Tuesday, 21 February 2023

"Afro-Victorian": Bringing Historical Black Women's Dress into the 21st Century w Cheyney McKnight

https://www.youtube.com/embed/N3rmKrQPAE4


(cheerful music) - (Cheyney) When I started living history, everyone told me "black women wore what white women were wearing, but the poor version of it." And from the jump, I was like "That doesn't make sense at all." (exploratory piano music) My name is Cheyney McKnight. I run Not Your Momma's History channel and I specialize in telling the stories of black folks in North America in the 18th and 19th century. So we started a new series, These Roots, where we do a day in the life of a black person, whether they're free, enslaved, wealthy, or working class. And so we follow them through an entire day and we've done three episodes so far and we're going to continue to do it. And then I also am a historical interpreter. So, I travel around teaching people about the stories of my people. - Cheyney's series is going to be linked all over this video because you need to check it out. But Cheyney is going to talk a little bit about, sort of give you a little bit of a taste of some of the stories of these women.


- Yes. Absolutely. - And people. - So when I got started in living history, I really wanted to learn about what black women were wearing. A little bit about my background, growing up, I had family members in New York and in South Carolina and so I had a very unique experience where I knew elderly people from the north and the south. And so I got a range of what black women were wearing in the 1940s and 30s. Going further back, I really wanted to learn the style of black women because I could distinctly see the difference in style between black women and other women in the 1990s and the 2000s. This was the same in the 19th and 18th century. When I started living history, everyone told me "black women wore what white women were wearing, but the poor version of it." And from the jump I was like, "that doesn't make sense at all." I had access to paintings and drawings and pictures, phot- photography of the style of black women and we had, have a huge amount of WPA narratives where black women were talking about clothing and the different styles they went through.


And then we also have firsthand accounts of people observing black people, which they really talk in depth about the style of black folks. What it comes down to is that black women always had this very peculiar style that is distinctly West African in origin. No matter how far removed they were for the continent, whether it was through enslavement, through time, through space, they held onto these very distinctly West African characteristics in clothing and also in culture.


And that this is what I really wanted to educate people on and make them aware on, of. I think people sometimes dismiss African-American culture as a distinct culture because it's kinda become mainstream culture in many ways with hip hop. A lot of that kind of gets lost in the wash, but I want to make sure people know the origins of black culture and style that is distinctly West African. - I mean, this is such a good segue - into what you're wearing, (laughs) but I want to talk also a little bit more about specifics. What is the style? Like where does it come from? What are the developments? - I don't know. - No, that's a great- - There's just like way too much. - No, no, no, that's a great question. So, I get my sources from a lot of different places. I get it from the WPA narratives, from accounts of enslavers, European travelers. But when looking at the WPA narratives, they talk about the necessity for things like mending and patchwork, which everyone was doing.


But I find that the style, aesthetic choices of black folks were slightly different. There was one account from a missionary during the Civil War. They were teaching black children how to read and write. There were donations from New York City of dresses, beautiful plaid dresses, for the little girls and the, the children brought them home to their mothers. And what happened was the mothers took contrasting colors and sewed it to the bottom. And so when the girls came back, the mothers were like, we fixed the dress you gave to our children. (Cheyney laughs) Like they could not tell them that this was a better dress because they added that fabric to the bottom. Obviously, the woman was horrified, but I like to think that they did fix those dresses. - You're welcome. (laughs) And so those are, you see, little anecdotes like that, where you would see white women who, whichever standing they are in society, would never have made that choice. Just like I think some French women who find themselves in America would makes distinctly different choices about their wardrobe, English women who had just recently migrated or Irish women are also, were also making distinctive choices that are different.


So looking at someone, you could kind of tell this person is from a different place or culture. And I find those little things unique when you find them in stories. Also, last one, one of my favorite stories. An enslaver's wife was observing enslaved persons going to church or what they call Sunday meeting. She said that the head wraps of the women were just so big and brightly colored that they could put one's eye out from a mile away. - Head wraps were a big deal. - Yes, absolutely. So you can find head wraps in the north and the south on women from enslaved women, free black women, and depending on where you were, it can inform if the person is enslaved or free or just simply black. It was also a racial identifier. Some women, for example, Juliette Toussaint. There's a beautiful painting from the early 19th century. She and her husband lived and worked in New York City and they were quite wealthy. They were, I would call them upper middle class or upper, upper middling. And she is wearing this beautiful head wrap, flat head wrap. And it's distinctly different from the turbans that were worn in the early 19th century.


