Thursday, 24 November 2022

African Elephant Bull Encounter On Foot | @EcoTraining TVTrails

Everybody I'm Rob the Ranger welcome to my channel in this video We're going to be having a look at a sighting that I had on foot with eco training. Enjoy All right, thank you all for watching if indeed You still are? If you want to check out eco training all their links to their social media their website their youtube tone are in the description Underneath at the bottom of the video, you know where it is there's also the info card up there if you want to click on that and Then all of the other normal things that you should do on YouTube subscribe to me subscribe to them buy a t-shirt Share the video like the video Whatever other that sort of stuff you do into the end card we have eco trainings videos a video that they've done on their channel with me and Obviously all my social media links follow me there. Thank you. Bye. Bye.


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African instruments here

https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/african-elephant-bull-encounter-on-foot-ecotraining-tvtrails/

What North Africans Really Think About Each Other (Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia etc)

They have a weird accent They love wearing too much cologne And the men are cute. Really!? Kaftan Tagine Couscous.. oh yeah If you were to ask any other Arabs about our dialect they would say it's not Arabic, because we mix it so much with French Morocco - we can't understand what you're saying Morocco for me is like a sign When I say I'm from Tunisia they're like - what, where is that? I'm like - do you know Morocco? It's really next to it Aren't they sneaking into Spain or something like crazy? They're very sneaky Are you sneaking Morocco? They sneak into France too Moroccans - they'll get into Europe.


You know what I mean. They'll get in there Home Soccer Super dramatic, hand talk Yes they're very -- Italians of the arab world They're very extra They have the pyramids so they're always talking sh*t Like it happened 4,000 years ago. Get over it Come up with something new We grew up seeing movies, Egyptian movies Egyptian songs as well Singers. Oh yeah, a lot of really good singers that guy has been killing the whole Middle East for decades and they're just too much. They're everywhere too It's like - look at us. We're Egyptians Basically I'm really in love with the country It's very beautiful, I love the beaches I love the food, and the men are cute. Really? Algerians too My beautiful country Algerians are very loud they're very loud and they're very, very, very passionate I think of -- very scary people They're very scary; a rough bunch They're like the Compton of North Africa So every time we meet outside of the country we always recognize each other and we always click; our government is quite the opposite he's like a singer - he's amazing We are all known for our flag so we put our flag everywhere so even in the World Cup Final, where Algeria is not playing there is the flag there Tunisia? They have a weird accent especially when guys talk they got French Arabic thing going right? but I think Moroccans it's more hilarious and Tunisians are kinda like less French, more Arab; they're very quiet Just like a mix of Middle Eastern and North African they're literally in the middle Very beautiful country, it's on the beach - Mediterranean sea Amazing food to be honest Your couscous with fish is so amazing; I miss that I think of, I think of, I think of...


Oh no. We don't like that guy I think like Gaddafi Other than Gaddafi, nobody knows anything about Libyans He walks into the room, he goes "woo" He does that a lot; I've seen a lot of comics. Gaddafi is the funniest By oil It's such a huge land This is where you wanna live but down there it's just desert It's just nothing but desert for miles and miles Ok so Sudan gets a rep for being lazy Lazy people live in Sudan and that's not true We're just energy-conscious Music Something about Sudanese music sounds so uplifting It's like they are Arabic, they are Muslims but they have this mixture with Africans Unique styles of fashion as well They love just wearing too much cologne They just love letting you know they're in the room It's that haj Muslim one where it's like you smell it in a Mosque.


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Exactly Like the Muslim uncle always has that It's not us right? Sudan Don't forget it, we have the most more than Egypt? What? How can you have 200 pyramids and that's not the first thing people know about you? Cause they're small, they're small They're small, a couple of them just look like triangle houses Mint tea? Is it Morocco? Morocco Obviously, come on Yes I drank mint tea before coming here Me too, every single day of the morning is my first thing to do Libya? That's just funny Wanna say Tunisia.


Is it Tunisia? oh shoot Tunisia Look at you; come on: we are the first country to have, come on I'm presenting Tunisian ladies, come on. Of course Egypt Can we let her.. She said - who's gonna answer first Egypt My belly dance teacher is Egyptian You belly dance? Yeah Can you show us? No Do you like the shirt up or no? It's like this That's too s*xual Just kinda like, it's all in the hips And then you know -- I just disgraced my entire lineage Oh my god. Egypt No Libya. What? Algeria; before the war in Sudan, Sudan was the biggest country in Africa Libya That's cause they were colonized by Italians Probably were eating all the time Algeria I listen to a lot of this style; I love rai music Algeria (can you sing us some?) Really? That must have been some of my favourite countries I know this one Morocco; hash please Just do it as if we didn't know Egypt because they have like 90 billion people that must be Egypt yeah no, it must be us, just by sheer numbers It's Egypt, yeah We had the Facebook revolution son! After the Algerian of course, Egyptian Egyptian girls are pretty sexy Morocco, come on Yeah - the women, they have this innocent beauty I'm gonna say Morocco That's when they have the European thing coming in they got the mint tea coming in, they got the green eyes Also we have this diversity in Morocco In the North you will see different people than in the South and in the middle of the country like everything is different For me it's a tie between Morocco and Tunisia cause Tunisians have very dark features while I feel like Moroccans have like, usually lighter features Moroccan women are beautiful It's a very difficult question; very Us, without a doubt If anybody tells you otherwise, I'm coming back to tell them no Egypt koshari, yeah Egypt definitely Koshari I'm sure everybody said their own country's food We have a thousand dishes so you can't not like something you're vegetarian, there is something for you; you like lamb, there is something for you OK let's put it this way - couscous for ex, every country has their own way of making couscous I've tried the Moroccan one, I didn't like it, even though I love couscous so even us in Tunisia, in every city they have their own way of making it We have pastillas, we make paellas too we have rfissa which is like this chicken I have to give it to Egypt, I hate to do it but They killed falafel; sorry Libyans - we tried It was voted the best at some point We're not gonna argue with that Sudan I would say it's between Tunisia and Morocco I think at the end of the day, we do have everything if you wanna go to the mountains, if you want the desert If you want the city vibe Every country is cool if you are a tourist So I would choose maybe Egypt because I've been there and I've lived as a tourist and it was amazing everybody loved me Tunisia I find them pretty cool They just have this very assertive presence about them They're just very secure in their identity and they just kinda know who they are I think that's what coolness is - just knowing who you are not needing to prove anything to anyone and that's what I've seen

