Summary of "በህንድ ሀገር ብዙ ችግር አይቻለው #Ethiopiapodcast #Africanpodcast #Amharicpodcast #Podcast"
Episode overview
This episode of the All Live (Alive) Podcast is an energetic, often funny life-and-career interview with a guest who goes by the stage name “Always” (also referred to as Abisar). It mixes personal history, career anecdotes, live demos (beatboxing, stage presence), and practical advice around a repeated theme:
Finish what you start.
Main story beats
- Childhood turning point: at 17, Always lost his father and soon after won a scholarship to study in India. That time brought both freedom and stress (visa worries) and taught life lessons.
- Academic rollercoaster: he initially wanted architecture but, through placement and family advice, ended up in computer science. After complications and returning home, he restarted his studies at Unity University and ultimately took about eight years to finish his first degree (he began a master’s in 2020).
- Radio → stage → TV: while studying he joined an English FM radio (105.3) in Ethiopia, developed his voice and presentation under supervisor Jason Peters, and then moved into MC work, beatboxing demos and later TV hosting/newsreading.
- Discipline & training: 17 years of Taekwondo (2nd dan) provided discipline that underpinned his ability to finish hard things and perform live; he repeatedly ties martial-arts training to professional discipline and punctuality.
Highlights, jokes and standout moments
- Accent/impersonation bits: he mimics Indian accents and riffs on reactions (e.g., “you are a scoundrel”), a recurring comic touch that gets big laughs.
- Beatbox demo: explains beatboxing techniques (palate, lips, tongue, breath control), covers his mouth to create bass, performs a short demo and elicits surprised laughter and applause (“Wow! Amazing!”).
- Stage energy: his high-energy MC style is celebrated; he quips “Always happy. Always. It’s a full stop.” and jokes about being mistaken for a dancer even though dancing is his love, not his profession.
- Self-deprecating moments: visa drama, waiting for embassy calls, and academic setbacks (restarting studies at 19–22) add candid, human texture.
- Pop-culture quips: playful lines about being a Gemini and citing Bruce Lee and Michael Jackson as inspirations; stories about learning English by watching movies and practicing with his father.
Key lessons and takeaways
- Finish what you start: discipline and persistence are central—Taekwondo serves as a recurring metaphor for sticking with hard things.
- Education matters: formal schooling fills gaps even for talented people; young earners shouldn’t dismiss education.
- Build complementary skills: networking, stagecraft, voice work, body language and emotional resonance make professionals stand out beyond core talent.
- Don’t compare—prepare: humility, hard work, reading, repetition (habit formation) and preparedness let you seize opportunities when they arrive.
Atmosphere and reactions
The episode balances serious vulnerability (loss, prolonged education) with upbeat, entertaining moments (beatboxing, accent impressions). Laughter, applause and warm praise from the host punctuate the conversation. The guest’s energy and authenticity are repeatedly highlighted as what makes him compelling across radio, stage and TV.
Personalities mentioned
- Guest: “Always” (stage name; also referred to as Abisar)
- Host: Abraham (All Live / Alive Podcast)
- Mentioned contributors/mentors: Jason Peters (radio supervisor), Ato Sentayon Dris and Ato Tarfas Asadi (Unity University leaders) — referenced in the story though not necessarily on-camera.
Summary
An uplifting mix of autobiography, practical career advice and live performance moments, the episode consistently encourages discipline, continuous learning and the habit of finishing what you start.
Category
Entertainment
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