Two South African creators are stepping onto the global stage, and it’s bigger than a moment.
TikTok has unveiled its Global Discover List 2026, recognising 50 creators shaping culture worldwide. Among them:
Wayne Chang, Cape Town food creator
Tamia Nontsikelelo, Johannesburg fashion entrepreneur
This isn’t just representation.
It’s proof that South African creativity travels, and more importantly, converts.
Because this list isn’t about followers.
It’s about cultural impact.

The Global Spotlight Is Shifting
For years, cultural influence flowed in one direction from the US and Europe outward.
Now?
Creators from Sub-Saharan Africa are not just participating in global culture.
They are shaping it.
Wayne Chang, known for blending Asian flavours with locally sourced South African ingredients, will represent the region in New York at the TikTok x Food Network event The Future of Flavor.
A Cape Town kitchen → a New York culinary stage.
That pipeline didn’t exist a decade ago.
Today, platforms are collapsing geography. A recipe filmed in a small apartment can reach Manhattan in seconds. And when that reach is paired with quality and consistency, it becomes opportunity.
Tamia Nontsikelelo, founder of modest fashion brand Tol’thema, represents a different but equally powerful shift: creators building businesses, not just audiences.
She’s not just creating content.
She’s building equity.
Not influence for vanity.
Influence for scale.

This Is Bigger Than A Creator List
The Global Discover List 2026 includes five Sub-Saharan African creators across categories like Foodies, Educators and Originators.
Among them:
Olawale Ogunlana, Lagos-based medical educator using content to democratise health knowledge
Trevor Were, Nairobi self-taught chef turning everyday meals into accessible inspiration
Cherie Kihato, Kenyan design entrepreneur exporting African heritage globally
What connects them isn’t just geography.
It’s leverage.
Each creator is using digital platforms to turn skill into visibility, visibility into credibility, and credibility into economic mobility.
The Bigger Brand Signal
African creators are no longer “emerging talent.”
They are global partners.
The cultural centre of gravity is shifting. Platforms are decentralising influence. And creators from Cape Town and Johannesburg are now competing and winning, on the same stage as New York and London.
The question is no longer whether African creativity resonates globally.
It’s how fast brands can align with it.
Because the next global flavour, fashion voice or cultural movement may not come from the traditional capitals of influence.
It may come from here.
And the world is finally paying attention.




