African instruments here

https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/what-north-africans-really-think-about-each-other-morocco-algeria-tunisia-etc/

Quest for One African Language Meant to Unite Africa | Mansa Talk Episode 1

https://www.youtube.com/embed/FN7FpJN0yQQ


welcome everyone to monster talks uh monster talks is a podcast by trunacheki and kunta content and what we are doing is we are having really interesting thought-provoking conversations around african greatness that is where we have the odd man's are there mansa musa one of the greatest africans who ever lived not just for his wealth of which he's been well cataloged for but also his philanthropy his ability to shape trade politics and um just a better african people free his life versus after his life so what we do is we focus on great africans or potentially great africans who are trying to do work that will shape the continent shape the people and move us forward a significant amount and a perfect segue will be to our host dean my name is dean i host monster talks and what i do is that i run a studio called kunta content and we make great african games my guest today is senna edgy he'll tell us a bit more about what he does but cena is the executive director of afro institute and what they do is they focus on pushing african excellence for the next 50 years so really interesting work in languages in research in cultural deficiencies in culture erasure detection and so on without further ado senna the flow is yours tell us a bit about yourself and what you do yeah hello dean thank you for for receiving me it's my pleasure to to meet you and be here with all you uh you guys and so i'm cena eg and i'm from west africa ghana togo uh my parents came from those areas and so uh i have been doing the back and forth between north america and and africa for the past 16 to 17 years so uh so recently uh during the covet 19 with all all the issues going on in the political arena uh when i heard the comment of donald trump the president the previous president of the united the united states regarding the african nations being a countries and this is when i really decided to start working on the project afro institute it is an idea that i have since 14 when i was 14 years old and i decided to start it or working on it during the cover 19 and this is how i come up with the the organization so the organization is is a research lab in culture and art for for the pan-african audience so what we do is to do research in culture and art we detect deficiencies and then we propose solutions to solve the problems or at least to initiate a change regarding the the those deficiencies so the first problem we detected is that there is too much languages in africa in africa and that is creating a problem uh for for for for the young and the uh even the old but we have issues with the capital human capital development and if you want to solve that issue we need to have a unified language oh wow um yeah davin right into it let's do it let's do it um you've already referenced the challenge and opportunity of having too many languages i think you're completely writing that few continents few people have as many languages as africans do yeah um just maybe are you able to give us a bit of context into a bit of our history in terms of languages the different areas of africa versus china that more or less brought together one and two languages fairly pretty quickly same thing with some parts of europe each nation has its own major language why is africa so different what's the history and what's the current yeah so so so to start with that uh uh we already have dialects right um like let's say for for instance the sub-sahara africa we have like around 300 languages dialects that we call them uh so so how it has always worked in the world is that uh when um uh um empires try to expand themselves and they take other territories they impose their languages to make it easy for the expansion to to to to be a success because when the people you conquered can speak the same language as you uh it's easy for you to transfer your culture and have an understanding for them so the same thing happened in africa with the the the colonization so on top of all the dialects we have we have all the colonial languages whether it is french english portuguese spanish and and others whether it's dutch in uh in south africa so on top of our dialect we have those colonial languages and that is just they are they are now part of our heritage but still we are having issue with all those languages there are some nations that communicate more do trade more steady with europe than with their neighbors and that is an issue because if we have common uh uh challenges on the african continent and we want to solve them you have to be capable to collaborate among us do researches among us among us steady among us and come with solutions among us uh we cannot afford to to not being capable to do researches with our neighbors because they speak another language they study in another another language and we have to uh communicate with people from the other part of the world more than our neighbors that will not work so i think that to get into the uh historical context for the africa i think it has to do with color colonialism and we have to start decolonizing the continent wow um yeah you brought up a really significant scenario where in where in for example kenya or nigeria you will find their largest trading partner is almost always a nation outside the continent maybe the us maybe china maybe europe and of course by extension it does force you to consider their currency their languages their people as more economically important than your own neighbor than ghana for example or in the case of kenya than tanzania or uganda wow yeah that's that's quite a strong statement and i think colony it's it's really an extension of colonialism yeah we can talk about the power situation in africa opportunities challenges yeah so like like like uh uh how's his name yeah aikon has been saying without power we can't do anything uh in africa like the rest of the world is not having the issue the power issue we are having if we cannot have a sustainable power we cannot compete with the world we will always be a little bit behind you know so so so we have to fix that and uh have you heard about aikon and his plan to uh put in put lighting in africa his project with one billion um chinese uh loan given to him yeah yeah he has done great stuff with it and we have to keep pushing with our government institution to to do something with uh with power in africa we need that yeah yeah yeah and i think of a nation like nigeria with so many power challenges and how much i i i remember doing some research for a company i work for and a lack of power or expensive power was the number one reason for companies shutting down in nigeria the number one country wow yeah that's yeah in europe in kenya um cost of electricity is the number one reason for power yeah cost not just not availability it's available it's just overpriced yeah yeah so yeah you're completely right without power yeah we can do it yeah yeah and i always find it so interesting um i remember when i was younger um you have money you can buy bundles you can get wi-fi it is it but without power you're just the same with someone who doesn't have that money yeah that's so true yeah it's i think it paints a really good picture of how important power is yeah yeah no it's like like when akon came to africa he was trying to put in place his projects for africa business that's the first thing he realized he's like yeah yeah we can do anything obviously yeah that's the first thing we need to tackle if we don't have power then we have to start with uh uh innovating in the in the industry before we can move forward but it's something that government should take care of yeah idea yeah yeah and most countries government is the one in charge with the power industry because it's so expensive yeah that uh entrepreneurs don't find it so allering to get into the industry but it can be also a partnership between private and government but yeah that's something that we need absolutely to focus on yeah yeah um yeah okay um so i'll i'll try to pick it up where we had left off yeah yeah to the power gods this might not happen again let's let's wish yeah yeah yeah uh okay so we were speaking about um having africa yes too few versus too many languages a bit of the history i think you fairly communicated how that impacts ability to trade ability to transact across people um so location education very important like if we if you have one unified language we can have a standardized education system and the education system will be will be less expensive because one education program for everyone not every country trying to design their own education program in their own either colonial language or dialect that would be too expensive we we cannot afford to spend so much money uh yeah uh if we can shut the cost down by tenth or by the hundreds the cost of communication will be so so cheap and for instance like i have been lucky that one of my parents come from togo one of my parents come from ghana so i have learned uh i have i went to school in both systems so i learned french and english otherwise if i didn't learn english how are we going to be communicating right now yeah yeah and and even though we are communicating in english it is a it's a it's a an inter a a colonial language we should be capable to have an option to speak in one language if we live on the same continent yeah and one country that comes from africa yeah yeah and i think i i really agree with the cost of education um let me take the example of tanzania um tanzania uses swahili as its main and for the most part the only language um and what that means is that all education is in swahili that's good so chemical engineering in the university is in oh i like that it is it is so difficult for someone not tanzanian to try to learn chemical engineering in swahili if you haven't grown around it yeah it's not familiar to you oh my god i tried reading a book oh my god i just think i've ever tried to figure out but that's good i like it i i i know that tanzania is a leader in um uh cultural protection and cultural empowerment uh on the african continent and that's something i like a lot about that country and their leaders and um i think that the rest of africa should follow their path so like swahili is a language that is in advance right now in what we are trying to do uh yeah improving an african language that uh for the project we have for uh the project of affluence to the project afro the language project swahili uh may be uh the centerpiece of the of of um of the of the language engineering so yeah it may be it's why so i really the main language and the other other one will try to be we'll try to add the other one to to to to it so yeah i like swahili in that i like the fact that it's already in advance so we can rely on something so to start the project yeah yeah and um i'm sure you've had a very interesting internal conversation of whether to quote-unquote market or develop a current language versus starting out afro as a new language how did that thought process sort of settle in your mind well uh the the way we see it uh is that uh um the the language that is most is spoken on the african continent like suahili we should give it much more weight right like we are not going to give more way to a language that is spoken by uh uh hundred thousand people uh or uh or or just one million people we are not going to give it more weight uh in in in the creole project that we are having so it makes sense that the languages that are mostly spoken like swahili takes much more weight in the balance of the during the creation so yeah so i think that is something that everyone has agreed on as yeah as as a way to go and the thing also is that uh um using just like if we want to use a unified language we can say okay so a hill is already advanced let's use yes swahili but the problem is that the goal of the institute is not just to uh uh uh create a unified language the goal also to make sure is to make sure that the future generation can have access to a language that all the african nations dialect are unified within it so if they are doing a research in in the future it will be easy for them they can see that okay this word here come from this part of the of the african continent it has this meaning this like the etymology of the world right so it will be much more easier for them to do research and be unified if all those dialects are within one language that then if you just choose swahili as a language and it will it will break down the um the resistance also to accept a a unified language if their own dialects are part of the cree the new creation so yeah yeah i mean that's that is a challenge especially as you said 300 languages in sub-saharan africa um imagine trying to do any significant research trying to bring together that geographical area it's almost an impossible challenge but we can make the impossible possible yeah yeah if you don't do that there's no growth there's no improvement yeah yeah so to davin um you've had a few cross let me say continental conversations with kenyans nigerians south africans egyptians what some of the feedback you're getting what some of the insights you're getting on afro as a language and some of the negatives and positives that these different regions are bringing to you yeah so so so yes i have conversation with uh with with with people from different geographic areas from africa and the insight i'm getting let's say if we talk about the north africa they already from what i understand they already have a unified language yeah they use uh arabs right yeah arabic yeah so so so so what some of them told me is that okay we have already a unified language but we understand where you are coming from you we understand your struggle we understand that not having a unified language create a division in the in the rest of africa so i'm mainly talking about sub-saharan africa so they understand what we are trying to do and they support the project but but the way they the the way the way we see it is that in the future within the african union there could be two or three official languages if our project is successful afro can become one of the uh uh languages arabic can become the second languages and uh swyle swahili is already accepted there could us still be swahili so we can have three languages on the african continent and and in the within the african union it will be easy for people to communicate uh so so that that's the way we see the coming future um also uh for for other people i heard the like