Prior to becoming a journalist, Allan worked as a photographic model and an English and Art teacher at
Wynberg Boys' High School, Bryanston High School, and Sevenoaks Finishing School. In 1975 she was a finalist in the 1975
Miss South Africa competition, and her photographs were published by the
Sunday Times. Allan's first published work was a series of classical music reviews for
The Citizen.
1980–1989: Sunday Times In 1980, Allan was employed by editor
Tertius Myburgh to write a column for the
Sunday Times, then the nation's biggest-circulating weekly newspaper. Later, in the main body of the
Sunday Times newspaper, she also began publishing
Radio Jani, her music reviews. She also had a nightly pop news spot on the David Gresham show on
Springbok Radio. In 1986 she began publishing ''Jani Allan's Week'' in the main newspaper. She would report on parties hosted by South Africa's elite and continue to interview famous figures. A year later Allan was in
Mauritius covering the Marlin fishing when the Helderberg
South African Airways Flight 295 crashed east of the island. Allan and her colleague Geoff Allan were the first journalists at the airport. The
Sunday Times published their joint report on the crash that killed everyone on board. Allan was voted "the most admired person in South Africa" in a
Gallup poll commissioned by the
Sunday Times in 1987.
Daily Maverick writer Marianne Thamm supports this view, describing Allan as "once the most influential writer and columnist in the country."
Assassination attempt and emigration Following an assassination attempt on her life in 1989, secret service agents advised her to leave South Africa. She resumed work for the Johannesburg newspaper from their London office. In London, Allan launched a new column for the newspaper titled
Jani at Large with the tag-line
Jani Allan - Reporting from London. After six weeks in London, Allan returned to work at the Johannesburg office. After a week back at work, Allan was asked to hand in her resignation as she had "become the story". Allan's tenure at the newspaper ended in September 1989.
1990–1996: London By 1990, Allan had become a regular columnist for the South African weekly magazine,
Scope, launching the self-titled
Jani Allan column from her base in London. At the peak of its success,
Scope had the largest circulation of any English-language magazine in South Africa. An article written by Allan on 5 October 1990, volume 25, number 20 in the magazine was presented by the MP Dries Bruwer to the South African parliament in 1991 in support of a legislation issue. at the Hyde Park Hotel in 1990 for a
Sunday Times (UK) interview In 1990, she also worked as an occasional society columnist for the (London)
Sunday Times, interviewing personalities such as
Charlton Heston for the newspaper and publishing opinion pieces for the newspaper. Allan later worked for the
SABC broadcaster and journalist Cliff Saunders's London press agency and interviewed South African and European political figures such as
Jean-Marie Le Pen. Allan was also published by the London
Evening Standard where she published reports on
George Carman's latest case, in which Carman was defending
The People against a libel case taken by Mona Bauwens. She also wrote for
The Spectator where she described Carman as "a small bewigged ferret." She published opinion pieces in the
Daily Mail and British conservative magazine
The Salisbury Review. She did research for and contributed to the anti-fascist magazine
Searchlight. The book that had been embroiled in controversy during the libel case because of its content was titled
White Sunset, and had right-wing groups in South Africa as its subject. It was alluded to in 1988 during her association with Terre'Blanche. In 1992 her agent described it to the British media as "a very serious look at the break-up of white society in South Africa" which features "fly-on-the-wall reportage". She had also completed
Fast Cars to Ventersdorp, a satirical look at her involvement with Terre'Blanche. It was compared to the style of
Tom Sharpe and in the foreword she explained that she had written it because "I want to leave the past behind me." In 1995, she gave a primetime interview to
SABC. the last Prime Minister of
Rhodesia,
Ian Smith, and American film actress
Faye Dunaway. The
Mail & Guardian praised the way in which the "no guts no glory" content creates a refreshing, witty forum". Soon after establishing the radio show in Cape Town, she was contracted by
MWEB to launch the website "CyberJani" with a weekly column, letters page and live chatline. The stated mission of the column was to provide "all the truth that is unfit to print and equally offensive to the left, the right and the centre". Allan tackled a variety of subjects such as
Affirmative action and gender issues. In 1998, Allan appeared in the
SABC documentary film,
Red Jacket to discuss the South Africa-based
Russian artist,
Vladimir Tretchikoff known for painting the
Chinese Girl. In the same year she made another screen appearance as a Parisian model in the
Pieter-Dirk Uys comedy,
Going Down Gorgeous. Allan's radio show, ''Jani's World,'' became one of the station's most popular, but attracted controversy in September 1999 when Allan interviewed American right-winger Keith Johnson of the
Militia of Montana. Johnson expressed several controversial and offensive opinions. Allan distanced herself from Johnson's views and apologised for the offense caused to Jewish listeners. Due to the negative reaction from individual listeners and from the South African Jewish Board of Deputies, the station was instructed to issue an apology two days later. Allan left the radio station in October 2000. From 2000 to 2001, she was a speechwriter for Buthelezi.
