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    Why Netflix’s ‘The Polygamist’ Has Viewers Outside South Africa Talking

    adminBy adminJuly 16, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Why Netflix’s ‘The Polygamist’ Has Viewers Outside South Africa Talking
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    Plot twists. Seedy affairs. Power brokers who cannot be trusted. The 22-episode South African drama “The Polygamist” has it all.

    Since the show’s release on Netflix in June, it has surpassed 23 million views worldwide and been among the 10 most watched non-English shows on the streaming platform.

    “The Polygamist” was adapted from a novel of the same name, written by the Zimbabwean author Sue Nyathi. It follows the life of a wealthy married couple in South Africa. The husband is a serial cheater. The wife is a scorned woman, faithful and very concerned with keeping up appearances.

    The show has become a catalyst for conversation online, not only in Africa, where polygamy is legal in several countries, but around the world. Here are three reasons the show has viewers talking.

    1. We All Know a Jonas

    The show stars Sdumo Mtshali, who plays Jonas, a business executive with young mistresses.

    As the title suggests, Jonas juggles secret second and third families. His first wife, Joyce, played by Gugu Gumede, however, wants to maintain the illusion of a perfect African family — money, success, respect, children. She tries to do this on her own terms, even if it means enduring her husband’s infidelity.

    Jonas has prompted debates among fans who note how much his behavior reflects the grim realities of dating and family life in 2026. Audiences have taken to the internet to describe their own traumatic encounters with a “Jonas.”

    “I felt seen,” Katalia Mendoza, one viewer, said on TikTok, thanking the show’s creators. “My own father was a Jonas that I am still healing from.”

    2. Africa’s Very Own Tyler Perry

    The show may have been produced by Gugu Zuma-Ncube and Thuli Zuma, daughters of the former South African president Jacob Zuma — a proud polygamist — but audiences have noticed that its glossy production and steamy scenes are similar to hits from the American director Tyler Perry.

    Mr. Perry is known for creating memorable onscreen villains, usually centered on broken, unfaithful men. Jonas has been compared to Charles, a popular character from Mr. Perry’s “Diary of a Mad Black Woman,” a film about a man who abandons his wife, only to return home in a wheelchair after his mistress abandons him.

    Jonas’s own wheelchair moment in Episode 20 of “The Polygamist” drew instant comparisons to an infamous scene in the movie where a wheelchair-bound Charles is pushed face first into a bathtub full of water during a confrontation about his infidelity.

    The show has also been compared to “Why Did I Get Married?” and “I Can Do Bad All By Myself,” two other hits from Mr. Perry.

    3. Crazy Rich Africans

    The show’s popularity has made its way to Hollywood, with stars saying they are hooked on the series. “I thought crazy rich Asians was something, but crazy rich Africans is a whole ’nother level,” said Sherri Shepherd, an actress and Daytime Emmy Award-winning talk show host, in a video posted on Instagram.

    Taraji P. Henson, an actress, confessed that she had binged all 22 episodes and wrote that the show had her in a “chokehold” in a comment on Ms. Shepherd’s video.

    Joe Jonas, of the Jonas Brothers, has comically shared several clips from the show on TikTok, reflecting on the name he shares with the main character. Looking equal parts confused and amused, he addresses Netflix, saying, “Hey, so what’s happening?”

    Ms. Zuma-Ncube, one of the show’s producers, said its global success was unexpected.

    While polygamy may not be the most common subject for a global audience, she attributed the appeal of the series to universally relatable themes.

    “Even in its foreignness, there’s this curiosity that makes people lean in and want to find out more,” she said. “And once they do, they find journeys that feel very familiar, family dynamics they have lived and experienced.”

    She hopes the show’s success “emboldens African storytellers,” she added.

    Ms. Zuma-Ncube said there was always a feeling that there was a huge gap to bridge when looking at audiences beyond Africa — that there was a big chasm between Africa and everywhere else. “And it’s just not true,” she said.

    Netflix has not confirmed a second season of the show.

    Africa Netflixs Polygamist South talking viewers
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