not especially from the african continent uh uh people like from europe nor america when they heard about the project the idea they have at first is to tell me well why don't you guys use english like people most people use english because it's so it's so so easy uh to use so some countries use it and they think that it will solve our hassle but the the only problem that it doesn't solve to use english is that we gradually all our dialect will disappear yeah and there will be no way to save it nowhere for our uh for the future of our children and that will be a huge problem and if you use english it's not going to be accepted by other other nations they will be like okay then why don't we use french we already speak french why don't we use french so let's put all that aside and create a new language based on all the african dialect comes from the root of africa so we can save some culture for our people so but and for people generally coming from sub-saharan africa when they heard about the project they are like oh wow it's a great project i think that if you can succeed doing this that will be good for everyone so generally people like it i just have one bad experience on social media especially facebook when i post the video uh the presentation video of the project and i posted it in a group for african language right and there was one language that came and he put an angry face on the video and i'm like you are a language how can't you like this project surprise yeah and he was from africa i was confused by his reaction but who knows maybe he has the same idea similar idea he was like what so he was angry i wish he's that if he's because he didn't like it i'm a little confused yeah so yeah that's the experience i have so far with the different type of people from different geographic areas a reaction to the project okay awesome um you've spoken i think really deeply about language as a challenge we have a lot of cultural deficiencies across fashion language food and so on what brought you specifically to language and do you have a such process with expanding to other of the creative categories i've mentioned that can potentially assist you in achieving your goal so let's say hopefully in the next five to ten years we already have afro as a language the acceptance is increasing a large percentage of the population has accepted it as a language um how are you planning to get into the other categories of deficiencies yeah so so so yeah it's important for me to underline that afro institute is not a a language organization uh we uh a research lab in culture and art for the pan-african audience so yeah we are starting with language because for us it is obvious that the language issue is one of the issue we should solve before doing anything else like yeah there's few things that you can do uh uh without using a language like you have to communicate with people especially when you are doing social work uh you are trying to communicate with a large group of people you need to use a language so so so for us it is obvious it's the first thing to do there are other language other uh cultural challenges we have among the pan-african audience and that we are going to tackle uh um i'm not going to be speaking about all of them right now there are few ones that i can i can name but i just want people to focus right now on the language because it is the first thing we need to do and and and i would like people also to to realize that we are not just creating a language by creating the language afro the the creole language afro we are also creating a coding language programmation language along with it so the future of the world is going to be online at least a large proportion of it if we create a language we don't create a coding language that goes with it we'll fall behind so so it was a huge project so i'm we are focusing on it right now but obviously there are other problems like the hair challenges among the african people like yeah we are the only people in the world that just wear that our women wear a hair that is not grown from their own hair it doesn't make sense like you can't really discuss about it without being targeted and being caught up so so i am not going to go hard on that but yes as as a research lab we are just going to propose other solutions to solve that problem and that those solutions will be coming after and but but yes we have other issues but right now we are focusing on language because it is the first thing we should do before moving forward okay okay um i think now we can finally get into a fairly interesting topic i think over the past really throughout african culture throughout black american culture and more recently over the past few weeks it's become a touchy point speaking specifically about the n-word it's been used significantly it started off as a very derogatory term still is it was co-opted into a term of endearment among african-american people and by extension among black people all over the world and i think it has created this interesting scenario of language quote unquote discrimination in that these certain things certain groups of people can say who are non-black especially but there are certain things of course black people can say and anytime this conversation comes up it tends to get a bit more complicated than i think it should be um because there are other words across many different languages that it is not uh what's the word wise to say in front of native speakers of that language so just curious about your thoughts your experience with the n1 and what you think we should all consider in that conversation yeah so so so regarding the n-word um from from my understanding it's a word in the beginning that does not have a derogatory a meaning it's a word that means black it's a word that means black and then it has been used uh in a very bad way so it's like a language is a social construct like if if we agree that uh uh tomorrow we are not going to call a table a table anymore we are going to call it a chair then everyone when everyone say chair we will be referencing to a chair and not to a table so a language is a social construct so so so a language can change a world can change its meaning over time so today the end world does not mean black anymore it means it's it's an insult it's an insult now should we ban it no we shouldn't burn it because i think that when you start burning things you are creating more problem than solution then if you start banning it then someone will use it to insult someone because it has been banned because it's a bad world so i think that what we should do is to do an education about it uh talk about it to our children and so they understand how that world become an insult so so so so for today should we tell other people not to use the world but it is allowed for other people to use it i think that has to do always with the person you have in front of you and the intention of the person so we shouldn't do a global banning of the world or like uh uh um preventing some people not to say it i think it has to do when you are speaking with someone or with a group of people if the these people are trying to like uh uh uh be disrespectful you you know it right yeah but if you're speaking to a friend and the way he used the world when you are talking with him you will know if he is trying to be disrespectful or he he's just speaking genuinely genuinely with you so i think that that that that's the way we should be taking it and we should we africans should stop uh being too um uh uh sensitive about things we should start being much more uh rational about those type of stuff like if if if someone has been disrespectful like take political action you can sue him if he has been disrespectful to you you can sue him injustice and win uh so this is the way we should be doing things and stop being reactionary or being like uh uh very sensitive like like let's say the the the the comment of the the previous president donald trump about african nations being a nation we shouldn't like react the way we reacted because it's a waste of our time we should just take a political action like if you speak that way well we we are not going to do this with you anymore we are not going to be involved in this type of activities with you anymore that's what we should be doing and not being sensitive about it so regarding the n word we should try not to be sensitive about it and being just purely rational about it and move forward with your life we shouldn't be allowing other people to dictate how we feel about a certain world or not uh so so there are different people within the the the african audience that sees uh the use of the end world differently there are some black people who like they want they call themselves negros because they say i am a negro that world means black i don't want other people to dictate to me how i should see that world if i should stop using that word because it has been used in a derogatory ways so so so so they want to use it as a way to fight other people imposing on them how they should perceive a certain word because now we perceive it as an insult because it has been used as an insult for hundreds of years and then it changed our way to see it and that's how that's something we should avoid at all costs and it's a fair argument to have as well but if you are speaking with someone and he is disrespectful you should call him out for it and you shouldn't allow yourself to be insulted or whatever so that's how you see yeah yeah i i fairly agree with you in that yes um i think generally as africans we are very good at um making noise at certain points not so much is following through with concrete action with an action that actually has an effect whether it's going to be a boycott whether it's going to be political censure whether it's going to be legal action whatever the next step is i think we need better thought processes around what that might be and in kenya especially we have a battalion called the kenyans on twitter the kenyans on twitter are well renowned for being some of the most organized bullies on the earth it is amazing um we've gone up against and almost always won against very many different opponents from ugandan to tanzanians to nigerians zimbabweans botswanans cnn new york times i believe almost almost everyone was significantly attacked kenyans has gotten a bit overdose from them however the same thing happens a day or two the hashtag are stranded the memes have been made the people have felt very badly about what they've done one or two things you'll get uh like we recently not recently about two three years ago we had a vice president from cnn who had to fly into kenya and go meet the president to apologize for some coverage that they had given some negative coverage they had given most importantly some dishonest coverage that they had given on kenya talking about some violence that didn't exist that was manufactured and so on and a big reason for that happening was as a result of cayenne's on twitter going on two times making a lot of noise however that's a very scenario most of the times nothing like that happens um it just disappears into the fog of internet news and you move on to other things so i'm in full agreement with you we do need a better structure with dealing with our reach dealing with our challenges dealing with our own problems yeah without solutions exactly yeah yeah and yeah other people may waste our time and we need to use our our time smartly like someone make a comment and then we start reacting to it and and that all that time wasted can be used properly uh to do something else and uh i believe that that's how we should we should be handling things rationally and yeah and start yeah and and avoid making knowledge for nothing yeah yeah okay awesome um so on to slightly happier topics um you're working on a few other interesting initiatives uh there's afro academy there's pan africa and there's afro tower maybe take us a bit through each of them what's what are you trying to achieve with each of them and how can the general public assist yeah yeah exactly so so so pan africa is a platform that is going to be long i mean afro academy it's a platform that is going to be launched online and it's going to make it easy for people to learn the language and eventually we are trying to create an artificial intelligence that will be that will be learning the language as we are creating the language and that artificial intelligence will be on the afro academy teaching the language with to people assisting people in translation and and and and also eventually online classes in afro online so so so so afro academy eventually is going to be really really uh involved in creating a pan-african uh uh education system for all africans in the world and people can can learn the language and other programs online in afro language that we are trying to create and also there is the coding language that we are going to create in in afro will be available to learn on the afro academy so so there is that and there is pan africa pan-africa is a cultural organization it's a it's a cultural union uh that has the um the role to to to to create uh uh um the the the the regulatory framework for for for the language project and other cultural projects we have in africa like we when you create a cultural problem we have to enforce it uh uh legally in all the countries that are involved in the project and so so so so pan africa is going to be the the the the cultural union that takes care of that but in the beginning we can of course use the uh existing legislative framework that exists on the african continent like the the african union for instance that already exists but i believe that going forward in the future it may be good to have a dedicated a legislative framework for for for cultural projects so we can move faster and quicker into decolonizing the continent uh so so that's that that's it and there's also afro tower uh like the language project is a huge project um and i we believe at afro institute that we need a dedicated infrastructure uh to gather people in one place to do the researches like there are some research that can be done online but i think that to create a language you really need physical people to meet together we can start with with uh existing infrastructure but eventually afro tower needs to be created because afro academy will be working in that building afro institute will be working in that building pan africa the organization will be working in that in that building and it will make a lot of things easy like creating a language for for for africa is huge so uh if the project succeed is is obviously going to shift the dynamic in africa and in the world because this is one language spoken by 1.


