African Americans Vs. Nigerians Beef | Ep. 143 |

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2023
  • Today we Have Auston Holleman and @KetchupTownVEVO From Nigeria on the same podcast. We will be discussing an interesting beef that has started globally between two of the most known groups in the Black Diaspora. How can these issues be mitigated? Is there even an issue at all?
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Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @Kenganda
    @Kenganda  Před 9 měsíci +36

    Let me set the record straight. Nigeria to me has been very inspiring and i have learned so much from that community. After visiting i wanted to stay. That being said, im still african american and i will say what is on my heart. If you are offended you need to ask Jesus to help you heal. If you listened to the podcast you would see how much i praised our brothers and sisters there and in the diaspora.

    • @dayosonictv
      @dayosonictv Před 9 měsíci +4

      Hahahahhah, Oshe man, have asked, he told me to tell u to stop calling us scammers every chances u get both u, charlamyne the god and Tariq Nasheed with them subliminal jabs. U don't see us calling ya'll names every chances we get? U have 79, 000 subscribers getting use to what u say about us , so relax (Nore voice).we recognise them subliminal jabs. Matter of fact ill be coming to your podcast i have a lot to say, but dont call me scammer o lol

    • @Kenganda
      @Kenganda  Před 9 měsíci +2

      who called you a scammer? I don't know any nigerian scammers to me that is nonsense.@@dayosonictv

    • @dayosonictv
      @dayosonictv Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@Kenganda i know u don't, but stop calling us that because u just did in this episode here, it's offensive to some of us hence why we're using Afrobeats to clean that up. i know u talk about Afrobeats alot about us and we really appreciate u for that but stop the scamming jokes please . i hope u understand and i know u do Oshe. Thanks .

    • @Kenganda
      @Kenganda  Před 9 měsíci +1

      but I didn't I said some people call nigerian scammers but I believe that isn't true. Give me the time stamp.@@dayosonictv

    • @dayosonictv
      @dayosonictv Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@Kenganda ok ill watch it again,

  • @kelvinwarren8761
    @kelvinwarren8761 Před 9 měsíci +96

    As a African American living in the Los Angeles area, I didn't know we had beef with Nigerians..🤷🏾‍♂️

    • @aao449
      @aao449 Před 9 měsíci +27

      Lol...my dear brother, CZcams pays "content creators" a lot of money for drama even if it's manufactured drama. Peace and humility is boring on CZcams. Financially, it just doesn't reimburse as well. Anyway, wishing you continued peace to you and yours!

    • @GOTravelhannel
      @GOTravelhannel Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@aao449@kenganda pin 📌 this sir.

    • @simpletruth1369
      @simpletruth1369 Před 9 měsíci +14

      It's an imaginary beef and people on the internet have monetized this narrative. Certain African countries provide heavy internet traffic when mentioned so people poke to get noticed and make money off of it.

    • @wisdommasterreviews4712
      @wisdommasterreviews4712 Před 9 měsíci

      You are not FBA!We who?

    • @wildmanmike100
      @wildmanmike100 Před 9 měsíci +9

      He needs the views. Just mention Nigeria/Nigerians in your podcasts to double your views. Make it controversial too.

  • @UmmYasmin91
    @UmmYasmin91 Před 8 měsíci +21

    I`m a Black American who's lived and travelled to Nigeria seven times.. The love I've received while there is unmatched!! Did my DNA and I'm 43% Nigerian I knew I was lol! I've reconnected with my Yoruba cousin Dami

  • @CGray-hw7su
    @CGray-hw7su Před 9 měsíci +31

    One of my favorite brothers in the world is a Nigerian brother who was probably 15 years younger than me. He came to my church and asked to play bass. This young brother was and is an incredible musician. Instantly, we connected. I loved hanging out with this guy. He was like a little hyper talented brother. I learned from him and he learned from me. His cousins that he lived with were so cool and invited me and my family in to their lives with warm loving and open arms. I have a very special place in my heart for my Nigerian brothers and sisters. I’m sure I may not feel that way about all Nigerians, but the Nigerians I have been exposed to are like family to me…

    • @Silverbackugx
      @Silverbackugx Před 9 měsíci +3

      That's a wonderful story, I'm happy this young brother had the decency and common sense to politely ask if he could play. A whole world opens up when you come with respect, it's always returned.

    • @chrisoghenetegamaloney5799
      @chrisoghenetegamaloney5799 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@Silverbackugxwhat mean decency and common sense?

  • @millionairemaine8901
    @millionairemaine8901 Před 9 měsíci +125

    Where's the beef? Online? I've known plenty Nigerians in real life and they are some of the coolest people Ive known in my four decades of living, never ONE issue.

    • @blacksocrates1
      @blacksocrates1 Před 9 měsíci +16

      The Internet is not real life

    • @hillcrestprofessionalservi3502
      @hillcrestprofessionalservi3502 Před 9 měsíci +22

      It's online misrepresentation and unfortunately people believe. They just said Burna said AAs don't have culture but nobody can produce the video

    • @-Tijani-
      @-Tijani- Před 9 měsíci +1

      White people lying to easily misled black people created this so-called "beef" that's non-existent.

    • @amazed8146
      @amazed8146 Před 9 měsíci +14

      Positive attracts positive, and so does negative. Most of this people whining most probably met someone that matched their negative energy; hence, the bad experience. Glad to know you’ve always had a positive experience with the Nigerians you’ve encountered. It speaks volumes about you; that you exude positivity. + vibes.

    • @skyking3210
      @skyking3210 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Those that want beef find it I guess, that can even pull narratives out of their behind

  • @LeoThaLast
    @LeoThaLast Před 9 měsíci +22

    Nigerians are some of the most complex and misunderstood ppl. I've never been scammed by one or met one with that mentality. I had a similar experience to Oshay except i had never heard anything bad about Nigerians so when i met Karibi, and he treated me like i was one of his brothers, i wasn't guarded. I just accept his generosity and gracefulness.
    A beautiful spirit and would give u the shirt off of his back. He introduced me to his family and they treated me as if i were one of their own.
    He passed away not too long ago and i feel like a part of me is gone.
    I miss the brother dearly and forever enriched by the time we spent together. RIPower Karibi 🙏🏾

    • @marcuscole1994
      @marcuscole1994 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I have they scammed me n my family

    • @Southernview3k
      @Southernview3k Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@marcuscole1994
      There are crime everywhere. Even you, you're not a saint either

    • @awakeningchi58
      @awakeningchi58 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Hey Ma brotha, i knew Karibi also and your 100% right about how much of a nice guy he was,rest in power to him and peace to you bro.

    • @chidimmachristopher3709
      @chidimmachristopher3709 Před 9 měsíci

      @@marcuscole1994the country you are living is a scam itself 😂

    • @marcuscole1994
      @marcuscole1994 Před 9 měsíci

      @@chidimmachristopher3709 ya niggas still scam

  • @guttaone
    @guttaone Před 9 měsíci +58

    As a African who was born and raised in America, every Nigerian I ever met was either a scammer or one of the smartest book worms educated doctor level. Incredible businessmen or woman. That doesn't seem to be just any old regular Nigerian. They're either on one side or the other side of the spectrum😂😂😂😂😂

    • @activeobserver1150
      @activeobserver1150 Před 9 měsíci +1

      People can’t be on specifically two opposing spectrum. It shows you lack concrete reasoning skills. There will always be people who fit in the middle. Nigerians are smart people. They have dumb, smart, unserious people and scammers too

    • @sean-et4wr
      @sean-et4wr Před 9 měsíci

      You are a liar. Every NIgerian you met is a scammer?

    • @Silverbackugx
      @Silverbackugx Před 9 měsíci +7

      And just what percentage of people become doctors?🤔🧐.. that leaves the other percentage that the world sees..

    • @fistandpen2505
      @fistandpen2505 Před 9 měsíci +13

      If you meeting so many scammers... maybe you're a scammer?! How are you going to meet more "Nigerian" scammers than me and I'm an actual real life Nigerian lol

    • @georginawellman5370
      @georginawellman5370 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@Silverbackugxlmao. and I'm 'Nigerian'

  • @simpletruth1369
    @simpletruth1369 Před 9 měsíci +37

    Nigerians and the rest of Africa are not responsible for anyone's low self esteem or inferiority complex. Some cultures in Africa just have an overconfident mentality and it's not directed against anyone in particular unless you're fixated on us.

    • @meganakinsanya4702
      @meganakinsanya4702 Před 9 měsíci +13

      @gilliberg bold in doing what ? If you don’t like Nigerians, don’t be around Nigerians as simple as that. Nigerians don’t have to do business, marry or integrate with other groups. You can’t force another community to be your friends. It’s just a Japanese man whining about not being friends with a Chinese man 🙄

    • @Isiejeme0829
      @Isiejeme0829 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@Negro.spiritual A delusional take on the convo. Be ashamed of yourself.

