
A snippet that ignited conversation
It was a simple post-workout video shared by a gossip page that quickly reverberated across South African timelines. On 3 September 2025, a clip of Unathi Nkayi, fresh from the gym, found its way onto X, prompting a storm of chatter almost immediately.
Between fitness and age-based scrutiny
Unathi, now 46, has been transparent about her health journey. Earlier this year she revealed she trains with purpose, drawing inspiration from Miley Cyrus’s lean yet feminine physique, leaning into green juices, protein, and fasting. But this latest video seemed strangely more provocative than inspiring.
Across the comment section, things took a sharp turn:
One user compared her to a defrocked classic car, still polished on the outside, but “the engine performance will tell you that iminyaka ihambile.”
Another bluntly wrote, “Yho, this is embarrassing.”
And when someone noted it must be tough competing “with 20-year-olds about snatched waists,” the conversation turned sour: “Being a girlfriend at 50 is sad.”
Some accused the video of being less about fitness and more about baiting attention, adding that a woman with self-respect wouldn’t flaunt herself just to provoke reactions.
Unathi putting in the work at the gym. pic.twitter.com/buneAhkulj
— MDN NEWS (@MDNnewss) September 3, 2025
What this tells us about social media culture
Here’s where Mzansi can only sigh. In a world where every post is fodder for either uplift or backlash, Unathi’s gym video became a microcosm of our insecurities about age, image, and genuine self-worth.
On one hand, she’s a respected media figure with a history in music and radio, known for encouraging wellness. On the other, the digital age demands perpetual perfection, and not everyone buys into that lie.
A moment of pause, as a society
Unathi’s post-gym video, though short, sparked more than trend chatter. It forced a moment of national self-reflection: Can we support someone’s healthy journey without demanding they conform to youthful ideals? Do we still respect intention, or do we tear it down to fit our anxieties?
Source: Briefly News
Featured Image: Daily News