billion people that's a lot that's a lot so so so uh you cannot create a big project like that without thinking about a dedicated infrastructure like like creating great stuff come with a cost so the question is how is culture important for african people how much are you willing to invest in culture for your for your future yeah culture is the most important thing you can invest in if you want your your your the future of your nations the future of your children to be great so i believe that this is a huge this is something we should invest in africa doesn't invest a lot in culture and we should change that if you want to compete with the world and move forward yeah okay awesome um um we can go back and talk about afro the language and some of the specifications you would like the public to be aware of in relation to how the language will work um some of the problems overall that you're trying to solve but then also how quickly we can get people to start speaking it yeah yeah yeah so so so afro that's the name we have we have chosen for for the project language and that will be the name for the language because it's a common name uh that we use among pan-africans when you say afro we know who you are talking about so we believe that in the future a language called afroware will it's a catchy world that will will make it clear to all africans that afro that language is for it's for our people this is the language that saves all our dialect this is our cultural heritage so uh so the language project afro the the the timeline we have for it right now is that the language should be created before 2030 and by 2016 um the future generation the coming generation should be literate in the language meaning that when the language is created by 2030 it should be or it should be enforced at first language within the borders of nation states that has adhered to the project so so so if we do it like that by 2060 uh the future generation speaking afro that will be congruent with the african union agenda 2063.


