Apparently media criticism, fair and unfair, comes from without as well as from within. The BBC has been taking the attack to both South Africa and Jacob Zuma, and while I’ve been a critic of Jacob Zuma in particular in the past, at least some of the Beeb's coverage appears to couch sensationalism in the guise of its traditionally staid mien.
A controversial recent documentary on South Africa breathes deeply the fumes of Afropessimism without bothering to look beyond the surface and past some of the admittedly controversial stories of late. It seems remarkably one-sided and not especially nuanced, and naturally South African defenders have lashed back. An example of the more sensationalistic elements of the show come with an interview with Zuma in which the interviewer goes for shock tactics rather than earnest engagement.
Part of the problem, for me, is that the jaundiced view not only from the BBC but from so many of South Africa's critics is cartoonish. But more than that, it also smacks of condescension. And perhaps the Brits in particular ought to be wary of being patronizing toward the South Africans, all things considered.