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May 17, 2023 • 36 mins
It's a very special episode of Sporadic Thoughts with some special guests!
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(00:01):
This podcast was recorded in the IHeart Radio line of Podcasting Center. It's
your girl, COURTNEYO, it's yourbig dog, Matt Sanders. The difference
between me and you say what's yourtruth? What everybody else is thinking?

(00:22):
Say whatever comes to your mind andshop it up. But today we got
toime ill that boy. Yo yoyo, it's your girl, COURTNEYO.
This is your big dog Matt SandersAnd welcome to another episode of Sporadic Thoughts,

(00:45):
where we go into your mind andwe let you journey into our mind
where we might say anything. Anythinggoes in this room, and we are
here today with right yes, yo, welcome to Sporadic Thoughts. We are
so happy to have you guys herein the building and we definitely appreciate you.

(01:07):
We're coming on today. Thank you, thank you for having us.
Huh yeah, everybody's day going.It's been good. It's been good.
God he's going. Yeah, hurryhurry and rush rush. It wasn't hot
like yesterday. I made the mistakeand had a whole track suit on.

(01:30):
It was nice. Yesterday was yes. I just used confusing right up and
down. That's what I said.The weather has to be a woman,
right right, yeah, already.I'm just saying from a woman's perspective.

(01:55):
Yeah, So with our special guess, um, we wanted zent today and
acknowledge, you know, the Africanculture and some of the things that are
coming up in our line of community. Uh, to highlight that, and
I'm gonna let our guests speak alittle bit about what they have going on.
So if you would like to explainsome of the stuff that's coming up

(02:16):
and go from there, floor isall yours because we don't want to it's
better coming from your mouth. Yeah, so we know that stuff. We'ven
gonna gonna get it together. Well, my name is Bowla our Way and
this is my husband my name,and we are the founder of CEO of

(02:43):
African Fashion. It's called Awesome AfricanFashion. And I liked how you spelled
it too, That was like,but that's the stuff. Yeah. Well
we're the last name too. Soum, well, we've been in Lima
Fall. It'll be twenty six yearsin December when we moved to America,

(03:06):
it was in nineteen ninety seven.Yeah, so then that in August and
in December we moved to live mins. We've been here. We've loved life.
I mean left to my husband,he would have been gone the biggest.
He's the biggest of the guy movedto line first. Yeah. No,
we moved from New York, thebig Apple. Yeah you wanted to

(03:30):
stand, I said, I know, this is too much for me.
It was way too much for me. I like it small and post.
When you have kids, you wantit smallt Yes, definitely. So.
And we've been here, it's almosttwenty six years. We've been here since
then, and I think I wouldn'tI wouldn't go anywhere this. I feel
a wonderful. Yeah. Yeah,I'm apply from California, so I've been

(03:53):
here like seventeen years. I'm justI'm a cal Hio in I love lie
right, I was. I wasborn and raised in Lima and tried to
get out of Linan. We areokay, Now what brought you here to

(04:18):
Lima specifically? I mean he's brother'sa doctor. Doctor howay you know what
I mean? Yeah? Yeah,so he got a job where he was
working in New York and we justcame. So he got a job in
light my Memorial Hospital and saying readit, so said, when I'm moving
to Lima, Ohio, somewhere smaller, um if you guys want to come,

(04:42):
you can't. If you know youcan stay, I said, oh,
I didn't like big city anyway.I had a little baby. You
know, my baby was only fortydays when we came, so she was
about six months five months then.So he said, well, let's stay.
I said, no, we gottago. I gotta get out of
here. So we followed him here, and then about ten years after that

(05:05):
he left. He left. Yes, he had a prior, he had
a practice here, um, andthen he left to Georgia. So he
decided to stay, right, Iam, yeah, him to stay here
with us. I said, we'resaying okay, So we decided to stay.

(05:27):
So we've been here that longer.We've loved it. We have focus
total together, and then we haveadopted one so we have three here and
we brought one from Africa. Sowe've been here almost twenty six years.
So um, Africa is always home, and we just wanted to do something,
um, something um. People reallydon't know about because when you talk
about Africa, people talk about country. Well, no, Africa is a

(05:49):
continent. Yeah yeah, okay,yeah okay, so and then people don't
understand and you get asked, didyou wear clothes in Africa? I hate
that naked? Do you have?Did you have a tie? Guy?