    • @simpletruth1369
      @simpletruth1369 Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@Negro.spiritual unfortunately this is the message your brothers and sisters are sending to the world through the Internet and some people are beginning to believe "hmmm maybe these people suffer from low self esteem issues or an inferiority complex". The world does not revolve around AAs feelings and we will not change for anyone.

    • @simpletruth1369
      @simpletruth1369 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@Negro.spiritual then why complain about our so called arrogance? Overall we are who we are.

    • @Isiejeme0829
      @Isiejeme0829 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@Negro.spiritual "you guys watch tv shows movies etc on black americans then come here with this "dont deal with akata" bs the other part is yall ARE NOT over confident with black americans yall are sly and make sure to be out of reach whenever yall throw jabs at black americans. My issue is i want yall to be just as bold to us as yall are with your house servants in nigeria or the rest of africa that cant stand yall. But its always hush mouth in person".
      When I read your comment, this part of it made me conclude you're out for more fight than offering a solution. Fortunately, I "often go in the kitchen" and not being afraid of the "heat" when I deal with strangers online. I don't know you, don't mean to be insultive but please arrange your views in such a way as not to cause further chaos. Yes, I'm bias towards my beloved Africa/Nigeria.

  • @kelvincyprian1237
    @kelvincyprian1237 Před 9 měsíci +13

    Greetings from Nigeria....Anybody who hears a story of someone having a very nice friend from Nigeria and then proceeds to be too open to us may end up scammed....also anyone who hears a story of a devious Nigerian and then proceeds to treat us with animosity will miss out on great friendships, partnerships and a lot of fun. There are good and bad people in every culture, tribe, country or race.
    With that said, we are one of the smartest, entrepreneurial, hilarious and wholesome people once you get to know us.

  • @ghsense2626
    @ghsense2626 Před 9 měsíci +94

    Id say atleast 70% of African Americans have Nigerian blood admixture. Its like saying South African white is beefing with the Dutch. We blacks are just soo perplexing

    • @ronj7658
      @ronj7658 Před 9 měsíci

      I'm beginning to think those Nigerian dna results are manipulated cause the beef gets worse not better after the dna revelation.

    • @fumaabston2510
      @fumaabston2510 Před 9 měsíci +5

      No

    • @MM-do3pt
      @MM-do3pt Před 9 měsíci +3

      No the slave trade didn’t happen orrrrr you just don’t want to be aligned with black Americans?

    • @KilifiKorner
      @KilifiKorner Před 9 měsíci

      I notice a LOT of arrogance towards african americans...since nigerians sold us to whites in america, that doesn't make sense to me...

    • @BrothaAhzi
      @BrothaAhzi Před 9 měsíci +4

      ​@@MM-do3ptHUH? 😂

  • @i.m.moreau8765
    @i.m.moreau8765 Před 9 měsíci +167

    As a Nigerian who migrated to America, black Americans treated us worse than white people. They talked so poorly about where we were from and we (my brother and I) just thought they were loud and ignorant. They used to ask us how it felt to wear clothes, live in a house, ride in a car, make monkey noises and call us African booty scratchers. We eventually got over it but it took a while. We still joke that the same people talking junk are the main ones screaming wakanda forever.

    • @mineo7668
      @mineo7668 Před 9 měsíci

      Lol. I bet Whte people treated you so much better calling you the N word and what about those Chinese people colonizing y'all in your own country?

    • @CHRONIC2oo3
      @CHRONIC2oo3 Před 9 měsíci +56

      Exactly! They started the BS and then somehow over time they flipped the story and rewrote the history.

    • @decoloniz_afro
      @decoloniz_afro Před 9 měsíci +5

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂.....

    • @reggieshavers630
      @reggieshavers630 Před 9 měsíci

      I’m a black American save your tears they called me a African booty scratcher to😂 black Americans will flame Anybody even yo greasy, greasy, granny with holes in her panties. But I never hear a Nigerian say black Americans beat them up. It’s always just jokes from elementary school😂

    • @victorhampton3452
      @victorhampton3452 Před 9 měsíci +34

      That sounds like b.s

  • @chilombomululu6034
    @chilombomululu6034 Před 9 měsíci +8

    As an african i have noticed tht its nigerians mostly tht tend to have this issue with african american and smtimes we have to accept we are ignorant of african american history .all black immigrants wouldnt be able to even step into the usa or even be able to freely work had it not been for the african Americans and how tbey struggled fighting for those rights .so we should appreciate african Americans and not beleive the stereotypes of what we are shown them to be.cause the the same is being done to us.the enemy wins when we fight

  • @-parttimeartist-7379
    @-parttimeartist-7379 Před 9 měsíci +40

    I'm from the American south and this is what I'll say about nigerians. In most of our spaces we don't speak bad or good about Nigerians. When we meet them in person the interaction starts out civil and friendly until the Nigerians start talking about how their culture is better, how they are harder workers, and then just outright start being rude. Their americanized children prioritize hanging with white people and fight hard to insert themselves into the white man's spaces only to be treated like a token and entertainment. That being said I met a really good man who was an Igbo. He gave me permission to call him by his true name and he told me " once my friend, always my friend". I pray the Good LORD up in heaven is protecting him in these trying times.

    • @CacaoFlower
      @CacaoFlower Před 9 měsíci +7

      Fake news most Africans hang with their own kind, like Ghanaians will hang out with mostly other Ghanaians that goes for Nigerians as well.

    • @TT-dv9er
      @TT-dv9er Před 9 měsíci +20

      @@CacaoFlower How are you gonna call somone else's experience fake?

    • @MM-do3pt
      @MM-do3pt Před 9 měsíci +4

      True news come to GA and you’ll see

    • @mikewilliams9069
      @mikewilliams9069 Před 9 měsíci

      Maybe cyz its fake?

    • @Negro.spiritual
      @Negro.spiritual Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@CacaoFlowerwho are you to call someone elses experience fake news this is where it becomes embarrassing to be a black american which i know you are because no one else has that type of audacious attitude.

  • @afrikanheritage99
    @afrikanheritage99 Před 9 měsíci +23

    Hello black family ❤️
    I want to remind my Black/ African-American brothers and sisters that i love you dearly ❤️ 💕
    We've similar but distinct traumatic experiences from people who separated and colonized us.
    We're in this fight for liberation and freedom from oppressors together.
    We're brothers and sisters, and we get each other's back.
    They want to keep us separated to weaken us further.
    United we stand- Divied we fall.
    Signed your Nigerian sister 🫂

    • @abena410
      @abena410 Před 9 měsíci +5

      Thanks. I couldn't have said it any better.
      Signed your Afrikan American sister.

    • @AmericanAfrikan-BurkinaFaso
      @AmericanAfrikan-BurkinaFaso Před 9 měsíci +5

      @afrikan thank you my sister! I’m black American and most BAs don’t understand that Nigerians love us dearly! You have to travel to Nigeria like I have done for many years now to understand this fact! Dont let the divide and conquer games continue to exploit us! Most of us don’t travel and many are now traveling to Africa and will be surprised to know how much we are loved by Africans! Many of us have had bad experiences with a few immigrants whose interest may not align with our own and castigate all Nigerians b/c of a few we met as adults and teased as kids. This is silly! My people need to travel and we would have a more refined and wholistic view of our African family! Division will get us no where and those of us sowing it need to be ousted from the community and conversation. Most of us love Nigerians and vice versa! We love you too! Keep the convo moving forward! #B1 worldwide!! Africans unite globally!

    • @MM-do3pt
      @MM-do3pt Před 9 měsíci +1

      Tbh it’s usually Nigerian men not women in my experience that neglect the historical struggles and progress AA made that inevitably benefited Nigerians and other African immigrants to come here and thrive… thanks for your acknowledgment

    • @meganakinsanya4702
      @meganakinsanya4702 Před 9 měsíci

      @MM-dot nobody neglected the struggles, y’all love to keep mentioning over and over again like a broken record. Your people paved the way and Nigerians came and flourished. Do you want to take their success for yourself ? Seems like a self absorbed person with a God complex

    • @rakoon678
      @rakoon678 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@AmericanAfrikan-BurkinaFasoWell said sis!

  • @thebakery3509
    @thebakery3509 Před 8 měsíci +8

    Auston don’t want to be there lol

  • @feefee2
    @feefee2 Před 9 měsíci +20

    People are individuals. Im African American and have best friends who are African. Love being around them and learning the culture. I had no idea there was a beef 😢

    • @obajbola9679
      @obajbola9679 Před 9 měsíci +7

      There is no beef ma'am, youtubians like this channel invents beef where there is none for views.

    • @MiBidnis
      @MiBidnis Před 9 měsíci +1

      The ones who have and want beef get amplified on social media channels that like conflict.

    • @Hippobottomless
      @Hippobottomless Před 9 měsíci +1

      I’d say it’s no beef just competition with a little misunderstandings

    • @wisdommasterreviews4712
      @wisdommasterreviews4712 Před 9 měsíci +1

      You arent FBA you are a African immigrant born in America, we not the same!

    • @feefee2
      @feefee2 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @wisdommasterreviews4712 what is FBA, who is the we in "we are not the same," and not the same as who?