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But unfortunately, something that I am trying to break down is that it wasn't just black women and Creole women in Louisiana who were wearing head wraps or just in the south. Black women in the north and south were wearing head wraps, we have the evidence on up into the 19th century. I have a beautiful picture from a historical society in New York, that pictures a black woman who works for a household as a maid of all work. And she is wearing this huge, fabulous, like mid-century, mid-19th century printed cotton. And it is huge, it looks like a Gele. And she's just like in the painting with her employers just, not the painting, the picture, with her employers, just "hey :)".


It is so cool. - So. - Fantastic. - It's like, so we've done a collab, Cheyney and I, which you can find on her channel, about chatelaines and we were just talking about how a chatelaine makes noise and it announces your presence to the room. I feel like it has some of the similar, like, "I am here". - "Acknowledge me". - Absolutely. - And I spent quite a long time kind of hiding myself that now I want to announce to the world that this is who I am. This is where I'm from and I embrace my culture and my people. - Everything to say "I'm here!" (upbeat music) Head wraps and taking up space and- - You do literally bring your work into the way that you dress. As you call it? - Yeah, so Afro-Victorian was a term coined by the costume designer of Jingle Jangle.


And when I first heard it, I was just like ooh. - You've been doing that for years. - Exactly! This is my style. And then also I incorporate a lot of Afro-Futurism, which I think some of this - would incorporate. - Which you can go check out - on Cheyney's channel. - I think that I, more so, educate people about things that we lost, the knowledge that we lost, which you encounter a lot, for people. Because we didn't do some things since the 1920s or 30s, there's a whole generation of knowledge that we lost. And for, specifically for black women. There's a whole period of time where we lost how to, for example, stretch our natural hair.


So when I say stretching, my hair is in a natural state, but if I want to do a updo, like you see those beautiful pictures that were taken of black women, they weren't using hot combs. They were able to pin their hair down into a European hairstyle with their hair like this. And so there were some things they did every day to stretch their hair. And so kind of making those connections and educating people about that. And I'll be doing a lot more videos on black hairstyling in the 19th century. - So definitely, I mean we've said this a hundred times, but please go check out Cheyney's channel. - Me too. Thank you so much Bernadette. It's been so awesome to finally just hang out with you. I feel like every time we see each other, we're racing by one another.


I'm like hi Bernadette, bye! (laughs) - Hello. Goodbye. - Right, right, right, right. - And it's always an honor to listen to you talk and to watch your videos, of course, I cannot stress enough how much, not only is your channel informative but it's so well-produced, like it's exactly what the world needs. All the links down below, go and follow Cheyney. I mean, I'm sure all of you already do because, you know. Yeah, I have no idea how to end this video. - Yeah. - This is like the worst part. - I know, it's always the worst part where you're like oh, I'll let you go. - So we're going to end this now. Go forth and be your most wonderful self and watch some videos. - Bye! - Bye! (laughs) - Okay, huzzah!.

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Africa Reacts to Truth Bomb that African DNA is More Diverse than World's Total

