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One moment on social media, one line that lit up comment sections across South Africa. When Sizwe Dhlomo, noted media personality and host of “Siz The World” on Kaya 959, was asked how one gets rich quickly, his reply was short and cheeky: “Be born an heir.” That off-the-cuff answer captured the mood perfectly and sent South Africans clicking, laughing, and reflecting in equal measure.
What He Actually Said
In late September 2025, a follower on social media asked Dhlomo for a way to achieve fast money. Instead of charts, plans, or investment advice, his answer was simple and pointed: inherit wealth. In other words, it is the compression of decades of hustle into one joke. The clip was shared widely, and readers responded with jokes of their own, memes, and commentary riffing off that line.
Mzansi’s Reaction: From Jokes to Reality Checks
Scrolling through comments under the post, you’ll find humour but also a sense of frustration. One user quipped, “How do you choose to be born an heir?” Others weighed in with the lived reality of many South Africans: building from scratch, maybe supporting extended families, trying to catch up. Some celebrated Dhlomo’s honesty; others pointed out that his biography is one of privilege, land plots, luxury property, and a media career, so the “heir” line lands differently depending on where you sit.
Why This Struck a Nerve
To many, wealth in South Africa is tightly bound with family ties, inheritance, land, and generational advantage. South Africa’s history of economic inequality makes that one-liner land hard—because for many, it’s not a joke; it’s a summary of reality. Dhlomo himself has previously posted pictures of vast land holdings and homes that stirred chatter and envy alike. So when he says “born an heir…” it resonates partly as social commentary, whether he meant it that way or not.
Be born an heir… https://t.co/lwmzKsSuQl
— Sizwe Dhlomo (@SizweDhlomo) October 30, 2025
A Fresh Angle: Comedy With A Mirror
While it’s easy to write it off as just a joke, this moment offers something more: a mirror held up to South African society. If your fastest path to wealth is to arrive in a family that already has assets, then what does that say about mobility and opportunity today? Dhlomo’s flippant comment may be ironic, but it touches on generational wealth, systemic advantage, and the difference between financial-freedom stories and inheritance stories.
For Readers In South Africa And Beyond
Whether you’re tuning in from Rosebank, Soweto, Cape Town, or anywhere else, this moment is one to reflect on. It’s funny, sure. But it’s also a nudge to consider how we talk about money, how we chase it, and whether financial independence means the same thing for everyone in Mzansi. And if you’re thinking of a quick route to riches, perhaps the real takeaway isn’t the punchline—it’s the pause afterwards.
Source: Briefly News
Featured Image: KAYA 959
 
                         
 
						 
 
						 
 
						