(06:11):
My god? Right? Remember questions? But I think this is what they've
been taught at school. Absolutely,that's all we were ever shown. Yeah,
Yo, always out to enlighten kindof like teach people or you know,
kind of like tell people, Okay, we wore clothes, we ate,
we didn't work around naked? Rightwe have TV? Yeah? Right?

(06:40):
I love that because you know,we as African Americans, we have
such a misconception right of what Africaand who Africa is. Yep, it's
such a misconception. And we allknow that's been a system that's been put
in place, right purpose, right, right, right, and that's like
you said, that's the picture thathas been painted. Right. So being

(07:03):
in rooms like this helps us tolearn, and we definitely appreciate that.
And I think what your event isabout, we want more people to assimilate
into that, right, so wecan learn the culture, right and and
and different things that we just simplydon't know, you know, like right,

(07:24):
ignorance is blissed right, right,wisdom is flower Absolutely yeah. So
um, I've always loved Foshion anythingfoshion for me and it's a party as
long as I get to get dressed. Yes, yeah, ok. So
Um, twenty two thousand, Iwent to Africa for my traditional wedding.

(07:46):
We'll be married for twenty year totwenty seven years next month. And um,
when you have a wedding in Africa, you can have like twenty I
mean four hundred people three under alot of people. Especially we just giving
back from in America. So Igot a lot of money. So I
was talking to my mother in law. She was still alive, ship passed.

(08:07):
We have so arresting peace. AndI said, I have all this
money. What do I do withthis money? And she said, well,
you love fashion. Why don't youjust buy staff and take them to
America and go sell them. AndI said, oh, good thoughts.
So I bought some stuff and Ibrought them here and people embraced them.

(08:28):
So since that time, I startedbuying staff. And every time I wear
staff, they see they like it. I take that Majormaids like send them
back home my brains. Yes,And I've been doing it since then.
So I've been red lighting across thecountry. And I'm a nurse, you
know, I work in a nursinghome. But fushion is always something I've
always loved to do on the site. Well, because of so many questions

(08:52):
didn't asked of me, I said, well, why don't we just do
something big? So it's been tenyears I've always wanted to do that.
Say do it fashion show? Youready yet? Yeah? I said,
I wasn't ready. I said,I'm ready. She just like gonna give
it out. I don't think you'reready yet. Yeah, my business because

(09:13):
when you're so passionate about certain things, you want to share that with yea.
Yeah, you gotta also remember there'sgotta be a line where I got
a profit off. I know,outcome, no income. Sometimes I didn't
think that way. Now I'm beginningto think, and you like, don't
do that because if you ask meyou like my clothes, You're like,
okay, we were in the samesize. Okay, I can give it
to you. And then you'd belike, no, you cannot always do

(09:35):
you give give you got a salesale because you have someone in to buy
another one. Ye. So Ilearned, you know. So I said,
let's do this fashion show. Hesaid okay, And I kept thinking
about it for like ten years nowand then four years ago, you can
think about the fact that, solet's let's ponder on that he was nervous.

(09:56):
I was, I didn't know whereto start to start. Yeah.
So and then, um so fouryears ago and went and paid for the
hall of the Civic Center January.We went home. Um and then I
kind of got myself a little bitready and in COVID hit February. Okay,
okay, said they said, giveme back my money. And then

(10:20):
yeah, after they said no,we're not ready for it to open up
a whole year. And then yeafter that, no, and they last
year I couldn't do it because Itook my kids to Africa for the court
time. Yeah, so I said, okay, this, I got to
do it soon as we got backfrom Africa. And when I had them
paid, the Civic citday was inJuly. I think I'm ready, get
out of the way. Yeah,I knew if I had the hall,

(10:41):
I was ready. You had yougot the location. So it's because a
lot of people asking. Yeah,a lot of people wanted it to be
on the weekend. Okay. Icouldn't get any Friday, no Saturday,
no Sunday. Everything was booked becausepeople didn't have um any location to have

(11:03):
a wedding because of COVID, COVIDeverything. Everything was just taking to what
day or what's the date for theevent. It's next Thursday. Okay,
so y'all hear that. You gota nice African culture fashion I'm gonna call
it expo going on at the Civic'sin May twenty fifth, next Thursday.

(11:28):
What time it starts to seven?And then we're gonna start right at seven,
you know, if we have twentypeople, we're gonna start absolutely whatever.
We just want to be on time. Yea. We have a lot
of activities. We have um,Chris Steady coming to play, okay,
yeah, yeah, yeah. Ihave people dancing African doing some African dance.

