When an AI clip gets everyone talking
Johannesburg’s timelines lit up recently after an AI-created video featuring Helen Zille surfaced and quickly became the talk of the nation. In the clip, she appears to bust a few moves alongside others portrayed as Democratic Alliance figures, and the surreal nature of what people were seeing had social media buzzing with laughter, disbelief, and some unease about what such deepfakes mean for public discourse.
The former DA leader and Johannesburg mayoral hopeful has been a familiar name in political circles for years. Her recent AI double dancing around didn’t come from her phone or public appearance but from the strange new world of generative media. South Africans from Cape Town to Pretoria were sharing and resharing the clip, tagging friends and making jokes about the decidedly unusual choreography and distortions of reality.
Sizwe Dhlomo chimes in with humour
One voice that stood out in the online chatter was radio personality Sizwe Dhlomo, who responded playfully to the AI version of Zille. In comments that embraced the ridiculousness of it all, he quipped that she was moving to him and that the clip had him in stitches, capturing much of the lighthearted public reaction. His take helped frame the clip less as a political flashpoint and more as the kind of viral moment that brings a mixed crowd of amusement and eyebrow raises.
South Africans took to X and Facebook with memes, chants, and improvised captions about “Gog’Zille’s” new dance career, with some joking that she might have a future on the Amapiano stage. Others used the moment to bring up broader concerns about deepfake technologies and how easily they can be mistaken for real clips if people are not careful.
Is this AI? Ngoba she looks like she’s moving to me bruh. https://t.co/jvaDLjlsuJ
— Sizwe Dhlomo (@SizweDhlomo) January 17, 2026
More than just a laugh
This isn’t the first time Zille’s online presence has been debated. Her social media posts in the past have drawn commentary, covering topics from city issues like water supply to personal photos that stirred discussion about context and history. The new AI-generated video adds a fresh layer to her public persona in 2026 as conversations about truth, technology, and political figures continue to evolve in South Africa.
Whether you saw the clip and laughed or looked at it with unease, it made one thing clear: in a time where technology can create convincing digital doubles, what we see might not always be what we think it is.
Source: Briefly News
Featured Image: The Economist