  • @ronniewamala5768
    @ronniewamala5768 Před 9 měsíci +42

    We have petty beef and animosity towards one another but can't keep the same energy for the oppressors.

    • @DeeBeeScribe
      @DeeBeeScribe Před 9 měsíci +3

      Bingo.

    • @fitnessman5542
      @fitnessman5542 Před 9 měsíci +10

      wrong F.B.A we keep fighting oppressors not yall

    • @jaren2159
      @jaren2159 Před 9 měsíci

      Black Americans been fighting the oppressor you Nigerians never put work in

    • @ncbrothad
      @ncbrothad Před 9 měsíci

      all day
      @@fitnessman5542

    • @sozb6708
      @sozb6708 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Your's is the only comment worth talking about. Grew up in the states....I'm 43, never had beef with no other Africans. In the states or on the continent. People take their personal issues and say "we" way to much these days. Some of these guys suffer from self hate but don't realize it because I agree many give all these other groups big passes.

  • @Njoofene
    @Njoofene Před 9 měsíci +17

    I'm Senegambians and always love Black people no matter where they are - because of my Pan-African family and the history of my family warring against Europe for over 2 centuries. Therefore, when I was about to go to America for the first time on holidays, and hoping to meet some Black Americans and make friends as I've always love them when I was in Africa. To my horror, I couldn't believe how badly Black Americans treated me especially my super dark skin colour. Interestingly, I receive more love from Latinos who were supper kind and nice to me and hanged out with me. Black Americans laughed and insulted me about my skin colour to my horror. I expected that from white Americans and was prepared for that, never from Black Americans. I felt sad for them, and really pity them because I've always love my jet Black skin and no one will ever make me feel about it. Interestingly, couple of years later, some of my best friends are Black Americans.

    • @LosAngelesMade
      @LosAngelesMade Před 9 měsíci +2

      Bro y’all gotta stop lying on these platforms, no grown black American made fun of ur skin color stop the cap. As a kid maybe u got roasted but we all did about any and everything. Tell the whole truth my boy. Colorism is big in Africa so don’t come on here acting like y’all don’t joke bad about skin color bcus I’ve been to 14 African countries and all had colorism issues so let’s keep it real if we going to talk straight. Immigrants gravitate towards each other bc they feel they are on the outside.

    • @HIDprox
      @HIDprox Před 9 měsíci

      @@LosAngelesMade i beg to differ. it's wide spread......

    • @LosAngelesMade
      @LosAngelesMade Před 9 měsíci

      @@HIDprox what is “wide spread” ? Colorism is wide spread even amongst Africans they put lighter skin on a pedestal and white ppl on a Godly level it’s embarrasing

    • @kellyk1590
      @kellyk1590 Před 9 měsíci

      Not taking anything from your bad experiences you just happened to meet the types we don't care for either!!!!

  • @enockt6218
    @enockt6218 Před 9 měsíci +20

    Atleast in Europe, im from Tanzania. Never have issue with my Nigerians brothers. I have many working for me. They are very hardworking people. I believe they work hardest among us Africans. Often very business minded which is very good.

    • @jaynewanjira3541
      @jaynewanjira3541 Před 9 měsíci +3

      That can be debated because you have never worked with Kenyans and they are the most hard working too according to a lot of American companies. Soooo. lol

    • @enockt6218
      @enockt6218 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jaynewanjira3541
      I have worked with Kenyans. They are aswell very good workers indeed and not lazy at all and good with supporting each other aswell 👍

  • @sistaluv1357
    @sistaluv1357 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thank you for sharing your very informative conversations.

  • @bayyinahzhaxx7620
    @bayyinahzhaxx7620 Před 9 měsíci +28

    Ive never had an issue with Nigerians, love them ❤, they're a big part of my community, so I don't know what you all on. However there was one Cameroonian young lady at my job that just hated everyone. Don't know where that chip on her shoulder came from, but I befriended her. I'm like 28% Cameroon, so I was intrigued. But, she didn't even believe I was black. To make a long story short I invited her to my family's home for xmas (we don't celebrate it but she does)...had to prove to her that YES im black by showing her my family's photos. She likely assumed I was horn African, or latina (who knows) but after that day we were cool. Sometimes you just have to make the first gesture.

    • @valley2898
      @valley2898 Před 9 měsíci +8

      Exactly, maybe her prior experience with African Americans wasn't pleasant, she just kept to herself which could be misrepresented as dislike.

    • @Silverbackugx
      @Silverbackugx Před 9 měsíci +2

      Making the first move with someone who just doesn't know you is always on point, but when you get a loud mouth caustic "king" and "god' who is just as broke as his ego is large. You give him that same treatment and look that Austin was giving this dude.

    • @Nikkinoonie
      @Nikkinoonie Před 9 měsíci +2

      I love that ‼️ We need more people like you .

    • @arieszona
      @arieszona Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@Silverbackugx idk what Nigerian you've been around but we are known for being successful, smart, resilient and independent, entrepreneurial, venturing and hard working. Definitely not broke but if they're in that situation, soon they're coming out of it. And that is why the hate is real amongst us.

    • @Silverbackugx
      @Silverbackugx Před 9 měsíci

      @@arieszona all those attributes are great, you left out a few that shine like neon lights above the others, arrogant, condescending, a bit creepy and forceful when dealing with women, dishonest, shady, and superstitious, you're wonderful people😘. It's interesting how you didn't deny anything except being broke, as long as you get money it doesn't matter how I guess🤷🏾‍♂️..whatever. I dont consider stolen credit card numbers and romance scam blackmail money as reliable steady income, maybe something is wrong with my morality and integrity.

  • @jegi7971
    @jegi7971 Před 9 měsíci +6

    O’Shea don’t apologise for anything, you speak for the authentic Blacks and authentic Blackness, keep that flame 🔥.

  • @BoviHouse
    @BoviHouse Před 9 měsíci +5

    ketchup be touching that guy too much. jeez. i’m sure the dude is uncomfortable with all the touching

  • @i.am.navkaur
    @i.am.navkaur Před 9 měsíci +5

    My experiences with Nigerians in the US has been quite positive. In fact, I feel like the way they’re pushed by their immigrant parents is similar to Indians!

  • @tayomed
    @tayomed Před 9 měsíci +21

    I see people from different black communities working together on the individual level, and that's very encouraging.
    Sure we don't have this kumbaya togetherness that the Nigerian guest is talking about but we're not attacking and killing each other either. Let's not overlook that and take it for granted.

    • @mikewilliams9069
      @mikewilliams9069 Před 9 měsíci

      Wrong, they’re killing each other in blue northern states but everyone is pretending it’s not happening

    • @GOTravelhannel
      @GOTravelhannel Před 9 měsíci +2

      Claps

  • @ayo9703
    @ayo9703 Před 9 měsíci +9

    As a Nigerian that`s in the top 3% income bracket in the US (Not a flex this is for context) I`ll tell you this for free. WE DON`T CARE. White man wants to be racist? We don`t care. Our African American family wants to shxt on us? We don`t care. We`d prefer to be welcomed by our AA family but we consider that a priviledge, it`s not determinative of how we will view ourselves. The reason for this is primarily the hyper-competitve environment we left behind in Nigeria. To be honest it`s more trauma than anything. This has rendered us numb to criticism and anything that takes us off our focus we will imediately dismiss.

    • @chidimmachristopher3709
      @chidimmachristopher3709 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Exactly!! The competition and standards of being a proud Nigerian is high, honestly when my family wanted to send me abroad I turned down the offer because my confidence level was low, I wasn’t ready for the pressure

    • @jermainenowels9511
      @jermainenowels9511 Před 7 měsíci

      Y’all don’t even welcome us lol

    • @chidimmachristopher3709
      @chidimmachristopher3709 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@jermainenowels9511 that’s a lie a local African can’t differentiate between black AA’s and black Africans, whilst some don’t even know y’all exist cause we didn’t have an in depth study on slave history. So that is a big lie

    • @jermainenowels9511
      @jermainenowels9511 Před 7 měsíci

      @@chidimmachristopher3709 differentiating is not the problem not sure why u even brought tht up. And it’s not lie. Most of y’all don’t even see us as African and harp on differences. I work with nun but Africans and they tell me exactly how some of y’all act.

    • @chidimmachristopher3709
      @chidimmachristopher3709 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@jermainenowels9511 how do we act? Cus when last I remember y’all are the most hated community for a reason y’all refuse to take accountability for

  • @mississippi4589
    @mississippi4589 Před 9 měsíci

    Another great show ‼️👍🏽👍🏽

  • @SharkOrDie
    @SharkOrDie Před 9 měsíci +14

    I’m from Los Angeles, I’m FBA, and I’m cool with a lot of Nigerians. My aunties married Liberians and Nigerians. I was just in South Africa and the men talked trash about Nigerians. I don’t participate in that, maybe it’s because I’m educated!