(11:52):
Um. I have someone singing.We have the fashion show. So
there's a lot going on. SoI just want people. I want to
be rifective with people's time. We'rebringing a lot of African true, I
know, just fashion, right,yeah, I'm culture. Yeah, yeah,
we talk about it. Yeah,bring a lot of because you don't

(12:18):
want to just have a fashion showwithout African fashion show without the African Absolutely,
that's the culture. That's how youfind out somebody's culture eat the food,
right, So um, we havea lady in Columbus, kid right
in Columbus and does the cooking andget a food. So we're bringing her
heels, so she is going tobe the one that's going to sell the
food. So I didn't have tobe involved in over the Let's forget it's

(12:41):
not just fire show. We havethings like a hot walk yeah, okay,
stuff like that, So doing't justthing you're gonna Columbi. They're bringing
every everything. Clothing, yeah,the whole experience. Music. Yeah,

(13:03):
I mean this is I'm kind ofshocked that I'm just hearing about this now,
you know. But this is allright though, because this is something
that's really a major that the communityneeds. And I definitely want to see
everyone come out of support to theirbest and come learn, you know who,
get you some culture and want theright definitely, and even moving forward,

(13:31):
Yo, if Matt and I cando anything to help for next year's
event, we want to do thatbecause we want us you know what I
mean, we want Black African Americansto learn and I'm really big on that
because it's just something that we didn'thave the opportunity and even at home.
I was kind of brainstorming through myhead, as you know, growing up

(13:52):
in school when we had to doprojects of when we had to research our
family, and the only place thatmost black kids could ever stop was like,
okay with my great parents are fromAlabama, right, And then I
say, you know, you getthe white kids, they're all in right
and everything, and then our crestis just stop. Okay, grandparents with
slaves and Alabama. So it's awhole other heart of us that if we

(14:16):
just don't know, and it bringsa lot of stereotypes against black African Americans
and Africans because the way it's said, it's like we're against each other right
where that's not even true, youknow what I mean? And we need
to break that stereotype down to letpeople know. You know what I mean
that right? Yea with the kidsabsolutely, Yeah, But I like how

(14:41):
she brought up that stereotype. Um, it's portraying a lot of movies like,
um, African Americans are not supposedto or are not welcome in Africa
or look different. Yeah, butwhat did y'all take on that? Like
see, Okay, yes, I'mgonna tell you one thing. They will

(15:03):
the fall nice you even do betterthan yeah, cause they look at you.
I guess yeah, like they represent. I was talking to a guy
to day. We're just joking,you need to visit Africa. Oh no,
I don't want to go there allthe time. Like we're gonna we

(15:30):
joke about outside of the wall.I'm gonna just three dude to my man.
But that's what's been ingrained in ourI'm gonna say social sensationalism has done
that. And then you know,just the ignorance of not right. I
mean, guys everywhere before we evencame in, my mom wanted me,

(15:54):
oh, you're not America. Theyjust shoot everybody, so you I mean
I was not like that. Yeah, but I call them the life.
Then I'm talking about gearing, likedon't just shoot everywhere if you talk to
someone that you know supposed to talkto. Wow, Like I said,
that was ignore right, Yeah yeah, yeah yeah go around and shoot everybody

(16:25):
shooting. Yeah. I've been workingon the street for years. I didn't
see no shooting since I've been badin life. But it's here, it's
everywhere. This show. This showis for you to just it's a stepping
stool for you to see the differentAfrican culture. Yeah, the teacher in

(16:47):
school. Yeah, you know that'sthat's how mean. That's a mean goal.
She's the foundation of this. That'sa mean like we need to bring
diversity. Yeah. I met adoctor Lulu. I did a TED talk
and she was asking me like howdid I end up in linement and the
things that I do, Like youshouldn't even be in linemen, like you

(17:08):
you need to go, you needto go. And I'm like, well,
you know, I got a family, was like bloys here and she
was like, well, I'm fromAfrica. I just up and left.
And you know, we were wewere sitting and talking and it was like,
what's in my bloodline? You know, my DNA is different because we
don't have a spirit where we feellike we can just go right, you
know, we feel like we're stuck. I'm like, well, you gotta

(17:30):
think about like my grandparents they wereslaves, so they didn't have that spirit,
you know what I mean. Sowhat got handicapped down to us through
epigenetics. It's totally different, rightfrom what you experienced. She said,
Wow, I never thought about itlike that. Yeah. Also, you
know, I'm intrigued even by thisconversation because I want to know more and

(17:51):
eventually I want to get to thepoint where I can go to Africa.
Right, I mean we took ourkids to Africa last ye. They were
blowing away. Oh my bad.Yeah. Every year we'd like to say
one big vacation. I mean Iwas thinking this year, maybe we'll go
to London or something. No,they want to go to her. Actually
last year they wanted to go back. I'm like, the take it.

