A reality TV star, a popular chicken restaurant chain and a die-hard apartheid supporter are providing South Africa with some entertaining moments in the runup to next week's landmark elections.
These are some of the quirky players in South Africa's third elections since the end of apartheid which have also yielded a flurry of small but colorful parties doggedly campaigning against established heavyweights.
Most of them are long on election antics but short on substance.
Brad Wood, a boisterous former security consultant better known as "Bad Brad," the star of South Africa's version of the reality TV show Big Brother has set up his own crime-busting party, The Organization Party (TOP).
Wood has launched a "shock" campaign with posters screaming: "Rapists, child molesters, murderers and violent criminals: This time we are fcuking [sic] you."
Meanwhile, the NANDOS party, which stands for the New African National Democratic Organization for Solidarity and is backed by chicken restaurant franchise Nandos, has promised to "ruffle some feathers."
"People are hungry for a party that will serve the people and grill the politicians, hungry for a party that is neither left `wing' nor right `wing,' but rather for the whole chicken," Nandos co-founder Nicholas Hulley says.
While for some, campaigning may be a not-so-subtle attempt to grab headlines, for Willie Marais, the leader of the Afrikaner right-wing Herstigte Nasionale Party (HNP) or Reformed National Party and its estimated 10,000 paid-up members, it's no monkey business.
For the third time, the HNP is calling for a boycott of the elections with posters that read: "Kies reg, bly weg," which is Afrikaans for "Make the right choice, don't vote."
Some candidates are campaigning for no particular reason and show an embarrassing lack of knowledge of the South African political system.
Leader Claire Emary of the KISS party, which stands for "Keep It Straight and Simple," says "you do not need to know anything about politics" to run.
"I don't even know how many votes you need to get a seat in parliament. How many do you need?"
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