    • @jordanfauntleroy2013
      @jordanfauntleroy2013 Před 9 měsíci +7

      South Africa men get mad because Nigerian men be taking up all they women. Not sure if it's true, but this id what I heard.

    • @tsholofelomocumi4207
      @tsholofelomocumi4207 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Can you guys pls talk about your issues WITHOUT dragging SAns along, you are cousins, leave us alone pls.

    • @jackblack5833
      @jackblack5833 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jordanfauntleroy2013 Why are Nigerians fleeing their country to leach off other African countries? This is the mode of operation of the Nigerians. Stop the BS.

    • @tloutlou2655
      @tloutlou2655 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jordanfauntleroy2013 taking all our women that's nonsese. They just don't respect our culture that's the problem. They just like Europeans I thier behaviour sometimes

    • @diplomatdiplomat2800
      @diplomatdiplomat2800 Před 9 měsíci +4

      ​@@tsholofelomocumi4207Did they steal your girlfriend too?

  • @digitallhm8160
    @digitallhm8160 Před 9 měsíci +11

    There's a difference between internet beef and real life. Nobody in America is talking about or has beef with Nigerians. Not one time have I been in the barbershop, church, school, etc. and heard anybody bring up anybody in Africa. Americans are too busy with their lives to care about the rest of the world

    • @o.t9358
      @o.t9358 Před 9 měsíci +3

      But the host bringing this topic up is black American 😂

    • @mysteriesoflife540
      @mysteriesoflife540 Před 9 měsíci

      @@o.t9358 let them.keep deceiving themselves. They don't care about Africans but they create E-wars with Africans, especially Nigerians at any slightest opportunity.

    • @jewelchilaka4089
      @jewelchilaka4089 Před 8 měsíci +1

      quite accurate

  • @MrSledge-vh7sn
    @MrSledge-vh7sn Před 2 měsíci

    "Nice one! Keep the energy flowing, for we are all but one Africans, no matter where you come from. As long as you're a Black man, you're an African. Unity is power. Let us all embrace our diversity and break the chains that bind us."

  • @jordanfauntleroy2013
    @jordanfauntleroy2013 Před 9 měsíci +5

    Never seen Black Americans beef with Nigerians. Many Nigerians grow up with us and they seem to fit right in with is more so than other African groups. They even act like us.

  • @agchitty
    @agchitty Před 9 měsíci +16

    Its all about proximity and how open you are.
    I live in the DMV and i work and live around people from African. I dare say 1 in every 4 black Americans are from somewhere foreign or have parents from somewhere else. If they grew up here you cant really tell unless they tell you their name. Needless to say I love going to Africa clubs, love going to birthday parties, church events and other social gatherings. I have never encountered any beef or animosity just because i am Black American.

    • @LosAngelesMade
      @LosAngelesMade Před 9 měsíci

      1 and 4? Bruh it’s less than 4 million black immigrants as a whole and it’s more than 40 million of us FBA. Stop the cap my boy I’ve seen both sides and have been to Nigeria more than 5 times and Nigerians have this bad rep everywhere not just here in the USA. I got love for Naija but the ones that come to the US many are arrogant for nothing and will scam you out your drawls. But then I have my gf and closest friends who are Nigerian and are good ppl so it depends on the person.

    • @mikejones-wn1sw
      @mikejones-wn1sw Před 9 měsíci +1

      @agchitty and your also a girl so yea the men love you, I am sure the women have gave you that look

    • @dguthrie1
      @dguthrie1 Před 9 měsíci

      Not true

    • @AyeYoBoxingWithMadiba
      @AyeYoBoxingWithMadiba Před 8 měsíci

      The DMV is probably the most diverse area in the USA where people from all races/ethnicities get along for the most part

  • @aao449
    @aao449 Před 9 měsíci +14

    As a Nigerian woman living in the US for the moment, I didn't know I was "beefing" with African Americans or any other group. Kenganda, one thing I would recommend to you and other CZcamsrs is stop stop focusing on all these manyfactured "beefs". I've seen AA vs Jamaicans/Carribeans, AA vs Africans, AA vs Latinos, AA vs Asians, AA vs etc, etc. . I've also seen you do videos on African men vs AA men, AA women vs African women, Africans vs other Africans. It's always some sort of "versus" with this channel.
    I know that the CZcams algorithms rewards your channel financially and with views when you play up drama and focus solely on this. There is not a single group of ppl any where who don't feel that certain aspects of their culture may be more desirable to them than certain aspects of other ppl's culture. We all just need to practice a lot more humility towards each other...black/African men especially. Stop the constant huffing and puffing and get big important things done. Focus on the big picture and work towards that and stop being tribal. It has always held you all back.

    • @Kenganda
      @Kenganda  Před 9 měsíci +2

      How is it holding me back? Is it you doing this work in Africa or is it me? Is it me spending my money hosting farmers, getting them grants, or working with all of the african community or is it you? You can say its holding me back but you are just lying. Just say you don't like it. You probably don't even live in nigeria you are some where in America probably in a middle class community doing nothing while running your big mouth. You should stay on the sidelines as we're ordained to do while people like me actually do the work.
      Now addressing your other points I agree. I still appreciate your comment but don't test me with foolishness when I put in more work in the pan african world than people like you period.

    • @obajbola9679
      @obajbola9679 Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@Kenganda Leave us alone, come and get grant for your people here. We on you now dusty. Fake Marcus Garvey.

    • @Kenganda
      @Kenganda  Před 9 měsíci +2

      ​@obajbola9679 sis put your panties on we know you are leaking juices

    • @KingVlog1
      @KingVlog1 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@Kengandabro 😂 am African and I love what you're doing ,dont respond to these fake african names we all these are the FBA guys who hate seeing unity .

    • @Silverbackugx
      @Silverbackugx Před 9 měsíci

      @@KingVlog1 an FBA wouldn't bother with a fake African name, nor would they bother still playing make believe calling themselves kings and queens.

  • @rilwanbalogun83
    @rilwanbalogun83 Před 9 měsíci +2

    One love to all Africans…Keganda keep bringing good vibe and nice content. Watching from US from Nigeria.

    • @rain1676
      @rain1676 Před 9 měsíci

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @jimmiebazz2586
    @jimmiebazz2586 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Great pod Brothers, Oshay learn to care more like the couple who cared about you being away from home doing a holiday and shared a meal with you 🤔 much love my brother you are doing a great thing to bring our people together (home)...

  • @legrindem
    @legrindem Před 9 měsíci +14

    I promise that we do not benefit from the so called beef. OTher people want us to keep fighting/ hating each other. We have so much to gain if we come together and learn from each other. Truly truly my prayer is for the day when we are all truly more integrated and don't have to have these types of conversations where we doubt our love for each other. We should Never let another person tell or influence how to feel about each other. Wyte people seriously like to have underground and quiet influence, you will never see how they put ideas in your head. Thats the real sorcery.

    • @afrikanheritage99
      @afrikanheritage99 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Thank you for your brilliant thoughts 👏 I am hoping they'll read your comment to be clear-eyed of the real enemy attacking and oppressing all of us.
      God bless you for this 🙏

  • @jadekamelion
    @jadekamelion Před 9 měsíci +6

    I wish I could’ve been on this episode. I have a unique perspective as a AA woman who has been with a Nigerian man 23 years.

  • @danettamarcus9468
    @danettamarcus9468 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I love this video. You guys should come together more. Every group that found that success grew. If you believe anything God said then listen to his word when he says “A house divided against itself will not stand” We have seen this all across the world and especially Africa, it’s proven to be true. You guys are clearly saying this. Please keep going down this road. Your podcast will blow up, if you can focus in this direction. ❤❤❤

  • @princeaghamiogie7154
    @princeaghamiogie7154 Před 9 měsíci +1

    What an interesting and educative Pop cast

  • @dennisstampleycali
    @dennisstampleycali Před 9 měsíci +8

    African American is not about tribalism! Even in Africa! Nothing wrong with it but keep your culture! Learn from each other and grow!

    • @Tashaten
      @Tashaten Před 9 měsíci +1

      That's what I love, like my favorite R&B group Maze song ( We are one)!!!

  • @Ob_BarberStylez
    @Ob_BarberStylez Před 9 měsíci +8

    Education is key. I’ve seen both sides of the relationships between AA & Africans. It is a case by case basis that depends on the individual’s mentality. I’m from Louisiana but have always known that I am Igbo (Obie the III [3rd]). Many AA don’t know their lineage/don’t care about it. Many of us are indeed a mixture like Austin said. For me… I’ve always know/been taught that I had Igbo lineage as well as Ethiopian. I connect with most Nigerian Bros & Sis majorly 👊🏾. My name & knowing a lot of Nigerian culture makes it easy for me though.

