A single joke has exploded into a $27 million war. A beloved childhood classic, a sacred African chant, and a rising
Zimbabwean comedian now collide in a courtroom drama no one saw coming.
What started as a viral punchline about The Lion King’s “Circle of Life” lyrics is now being called an insult, a lie, and a global misund… Continues…
In a world where nostalgia is priceless, Lebohang “Lebo M” Morake believes his work has been turned into a cheap gag. To him, the opening chant of “
Circle of Life” is not a meme, but a piece of living heritage: praise poetry honoring a king, a culture, and a continent.
Hearing it reduced to “Look, there’s a lion. Oh my God” wasn’t just inaccurate; it felt like a public stripping of meaning before millions
who grew up revering that sound.
For Learnmore Jonasi, comedy is about exaggeration and absurdity, not legal landmines.
Yet his viral bit now stands accused of misleading the world and threatening Morake’s reputation and Disney ties. The lawsuit, filed in the U.S.,
forces an uncomfortable question: where is the line between parody and disrespect, between cultural guardianship and creative freedom? However it ends, the echo of that chant will never sound quite the same again.