(18:11):
It's too expensive, like twelve fifteen, eighteen hundred for one person. My
fault. How long is the flightfrom from from the Atlanta That really direct?
Wow? I think it's from NewYork. Yeah. My kids loved

(18:33):
it, and so they're really excited. They just want to go back every
time. Yeah, I'm friends wereokay on so I kind of followed her.
Okay, you know what I'm Yeah, and a lot of people said
we felt like we were there becauseeverything we did that grow high she did.

(18:56):
Everybody was seeing everything we did backhome last year. That Yeah.
Absolutely. I'll have a question aboutum, just to get a little more
knowledge. I guess for my ignorancetance, what type of religion is like the
main base out there, but bothboth of what Muslim? Right, Okay,

(19:22):
that depends on each country. Thatdepends on the got country got more
Muslims? Country got more? Okay, okay, yeah. And we have
the tradition everybody, every one ofDamn, they'll all play too long God.
Okay, hey, gods one God. Then the tradition that before the

(19:48):
Muslim and the christend. We havethat on to everybody. God, my
friend, I should event day likewe all pray this one God. No,
not everybody like here they don't havea Muslim holiday. Yeah holiday,
everyone the same amount of holiday.They're gonna give the Christen during the Christmas

(20:12):
when it comes to their home.Muslim, Wow, get the same Okay.
Yeah, I'm like I said,everybody's playing one Muslim and Christmas Bible
Okay, yeah, own Bible.Okay. So what were some of the

(20:33):
things that you guys found hard toadjust to when coming again coming to America.
Let's trying to me. It wasit was speaking. It was communication
when we first came, even thoughwe went to college back home, just
trying to express herself was so difficultbecause everything you said, like what what

(20:56):
did you say? We didn't understandthe accent was so strong, and we
spoke English. It was English,but we have to repeat yourself over and
over again. I mean, itwas so frustrating. Um. I went
to a nursing school, so itwas much easier for me to kind of
flip because you have to sometimes I'vebeen in the bathroom, I'll say the
same thing over and over and overand over again. Because you're talking to

(21:18):
a resident. You want to beable to express yourself to them. What
kind of medication are you're giving them? Kind of treatment? So to me,
it was that the food wasn't badbecause everywhere you could get African food,
you know, so you can buycook at home yourself. But for
me, it was the communication andit was very mine. Still doing understand

(21:41):
me. Okay, it's still strong, it's strong. Listen hard. Yeah,
my my my main goal. Mymain problems when we when we want
to hold the food. Okay,the kids like hey, the kids hard

(22:03):
to get same? Okay, keepit simple. If you ain't in burger,
somebody knew how to burger. Whereyou want to same? Same you
eat it? Keep down down onstreet. Yeah, what's my first experience

(22:26):
that was terrible? I was orderedice cream? I was right there on
the drive truth and I was holdingthis burger, can get it to come
to the window, out the window, don't get it? Oh my three
people and I would like you knowabout three now. He was just winding

(22:52):
the window and tell the kids toorder. He'd like the food here.
People in New York they didn't knowwhat he's going up ball, you know,
don't have enough foreign us yet.Is it is? Yeah, definitely,

(23:15):
We've enjoyed life. Milama is abeautiful I don't think I want to
move anyway. I'm very well knownthat everything un a right. Yeah,

(23:37):
they say awesome, Yeah, Imean it's it's it's a blessing. Like
I said, to have you guyshere share some of the stories and give
us a little more knowledge on whatwe don't know about. Um. I
guess I would wonder, like,okay, so they say that ours is

(24:02):
chicken, What is like the mainfood dish in Africa? You would say,
like everybody, everybody, that riceis the main I mean we would
like to say Africa is a continentcountry. Right, it's like Africa,
I mean rise most of the Africanpeople right right, okay, yeah?

