Heading Art or Sport? Car spinning – a culture explored

Spina Guluva is a 13 part magazine documentary on the old age street culture of spinning cars, brand new on eKasi+ channel 105 on OpenView HD. Car spinning used to be synonymous with car theft and township gangsterism in the ‘90s. The stereotype is that drag racing and spinning stolen gusheshes (BMW 3 series) was commonly used to show respect at funerals of gangsters.

The show is presented by actress, dancer, choreographer, singer and businesswoman Khabonina Qubheka who grew up watching this informal motorsport.

The first episode interrogates the roots of spinning and the origins of the stereotypes by speaking to a group that were part of the spinning culture back when it started. Spinning has evidently experienced a major makeover as it is now recognised as an official, registered motor sport, but is still not completely legal.

Spinners across the country are fighting to regulate their sport in an attempt to attract interest and sponsors. They still face hostility from authorities, hence spinning occurs on the streets and informal stadiums, mostly at night time.

The show explores the multi-faceted culture in places such as Soweto, Witbank, Mpumalanga, Alberton, and a town dubbed the World Cup venue of spinning: the Vaal. Spinners come from across the Southern Hemisphere to pit themselves against the best in the region. Featured on the show is the 2nd event and there is an expected audience of 15 000 people.


Host of Spina Guluva Khabonina Qubheka

Catch Spina Guluva on the eKasi+ channel 105 on OpenView HD Sunday, 19 October 2014 at 7PM 

Author: Represent

Share This Post On