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so so so right now the african union agenda 2063 is lacking one thing it's lacking in culture it's lagging and unified language and if we add that to it the african union agenda 2063 will be complete so so so so this is the timeline we have with the project this is why we want to move quickly forward with the with getting the project out for people to to to to know it and eventually or very soon uh have uh the project within the hands of the at least one african uh president so we can start really seriously talking about this like we just don't we don't want to create a language and hope that people speak with it we are going to collaborate with the politicians to make it a reality to make it a law it has to become a one language and it will be useful if we can uh when the language is created that all the street names in africa change their names in afro so we start really enforcing it this is a pan-african project and it has to be done quickly because time is running out we have to do it now so so so so so that's it and and afro is going to be a union of all the african dialect and of course we have to take into consideration that those dialect has to be compatible among themselves for it to work so so this is why i i talk about sub-sahara countries dialects because they are compatible then other dialects that are spoken on the on the african continent we cannot put all of them together so so this is where we are coming from within when it comes to the choice of dialect but yes it will be a union it will be like it will be a creole language like other creole language existing in the in the world like the asian creole and there's all the caribbean creoles so what we are going to to do is to hire a lot of languages coming from all over the places some of them will come from jamaica barbados the caribbean 80 come from african continents and we are going to collaborate because some of them have much more experience in speaking a creole language already so we will put all those experience together within the pan-african audience pan-african language and then we are going to create that language and the coding language as well so so so this is where we are going okay awesome fantastic i i think that brings me perfectly into just the final thought process and this is focused on extreme and endangered languages in africa yeah we have a significant number of them being very likely to disappear over the next couple of years um because of the malleable nature of culture i'm sure you've been concerned that the same could eventually happen to afro what some of the thought process you have in trying to protect the language for millennia to come so so the way i see it the way we see it at afro institute we cannot speak all those languages we cannot speak more than 300 languages we can speak 300 languages we if we want a unified africa and if you see the rest of the world true guerilla warfare uh uh expansion imperialism expansion they have imposed one language on the territories that they conquered and the reason is that it's much more easier to manage a nation with one language than more languages like you cannot compete with the world if you speak 300 language so so by creating the project afro the afro language the creole language 2.0 are we going to uh um to be um participating in the disappearance of those languages yes of course if we don't do it will those dialects eventually disappear yes it's going to be so so so the way we see it is that we can say we cannot protect each one of those languages for a language to be preserved it has to be spoken by a lot of people yeah if we have 300 languages all of them cannot be speaking by billions of people at the same time yeah yeah we have to make a choice here so the way we see it at afro institute is to create a creole language and save all those live dialect at least the most important part of all of them within one unified language that will be speaking by billions of people so we are saving those language within one language but we cannot save each one of them individually so there is a choice to make and we think that that is the right one to do yeah yeah awesome yeah completely understood completely in agreement um i think the challenge also with so many of these disappearing languages is that they also get replaced as you said by the conquerors language by the imperial language it is possible even now um it is so wrong that even now so many years after colonization has ended that still happens however i think it's a perfect opportunity for a new language to take the space of one that has disappeared or is endangered where there is this continuation of african culture of african thought process yeah yeah okay awesome wow any parting shots for other pan-africanists would like to assist afro institute in the work that you're doing yeah so so so if if you guys go on our website afro.institute if you go on the website you can listen to the presentation video on the website you can download the black paper of the project and read the project and also you can send us your if you are language we need a lot of language from all over the world among the pan-african audience from the carib from the african continent wherever you are in europe north america but like send us your your your cv your experience in language if you are language we need a lot of you guys so eventually we are going to meet somewhere on the african continent and do research it is also possible that there will be uh well there will be different branches around the world and there could be different groups working on the language in different parts of the world but there will be possibility for you guys to meet and collaborate online and physically so yeah if you like the project send us your cv and and if you if you want to help us also uh with the um afro tower the building of the afro tower if you are nations or an individual out there and you want to give away 10 hectare of land to build the afro tower the the the the the infrastructure in which we are going to be working to build the next generation of language for african people yeah we need you to participate in that if you're an architect and you want to build that you want to create the the um you you are willing to to to help us with the uh construction plan of the of the of the afro tower you will be more than welcome send us a message and we'll get in contact with you and we'll collaborate together so and right now also if you are a a leader uh in in a government in africa whatever the government especially in sub-saharan africa and you are willing to help us move forward with the project to to to get in contact with all the african leaders so we can move forward with this project you will be more than welcome to contact us and then we will collaborate together to make that a reality yeah okay wow awesome um thank you so much for your time thank you so much for your energy and for your thoughts it has been a fairly interesting learning experience even for myself and hopefully also for your audience um so to hear more about our institute go to their website as he stated afro.institute www.afro.institute yeah and also don't forget don't forget like to make this project a reality we need donations so on the on our website you can also give us donation and through paper credit card or also you can give us crypto donation and and right now the organization is incorporated in canada but eventually it will be incorporated in sub-saharan africa in a nation uh where we are going to build the afro tower we will incorporate the organization in that in the in that city or in that country so we need a lot of donation like it's a huge building that is going to that is expected to cost around 300 uh million u.s dollar so like you cannot build uh the future you cannot build a huge project like this one without a huge institutional building so we have to be capable to finance our own organization like the idea that the african union parliament has been financed by china yeah i mean thank you to china but we should be capable to be financing our own institutions and this is one of the tests we have in africa we need donation and go on your website if you like that project and donate support us to make this project a reality yeah okay awesome thank you so much thank you so much for your time and have a lovely day i know it's early morning in canada it's late night here in um kenya thank you so much for your time uh thank you so much for our viewers and see you soon bye yeah it has been a pleasure thank you a pleasure a pleasure bye

