• 2 years ago
Transcript
00:00 [no audio]
00:05 [water running]
00:08 [door opening]
00:10 [door closing]
00:12 [car driving away]
00:17 [speaking in foreign language]
00:20 [speaking in foreign language]
00:48 [speaking in foreign language]
01:00 Some people don't understand what the commentator is saying in English.
01:05 Some commentators do come with proverbs, poems, and not everybody understands that.
01:09 But as a Yoruba commentator, my show comes to fill the gap where people are lacking.
01:15 Like, what they don't understand, they know if you tune into Yoruba commentary,
01:19 they will understand the game even more.
01:22 What is going on without even watching.
01:24 When they listen, they know that, okay, this is what is going on.
01:26 The pulse is here. The boy is in the net. The boy is at the back of the net.
01:29 This is a go kick. This is a free kick.
01:31 In their own indigenous language and the language they understand.
01:35 [no audio]
01:42 [speaking in foreign language]
02:08 [no audio]
02:13 [speaking in foreign language]
02:18 [speaking in foreign language]
02:46 [no audio]
02:56 [speaking in foreign language]
03:06 [no audio]
03:19 What makes my difference is, one, is the male-dominated field where I shine as a female.
03:27 So that alone is an attraction to people.
03:31 Wow, a lady reporting Yoruba sports, that's huge.
03:35 [no audio]
04:01 [speaking in foreign language]
04:16 [no audio]
04:26 [no audio]
04:51 I really, really wish and hope to expand sports in Yoruba globally.
04:57 On a global stage, because, see, there are times in a world you have a champion's league draw.
05:01 And you have other people from, like, Portuguese, they are speaking Portuguese, they are speaking French, speaking Spanish.
05:07 I can also speak Yoruba on the ever champion's league draw stage, or the ever champion's league final stage,
05:13 like, and you get translators that translate.
05:16 [speaking in foreign language]
05:26 [no audio]

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