Kabisi (Mpho Molepo) is angered, and dead serious in recovering his CEO position from Nkosiyabo (Muzi Mthabela), who took his privately-owned company’s, #Ezweni. He is fearless and will go to the extent that it takes. As a type of shakedown, Kabisi requests that Nkosiyabo hand over his portions in #Ezweni, gather his packs, and leave since he has a video of Nkosiyabo’s niece Sphe (Pearl Monama) acting rudely.
Nkosiyabo loves his niece and would successfully safeguard her, and Kabisi knows this. In the wake of giving Nkosiyabo an opportunity to consider it, he orchestrates a gathering with a columnist when Nkosiyabo misses the cutoff time.
She once imparted a union with Kabisi’s nephew, Mazwi Moroka (Musa Ngema), so it’s a mutually beneficial arrangement! Moroka’s defender, Kabisi, accepts it is his obligation as the family’s head to shield the privately-owned company’s. Considering that the Moroka family controls most of #Ezweni’s portions, as he would see it, they should keep working it. One of them ought to order that vessel since they established the organization.
Not at all like Nkosiyabo Cele or some other party, Nkosiyabo’s arrival on the CEO position has enraged Kabisi. He doesn’t care a whole lot on the off chance that his family members concur with his systems for getting it back. Nonetheless, Kabisi’s self-serving plan will catch up with him, and when the article on Sphe’s video turns into a web sensation, his family will be rankled.
Mazwi is ready to leave Kabisi in light of the fact that he feels sold out by the way the last option treated the mother of his youngster. Mazwi’s choice to move out causes him to feel forlorn and discouraged on the grounds that he cherishes his family and doesn’t have a spouse or children. Notwithstanding, feeling alone and lamenting his decision are two totally various things; all things considered, this is Kabisi.
Be that as it may, Nkosiyabo won’t accept this without a fight, and he goes after the Morokas in full power. With an end goal to uncover the Moroka family’s inadequacies as fair wedded individuals, he moves toward a columnist himself. Notwithstanding, it misfires, and the essayist winds up writing an extremely sure article in which Mazwi and his family are depicted as casualties.
Despite the fact that Kabisi is smiling wide as can be as his foe encounters one more difficulty, Nkosiyabo is as yet the CEO. What moves will Kabisi make to get this position? We are mindful that he is a man you can’t quell. We are mindful that he is a man you can’t repress.