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Potjiekos - A South African tradition

https://www.youtube.com/embed/-d0kLqhPytc


Today we're going to be making a dish that is really close to my heart as I'm sure many of you are aware I grew Up in South Africa, and this is a real traditional South African dish today We're gonna be making Potjiekos. This here is the star of the show. It is a cast-iron pot and you'll find at least one of these in most South Africans or Zimbabweans houses Worldwide. This is one that I've had for more than 10 years now and it is still absolutely perfect and it will last many lifetimes it is a fantastic buy it might be a little expensive when you buy it upfront but It's just gonna last forever if you take care of it And I will show a video in the future on how to take care of this if that's something that interests you Just let me know in the comments now traditionally. You would want to cook this on coal You don't wanna use gas, but I am cheating a little bit today I don't have a pit somewhere to actually do the coal.


Today's potjie will be a lamb potjie So I've got a leg of lamb that I've cut up into bite-sized pieces and I've got the bone in there as well That's gonna add fantastic flavor to this. Essentially. What a potjie is is a layered stew so That's a bit sacrilegious to call it the stew. It's not as chew in the traditional sense It's just so much better, but it is a layered stew and I'll show you what that means in just a little while but the meat you've got So many choices if you want to use beef you can you want to use lamb I enjoy a good lamp potjie You can use fish chicken's a big one as well My brother-in-law Andre does fantastic chicken potjie, and I'll get him to show you guys His recipe one day as well because that is awesome When it comes to vegetables, you can use absolutely anything you like when I'm doing a red meat potjie So with lamb or beef I always will add at least a kilogram and a half of fresh tomatoes I will add two or three white onions and That's pretty much it the rest of it could change depending on what's available at the store or fresh from our garden My dad whenever he used to make a potjie he'd put so much cabbage on that He'd have to put a brick on top of the pot because the cabbage was just so high up now I won't be using that much cabbage, but there will be a layer of cabbage in there as well now Let's look at the real secret of a good potjie and that is down to the spices These are the ingredients for my garam masala now ideally, I'd prefer to have whole pieces of things like the cinnamon that's over here and the cloves but Unfortunately, I just didn't have any in stock right now I only have the powdered This garam masala is actually great in many other meals if you just want to make yourself a curried lamb There's a fantastic way to do it.


I would probably add a bit more garlic and some ginger as well When you're doing the cooking up. Yeah, this is a great base for that You just want to grind it up as fine as you can And we'll be ready to start cooking the meat You want to add about a tablespoon of oil just vegetable oil or any oil you want to use some lard would be good. Make sure it's as hot as you can see it there where it's sizzling and then we start adding our meat And then in there the spices now you can mix the spices in with the meat before you add them to the pot, but it's not gonna make a hell of a difference And this is gonna be about the only time you will be allowed to stir your potjie so let's just get it all mixed in there get the spices all over the meat That smells incredible So you see the The bones I left there.


It's quite a bit of meat still on them, but that'll cook off nicely and some more bone over there While this is cooking down a little bit. You're gonna stick your lid back on and You're gonna let it cook for about ten minutes and during that time. You want to prepare your vegetables Once about ten or fifteen minutes have gone by then You should have quite a bit of juice at the bottom of your pot. I Don't know if you can really see that it is Quite juicy in the bottom. So that's fantastic. You want to just spread it out and Now we're gonna start layering Our extra ingredients. So the first thing to go in we're gonna add in our tomatoes As well as our onions and you don't wanna stir it you just want to Just mix it in to the top there We're gonna add About a pint or half a litre of lamb stock At this point you can season to taste you probably only gonna need a bit of salt Because there's quite a bit of pepper in the masala that I mixed up earlier.


So season with a bit of salt be sparing because the obviously is gonna be some salt inside the Lamb stock that I just added You then want to start adding ingredients based on how long they take to cook Generally, it's not terribly important, but I tend to go with the potatoes at the bottom first So just get those spread out and then go with some carrots Then we have our sweet potato this is already getting very full There's our squash Who is going to be layering up some cabbage on the top a couple of things that the cabbage does is Obviously it's there for some nice lovely cabbage to eat But it also it'll hold the moisture in a little bit it creates a bit of a Layer, but a boundary at the top There's one of the ingredients that I haven't actually showed you just yet and before I finished putting the cabbage on I probably should put it and That is some wine now if you don't like cooking with alcohol I know my sister doesn't like alcohol in her food then you can use just water But if you are going to be using water not wine then add about three tablespoons of balsamic vinegar So I'm going to be adding about two cups of wine And then we're just going to continue layering the cabbage I laugh because this is something we used to tease my dad about every time And it looks like I'm gonna have to do the same thing Let me go get a brick.


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My dad's gonna be really proud this time Well, there we go, that's a proper Family recipe their bricks and all but what we're gonna do now is you can see that the it's bubbled up already It's already simmering again. So it's time to turn the heat down a bit and let this cook for about three four hours if you can The potjie has been cooking now for about an hour and a half and it's time to check just to see that there's still a Lot of liquid and there definitely is I could actually hear bubbling before so that's another way to check But you can see there's plenty of liquid around there I'm happy with that if however you couldn't hear it bubbling away. Then I would go and add some water or in my case I'd probably add another cup of wine in there.