    • @jermainenowels9511
      @jermainenowels9511 Před 9 měsíci

      Yep education is key. Both sides got issues

    • @jordanfauntleroy2013
      @jordanfauntleroy2013 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Igbo tribe where the first group of slaves taken in the transatlantic slave trade. There was over 100 Igbo settlements from West Africa all the way up to India. The Portuguese and the Spanish had put them into slavery. They either had to convert to Christianity or be put into slavery. Many of them refused to convert so they where put into slavery by the Portuguese. They arrived in America on May 15, 1518. It's said that 60% of Black Americans that have taken a geneolgy test have at least 1 Igbo Ancestor. Not sure if this is true or not, but the Igbo are also believed to be from the kingdom of Judah any many of them have practices that are linked to Judaism. It is estimated that 2 million Igbo where put into slavery. There is a hebrew temple I want to go to in Nigeria and when I have the money to travel Im going to go.

    • @amanokal5635
      @amanokal5635 Před 2 měsíci

      Ethiopian ? serious bruh You need to review translatantic slave trade

  • @chrisamoi8663
    @chrisamoi8663 Před 9 měsíci

    Great content

  • @professorricci938
    @professorricci938 Před 9 měsíci

    I think i love this podcast. There are prejudices everywhere and its a normal thing. Even in nigeria there are prejudices. Big up bro .

  • @adhdmuseum9631
    @adhdmuseum9631 Před 9 měsíci +8

    It’s not a beef. African Americans don’t go to Nigeria for school and we can’t used their currency to buy homes in America but Nigerians run to America to go to school and our currency can be used in their country.
    What competition? African Americans built the wealthy country in the history of the earth. What issue?

    • @afrikanheritage99
      @afrikanheritage99 Před 9 měsíci

      So, what's the your problem? No one stopped you from exploring opportunities around the world. All thanks to your country who lied and brainwashed you that your country is the "Greatest country " in the world. You bought into the propaganda and are stuck in the US and majority of you totally ignorant of the world around you.
      It's never to too learn.

    • @amaechihenry7405
      @amaechihenry7405 Před 9 měsíci +10

      How come you can't use the same knowledge to build your community.

    • @sshawnbr3
      @sshawnbr3 Před 9 měsíci

      @@amaechihenry7405Same reason Africans can’t benefit from their own resources.

    • @shantaalli2865
      @shantaalli2865 Před 9 měsíci +3

      ​@@amaechihenry7405Why 😭 can't you build your country?

    • @diplomatdiplomat2800
      @diplomatdiplomat2800 Před 9 měsíci

      And Black Americans are at the bottom of the American society? Oh please stop 🛑

  • @GodsGreenEarth360
    @GodsGreenEarth360 Před 4 měsíci

    This was such a great conversation! Oshay is really out here bridging the gaps for us African Americans and it's beautiful to see! Love to the US and Love to Nigeria. 🙂

  • @teneishaswinton7591
    @teneishaswinton7591 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I agree,I have met some of the nicest people while visiting Lagos and Imo State.

  • @meganakinsanya4702
    @meganakinsanya4702 Před 9 měsíci +33

    I feel oshay like to bring up Nigerians cos he’s trying to access the market and they won’t let him. Nobody has beef with anybody, making up stuff. For the most part, we Nigerians have no issue with black Americans. But the constant hatred for Nigerians based on perceived arrogance and attitude is weird. Nigeria is not the only country in Africa, if you don’t like or can’t get along with a nigerian, that’s a you problem. We are very welcoming people. P.S Carribeans were a part of the slave trade, yet they love Nigerians. I feel the disconnect with AA and Nigerians is partly cos of dna results

    • @Kenganda
      @Kenganda  Před 9 měsíci +24

      nobody needs Nigeria's market boo and that is respectfully speaking. The African American Community made me VERY successful and I don't need any other markets for money. Everything I have my African American community has provided for me and I don't need any other market to survive. Love Nigerians but no...I don't need the Nigerian market honey. The African American community's market is 3 times the wealth. Nice try but no cigar.

    • @fesderi3933
      @fesderi3933 Před 9 měsíci +8

      ​@@Kengandayou go explain TAYA oooo.... Some of una confused

    • @alexmaina6511
      @alexmaina6511 Před 9 měsíci

      Get over yourself woman

    • @valley2898
      @valley2898 Před 9 měsíci +8

      @@Kenganda Oshay, it's unnecessary, should have ignored. You never know what the future holds, just like you didn't know few years ago you will be in Uganda doing this.

    • @DanImpact00
      @DanImpact00 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Don’t say that he’s looking for clout. He’s doing a good job and also this conversations needs to be had cos it’s real

  • @legrindem
    @legrindem Před 9 měsíci +15

    Also people let us realize that when you talk about things like this you are creating it. I never thought there was a real beef thing. Lets talk about how to grow together. that way we create more of that instead of the former.

  • @user-qb7vy3gp7u
    @user-qb7vy3gp7u Před 5 měsíci

    Good job Jackson.

  • @iannngeno
    @iannngeno Před 9 měsíci

    That shirt of Houston is famous in every country and podcast... And on fire too,, the Tyler deserve the respect

  • @PapBob-jg7rd
    @PapBob-jg7rd Před 9 měsíci +4

    Nigeria population 215 million in Nigeria . Population of Black Nigeria in US 400,000 . Black Population in US 50 million . Nigeria population in US insignificant . Black America population in Nigeria insignificant . The internet and real life can be different .

  • @jesse-mb5go
    @jesse-mb5go Před 9 měsíci +4

    Great stuff Oshay. As an African living in the diaspora, I believe you are helping all black people globally. Much love!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @TT-dv9er
    @TT-dv9er Před 9 měsíci

    Greatest conversation I have ever seen

    • @toddmaek5436
      @toddmaek5436 Před 9 měsíci

      how so?

    • @TT-dv9er
      @TT-dv9er Před 9 měsíci

      @@toddmaek5436 Caucasians are a global minority. Yet, they have been able to rob, steel, kill, and destroy everywhere they colonized. The colonization that mattered the most was of the minds of the hundreds of millions of people around the globe for centuries. It was so insidious that Africans of the diaspora have yet to re-connect on a consistent level of brotherhood. Blacks fight and kill each other in America. But we also know we are ALL we got and we will support each other. Even the Bloods and the Crips are wearing the other colors and are respectful of each other. This conversation showed me that the connection with the Caucus people is completely irrelevant to the future. It will be Africans of the diaspora re-connecting and building Africa. MOST importantly without bringing in the European mindset.

  • @queenadeniboye
    @queenadeniboye Před 4 měsíci +1

    Ironically Nigerians embraced Davido’s music as being closer to the culture and Burna Boys music of sounding more westernized. After Burna boy started blowing up in other countries specifically America, they started appreciating him a lot more.

  • @CaribbeanLife2023
    @CaribbeanLife2023 Před 9 měsíci +5

    Auston you need to expand your wardrobe. Lol! 😂 Must be your favourite shirt. 🤦🏾

  • @cloutlordgunsmoke1009
    @cloutlordgunsmoke1009 Před 9 měsíci +5

    I am African American but my ancestry traces back to Nigeria

    • @julianaansah6367
      @julianaansah6367 Před 8 měsíci

      Most of y’all are Nigerians especially Igbo or Yoruba learn more about them

  • @lanlande24
    @lanlande24 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Wow I like how the guest speak!

  • @paulobatuyi
    @paulobatuyi Před 5 měsíci +1

    Excellent video guys keep up with the good work, this topic should have been covered a long time ago 👍🏽 but nothing is ever to late so maximum respect 🫡👊🏽

  • @murrayedwards1805
    @murrayedwards1805 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I know to take each individual as they come, there's no stereo typing in my lexicon. You treat me right and i will treat you great. We are all not always same, even twin born of the same womb have their differences. Let's keep the conversation going

  • @dicksonstephen7752
    @dicksonstephen7752 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Curruption is everywhere even in west

  • @brandonray4379
    @brandonray4379 Před 9 měsíci +14

    There's no beef towards Nigerians from AA. It's more like they come here and have animosity towards us. I grew up in the south, the word Nigerian was never in our vocabulary.
    Most black Americans don't think about Africans like that. They're not even on our radar. We been on these side of this world alone battling the harsh effects of white supremacy, alone, for 400 years.

    • @Cahluvca
      @Cahluvca Před 9 měsíci +3

      Still alone brotha...

    • @afrikanheritage99
      @afrikanheritage99 Před 9 měsíci

      You're not a fair person to not recognize how Africans are bullied in America.

    • @tbk01
      @tbk01 Před 9 měsíci

      XD, and it's not like Mali, Burkina Faso & Niger are actually at this exact moment doing a military overthrow of white supremacy (France/USA). It's not like they suffered from colonialism for centuries. I understand, Black Americans have it hard, but it's not like every other black group is having a dandy time, they were busy. Their are also fighting. Btw, on that alone part. Haiti has taken black American refugee multiple times and free them from racism/slavery. Some black Americans resettled in Liberia. Some black Americans went to Canada. That 400 years had more things happen and interaction than what you thought.😅

    • @activeobserver1150
      @activeobserver1150 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Africans aren’t thinking of AA either. We wake up and succeed

    • @Homeground38
      @Homeground38 Před 9 měsíci +3

      True , so much to worry about, normal BAs are on beat trying to make it...... they're actually supporting Nigerian music and patronize African joints in their cities ......

