His father would soon resign from work due to poor health and in 1999 Maziwisa was accepted at St Joseph's House for Boys, a Home for orphans and destitute children.
Whilst there, Maziwisa attended Ellis Robins High School, initially through the help of St Joseph's, and later on through the assistance of renowned late cricket journalist Peter Roebuck.
Maziwisa won a series of national awards including scoring a first class in Public Speaking and News Reading.
But after being approached by Saviour Kasukuwere[5] in 2010 (then Minister of Youth Development, Indigenisation and Empowerment), he tendered his resignation and decided to move back to Zimbabwe to work for Robert Mugabe.
As elections drew closer, Maziwisa made headlines when he accused[11] Coca-Cola for disguising its ‘Crazy for Good’ initiative as a genuine marketing tool when in fact it was an attempt to promote the MDC-T. Maziwisa intensified his anti-MDC-T rhetoric in the period leading up to the 31 July elections describing Tsvangirai as a miserable loser[12] who had created more babies than jobs.
[16] Speaking during a dialogue hosted by the Young People in Politics in Harare on Friday 14 July 2017, Psychology fallaciously claimed that ZANU PF had created more than 3 million jobs as it promised ahead of their election win in 2013.
They suggested jobs like Spikes-welder, bank queuers, pothole fillers and thigh vendors qualify admirably as some of the “jobs” Zanu-PF has created in Zimbabwe, where people are forced to queue for hours to withdraw money from their cash-strapped banks, or turn to menial or degrading work to make ends meet.
He seemed irked by the fact that members of the opposition had ascribed a rather narrow definition to the term "job" to suit their political narrative.
According to this wide interpretation, Maziwisa argued, it was possible that his party Zanu PF through its various enabling policies had created more jobs than the opposition was willing to admit.