You can add water that's not problem at all You just want to make sure that there is always liquid inside you because if there isn't Then it could potentially burn down the bottom there. So just make sure there's a liquid in there all the time Now, why do we not stir a potjie? Well as a few reasons for it the way I like to think of it is each layer here that the liquid that's coming up from the bottom all the flavors from the meat is gonna push up through all the different layers It comes up to the top and then it sort of sinks down and it's kind of circulating the whole time that this is cooking And it yes, it's going to bring some of the flavors up from each of the different layers into the other layers But it's not like a stew which pretty much makes everything taste The same in my opinion this just it comes out so different Potjiekos is more than just a meal It's a social event in South Africa.


You'd spend your entire day around cooking one of these and You'd start at 9 a.m Chopping up the vegetables and the meat and getting it all seasoned Probably start cooking at about 11 a.m. With a view to have it done by about 6:00 or 7:00 p.m that evening all through the day you're their friends and family coming around and sharing a beer with you and Sharing the events of the week You'd have a braai probably in the early afternoon like 2 p.m. That's a BBQ for those that don't know what a braai is and It's just such a great day. And it's a tradition. I like to keep alive I've been in the UK now for 20 years and I still have Regular potjies. I really do enjoy it it tastes great but it's also it's that that nostalgia for me as well and my wife really enjoys it she's British and She loves it Her family love it in fact Our next-door neighbour's also British and they came around last year for a potjie and they absolutely loved it and they were asking me yesterday When I'm gonna be doing another potjie so that's part of the reason why I'm doing it today to show you guys how it's done and also To help out my neighbors who have been craving some some good old-fashioned potjie so we're just gonna let this simmer for a little bit longer probably got about another hour and a half to go and We'll have some delicious food ready to eat We are ready now to dish up this is for my next-door neighbor So I'm gonna dish theirs up first and you get to see what this looks like It's been about four and a half hours Now that I've been cooking this every now and then I've come and checked on it made sure that there was some liquid in there and we can see how that's Really come down quite a bit.


I can see there's still some liquid on the side So that is perfect. If you let this dry out they could very easily burn underneath and that's the last thing you want so it's time to turn this off and Let's get some food into a bowl for next door because I'm sure they're quite hungry we're going to get some cabbage in there, of course and This looks and smells incredible So I'm trying to get a little bit of everything in here, of course we'll get some meat from the bottom there All that meat is looking fantastic falling apart nice and juicy just perfect Well, I wish I could offer you all a bowl of this 'cause I'm sure you'd love it So that looks a bit of a mess at the moment But when I take that over to next door And I'm sure they're gonna love that and then it's time for my wife and I to have our dinner as well Anyway, I really do hope you give this a try There are so many different variations of how you can put this together And I'll share a couple more recipes in the future with different types of potjies that I'm sure you guys will love Anyway, that's it for now.


Thank you so much for watching until the next video. Stay safe and stay spicy.

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Beads shopping in one of Africa's Busiest Markets & why everyone loves beads

https://www.youtube.com/embed/EKfFYMs6jdM


Hi everyone! To all my subscribers and my  return viewers welcome to this lifestyle video   and at the same time the 12th episode of my fashion item of the week. Just because beads are one of my favorite items this episode is really  special. In this video I am collaborating with a Nigerian youtuber Fiath Ogechi from Fiath Ogechi Tv and an award-winning fashion designer Ciah Hlophe from South Africa to talk more about beads. Check their channels out and stay tuned we will be back. A bead is a small piece of glass, stone or similar material that is threaded with others into a chained form or sewn onto a fabric or leather etc..


What is popping everyone! i'm Ciah and today we are going to be talking about beads. As a designer myself, I've been fortunate enough to learn a thing or two about beading. And let me tell you this, if you master the beginning and the ending which is called the closing of any bead piece that you do, anything else in between a walk in the park. Everyday, all over the world.. People wear accessories made out of beads in the forms of earrings, necklaces and bracelets. In Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal and other african countries, waist beads are a symbol of femininity, fertility, sensuality and spiritual well-being. And speaking of necklaces i'm actually wearing one right now but this is not a fashion accessory. This is more of a cultural symbol, if I can put it like that. In my culture and my tradition when your father passes on and you are the last born, you have to wear this as a symbol.


And you know like I said this is not to be used as a fashion accessory. That is why I kept it hidden under my shirt. Hello my name is Fiath Ogechi! So yes! I love beads! In fact growing up as a child I loved making beads. I used to make beads and sell it yes yes yes yes Infact you can't be an african.. if I let come down home to Nigeria! You can't be Nigerian and not have your.. And be dressed in your traditional outfit and not have your beads on. You would be so incomplete. So generally in Africa, beads symbolises beauty, tradition or culture strength marital statute   age, power and warrior hood. Depending on the type of bead how it is worn and by who. Now can we please discuss the versatility and importance of beads during a traditional wedding.  A typical traditional South African wedding where there is a Zulu or Hosa tribe involved.


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You know beads are always the showstopper for me because is it really a wedding without a glamorous neck   piece or a head that has been nicely decorated with beads? No I do not think so! When it comes to beadwork the Zulu and the Hosa people always excel. Beads are now also hitting the runway but not as head pieces necklaces or earrings but as dresses.


In 2019 Gert-Johan Coetzee put together an amazing dress for Miss Bonang Matheba and it weighed 9kg. As heavy as it was she wore it with such grace and elegance. Also in 2019 our reigning  Queen Miss Universe Zozibini Tunzi took her first walk as Miss Universe, wearing a dress made out of beads. She also gave her last walk as Miss Universe wearing a dress made out of beads. So you cannot deny the impact that beads have in fashion. One other reason I love it so much is  because it brings out the rich african culture. Infact, I can't go anywhere without wearing beads. Either is waist beads or anklets, earrings it's so beautiful and african one  of the reasons I love it so much! So yes! beads are beautiful! BEAUTIFUL! Thank you! That being said, while in Ghana for my holidays, I had the desire to go shopping for beads Agbobloshie market is 1 of Accra busiest markets where you can find almost everything to buy at  very low cost.