(24:25):
Ok it differently, Yeah, likethe Africa is differently. We're just right,
but I think it's mainly right.So what was the most shocking thing
to you about the African American dietcompared to your It's not spicy okay,
so like spicy Okay, yeah,they don't you know, you put a
little bit spice and like still hehas stuporsoms more hot sausos, trying to

(24:52):
make it more spie. Yeah.Yeah. So it's food food considered like
a like kind of like like,how do you see soul food in a
way? Is it compared to likea soul food? Like foofo? Is
this solid? We call it solid? The best way to eat foo boys
with your hands? Okay. It'smade in different ways. You could use

(25:12):
diary, you could use yam powder, you can use I thought you said
that, but I was like Iheard yeah, okay, So it depends
on how you cook it. Youain't know what. It could be white,
it could be yellow. So foofoyis going around crazy, Yes it
is, yeah, and it's allover TikTok. So I thought, well,

(25:33):
maybe we should just bring foot foodto light mind and that I eat
food food. It's just the footfool on the flyer is just making names
just so. Yeah. I mean, but once you get them in there
to eat the food, fools,then they don't have any choice but to
say so if that's what's gonna okay, they just get there. Yeah coming

(26:00):
sw Yeah, well we're really excitedabout it. I'm brilliant, exciting.
This is amazing. This is thefirst one. So yeah, I know
next year, by the grace ofguy, we have a lot of family
coming from out of town. Yeah, next ye, I'll try to right
after this one. I'll make areservation for a weekend that way. Yeah,
already I booked the hall like ayear here because I know when you

(26:26):
get the hall, you get you'regood. Definitely. I always plan ahead,
so I know by next year byI will make reservation. How you
know first time. First time isalways a little bit yeah you already you
know where your mistakes where you're right? Yeah, like you say some shirts,

(26:47):
Yeah you're just hearing it for thefirst time with out there. You
know at that time, you knowpeople, you know where to keep doing
this outside keeping what it is.I mean, fresh white might be different,
bigger definitely. How you're gonna lovedmore than is not just African.

(27:17):
I involved everything I had kids,teenagers. I didn't get like people that
does it like for like yeah,like yeah, I involved people that are
free. That part called me everyoneI like he said for the first time,

(27:44):
I didn't know I was going differentplaces. But then because I have
a team of ladies that I've sewnin me um since I've been in Linemas.
Absolutely I put them together UM andthey've been amazing. So they kept
telling me call the call that thatand not this power. You have to
respect what people are telling you becausewhat you don't know other people that actually
help. So and that was howyour name came up. That word what

(28:08):
you said, you didn't hear aboutit. It is because I was still
trying to get myself together. Iwas still trying. Yes, she's my
team, so yeah, she's beenin my life for a long time.
I know some people that I've metwhen we came to Liman years ago,
twenty seven years ago, and they'rein my team because I know they've known
me. They can tell me,no, don't do it this way,

(28:30):
genuine people. Yeah, iual towin the prize. I was going to
do it differently. They said no, And I have to listen because talk
about it's twenty dollars if you come, If you buy the tickets ahead of
time, between now and that day, it's twenty dollars. Okay, buy
at the gate it will be twentyfive dollars or a dollar. And what
kids at eleven to seventeen would beten dollars. Wow, if you're doing

(28:56):
if you think you want to waittwenty last day to get your ticket,
yeah, it's yeah, ahead andget the tickets tickets dollars. You can
get it online on the line officialsright now? Um? Yeah, what's
the website? Are well? Ifyou get a bowler our way on Facebook?

(29:18):
Yeah, also will pop up andthen you can just buy your ticket.
Then is there are you? Youcan call me from one nine three
zero two six five four whenever youare. I can't bring the tickets.
And he said four one nine threezero five four okay all four one nine
three zero two two seven seven sevenAnd that's mine. Okay, Now what

(29:42):
time is the event? Seven?Yeah? Okay, sure you're not doing
African time, right, We're doingit seven o'clock. Yeah. I'm challenging
Lineman to step up. You know, this is a big thing. We
got this and then we got Juneteenthcoming up, So I'm challenging everybody,
step up, come show your face. Um, it's a good, friendly,

(30:03):
fun family event. Um come along. Yeah absolutely people yeah outside Yeah,
and and like yeah, and wedefinitely need to start learning our culture

