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  • I did go to Zambia though.

  • Fantastic place Zambia.

  • Went there, visited the place and had a good time.

  • While I was there I had a chaperone who really made my trip.

  • His name was Alinani, a sweet guy.

  • And his job was to get me accustomed to the Zambian culture.

  • And every day he would give me a new piece of information, some more interesting than others.

  • Like one day he looks at me and goes,

  • "Trevor, you know Zambia is a very, very conservative nation."

  • I said, "Oh, okay Ali."

  • He says, "Yeah, so please stay away from profanity."

  • So I said, "Okay, I can do that," I assumed he meant swearing.

  • But I didn't say anything because I wasn't sure if he meant a person or swearing. I wasn't...

  • No, no, because in Zambia, people have names like Profanity.

  • So, that's how I laughed when I met Screwdriver. That's the same way I laughed.

  • Yea, because you see, in South Africa, we have African names you can translate.

  • Like Happiness, Blessing, Hope. Those kinds of names.

  • But then in Zambia, people give their names, like they give their children names of everyday English words, anything.

  • So like, Table, Chair, Car, House.

  • You see like this. You just have to get used to it.

  • It's very hard, but you have to keep a straight face.

  • Which was difficult because I met a mechanic, who had sons named Brake and Clutch.

  • And that was not, especially when Brake was running around causing chaos.

  • And his dad was there like, Stop it, Brake, stop it, Brake, stop it, stop it, Brake."

  • And I was like, "Hey, stop it, Brake."

  • But you have to get used to it, it's a cultural thing.

  • And so, you have to respect it.

  • And the second warning Ali gave me, was even stranger.

  • We are driving through Lusaka, the capital.

  • And Ali looks over at me in the car and goes,

  • "Trevor, you know here in Zambia we are a very God-loving nation."

  • I said, "Oh, ok Ali. That's a good thing to know."

  • He says, "Yes, so while you are here, don't be gay."

  • I said, "What?"

  • He says, "I know it can be tempting sometimes but don't do it."

  • "Don't be gay."

  • Don't be gay?

  • I have never been warned of this in my life, don't be gay?

  • "Hey bru, don't be gay. Don't be gay."

  • Don't be gay?

  • Crazy, crazy warning to get.

  • But then I found out why Ali was warning me.

  • Turns out in Zambia, being gay is illegal.

  • If you are found to be gay, you will be arrested and sent to prison for more than thirty years, yea.

  • Which is a bit of a weird punishment when you think about it.

  • I mean I am not saying that gay guys would enjoy prison, I am just saying if I was gay, that's not the worst thing you could do to me.

  • They would be like, "You are going to jail!"

  • I would be like, "Oh no."

  • Don't be gay?

  • I couldn't believe this. Gay is a crime in Zambia.

  • Which got me thinking, if gay is a crime, that means the police have to monitor it.

  • They actually have to police gay. Yeah.

  • Which means in their police force, they have a gay division.

  • It's a crime, it's a crime.

  • So that means they have a murder unit, a robbery unit, a white-collar crimes unit.

  • And then they got a gay unit.

  • Yea, they have got a little G unit in their police force.

  • That's responsible for all things gay.

  • That must be the most fun police force to be in the world.

  • You get to go under cover, dress up really nice.

  • Get in touch with your flamboyant side, have a good time.

  • I bet the sergeant's there every morning, briefing his detectives.

  • "Good morning, Detectives."

  • "Welcome everybody. Today, we will be launching a sting operation."

  • "We have just been informed of a fashion show that will be taking place."

  • "And as you know, the gays cannot resist the latest trends."

  • "Therefore we will be in full attendance to apprehend each and every one of them."

  • "Let us make sure we are here."

  • "Detective Chepoa?"

  • "Present!"

  • "Detective Table?"

  • "Present!"

  • "Detective Mongai?"

  • "Present!"

  • "I think he's in too deep."

  • How do you police gay?

  • Do they stop you if you look suspiciously gay in the streets?

  • I mean, gay doesn't have a look. But maybe you have a bounce about you, like a bit of pizazz.

  • Do the police pull up there and is like, "You, over there!"

  • "What is the purpose of that flamboyant scarf?"

  • "Put your hands up!"

  • "Turn around! Don't tempt me, don't tempt me!"

  • "You are going to jail."

  • How do you police gay?

  • Do they have roadblocks? Like for drunk driving?

  • Do they have gay roadblocks?

  • They are just like stopping people in their cars.

  • "Good evening, Officer."

  • "Good evening, Sir."

  • "License, Please."

  • "Thank you very much, Mr. Stylish. Hey?"

  • "Tell me Sir, have you been gay this evening?"

  • "What? No, I have not been gay. In fact, I don't gay at all."

  • "I see, not even one or two?"

  • "No, No. No gays for me. No gays for me."

  • "Okay."

  • "Then tell me Sir, what is that I can smell from your breath?"

  • "Is that balls?"

  • "No, no, no, I don't even eat chutney, no."