https://www.youtube.com/embed/YXmBhIoiD6Q


this by far is the most outstanding video  you'll ever see as an African or a person   of African descent that the Western world  has been trying to hide for centuries welcome to 2nacheki's Africa react I am your  host mikeymushi and this is a show where we go   online and look at better videos concerning  the African continent and its people and in   today's video we will be talking about one of the  most important thing what it means to be African   and the difference between being black and being  African because uh one is made up the other one   is an actual an actual fact so today's video  we will be reacting to this geneticist he's a   British geneticist called uh Dr Adam Rutherford  and he says something very important that every   African here every African in the diaspora and  every person who has an inch of African DNA needs   to hear okay this is something the Western media  will never tell you this is something the Western   World will never tell you so before we start with  our reaction please make sure to like subscribe   and hit the notification Bell it's the best way to  let YouTube know this is a good video and it will   share it to more like-minded people like you so  let's have a listen and afterwards we'll discuss   the average African-American genome is very  distinct from the African genomes from which   they they were taken now you couple that with  the fact that there is more genetic diversity   within the African continent than in the rest  of the world put together have you had that   just a very very important uh thing what is the  said which means that on average someone from   Senegal is more different genetically to someone  from Angola than either of those people are to   anyone else on the rest of the planet and that's  just the what the genetic says so this I know this   is quite a brain scrambling concept no no I'm  with you I'm with you but but that's this is   one of the problems okay are you with us just uh  bear with him he'll explain it perfectly this is   one of the problems with the earlier conversation  about about how we categorize people we say black   people right because Linnaeus said black people  Homo sapiens alpha or Africanus but actually it's   a completely incoherent biological category  because of the amount of genetic diversity   that exists in in people from the who are  in Africa or from the African diasporas   so how this relates to the transatlantic  slave trade means that you've got two people   taken from maybe neighboring tribes or counties  or whatever the equivalent is or or countries who   are taken from their their birthplace put onto  ships mixed around maybe live or die they then   traded around forcibly mated potentially um we we  know from the genetics now that they that there   is a lot of European DNA in the African-American  genome and mostly it is from male Europeans into   female African-Americans so you know figure  that out he's politely saying uh sex lives   um interestingly the converse is also true many uh  white Americans have up to 20 percent of African   ancestry that we can measure in their DNA so again  it's another example of how there's a mixed race   Medici okay so uh we will stop it there but please  we will link the original podcast because it goes   on for about two hours and it's just pure gold  what he's talking about is just pure gold and   uh this long form uh for you to understand  everything he's saying about genetics African   DNA African genetics you really have to watch  the one hour uh sorry two-hour podcast and so   you can educate and Elevate yourself right but  uh with that let's discuss uh on the points that   uh the doctor the good doctor has said right  first he said which is the most important thing   and which no Western media organization which  no no Western 10 platform can always tell you   because this Western media platforms like putting  Afrikaans and people of African descents downright   they just like to propagate Western uh white  supremacy right because white supremacy is just   Western Supremacy that's the job of the media so  the thing this media will never tell you is that   your African DNA right your African DNA you  me as a Kenyan me as a Tanzanian are elected   so genetically diverse more than the rest  of the world combined like you can imagine   how like what that one means right so so  uh like like think about DNA as uh maybe   um juice right so you have concentrated juice  and over time it keeps diluting it right it   keeps diluting so what the doctor is saying  maybe to explain it in a layman's term is that   the African juice is the most concentrated one  that has more more more more variety like more   more variations right so that's why me as a Kenyan  and the Senegalese me as a Kenyan or somebody from   South Sudan or somebody from Egypt are vastly  different genetically as compared to the rest   of of the people as compared to a European uh a  Spanish Spanish person uh Portuguese person French   person German person British person basically  the same the same DNA lineage right technically   you know this topic is kind of complicated  because I'm not an expert and I'm explaining   this as a Layman so bear with me if I don't get  it quite right scientifically right but the way   I've understood it is that me as a Kenyan right  and my friend as I thought sudanis we are more   genetically different more genetically diverse  than a Portuguese a Spanish a German a Russian uh   Belgian right all those people are more similar  like the difference between them is negligible   than the difference between me as a Kenyan me  my friend as a Senegalese my friend as a South   Sudanese right so what does that tell you uh about  what this world is the whole concept of