighing in on Julius Malema’s courtroom behaviour with a sharp, cheeky line that instantly got people talking. His now-viral comment, “Dr Maweni hard at work,” turned a serious public moment into a very South African internet joke that landed because everyone immediately understood the reference.
Malema’s latest court appearance was already drawing attention, with many South Africans following the proceedings and discussing his demeanour in and around the courtroom. Then Dhlomo arrived with one line, and the mood online shifted. It was classic Sizwe: dry, playful, and perfectly timed.
Impande ihleli ngaphansi kolimi. Lol! https://t.co/yKI2775XJr
— Sizwe Dhlomo (@SizweDhlomo) April 15, 2026
That is part of why the comment travelled so fast. He has built a reputation for saying the thing many people are already thinking, but in a way that feels half observation, half punchline. In a country where politics, celebrity culture, and online banter often overlap, that kind of comment does not just trend. It explodes.
The Dr Maweni reference was clearly made as a joke, and that is exactly how many social media users took it. The line played into the kind of exaggerated, meme-driven humour South Africans love, especially when a public figure’s body language or behaviour suddenly becomes the centre of online speculation.
It also helps that local audiences are deeply fluent in this kind of humour. South African social media has its own language, rhythm, and cultural shorthand. A comment does not need to be long to become a talking point. Sometimes one sentence is enough.