  • @vmoney65
    @vmoney65 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Part of the problem is that folks are missing a lot of knowledge about history and context because both inform one's perspective.

  • @marquesridley2464
    @marquesridley2464 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I luckily had a friend from Nairobi when i was 6 or 7 years old that told me about all the cities in Africa. Peaked my interest and i knew at a young age what Americans learned about Africa is BS

  • @NobleSoy
    @NobleSoy Před 9 měsíci +8

    You’ll never see the Igbo and Fulani conflict discuss on here

    • @kreativeforce532
      @kreativeforce532 Před 9 měsíci +4

      which is a real conflict. pew pew

    • @marcuscole1994
      @marcuscole1994 Před 9 měsíci

      Fulani my ppl they gangsta

    • @sshawnbr3
      @sshawnbr3 Před 9 měsíci

      Exactly!! These idiots really try to act like Black America is where that tribal BS comes from. They know good and damn well that they come over here with that!

  • @akendon7260
    @akendon7260 Před 9 měsíci +8

    Auston looks Igbo. I work with a lot of Africans and Nigerians. Whenever I see Africans that look African American, I know they are Igbo.

    • @jaren2159
      @jaren2159 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Cap

    • @africantraveller8303
      @africantraveller8303 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Cap🧢

    • @berthatz
      @berthatz Před 9 měsíci

      Yes he does..I visited home(Tanzania)On July and met this Guy looks exactly like Auston.He told me he was Nigerian ..He wanted my phone number 😍but hey my husband was around😜

    • @africaine4889
      @africaine4889 Před 9 měsíci +3

      ​@@berthatzso if he wasn't around you would have give him your number? Eish! Lol

    • @berthatz
      @berthatz Před 9 měsíci

      @@africaine4889😝🙌🏾

  • @Doomer253
    @Doomer253 Před 9 měsíci +15

    Austin showing yet again how much of a intellectual liteweight he is.

    • @Silverbackugx
      @Silverbackugx Před 9 měsíci +8

      I believe it was choosing not to engage and it was a wise choice. He showed up to support Oshay like a brother would. Anything he said would have Nigerians something to cry about, the intellectual light weight is you for not understanding that.

    • @db6881
      @db6881 Před 9 měsíci +2

      ​@Silverbackugx Nah he's just missing chasing tail in Brazil 😂😂😂😂. Depressed because his fetish refuses to f with him.

    • @BossKong-lo8ri
      @BossKong-lo8ri Před 8 měsíci

      @@db6881you mad because he doesn’t want you or what? I’ll never understand comments like yours.

    • @db6881
      @db6881 Před 8 měsíci

      @@BossKong-lo8ri It is just the truth I don't have to be one of the women he bashes to still stand up for them. He recently travelled to my country and even in the motherland he caused problems.

    • @BossKong-lo8ri
      @BossKong-lo8ri Před 8 měsíci

      @@db6881 what happened?

  • @MM-do3pt
    @MM-do3pt Před 9 měsíci +3

    It’s usually Nigerian men not women in my experience tbat come to America and downplay the struggles AA have overcome to open the door for new immigrants to come here and thrive…. They call AA lazy and angry and never acknowledge the long tumultuous historical fight

    • @themarathoncontinues4211
      @themarathoncontinues4211 Před 6 měsíci

      The men simply protect their women and families from the ppl who will bully their children and pester them with elementary questions.

  • @murrayedwards1805
    @murrayedwards1805 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Believe me the very first time I came across Oshay Duke Jackson, the feeling I got was he was one pissed off Nigerian. Do you know what Oshe means in Yoruba language? It means thanks

    • @LosAngelesMade
      @LosAngelesMade Před 9 měsíci

      Brotha in Yoruba it’s O se not Oshay two different words my boy nice try though. Im FBA and got love for Nigeria but let’s not act like what was said isn’t the truth. I can tell the truth about my black American family but will also tell the truth about Nigerians. There is no real beef just both have biggest egos about who is the best Black. Bitterness can make you this way we need to let go of the past tension and move to unity. We have to acknowledge the feelings say sorry and move on

    • @chidimmachristopher3709
      @chidimmachristopher3709 Před 9 měsíci

      @@LosAngelesMadepls speak for yourself, am Nigerian too and if having confidence is ego work on your insecurities

    • @LosAngelesMade
      @LosAngelesMade Před 9 měsíci

      @@chidimmachristopher3709 u sound butt hurt and bitter? Just say that 😂 insecurity is having the most bleach products in the world and running from ur country, that scream insecure like fake bravado. Get something done first sir.

  • @marianamcanuff6835
    @marianamcanuff6835 Před 9 měsíci +5

    We should have a mutual respect for one another I am from Jamaica myself but when I came to America I use to get the go back to Jamaica song. Now everyone wants to visit. What I have learned over the years is respect should be given for the fight. Black African Americans had to fight for what we have today in America and the respect needs to be given for the fight Blacks have given in Africa and countries such as Jamaica and Haiti from the colonizers. From every direction there has been a fight. So whatever freedom we have now is because we all have been fighting our ancestors and our people now! That is why we have youtubes like this and other outlets for the fight. We have no other choice but to fight.

    • @wisdommasterreviews4712
      @wisdommasterreviews4712 Před 9 měsíci

      Who wants to visit Jamaica?Stopppp

    • @marianamcanuff6835
      @marianamcanuff6835 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@wisdommasterreviews4712 No you stop! You don't have to question when you read replies like yours that your only coming from a negative point of view to DESTROY and not build. If you took from my comment that I in some way truly meant everyone Literally like I don't have enough intelligence to know you and other people don't have Jamaica on their bucket list and may have other countries they would like to visit. Please! In addition When we start respecting each other as I said in my last comment we will see how each of us add to the cause for equality and justice everything we do is for the children of the future just like it was done for us. Go listen to some Bob Marley and sit under a tree. Geesh.

    • @diplomatdiplomat2800
      @diplomatdiplomat2800 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@wisdommasterreviews4712 I do. Please stop being jealous

  • @onthegrind9971
    @onthegrind9971 Před 9 měsíci

    We need to educate the new generation about each other history.

  • @fridaymaureenodipo1315
    @fridaymaureenodipo1315 Před 9 měsíci +2

    He just reminded me why. A fool in his heart says there is no God.

  • @johncurry-jf6jc
    @johncurry-jf6jc Před 9 měsíci +6

    Blk Americans have no interest in what going on Nigeria or any other country in Africa and that’s just a unfortunate fact, as both places should be closer , you have to remember both people have been separated for 400 plus years and are just now connecting and culture’s are very different, but it’s good the conversation has started

    • @dandaddalyon12
      @dandaddalyon12 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Then why is Oshay in Africa?

    • @Tina-bm8ei
      @Tina-bm8ei Před 9 měsíci

      @@dandaddalyon12 Because (#Oshay) is really lowkey of "AFRICAN DESCENT"...TBH!!! Somebody even said his name is of African descent so he just claims to be "ADOS" when he's really ("NOT")...SMDH He's really just a 2nd Generation "African-Immigrant" but he's just too ("ASHAMED") to really claim his African identity lol. & That's why he's claiming to be a Black American When He's Really NOT!!!...LOL🤣🤣 SMDH!!! WHY Do U think he said in the video that he has a brother that's half igboo???🤔 or however u pronounce it??? I don't really know or *CARE BC "ADOS/FBA/BLACK-AMERICAN'S" OR ("NOT") AFRICAN ANYMORE....AFTER OVER 500-YRS OF "SEPARATION" FROM AFRICA🤦.*
      *&*
      *#OSHAY** NEEDS TO FINALLY ACCEPT THIS ("FACT") BC ADOS/FBA/BLACK-AMERICAN ACTUALLY ("DON'T") EVEN HAVE ANYYYY AFRICAN RELATIVES AT AIIII!!!! SO ADOS BLK-AMERICAN'S HAVE NOW BASICALLY BECOME OUR OWN SEPARATE, & UNIQUE, CULTURE!!! THAT IS ALSO THE MOST ("INFLUENTIAL-CULTURE-WORLDWIDE!!!!") & WE NEED TO LEARN TO JUST ACCEPT, & BE VERY PROUD, OF THAT & OF JUST BEING "ADOS/FBA/BLK-AMERICANS" NOW...WHICH IS A TOTALLY NEW, & SEPARATE, ETHNICITY, CULTURE, & NATIONALITY. THAT'S TOTALLY SEPARATE, FROM & DIFFERENT, FROM AFRICAN'S!!! & TBH THAT'S ALSO WHY BLACK-AMERICAN'S REALLY DON'T HAVE ANYYY REAL CONNECTION, OR INTEREST, IN AFRICA, OR AFRICAN, PPL...Just like Austin said*
      *in the video so I don't know what part of that Oshay doesn't understand Yet?!?!? With This Pointless "Pan-African" Nonsense That He Keeps Tryna Push That's Actually Never Gonna Work...Bc ATP We're Allll Just Wayyyy Different PPL Now Period & That's Also Ok. But We Just Need To Allll Move On Bc We Are ("NOT") AIIII ONE "BLACK-DIASPORA" OR A SO CALLED UNITED FAMILY??? & WE NEVER WILL BE. Bc that would actually have to start with ("AFRICA") BEING ("UNITED") 1ST DUHHH!!!🤦 & THAT'S JUST COMMON SENSE. BUT THEIR NOT!!! SO **#OSHAY** JUST NEEDS TO STOP!!! WITH ALL THIS FAKE-BS!!! & FINALLY MOVE ON!!!*

    • @DanielWilson-bu4cq
      @DanielWilson-bu4cq Před 9 měsíci

      @@Tina-bm8ei your culture isn’t influential anywhere why do y’all like to say this dumb stuff

  • @valley2898
    @valley2898 Před 9 měsíci +3

    My sister is married to an Igbo guy. Great dude, natural red hair like Blake Griffin.