being   black is uh fake it's it's made up it's man-made  right uh because nature does not care care if I'm genetically right because uh DNA always wants  to spread and propagate right that's the whole   point of life on this planet so this DNA of  our African DNA doesn't care if these Western   people call us black doesn't care if this person  people call themselves white because they're not   white and they are not luck we are where we came  from right the region where we came from our DNA   is where we came from right so all this uh media  trying to push the fact that these black people   categorizing Africans together right like like  all if if you've got black skin you're the same   person no no no no no technically it should be if  you avoid skin you're more of the same person but   if you have African DNA if you have African DNA  you're more different you're more diverse than   your your brother like even not even the next  country the next tribe me as a Bantu my friend   azakushite my other friend as an eye lot we are  genetically diverse and those people live next to   each other right the Maasai the kikuyu the lawyers  right like these are the communities in uh like in   uh East Africa right those people live next door  to each other and they're more diverse than an   American and a Russian right the more diverse than  than I know like a white Australian and uh like a   like a British person because they're technically  the same people right so what does that tell you   about the world that we live in uh we live in a  white supremacy a western Supremacy world where   they put down African people by categorizing them  and demeaning them right everything black uh as uh   Julius malema recently said everything black on on  the world we live in is vilified everything black   is hated right because they gave us uh this thing  uh you guys hold this black thing we hate this   black thing and the retort is that technically  scientifically we are not black we are African   and African means like a like a touring from  Algeria right uh uh uh so Sudanese from from   Sudan right uh uh pygmy from Dr Congo uh koisan  from South Africa those people genetically uh we   even did a recent video where Neil degrassehson  was talking about the same things right those   two people have got the most extreme genetic uh  characteristics and are like in this the world   that we live in are considered as the same people  which is totally insane even the doctor like says   the lunacy right how these scientist can be like  ah you people are black like as a geneticist I'm   sure people like that always think we live in a  crazy world right we are people make scientific   uh political decisions scientific decisions  uh policies uh like decisions based on racial   stereotypes based on racial uh hatred based on  racial looks right just because you look a certain   way this person already thinks you are this  step and this step in this step and the genetics   speak a different story right and he also uh  mentioned about how uh there's a lot of uh white   people with 20 African DNA so some of you racist  people up there in America who hate Africans uh   technically are actually Africans right and this  is what the media will never tell you because they   want to vilify this African DNA to put us down so  that they can be up that's the whole definition of   white supremacy of Western Supremacy which is  basically the same thing right they're making   their decisions the same way the Nazis made  their decisions with the Aryan race right it   wasn't based on science it wasn't based on fact  it was based on this pseudosense called Eugenics   racism right so so so how can you have the same  moral compass as a Nazi and be like oh yeah we   are the like we are the modern civilized world  and you're just perpetuating the same decision   making the same category making the same behaviors  at the technically the worst people to ever exist   on this planet did you're basically following what  the Nazis did in categorizing people saying ah we   are better off because we are like this and  you guys are not bit off because you're like   that because of your like oh because you're all  black in this area right and we will have better   policies for us and you love poor policies for  like uh for like for you people right these are   the same people who always will fit the Nazis yet  they're just using the same policies as the Nazis   to run this apparently modern world right yeah so  uh sorry for the long run but this uh uh is always   very important to me this topic because I love  fact I'm always a geek always love science and   and science is cannot lie right science tells the  truth even if you're racist you can try to put on   in your pseudoscience when which which over the  history they've done but the truth always comes   out facts are always facts regardless of if you  are racist or Not facts will always be so   to all my Africans uh please I would recommend  you guys from today if you are in America if   you are in the UK If you are in Australia all  over the world right if you're in the continent   stop referring to yourself as black right start  referring to yourself as African right African of like the East African region right stop stop  stop using their terminology stop using their   their racist categories right start just using  the facts right uh you you you you can either   circling yourself abazonias uh azanias like but  don't just perpetuate the things that you're   told are Black White yeah yeah those are made up  words right so with that said uh this has been   your host mikeymushi please make sure to like  subscribe and hit the notification Bell it's   the best way to support this channel yeah and uh  with that said always remember Africa is watching


