The “mansion debate” has officially reached a boiling point. Influencer and DJ Cyan Boujee has offered a subtle but pointed response to Mac G, after the Podcast and Chill host publicly dismantled her claims of purchasing a R10 million home in cash.
The controversy began when Cyan announced the massive real estate milestone, only to be met with sharp skepticism from Mac G, who questioned the logistics of such a transaction without traditional financial documentation.
Mac G’s Verdict: “Where’s the Payslip?”
During a recent podcast episode, Mac G didn’t hold back, citing several red flags in the influencer’s story. His main arguments included:
- The Missing Vlog: “Cyan Boujee vlogs everything,” Mac G noted, arguing that a house-shopping series would have been inevitable content for her.
- Financial Paperwork: He questioned how a young influencer could secure or justify a R10M property without a traditional payslip or visible proof of consistent income.
- The Ultimate Proof: He issued a direct challenge for her to settle the debate: “People must post the title deed, bro. It’s simple.”
The Subliminal Response
Rather than engaging in a shouting match, Cyan Boujee took to TikTok—on a fresh account following her previous suspension—to let her past self do the talking. She shared a throwback clip that felt strategically curated to address the “how” behind her wealth.
In the video, she breaks down the reality of her daily earnings:
“The best thing about my life is that I get paid every day and probably three, four times… I feel like I deserve to buy myself a house.”
By resharing this, Cyan appears to be signaling that her “daily hustle” and consistent cash flow are what fueled the purchase, regardless of what traditional banking standards might suggest.
A Warning on Public Wealth
While Mac G remained unconvinced, he ended his critique with a piece of unsolicited advice. He suggested that even if the purchase were 100% genuine, flaunting a R10 million cash buy online is an invitation for “unnecessary scrutiny” from authorities and the public alike—warning that some wins are better celebrated in private.
