  • @fungames1594
    @fungames1594 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Congratulations on a pure South Sudanese woman!
    My woman is half Ethiopian & Half South Sudanese.

  • @BossKong-lo8ri
    @BossKong-lo8ri Před 8 měsíci +1

    Man, I’m from America, my far off ancestors came from Africa. I know some of the tribes and everything. With that being said, I’ll never tell my kids they’re from Africa. My grandpas and grandmas have a strong history here and it’s recorded. We have our own culture and everything. From slang, music, foods, styles of dress and etc.

  • @constancew7
    @constancew7 Před 9 měsíci +2

    What's crazy about this is that we are literally the same people. Smh...

    • @PlutoniumSol
      @PlutoniumSol Před 9 měsíci +1

      We are not the same people. We are very different. But that isn't going to stop you all from forcing dark-skinned people to blend, as of they all belong together. Surface level thinking like this has caused genocide after genocide. We are not the same. And that's OK.

    • @Negro.spiritual
      @Negro.spiritual Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@PlutoniumSolno its not ok to push stupidity black americans and west africans are genetically the same ppl we have the same blood running through are veins that doesnt change just because one group got dropped off in america.

  • @VictorMulangu
    @VictorMulangu Před 9 měsíci +5

    AAs have always looked down on Africans because of simply how underdeveloped Africa is ..Bt the thing is they forget that they are rich people in Africa and always send their kids Abroad to school in the case of Nigerians in America..So u want to look down on someone who grew up in a mansion and coz of stereotype and that kid is given pocket money by their rich dad that u dont earn working a 9-5 u will get animosity..and U cant do that to Nigerians ..Nigerians are the most succesful black grouping in the world..

    • @feefee2
      @feefee2 Před 9 měsíci

      Wow that has not been my experience as an AA! We praised Africans and picked their brains for culture! Some of my best friends are African!

    • @LosAngelesMade
      @LosAngelesMade Před 9 měsíci

      Brotha hate to burst your bubble but African Americans are the most successful blacks in the world. We have the most millionaires and billionaires. But we don’t look down on africa most of you look down on urselves and other Africans bc of tribalism

    • @danrichard9082
      @danrichard9082 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@LosAngelesMaderemove athletes and entertainers and you don't have any millionaires

    • @LosAngelesMade
      @LosAngelesMade Před 9 měsíci

      @@danrichard9082 lol u must live under a rock, we have mannnnyyyyy millionaires and billionaires without sports, good try though. U sound kind of upset? 😂

  • @akh_jiminy5146
    @akh_jiminy5146 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Oshay is Drunk AsF🤪

  • @MrJW-jf3ue
    @MrJW-jf3ue Před 9 měsíci +2

    I think its according to your age. Im 59 years old form California. But I know Africans and African American are one, and I treated as so. I went to Ghana this year and enjoyed myself.

  • @majamaja8136
    @majamaja8136 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Happy Kenyans are a free minded people

  • @tribeaccessorieboutique
    @tribeaccessorieboutique Před 9 měsíci +11

    Please talk about all Africa, not only seldom countries. Like Congo Democratic for instance, the south region (Lubumbashi). Encourage visiting as well... please unit African countries, don't become like the Wytttes... Talk about all countries in Africa not only Nigeria, Uganda, Kenya, Ghana.... How about Congo Democratic, Angola or Congo Brazzaville???
    With 💞,

    • @TonnyOkello
      @TonnyOkello Před 9 měsíci +3

      Language barrier comes into play

    • @tribeaccessorieboutique
      @tribeaccessorieboutique Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@TonnyOkelloin Congo DR they speak French and English too, not much but they do speak English

    • @tribeaccessorieboutique
      @tribeaccessorieboutique Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@xavion2678 south Africa, cape Town / Tanzania Zanzibar

    • @thenaughtyamericanexpat
      @thenaughtyamericanexpat Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@xavion2678 I'd say Diani Beach in Mombasa, Kenya and the Tanzanian island of Zanzibar. However, don't just take my word for it. Go get your passport stamped, and decide for yourself. Godspeed.

    • @afrikanheritage99
      @afrikanheritage99 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​​@@xavion2678Tanzania, Kenya, Gambia, Sierra Leone and Nigeria in Lagos, South Africa in Cape Town.

  • @africanadage852
    @africanadage852 Před 9 měsíci +2

    😅😅 Those Zimbabwean women are a force to reckon with. Aunty Arikana is an example. Thanks for the acknowledgement Oshay. Zimbo out.🇿🇼

  • @jadeasoldier
    @jadeasoldier Před 9 měsíci

    🖤❤️💚 all of us together, from an afro-american +nigerian ;)

  • @nynurse29
    @nynurse29 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I didnt even meet a Nigerian until i was in my early 30s i knew one African dude in High-school and no one knew he was African until his parents showed up in his cultural attire. He was deep in our culture. There wasnt even a flood of Africans where i lived or in Southern states growing up in the 80s and 90s. All this black Americans did this to us. Its like 50 million of us and most of us wasnt around them. I didnt even know where Nigerian was and knew nothing about it.

    • @LosAngelesMade
      @LosAngelesMade Před 9 měsíci +1

      This facts! I went to highschool with 3 Nigerians but I never knew they were Nigerian bcus they did everything like we did the only way I knew is senior year when I heard their last names when we graduated lol cus they had English first names I never knew they were Nigerians. I’m cool with 2 of them until this day bcus both married FBAs.

    • @Tiger-zp8eq
      @Tiger-zp8eq Před 9 měsíci +2

      Exactly! Outside of NY, most of us had no contact with them until adulthood. These stories about how they were treated so bad by BAs are suspect AF.

    • @nynurse29
      @nynurse29 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @Tiger-zp8eq and I grew up in upstate new york not new york city where most carribean and Africans are. Hell I didn't even have any carribean classmates or they definitely was absorbed in black American culture. That period of time was golden for hip hop and r&b I was busy enjoying the 90s black culture. The only part of Africa I really remember paying attention to was South Africa because of learning about apartheid in social studies. That's it!

    • @JayFocused
      @JayFocused Před 9 měsíci +1

      Right. Same for me, in the 90s/early 00s they just didn't have a large presence in the States.

    • @beezelsub
      @beezelsub Před 7 měsíci

      @@Tiger-zp8eq they're not suspect at all. From what I read it was the worst in the 90's - early 2000's due to all of the anti-African propaganda at the time.

  • @dee3489
    @dee3489 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Never seen any problem my gf Nigerian and im black American born.

    • @jaren2159
      @jaren2159 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Wtf does Black American born mean you Black American or not

    • @afrikanheritage99
      @afrikanheritage99 Před 9 měsíci +4

      ​@@jaren2159You need a lot of help to deal with your hate. Why are you aggressive towards group of people that look like you that has no power to subject you to institutional racism you've been dealing with across generations.
      #MisplacedPriority

    • @ronj7658
      @ronj7658 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@afrikanheritage99because he has to hate someone that looks like him to make himself feel better about being a L0śëŕ

    • @dee3489
      @dee3489 Před 9 měsíci

      @@jaren2159 mean exactly what I said born in USA duh

  • @rcsmith2761
    @rcsmith2761 Před 8 měsíci

    I grew up in DC and then moved to a diverse neighborhood in Hyattsville, MD with many west and east Africans, including a significant amount of Nigerians. The African Americans, Nigerians and other Afro ethnicities all rew up together and went to the same schools to the exent I never knew a lot of my classmates and friends were not FBAs until I met their families. I do recall an era in the early 2000s when a lot of people (Nigerians in particular) were scamming and committing white collar crimes but I never saw this fact as a representation of an entire nationality.

  • @carolpsalmon1227
    @carolpsalmon1227 Před 9 měsíci

    The guy in the hat has a calm spirit
    He seems loving too that's how we should all be as blacks

  • @Silverbackugx
    @Silverbackugx Před 9 měsíci +40

    I could 100% relate Austin's history and energy on the show with this Nigerian. You cannot have a conversation with one of them without them telling you how they are "gods" and 'kings and queens" and somehow broke as a rich bum but better than other people, while constantly trying to finesse. The ones that I have personally encountered have been the most caustic and arrogant people in the room, you know them by the guy wearing the pajamas and the fake bling with the loudest mouth. If this dude knew how to connect with Black Americans, he would know that we don't like all that deliberate touching, especially from other men..wtf....hard pass.