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How to Prepare to Play the Djembe | African Drums

https://www.youtube.com/embed/53tnS3Uonh4


Speaker 1: Prior to we even play the drum, we need to learn just how to hold the djembe drum as well as what position to be in to ensure that you can be comfortable to bet an extended period of time. The initial point I do is I tilt the drum away It ' s not a thigh master. You wear'' t have to sit right here and capture it.You ' ll make yourself tired. I ' m not leaning from side to side. Speaker 1: What concerning your arms and also your shoulders? Audio speaker 2: Your arms too. The more you unwind your feeling as well as your body,. since there'' s a body connection with the songs. The method, you see just how I'' m kicked back right here, I'' m. sitting like below, I'' m relaxing. This way if I want to hit the bass, I only. do make use of that bass. In this way I'' m relaxing. Audio speaker 1: And you'' re raising your arms. You ' re moving your arms. You'' ll notification that my body is still. I'' m not going side to side, however I'' m lifting. my arms backwards and forwards, as well as I'' m staying center.Those are some


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suggestions on exactly how to prepare yourself. to play the djembe. It ' s not a thigh master. You wear'' t have to sit below and capture it.You ' ll make yourself tired. I ' m not leaning from side to side. That way I'' m relaxing. You ' re relocating your arms.

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Monday, 20 February 2023

Djembe Lesson: Melodies In Tones

https://www.youtube.com/embed/xqOiBoSKe78


So - erm - If you'' ve saw my various other videos that I'' ve called ' Melody in Tones ' and also'' Tune in Tones 2 ' You ' ll have kind of got the suggestion that I commonly use this in practice however additionally in solo also This concept I got from Famoudou Konate where you can play an echauffement basically done in puts and afterwards throw in tones that make a tune ... ... undoubtedly you can play in tones as well as throw in puts that make a melody too. Among my videos just recently was called '' Tune in Slaps and also Tones' ' for exactly that reason. But ... erm ... I'' ve only shown you a pair of different patterns and when I actually being in the studio and also do this in my own method ... ... I could bet an hour - wear'' t fear I ' m not going to do it for a hr currently! - yet I could bet a hr ... ... ... as well as just do whole lots of different variants, so I '' m just going to bet a few minutes ... um ... ... and just gone through some different variations this time without much talking ... um ... just to offer concepts ... you recognize ...


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I'' ll keep remining you of where the one is also so ... here we go ... I'' ll stick in 4/4 for the minute so ... One ... two ... three ... four ... One ... 2 ... three ... four ... One ... One ... One ... One ... two ... 3 ... 4 ... 4 ... one ... One ... 2 ... 3 ... 4 ... Enjoy ...

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Tekno - Enjoy (Official Music Video)

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


FALSE:: MISTAKE: UNSUPPORTED ENCODING


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African couture fashion/ black African fashion show /Black Fashion

https://www.youtube.com/embed/uS0MVE57dQo


Fashion, models, designer, catwalk, lingerie, celebrities, influencers, actress, lifestyle, women, sexy, beautiful, shirts, gorgeous, handsome, Beach,


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First Time Trying AFRICAN FOOD Mukbang ( FUFU EGUSI SOUP EFO RIRO & OGBONO SOUP ) QUEEN BEAST & JUJU

https://www.youtube.com/embed/flvt8fNxI6Q


hey what's up kings and queens today  Juju is trying African food AKA Nigerian   food in the building subscribe click  the post notification are you ready   the thing about African food you  can actually eat with your hands what do you give it a nine out of ten okay okay why not  a 10 out of 10. because it it has a   little aftertaste that'll tastes a little  bit bad oh yeah you think so I like him   what's next this one okay I  think this one is the albino   soup so did you want to try it you could try it  with Fufu which is that or you could try with ebba   and I'm gonna try with EBA because this is the  first time I tried it ever and immediately the   ebba actually have a different consistency is  very much more stickier than the Fufu so go   ahead you could get the EBA you want to try ebba  I was supposed to try um with something or yeah   you dip it in here in the sauce and you scoop  up what you can scoop it up scoop it up buddy let's see let me try tastes  good you like it let's go mmm it does taste good okay we're gonna try  the meat yeah yeah of course he's going in   he will actually he what he really want to do  is just stuff his face with everything that's   what he really want to do it tastes good You're  Gonna Take It Go ahead take it go ahead take it   take it so he's over there matching munching  on that and I'm gonna try with this meat here the elbow has a different taste than   the Fufu I'm trying to think of what taste  it has I know they said it's cassava but immediately though I'm gonna have to say that ebba  tastes bad NoDa the Fufu tastes better with this   here I think this one is the ogbono soup and  it's busting let me try it hmm tastes better   it's better I guess the cassava have some type  of after aftertaste from it you don't like it you saying yeah but your face is saying something  else you want like the Fufu you like this one   yes oh so do you like the elbow I guess he likes  the aftertaste of the Eva more than the who so I'm   gonna put some of the ebba on your end and we're  gonna go to the next thing for him to try well let   me know um you Nigerians and um Africans that  eat um Fufu whatever what do you prefer do you   prefer the pounded yams hufu or do you prefer EBA  I like them both but I'm gonna have to say for me no pounded yams but this is good this soup is  definitely busting busting I like it I like it   we're gonna go to the next one after this bite  right here here we go but we're gonna have to   choose the egusi because I want to eat that one  so I'm gonna try it with something I haven't   tried before obviously with the EBA I'm still  trying to see here it goes y'all this is it okay I think that's that tastes  pretty good tastes pretty good but instead of uber for me instead of pounding  dance for me it stood out for me what do you think   that's pretty good that's pretty good and busting  busting it is busting busting just like the mean I'm gonna take me a huge look at this a huge  well I think it's huge a huge Pizza thing here   and I'm gonna see if I could swallow it  you know you know a lot of them swallow   uh the Fufu with the food you think you  could be able to do that no good please   well I can't swallow I can't swallow that  one obviously you could tell he likes this   one more because he went right back to  this one and then y'all hear Eli in the   background so we're gonna go to the Echo rero  and then we're gonna chase it just like that um that's busting busting don't  gotta taste it with the meat and then you could eat it with the meat it's  good it's good that's pretty good what would   you rate it a seven a seven okay yeah and you  know what what people are saying is in the chat   what are they gonna say in the chat pretty good  hey that's pretty good mmm that's pretty good   so seven is not bad it's not a bad reading you  would say hold on the next thing we're going to   try is this one this one is the oh I forgot  what this is guys ah look at it I'm when I   come to it I'ma let y'all know this one oh yeah  okra this one's the okra y'all yeah guys okay uh-huh because it's all gooey yeah go ahead and taste it I'm not gonna  lie I think the rest of this restaurant   probably left some soap on that oh no  because it tastes like a little soapy   it tastes like this last time yeah I'm not eating  it yeah we're not eating that one because I think   it tastes soapy for sure everything else  tastes good but that definitely tastes soapy   like they left some soap in there somehow  some way a 10 out of 10.