  • "So you are not gay?"

  • "No, not gay at all."

  • "Then Sir, can you please blow into this?"

  • Don't be gay.

  • I was not gay while I was in Zambia, so I had a good time.

  • Went around and saw the people.

  • The highlight of my trip came when on my day off. I asked Ali for suggestions.

  • Ali said to me, "Maybe you should travel around Lusaka, meet some of the people, just have a good time."

  • I sai, "Ali, I want to do something special."

  • He said, "Oh okay, in that case, maybe you can go to the mall and if you are lucky, maybe you can ride the escalators."

  • I said, "What?"

  • "Hey, I am not promising anything, but if you are early, maybe you can go once or twice."

  • I said, "Escalators?"

  • "I know, mind-blowing, ha?"

  • I thought he was messing with me.

  • Until I found out people in Zambia go to the mall just to ride the escalators.

  • It seems ridiculous until you understand the backstory.

  • When we were in Zambia, there were only five public escalators.

  • Five, in the whole country.

  • The first escalator was built in August.

  • Not August 19??.

  • No, no. You guys remember August?

  • They built they're first escalators, ever.

  • Yea, and so now it is all the rage. People go to the mall just to ride escalators.

  • But now, I don't want you to picture some dusty village.

  • That's not what Zambia is, it's a beautiful place.

  • They are developing just as we are, they've got roads.

  • They've got airports, the've got beautiful hotels, stunning shopping malls.

  • They've got everything we got, even faster internet.

  • The have just never had escalators.

  • And now they started building them.

  • And because of that people go there, and they just spend a day riding escalators.

  • Yea, dads will go home and fetch their children.

  • "Children, we are going to the mall."

  • "To do what, Daddy?"

  • "To do shopping, and to ride the escalators!"

  • "Yay!"

  • We couldn't believe this so we went to the mall, right.

  • We get to the mall. The mall is empty.

  • Escalators are packed!

  • People are standing in lines going around, doubling back on themselves.

  • There's old people, young people, even couples.

  • There were couples. Guys that actually picked up woman by saying: "I am going to take you to the escalator, girl."

  • "Oh, you are so fancy."

  • Escalators. Some people didn't even know how to ride the escalators.

  • Kids were easy, they just jumped on. Old people would panic.

  • There was one guy who got on the escalator, and it was going up.

  • And I guess to compensate for something in his mind, as it went up, he started leaning.

  • He fell down!

  • He was hurt so badly.

  • Oh, it was fantastic to watch.

  • We spent like three hours doing this, just watching people riding escalators.

  • And you know what? Our patience paid off, because in hour three, the most fantastic thing happened.

  • A school brought a class of children to the mall.

  • And their excursion was just to ride the escalators.

  • It was magic.

  • Thirty kids, about five years old. Cutest things, they were in their black and white uniforms.

  • And they are standing there together holding hands.

  • And they were so excited, they were shining.

  • Not from excitement, they had Vaseline.

  • And there is two teachers with the children, and they grab their hands on either end.

  • And in a long train, they start marching through the mall.

  • And as they do the start singing at the top of their lungs like little angels.

  • "Escalator."

  • "Escalator."

  • "Escalator."

  • "Oh, Oh, Ohhhhhhoh, escalator."

  • "Escalator."

  • It was the sweetest thing ever.

  • People are waving at them, smiling.

  • And these kids see the escalators, and they lost their minds.

  • These kids went crazy.

  • They're not holding hands, they start screaming and running around.

  • It looked like a zombie movie, or something.

  • They are jumping, but then you see the smiles on their faces.

  • It's like the end of Saraphina. You are like, "What the hell is going on here?"

  • These kids are screaming and having the time. They are jumping around doing cartwheels.

  • The teacher can't control them. She's panicking like, "Hey! Get back! Get Back! Two-by-Two! Two-by-Two!"

  • Two-by-Two was one of the kids, I didn't know.

  • She's like, "Two-by-Two! Next to me, next to me!"

  • Other kids are still jumping, she can't control them.

  • There was one fat kid. He couldn't jump so he just shook himself.

  • "Escalator!"

  • "Escalator!"

  • It was the most amazing thing I have ever seen in my life.

  • It's like I had gone in a time machine to a time when escalators were new.

  • Brand new and popular.

  • So popular that people were taking pictures of the escalators, using their iPhones!

  • "Technology, eh?"

  • "Who even thinks of these things? Can you imagine?"

  • "Eh, we are in the future now, my man!"

  • "A kind of moving stairs, ah?"

  • "What are we going to see next? I don't even know, I don't even know!"

  • "I wonder how it works, ah!?"

  • "Let me just check there." "Siri, how does an escalator work?"

  • "I don't know."

I did go to Zambia though.

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"ザンビアはエスカレーターが大好き、ただゲイになるな" - TREVOR NOAH (It's My Culture) ("Zambia loves escalators, just don't be gay" - TREVOR NOAH (It's My Culture))

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    胡捲子 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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