They Lied About Africa

How They Scam You When You Build in Senegal

15 min · 9 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio How They Scam You When You Build in Senegal

Descripción

One plot of land. Five different buyers. Five families who each believed it was theirs. This is not a horror story — this is what is actively happening to diaspora investors trying to build back home in Senegal right now. In this episode I sat down with Paya, founder of Paya Residence in Almadies, to get the full picture — what documents you need, where to verify ownership, which neighborhoods are actually worth investing in, and exactly how people lose everything before a single brick is laid. If you have ever said "one day I want to build back home" — this episode is your starting point.

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38 episodios

Portada del episodio How FIFA Tried to Keep Africa Out of the World Cup

How FIFA Tried to Keep Africa Out of the World Cup

What if I told you that African countries once boycotted the FIFA World Cup—and that this protest is part of the reason African teams are able to qualify for and compete in the tournament today? Most people know who won the 1966 World Cup. Far fewer know that almost an entire continent refused to participate. In this episode, we explore one of the most important yet overlooked moments in African sporting history: why African countries boycotted the 1966 FIFA World Cup, how FIFA's qualification system treated Africa differently from Europe and South America, and how a united protest changed the future of African football. This wasn't just a story about football. It was a story about representation, collective action, and a generation of newly independent African nations refusing to accept unequal treatment on the world stage. If you're watching the 2026 FIFA World Cup, this is one piece of history you shouldn't miss.

28 de jun de 202619 min
Portada del episodio Africa Loses $95 Billion A Year To Patriarchy

Africa Loses $95 Billion A Year To Patriarchy

Sub-Saharan Africa loses $95 billion every single year because women are systematically excluded from owning land, accessing financing, and being compensated for their labor. In this episode, I will walk you through the three specific mechanisms that make this happen, take you inside Nigeria's inheritance laws , where the Supreme Court ruled women have the right to inherit and it still doesn't happen, and then show you what Rwanda did when it actually changed its laws and what that did to their economy. It's 2026. Africa cannot afford to keep leaving $95 billion on the table every single year. The continent's most powerful economic asset has always been its women, and it's time we start treating it that way. If you're wondering how patriarchy took root in Africa in the first place, meaning where it came from, how it was installed, and why it stuck, check out the previous episode: Patriarchy Is The Most Successful Import In African History. The two episodes together tell the full story.

14 de jun de 202615 min
Portada del episodio Is Modest Fashion Misrepresenting African Culture?

Is Modest Fashion Misrepresenting African Culture?

In this episode, I sit down with Senegalese stylist and textile exploration artist Marième Mboup to unpack a question that feels simple, but isn’t: is modesty really a choice? Raised in Dakar, where modest dressing is lived, embodied, and culturally rooted, Marième brings a perspective that challenges how global fashion has reframed modesty as a trend, an aesthetic, and a market category. Together, we explore what gets lost when identity becomes content, who benefits from the commercialization of modest fashion, and how African Muslim women are reclaiming authorship in an industry that has long borrowed from them without credit. This is not just a conversation about fashion — it’s about power, narrative control, and redefining what freedom and creativity actually look like.

25 de mar de 20261 h 7 min