The market was full of sellers and buyers and lots of carts and vehicles. Luckily I was accompanied by tw o elderly women who are beadists who willingly took me to where they buy their beads. I actually found all I was looking for  and more since I returned from Ghana,   I have been working on some  beads and here they are. I hope this episode was impactful Do you have your own opinions you want to share for us all to learn? Where do you come from and how do your people use beads? Please share in the comment section below. I promise to come back next time with  another fun and fact-filled episode Thank you for watching and do not forget to subscribe and hit the notification bell   of Fiath Ogechi Tv, this channel and that of Ciah Hlophe Bye

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AMERICANS try SOUTH AFRICAN Snacks for the First Time

https://www.youtube.com/embed/W5FwdGenjQQ


Africa whoa hey good morning guys and welcome back to the vlog today we are going to be eating some snacks from some country try to reach was generous enough to send us a package of treats from some strange countries hey so you guys ready yeah Miss America here we go I'm doing well we got this my car Jose you want to be in charge your card okay Africa whoa so yeah so Cape Town South Africa guy hey awesome when what we got in here ready Wow Oh me little bar well there's no here we have some mini Edgard cheese flavored snacks okay I grit oh wow this is hacking a little busted up mmm that is small goodness smell like ready one two three mmm what's the square one yeah in America oh he's it mm-hmm yeah that's what it tastes like I feel like a cheese it no lucky thing it's like those tuna crackers here I like rectangle okay so those are good oh cool mini cheese crackers thumbs up are swing-wing friends what brings you here boys it made from corn or huh the maize no no you can melt and mouth Wow Wow they're like big corn puffs guys really yeah sir awesome thank you whoa all right we showed you this they don't maize or what do they come clean clean corn cobs big like he's really thank you all right maize corn crops hey I'll get em I mean you know in your mouth yeah then my mouth oh it is gone it kind of did some little chickeny yeah yeah like a chicken flavor yeah I choose this one oh when you're wunderbar this is the wunderbar Calabar half milk chocolate bar and it's absolutely delicious Wow I think I like this it's Gloria named you the treasury's one for you all right yeah typhus has a monthly subscription so you can read it order food from all over the world wait that's fun yeah this is really good it's my favorite young good chocolate I'm gonna advertise that pepper again so I can get this chocolate okay let's go it can it fix it biscuit maybe henesys gets crazy are they kind of balls or tennis racket they're the even with team hello whatever oh wow they're made with real coconut and syrup really Wow there's a cool little supposed to be enjoyed the TiVo hi these are look awesome you have a spider's fangs our best medicine company these have a pretty pattern looked at I like to serve with would you advise care of your company and stuff yes yeah there are eight ready one two three do you again coconut you can definitely taste the coconut I can imagine having like a tea party and dip in them is a bit definitely going to see sure yeah yeah those are good yeah this one is a TV bar by beacon chocolate bar basically rice puffs with chocolate nothing about peanuts so starting out in it would go must be the right subspace II let them open we had had a little accident here yeah some of them one of them melted yeah these guys here got damaged in transit all right change it whoa Tommy Tommy looks kind of like a Snickers yeah yeah it's really light wow there's like amazing super live it oh yeah looks more like a bang bang yeah that's like in the inside miss na go like it's like mixed together not all like differently oh yeah great is called a PV bar once it is oh yeah everyone go mm-hmm-hmm I think I forgive you really sick year thumbs up South Africa s use one of these sticky one that is the same kind so okay we'll do it a non non sticky one this one's called up scissor is er o cream-soda scissor maybe not so happen it exploded in there the cream soda came out does it show this hard brittle and busy and texture when warm which this is warm it's softer and it loses some of its fizz it's easier to eat when it's warm oh wow it's almost like liquid so that oh yeah do we count a minute I don't think we can open it well we feel like we use it into our mouths okay you can get in here right now I'll sleep okay 7 l squeeze it we leave that one on this is over oh wow I'm gonna try it's green inside yeah I better be fun to freeze it but I'm going to have a hard time eating this let me just taste it a little bit face it they're like green apple I would say it's more like wine Wow can you tell my friend Tina yeah what's really good actually yeah like citrusy is good it's um definitely messy and it just loving it and it's warm fake good yeah okay I know over watch my hand a few moments later three goodies left all right tiny one okay this one is a mess please text message a Texas text close Venice Nestle a lot of these ones in this box of chocolate yeah okay good chocolate and wavern oh this is the most popular chocolate bar in South Africa Oh No so you can't help but love it oh my so this oh yeah definitely like layered wafer in shock oh yeah this was not big enough for all okay how was it sir you're delicious I like it like it so wait for my that's the most popular chocolate bar in South Africa say yeah I think that's good cool I was expecting the way for any kind of stale yeah no I look really that's good okay all right here we go this is this is called topper and it looks like their pack of cookies kind of like an Oreo whoa so pretty what's the big plan a big look you only get a half I don't know one half okay yeah hey yo I'll take everything so squeeze all right okay right I think you're going to eat all this at one setting no but it's a good piss - I'm so working on the other guys are called what hoppers hoppers hoppers why I'm thinking hmm mm-hmm look right - ma'am no I sent her milk tea or coffee so those are good good thank you great job South Africa last one those three from the Baker Baker baby yeah Thank You Baker and then beacon beacon remember they don't have so many snack companies insulting nextly I don't forget that this is from yes it's a me little bar me live in Neela's splitted chocolate offices filling is caramel and brownie whoa I can know that every single square has our mole has an X like oh yeah really logo on it how many more funny mmm taste the caramel yeah hmm okay like our dish do we in man mm-hmm like little pieces that's caramel or something you can definitely taste it's caramel good everybody what do you think some of us some thumbs up so is it possible for us to visit South Africa and survive on this next week okay hexer yet so don't forget nobody gets next food has no brand right like the Cadbury are not not very but the um medically all right meelo Nestle international brand yeah but um pretty good stuff what was your favorite well I really like the wunderbar ah I was a chocolate bar yeah that was really good Sara I actually really liked everything I don't really care for the fling no let's say there weren't really my favorite um that's busy things too maybe if it was bread yeah and it was frozen that we cool but yeah this one probably out of pollen yeah what's your favorite James Meow's them all was either probably a meal Oh chocolate bar or just one yeah either it's a meal chocolate bar or the ER okay funny I guess this is normal TV we need sir what's your favorite one so one day by the Wonder Boy Wonder Bar by far the rhyme all right guys this one right here is my favorite the little tiny tea cracker is my favorite I could eat the whole pack easy go ahead try another one munch em up so thank you so much to try trees for sending us this pack of delicious snacks and we kind of made a mess over but we'll pick it up don't worry don't worry and uh if you guys want to try this like Jewel said it's a subscription like a monthly subscription thing and so there's a link down in the description of this video where you can go ahead and check them out and if you're interested in trying different snacks from around the world but you don't want to travel this might be a really good way to do that yeah maybe one examples what you want to know what you're getting into yeah like if you can live there man that's important yeah if you haven't yet subscribed to the channel go ahead and hit that subscribe button because we make new videos for you everyday we just share our lives with you try to give you something that was hope you keep smiling well guys we'll hopefully you have a really great day my lane


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