Pearl Thusi, a media personality, took aim at Slik Talk this week after his verbal assault on Minnie Dlamini made national headlines.
Minnie Dlamini and her estranged spouse Quinton Jones filed for divorce after four years of marriage, prompting the controversial YouTuber to come out of retirement to remark on the news.
The man said in a video that went viral on social media that everyone knew Minnie’s marriage was not going to have a happy ending.
“Everyone and their mother knew that you were not going to stay in that marriage, that you were not going to make it through that marriage,” says the author. “You possess all of the characteristics of a returning soldier,” he said.
Minnie married Quinton, according to him, in order to “secure the bag.”
“You snatched the bag from him and fined him. You’ve placed your wager on the incorrect horse. This man seems to be the ideal person on paper; he has money, he has pale complexion, he is 6 feet tall, and he appears to be the perfect guy on paper. “However, he was unable to provide you with the one necessity that you want the most, which is attention and significance,” he said.
Pearl was one of the persons who voiced their displeasure with Slik’s crude remarks on the show. After he lost a boxing battle against Cassper Nyovest, she replied by stating she believed he would need some time to recuperate before returning to the internet. She was referring to his loss to Nyovest.
“I was under the impression he was waiting for his wounds to heal.”
I assumed he was waiting for his wounds to heal, but that was not the case.
Minnie and Quinton revealed in a joint statement that they had been apart for some months and that the choice to file for divorce was the final option for them.
“Over the course of the previous two years, our family has experienced amazing joy as well as heartbreaking sorrow.” We took consolation in the fact that we had one other throughout this difficult period.
As stated in the statement, “despite our best attempts to absorb changes in motion, the mental load and post-traumatic pain associated with each of our individual losses overcame our will.”