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Final two choirs decided – viewers to choose the winner

Kelly Khumalo talked about her being in the final, “People should vote for us because we’ve shown strength, focus, resistance, but most of all talent, creativity and honesty through the music. For me, winning would mean that I’ve grown as a musician and have elevated my craft to the next level.”

IN what has turned out to be Clash of the Choirs’ most successful season yet, only Team JR of Mpumalanga and Team Kelly of Gauteng remain as the final two choirs left in the competition, set to slug it out for a whopping R 1 million cash prize, after Cape Town’s team iFani dramatically exited the competition.
Once again, the viewers decide on who wins the famous contest. Vote lines close this Thursday night at 20:00 sharp, following which, the numbers will be audited by an external company and revealed in next Sunday’s live finale episode.
Kelly Khumalo talked about her being in the final, “People should vote for us because we’ve shown strength, focus, resistance, but most of all talent, creativity and honesty through the music. For me, winning would mean that I’ve grown as a musician and have elevated my craft to the next level.”
JR had the following to add, “People shouldn’t vote for JR, they should vote for these hardworking guys and girls, who came to Jo’burg from small towns, were ridiculed and never taken seriously until they proved what a dream mixed with dedication to their goals can do. An example not only for them but for every person with the hunger to fill a void, with a feeling of personal accomplishment.”
Vote for Team JR or Team Kelly now via: SMS on 33405 – viewers can vote up to 100 times per person using the words ‘Team Kelly’ or ‘Team JR’; or via WeChat on the official Mzansi Magic account, also limited to 100 times per person.
Voting lines opened at 19:00 on Sunday, and close at 22:00 sharp on Thursday.

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Lucky Thusi

Lucky Thusi is the News Editor of Comaro Chronicle. He started as a reporter for Southern Courier in 2008. Since then he has grown in leaps and bound in journalism for the past 16 years.

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