2001–2012: United States Allan moved to
Lambertville, New Jersey where she worked as a waitress in relative obscurity for nine years. Between 2004 and 2005, Allan wrote on a freelance basis for titles such as
WorldNetDaily. As a personal interest, she also worked as a published
astrologer. Allan joined
Twitter and started publishing a new blog titled
My Grilling Life. She regularly wrote satirical pieces about her experiences in the restaurant where she once worked. In October 2013, she was the subject of a profile piece by the
Mail & Guardian newspaper titled "The Return of Jani Allan". Allan announced to the newspaper a new media project, an interactive biography project about her life and South Africa. In September 2014,
Dekat, an upmarket South African lifestyle magazine published in English and Afrikaans, featured a column by Allan. Allan's column was part of the magazine's 1980s edition and is a letter from Allan to her younger self. In October 2014, the
Daily Maverick published Allan's column titled "I refuse to be the poster child of slut-shaming" in which Allan takes issue with comments made by
City Press editor
Ferial Haffajee. Allan's column was supported by the respected journalist and sexual abuse victims activist,
Charlene Smith. Smith described it as an "important, critical piece" and referred to Haffajee's reference as "thoughtless and cruel." Smith continued to describe Allan as "one of South Africa's great writers, and now ... one of South Africa's generations of brave women who speak up loudly and clearly about the harm they experience." On 1 January 2015, her former employer the
Sunday Times published her hopes for 2015 in a feature that focuses on the South African Twitterati, some of the most popular social media personalities. In June 2015, the
Daily Maverick published Allan's op-ed piece on forgiveness. June also saw the publication of Allan's guest column in
The Big Issue South Africa that was marketed as the Just Jani Allan column on the front cover. In July 2015, Allan became a regular columnist at
BizNews. In November 2015, the
Daily Maverick published Allan's op-ed piece on feminism in popular culture. Cape Town academic
Rhoda Kadalie praised the "well-written" piece "on feminism because it is truly controversial in many ways. Jani deals with the nexus of race, sex, wealth and beauty as pertains to the entertainment industry and her critiques are valid." Allan's column for the special annual edition of the
Big Issue South Africa was published in December 2015. That same month, the
Daily Maverick published Allan's widely circulated open letter column to her former editor,
Tertius Myburgh. Allan wrote the column following the revelation of several spy allegations against Myburgh. In August 2018, she wrote a cover story for the
Weekliks supplement of
Rapport and retold her experiences meeting the late
Magnus Malan in light of the Bird Island scandal. In October of the same year she wrote a long-form piece for
Fair Lady magazine about her second marriage. In April 2019,
Rapport published a guest piece by Allan for the upcoming
2019 South African general election. In the piece, Allan expressed support for
Helen Zille and
Mangosuthu Buthelezi. In 2020, Allan wrote more regularly for
Rapport. The newspaper published Allan's obituary piece for
Sol Kerzner and a piece she wrote about
COVID-19 in the United States, both cover stories for the
Weekliks supplement. She also wrote for the newspaper about
Joe Biden sexual assault allegation and
Black Lives Matter protests in United States. In April 2020, Allan began writing opinion columns for
RT (formerly Russia Today), the Russian TV network and news agency. An interview with Allan and an extract from her memoirs,
Jani Confidential was published in the February 2015 edition of
Fair Lady. On the weekend of 28–29 March, Jani Confidential was serialized by
The Weekend Argus and by
Rapport on 29 March 2015. Serializations were also published by the
Sunday Tribune and the
Sunday Independent. On 30 March,
The Star published an extract from the book. Allan's memoirs were positively reviewed by Marika Sboros, an ex-
Rand Daily Mail reporter now writing for BizNews. ''"Allan's memoirs are well written, punctuated with her characteristic style: the surgical journalistic precision, creativity, biting wit, bitchiness, and black humour aimed as much at herself as others ... There is an overwhelming unadorned, painful honesty and openness in her version of events and minutiae of the detail, a compelling coherence throughout."'' Sboros then commended the apolitical nature of the memoirs, citing the honesty of her privileged white upbringing: "She comes across as what she was at the time: not just a babe, but a foetus in the woods of South African apartheid politics."