    • @skyking3210
      @skyking3210 Před 9 měsíci +20

      Stop it brah, you run the same speech with gods, queens and kings so it should be like looking in a mirror
      If you are actually good at reading the room you could tell this guy is eccentric and maybe not even straight
      Black folks too emotional as always while playing macho

    • @patrisio3
      @patrisio3 Před 9 měsíci +20

      If I didn't know any better, I thought you were talking about black Americans.

    • @skyking3210
      @skyking3210 Před 9 měsíci +6

      @@patrisio3 short sighted that one, it's like he lives in a vacuum even amongst his own

    • @valley2898
      @valley2898 Před 9 měsíci +15

      @@skyking3210 Exactly. Falling for the same shittt, using one guy to paint brush a people. Everyone is different, approach each person differently.

    • @simonesimona8317
      @simonesimona8317 Před 9 měsíci +9

      ​@skyking3210 thank you for your room reading, you just confirmed what I was thinking 😅 this is deeper than Naija vs blacks

  • @KenUbeleveit1
    @KenUbeleveit1 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Burna Boy has been on Breakfast Club before

  • @PreyeSelekeodudu-mt7dx
    @PreyeSelekeodudu-mt7dx Před 6 měsíci

    Omor u be like pastor eeh good preacher..

  • @lutaayam
    @lutaayam Před 9 měsíci +4

    This Nigerian brother preaching too much kumbaya

  • @coldtruth17
    @coldtruth17 Před 9 měsíci +17

    From my experience (as an adult) most of the disrespect came from Nigerian women. Not because I did anything disrespectful, but it was normalized for them to talk down on AAs.

    • @ukariogulu1417
      @ukariogulu1417 Před 9 měsíci

      No argument ,but Africans are the most insulted black people on the planet. Nigerian girls were called all kinds of ugly ,smelly etc. Unfortunately they internalized a lot of anger and so give it out to blacks

    • @MegaLadylove2012
      @MegaLadylove2012 Před 9 měsíci

      Nigerian women are disrespectful

    • @emerkens8008
      @emerkens8008 Před 9 měsíci

      THATS A LIE. STOP LYING ABOUT NIGERIAN WOMEN. SEND THE PROOF THEN

    • @kreativeforce532
      @kreativeforce532 Před 9 měsíci

      Nigerian women disrespect Nigerian women too. so what? welcome to the family. "talking down" is only a problem in 2 cases: 1. if you believe all Black people regardless of grouping are equals and we have/ never had any system of social hierarchy. Well we do have such, and thus you're wrong. That AAs (mainly the women) refuse to accept and practice this anymore is to their own peril.
      it also upsets titled AAs that they're forced into equality of status with people who have not earned the same titles. its juvenile. cut it out.
      2. if you believe that AAs as a group are better than all continental Africans as a group. Again wrong and racist. As this belief is based in the idea that SOME bit of white blood/dna = superiority. The implication then is that purely white people are then superior to you. So this is a moronic and phyrric belief to operate under. stop it.
      An AA doctor is socially the senior/ superior to a Nigerian undergrad student. A Senegalese elder man is superior to a young Carribean man. AAs in the 1920s had 12 self-created levels of social caste (as described by members of Tulsa OK of the era). It's not a foreign concept to you.

    • @kreativeforce532
      @kreativeforce532 Před 9 měsíci

      p.s. gangsters in the 20s were part of that caste system and they were not at the top of it. Some old ways are better than new ones.

  • @BossKong-lo8ri
    @BossKong-lo8ri Před 8 měsíci

    I’ve had a few homeboys and homegirls from the continent (military). There’s only been a few who was on that FBA’s are this and that. Me who use to consider myself a Pan African would bring up interesting convos. I’m still coo with a lot of them.

  • @dred9174
    @dred9174 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Most of us have Nigerian blood but a lot of us are also from the indigenous Black tribes that were already in the Americas the Conquistadors and Columbus wrote about seeing jet black people in the Americas which predated the Atlantic slave trade.

  • @charlesislaw
    @charlesislaw Před 9 měsíci +3

    United States of Africa
    African Diaspora Unity

  • @vonniofdoom5590
    @vonniofdoom5590 Před 9 měsíci +8

    Which Americans have time to beef someone in a third world country?

    • @javionriley8739
      @javionriley8739 Před 9 měsíci

      Exactly majority of us never even came across them ! Dude is simply delusional!! And you see how the Nigerian do is gaslighting and lying about everything he never touched on tribalism in his own continent, which is the reason why they fled to USA 😂😂😂! All while wearing a jacket that says “hood rich” the jokes write themselves

    • @jaren2159
      @jaren2159 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@storyteller6777that Crackhead mom can teach how to use a toilet

    • @fredrickbrown6206
      @fredrickbrown6206 Před 9 měsíci

      Now Ive been to Africa the poor I seen over there will scare the hell out of people here . That's why so many of them die trying to leave. @@storyteller6777

    • @2LETLIVE
      @2LETLIVE Před 9 měsíci

      @vonnionfdoom5590 Do you even know the meaning of "third world"? Your idea of third world is right there in America. Go to the projects, the hood, and fift word in America. Go to Philadelphia, go to every black American community and neighborhood in America, it is like a war zone. They are the most impoverished and backwards society in America. Go yo skidroll in Los Angeles and see black American destitute loitering everywhere. Go all the major city in America, you have black American destitutes and beggars at every corner of the city. You need to humble yourself bro., and stop throwing insults on Africans.

    • @5Pointstarr
      @5Pointstarr Před 9 měsíci

      realistily yall american do have beef with 3rd world counties, stop goin over to 3rd world countries and stealing their resources.

  • @rodgersombati317
    @rodgersombati317 Před 8 měsíci

    @KetchupTownVEVO our Alaba is called River Road at downtown Nairobi CBD 😅

  • @whenAgrownman_speaks
    @whenAgrownman_speaks Před 9 měsíci +1

    Here in Houston it's was tough with the 1st gen Africans that came over because of the propaganda but around the 2000s once the kids grew up together it all changed. The cultures are so intertwined not just from Africa to Jamaica all over the diaspora you can see it in Houston.

    • @beezelsub
      @beezelsub Před 7 měsíci +1

      Honestly that's nice to hear.

    • @whenAgrownman_speaks
      @whenAgrownman_speaks Před 7 měsíci

      @@beezelsub even in Houston hip hop rappers like lil O, chamillionaire, tobe nwigwe and this youngster named maxo cream are all 2nd generation Nigerian descent kids who grew up here and just seen themselves as black

  • @SILKY215
    @SILKY215 Před 9 měsíci +16

    Oshay is so modest. Black Americans/FBA are the most influential group of people in the world. The creator of Afro beats was influenced by Black Americans/FBA.

    • @tok1879
      @tok1879 Před 9 měsíci +6

      No doubt

    • @gilbertnaddy-7729
      @gilbertnaddy-7729 Před 9 měsíci +9

      Absolute nonsense ! The most influential group of people in the world ?

    • @uchenna127
      @uchenna127 Před 9 měsíci +6

      No he was not. Stop spreading false information. Stop trying to co-opt the achievements of everyone else; like some kind of Black supremacist. Give people their kudos and move on, or are you that insecure.

    • @Kenganda
      @Kenganda  Před 9 měsíci +14

      actually yes he was....he was a jazz musician before then. He was DEFINITELY influenced by African AMericans without them there is no Afrobeats.@@uchenna127

    • @jaren2159
      @jaren2159 Před 9 měsíci +9

      ​@@uchenna127No all the people Oshay named came to America and got their whole style and education from Black Americans yes we are the most influential

  • @marcasino3117
    @marcasino3117 Před 9 měsíci +8

    Divide and conquer has always been the play. Most African Americans have Nigerian ancestry.

    • @justcallmebrian793
      @justcallmebrian793 Před 9 měsíci +2

      No we don't. We came from three different regions in Africa and not only Nigeria. Look at the archives which points to that fact

    • @Cahluvca
      @Cahluvca Před 9 měsíci

      What does that mean....they see you as a foreigner regardless

    • @afrikanheritage99
      @afrikanheritage99 Před 9 měsíci

      Point Blank.
      We're brothers and sisters ❤

    • @afrikanheritage99
      @afrikanheritage99 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@justcallmebrian793Gosh Transatlantic slave trade was taken from West Africa.

    • @justcallmebrian793
      @justcallmebrian793 Před 9 měsíci

      @@afrikanheritage99 They came from several different regions in Africa, it is very well documented.
      tracingafricanroots.files.wordpress.com/2018/02/tast-usa-countries-of-origin.jpg
      tracingafricanroots.wordpress.com/maps/slave-trade/