Stop what's up yeah wow you can't really rate it because  that's not how it tastes for real I had   it before so it's way better than that  so we're just going to smash now y'all   had a JuJu there's plantings here you  want planting they made planting too and we're just gonna smash so   I'm literally home alone right now with the  kids and I got a meeting literally in like in like 10 minutes I think so this  video gonna be short and fast but I   gotta eat cause I'm hungry and I eat all day  I worked out I'm gonna work out again tonight I like all of this you gotta  try the rice with some of these for sure oh this right here Juju with the rice  listen plus and blessing Boston which you should   have done is scoop this first and then put it  in the rice yeah and then put it in the rice you gotta make sure you get a piece of meat  you got to make sure you get a piece of meat   y'all boy so in general Juju what would you  rate this Nigerian food what would you rate   it all together not in total like what would you  say is it a 10 out of 10.


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99 what would you say   a 1 000 why you have to you have to whisper  it you're gonna have to whisper buddy   you could have told them straight up  but yeah guys I legit have a meeting   um but it's a virtual one  six minutes but I'm hungry   I don't want my stomach growling while I'm on  there and then I was supposed to do this earlier   but when I went to the restaurant  y'all how about I forgot my card I forgot my credit card so what I had to do   no I was about to but then I was like wait hold  on I think I could do pick up because I couldn't   deliver to my house I'm too far I'm too far from  it because this restaurant is pretty far from me   so I had to literally say you know what let  me check Uber to see if they have pickups so   I had to order from Uber then waited for it to  be ordered I mean waited for it to be cooked   because the F4 re-roll wasn't ready but I really  wanted to try it while we really wanted Juju to   try it but you guys can tell that Juju likes the  Bunga fruit and the Bunga soup is pretty good too   to be honest I would say you can enjoy any one  of these sauces I like the effort I like them I   like the afro reel I like the ugly egusi and  I like the Bunga soup I think this one's the   yeah this one's the Bunga soup recommend this  um and the Fufu is better than that about to me   but the EBA is cassava which is better for carbs  so if you're like on a lower carb diet the EBA is   way much better it doesn't taste bad it's just the  Fufu I don't know you gotta smack the FUBU right oh oh so you're done eating   all right so we all done y'all make sure you  guys look at the Subscribe button subscribe   to the channel click the post notification don't  miss out again comment in the comment section what   else y'all want to see you have anything to say to  do before we leave yes what you want to say I do I don't know what you just said oh okay  this is pretty good all right so if y'all   want more JuJu go ahead and check our skit  shadow acting skills because he's incredible   y'all but I was going to leave you guys where  we love you you perfect you're beautiful peace

african instruments

https://howtoplaythedjembedrums.com/first-time-trying-african-food-mukbang-fufu-egusi-soup-efo-riro-ogbono-soup-queen-beast-juju/