Radio 702 journalist, Jenny Crws-Williams was also enthusiastic, saying that it "has to be a bestseller: tightly written, moving, funny & horrifying in one great cracker that keeps spilling out surprises." Allan's former
Sunday Times colleague Gus Silber described the memoir as "A tragi-karmady of epic proportions. A tale of an epoch. So vividly & elegantly told." Rebecca Davis, a high-profile columnist at the
Daily Maverick described the book as "truly, truly fascinating." Writing in the
Daily Maverick,
Marianne Thamm echoed Sboros' sentiment that the affair allegations with Terre'Blanche were untrue. Thamm describes the interview with Terre'Blanche as "misunderstood" and a tool in the "manufactured scandal." She praises the memoir as "searing in its honesty and insight, hilarious and unforgiving." Thamm continues: "It is a portrait of a time and a place, delicately (and often hilariously) captured by a woman who remains undoubtedly once of the most talented writers to emerge from that decade." Thamm concludes that "Allan herself is a survivor, one of those people who, in losing it all, gained herself and more." Allan's memoir has also been well received in the Afrikaans press. Herman Lategan's book review appeared in
Volksblad,
Beeld, and
Die Burger. Lategan wrote that Allan had been betrayed by "Judas friends" over jealousy and that she had been unfairly treated by a "patriarchal and chauvinistic media". He argues that Allan gave the conservative community ammunition as she was a target as an "outspoken" female figure in the public arena. She does not fit the mould of conservative women in South Africa as she is instead "a cosmopolitan mix of Sandton
kugel,
Mata Hari,
Marlene Dietrich and
Camilla Parker Bowles". Lategan describes the memoir as "a journal of treachery, malice and a mirror on South African society". Len Ashton, Allan's former
LifeStyle editor at the
Sunday Times, reviewed Jani Confidential for the South African magazine,
Noseweek. Ashton writes that
Jani Confidential is "a page-turning memoir. Those who knew the columnist in her triumphant previous incarnation will be staggered by this tale of astonishing endurance. And wry humour." Ashton also mirrors other reviews by regarding the affair allegations against "[Allan,] a fascinating woman", as "the humourless PC view."
Oscar Pistorius On 14 April 2014, Allan published an open letter to Oscar Pistorius. Allan described the sports star as a "faux hero" and suggested that he had taken acting lessons in preparation for his court appearance. Allan also compared Pistorius with
Eugène Terre'Blanche, writing that "Terre’blanche was cut from the same cloth as you, Oscar." Allan continued to criticize Pistorius' lifestyle as "a wasteland filled with expensive toys and recidivist acts." Allan's column went viral and was republished by the
Daily Maverick,
The Citizen,
Biz News, and other news websites. The column was also reported on by other media titles such as
Beeld. Canada's
Globe and Mail also reported on the effect of the column, publishing quotes and a link to the full text. The story has also garnered attention in the United States, with reports appearing in the
New York Post,
Time, and on
Perez Hilton's website. On 21 April 2014,
Fox News broadcast an interview with Allan. Allan reiterated her belief that Pistorius had taken acting lessons and highlighted his alleged relationship with a 19-year-old in that year. A spokesperson for the Pistorius family has denied the claim that Pistorius took acting lessons. Anneliese Burgess, the media manager for the Pistorius family said the claims were "fictitious" and "totally devoid of any truth." Burgess continued "We deny in the strongest terms the contents of her letter in as far it relates to our client and further deny that our client has undergone any acting lessons or any form of emotional coaching." Allan's claims have been reported internationally, appearing in respected newspapers such as France's
Le Figaro, Spain's
El País, and Italy's
La Stampa. Allan's piece also affected the case proceedings. Social worker Yvette van Schalkwyk said that she decided to testify in Pistorius' defence after reading what was said about the athlete in the media. Van Schalwyk alluded to Allan's column when she explained her motives: "What upset me was the fact that they said he had acting training, that he just put on a show and just started crying when it was needed."
Animal rights advocacy On social media, Allan describes herself as an "animal rights activist." Her recent journalism reflects a concern for animal welfare issues. In November 2013, she focused attention on a controversial photograph of US TV personality and trophy hunter
Melissa Bachman posing with a dead lion in South Africa. Allan was vocal about the photograph on social media and published an open letter to Bachman. Allan's piece went viral, garnering over 1 million page views. Later that month, the South African media reported on Allan's criticism of
Victor Matfield and
Fourie du Preez after the pair published a photo of a zebra they had hunted. Allan's involvement in animal rights advocacy and journalism began in 1990s when she was working as a
Cape Talk presenter and
Mweb columnist. On air she championed the cause of the
Lipizzan when a local dressage school faced closure, then educated listeners on the devastating horrors committed against horses as part of gang initiation practices in the Western Cape. She has also discussed the work of the Cape Horse Protection Society and invited representatives onto her show. She also worked for the Domestic Animal Rescue Group. In Allan's memoir,
Jani Confidential, she provides metaphors for the way we treat animals. She highlights the brutality of
Marlin fishing, having reported on Marlin fishing events for the
Sunday Times. She is also critical of
bullfighting, recounting her experience of being invited by an ex-boyfriend to the
San Fermin running of the bulls festival in
Pamplona. ==Personal life==