In South Africa, awareness campaigns are evolving beyond simply "spreading the word". Emma Mendes from media update attended the premiere of What About The Boys 2 to explore how storytelling, industry support and intervention programmes are being used to support education, prevention and long-term cultural change.
As the public becomes increasingly exposed to social crises through constant news cycles and digital media, the conversation surrounding social awareness risks becoming diluted with an oversaturated media landscape, which can limit the long-term impact awareness campaigns aim to create.
Addressing deeply embedded societal issues now requires more than reactive messaging: it demands sustained public engagement capable of reshaping the cultural narratives and social behaviours that continue to fuel these crises.
From Storytelling to Social Change
The media has always held the power to shape public thinking. From film, broadcast and television to advertising and digital campaigns, storytelling influences the way societies understand social and cultural values. As discourse surrounding systemic and social issues continues to evolve, media is being positioned not just as a reflection of social issues, but as an active participant in addressing them.
This evolving approach was evident at the recent premiere of What About The Boys 2, hosted by Primestars and The YouthStart Foundation. While the film confronts issues surrounding gender-based violence, the dialogue throughout the event focused on something equally important: young boys need to be taught emotional expression and accountability from an early age.
Stories can create emotional engagement in ways statistics often can't, and allows audiences to move beyond headlines and into reflection, empathy and self-examination. Through a combination of discussion panels and a screening of the film, the event demonstrated how storytelling can become a catalyst for broader cultural impact.
Why Visibility Matters
The significance of initiatives like these also lies in the visibility they create. Sponsorship, media support and public platforms play a vital role in amplifying concerns that would otherwise remain confined to activist spaces. Events that integrate media with mentorship-driven messaging and public engagement can transform awareness into participation.
The event itself becomes more than an isolated experience. It becomes a communal space for effective communication — one designed to encourage reflection not only on the crisis itself, but on the systems, behaviours and cultural expectations that contribute to it.
This highlights a growing change in how social campaigns are being approached globally. Modern awareness initiatives are no longer relying solely on visibility. They're increasingly focused on creating sustained public and emotional engagement, and accelerating cultural momentum.
Industry Support is Vital
While storytelling and visibility sit at the heart of social awareness campaigns, long-term change requires institutional support. This is where sponsorships and partnerships become significant.
When companies, media organisations, educational institutions and public platforms actively support social-awareness campaigns, they help shift these initiatives from niche advocacy spaces to mainstream public discourse. Not only does this increase awareness, but it also creates a broader national dialogue.
Industry involvement also plays a critical role in legitimising and sustaining the momentum of these discussions within public culture. Sponsorships and institutional backing can signal that these issues aren't temporary media talking points, but societal concerns that deserve continued investment, visibility and engagement.
Events like the premiere of What About The Boys 2 aim to establish that, while storytelling may ignite conversation, meaningful change needs collective structures to support and reinforce the understanding that systemic social crises require systemic responses.
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*Image courtesy of Canva