(30:23):
beyond where what we were taught askids, so our future kids can know
that there's no stereotypes. They're allof what we were taught is completely false.
You know, we aren't bound byreligion, right, we aren't bound
by culture. Like we all needto learn humanness right of each other,

(30:48):
because like the black African American plight, it's totally different, right from the
African plight. And I believe thatonce you infuse those two cultures together,
it's unstoppable. Like I'm thinking aboutJune teenth, Like you know, I'm
the MC of that event downtown.These two this this needs yea so we
can look beyond. Yeah, AndI've always loved that June did. She

(31:14):
was a part of it. Weinvited people, a lot of all our
Africans, we told them and theycame yeah, yeah, absolutely. I
mean we need to put it inour kids. Africa, it's your whole
Yeah, this kid to go toAfrica, right, Yeah, the only
thing I'm not gonna advise you togoogle without Yeah, anywhere you go in

(31:40):
the ward, if you go somewherein the war, if you goog by
yourself. Yeah, don't take thatmind said, I don't those in Africa.
African people do. No, it'severything. That's a big fact.
Take that out your mind. Itdon't mean that they Africans and Africa don't

(32:00):
like yea, that they kind ofput us against each other. Rights each
other. Now and um, wouldyou guys ever be interested in like forming
a group that would go over toAfrica, say like like next year or
in a couple of years. Knowwhat? I no one I talked to
someone to jam with. Yes,that I just didn't know where to start

(32:24):
with a group. I would loveto be like, what is the tour
person? Yeah? I talk tosomeone today. I don't want to mention
his name, Okay, I don'twant I'm talking. He said he's been
thinking about that. He said he'sgonna have to Uh, well, he's
going to do it. He saidhe's going to give people like a year
ahead of time. And I waslike, oh my god, I said

(32:45):
that would be great. So absolutely, that's two people in one day.
In the state program. The programbecause a lot of guys that I walked
with, people that know you didn'twant to good, well, I'm gonna
go one day. I'll listand it. If you continue to say you want
to go one day, one day, got to be to day right away.

(33:08):
You don't even want to bring twoyears two years. I had that
bright and started walking through. One'sthe idea. Well, I'm linn,
I'm little girl. You're not gonnago. I'm gonna go by Yes,

(33:31):
you're getting hard years two years io. Yeah, and I think a lot
of us now we're open to travelbecause I gotta passport. Yeah you know
what I mean, you're ready tostamp. And now like we spend all
this money and we go never useit, right, we go everywhere else,
Like I haven't been to Tunoon,Mexico and going to Jamaica. Why
not why not go to Yeah?Absolutely, I would four love, love

(33:53):
love to do to Thank you guys. Yes, we would love. Yeah,
thank you guys. We would love. We are from a lot of
people who go to Mesic to goto the result. Yeah, I want

(34:15):
to see. We took off fourteenyears old girl, our kids for years
below. We took the inside themarket. Okay, marketing and you have
to the biggest market. Really,it was a lot going on. Then

(34:38):
wearing there the plan to go thetwo days after, we thought, yeah
we are um everything, she's everythingwe bring in for this show. It's
alf from Africa. It's a handmadeit's not it's not a mass production India.

(35:00):
Okay I made that. Yeah styleeverything. Jury are everything y'all heard
it first? Is authentic. It'sthe best. May twenty fifth, Thursday,
seven p m is a beautiful Africanevent. Mccartha expo. Yeah,

(35:22):
because it's definitely an expert. Butwhat's one the last thing y'all want to
get out to the world. Um, we just wanted to come out and
enjoy the culture with those. It'smodern, it's traditional. We want people
to see everything about Africa. We'renot going to bring Africa to you,
um like bring the whole con continentto you, but we just want to
show you a little piece of whatAfrica is. Fashion, clothing, the

(35:45):
purse, artwork, a little bitof everything so you can enjoy with us
as much as we enjoy Africa.We are so proud to be an African.
Africans I mean anything Africa. We'rejust all over it. So we
just want you guys to come outand enjoy with us and just what ship
I love with you guys, soyou guys can enjoy it with us.
Wow, that's beautiful fit. Yeah, it's your big dog, Matt Sanders

(36:07):
and it's your girl Cornell. Thisis Sporadic Thought. Thank you, Thank
you guys. This podcast was recordedin the iHeartRadio Podcasting Center. Thanks for listening.
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