Welcome back, dear viewers! With you, Adham Al-Nashif,
at the whistle for the second half. The ball goes back to the goalkeeper
of the winning team. No way! There is no way he will start
wasting time this early! Get up, Captain, don't waste time!
Don't waste time! Of course we all know that the goalkeeper
is the only player allowed to get treatment, drink
and reproduce on the field! Let's see! Hello! Deliver the order to the same address,
Cairo Stadium, Area 18. Keep in mind that
this is all from your time. I am counting every second. You have no idea
how much this watch cost me. I know I'm late but I have
a certain technique to tie my shoes, I'll tie them and we will play! I'm coming, I'm coming! Congratulations!
Wishing you a safe and easy delivery! Can someone call a winch? Looks like the ball is very hot in his hand. As you can see, the goalkeeper
is wasting time in the 75th minute! And the referee is very proud
of his authentic watch! Which gloves match better, guys? This or that? I think this one is contrasting! Does anyone have a clipper, guys?
I have a hangnail. Boy, I'll give you a warning! Boy! Salma, darling, divorce
is not your decision alone! Guys, can someone call
the official sponsor to cut off his signal? What will her neighbor think of her
when she hangs her laundry on the roof and find out that
she doesn't have an antenna? Apparently, the goalkeeper
is educating himself and the match ends with the departure
of all players and spectators while the goalkeeper stays! What a meaningless encounter and a special appearance
by the referee and his watch! How I wished the days would pass and forgot that that was my life! Ahmed Khaled... Tawfiq. Hello, dear viewers. Welcome to a new episode of El-Daheeh! Rolex is a renowned watch company. This company produces
about 1.05 million watches annually which is about 2,870 watches per day which means about 120 watches per hour. This is a huge number, my friend, especially, when you know
that the cheapest Rolex model, the Oyster Perpetual, costs around $5,000. -"What?!"
-This is the cheap one they make fun one. This is what they call "high copy"
on WhatsApp groups. "Who can buy
such an expensive watch, Abu Hmeed? -If I had one, I wouldn’t watch you."
-What is this betrayal?! Let me tell you, my friend,
that you might be able to afford the watch and still not be able to buy it and you would have to put your name down
with an authorized distributor in a waiting list that takes months
and can even take up to a year until the required product
becomes available! There are models
like Patek Philippe for example that can take up to 3 to 4 years!
You'd wait 3 to 4 years for a watch, a watch worth 80 to $90,000! "Are these numbers real, Abu Hmeed?!" They are real, my friend,
but they are outside your network. The delay and difficulty
in accessing new products makes the used market
for Rolex in very high demand, so much so that some new watches
could be cheaper than the old, used ones! For example, the most expensive
used Rolex watch in history was sold in 2018 for over $17.5 million. This watch is a Rolex Daytona that was owned by actor Paul Newman as it was a gift from his wife
which she gave him in '68, and he used to wear it while driving cars. He loved racing cars very much. That's why this model
was known as Rolex Paul Newman. The lucky owner who sold this watch was Paul Newman's girl's boyfriend. He asked her,
"Didn't your father leave anything?" Mind you, this was in the '80s, my friend. At the time, the original watch cost $200. Look how much that lucky fella made! This teaches you to choose
your friends well, my friend! And more importantly,
choose your friends' fathers! This story is one of the stories
that immortalized the legend of Rolex watches. Rolex represents 25%
of the Swiss watch market. It, alone, owns a quarter
of the Swiss market and is still going. This company is valued
at approximately $11 billion, meaning it's the second-largest
Swiss company after Nestlé. But Rolex could have never
reached these numbers if it had not been for its founder's mentality
who said something very important, "Only great marketing is needed
to make a company successful." "What, Abu Hmeed?
Do you mean a product could be mediocre but because its marketing is good,
the company becomes successful?!" Yes, I'd like to show you. "I don’t get it, Abu Hmeed!" "Abu Hmeed, you are so evil!" No, no, my friend, I am joking! You are neither a product nor a marketer! The founder of Rolex
realized the value of his brand and thought about how linking his watch to the most important events
of the 20th century would be enough to make it prestigious. It's chic and elegant. His goal, my friend, was not necessarily
to manufacture high-quality products, but more importantly, was to tell people that he was manufacturing
high-quality products, do you get it? This is the principle
that made people dream of a Rolex. This man, my friend, was Hans Wilsdorf. From his name,
you can tell that he was German. He was born in 1881 in Kulmbach and was the middle child
of a very wealthy family that had an iron bars and tools business. At the age of 12, he went through
the most tragic thing a child can go through when his mother died
and less than a year later, his father died! It was even more tragic when his uncles
decided to sell his father's company because none of them could manage it. They sold the company and used the money
to send Hans and his two siblings to boarding schools to receive good educations. In Hans's autobiography
which he published in 1946, he says that what his uncles did
shaped his future and that that step made him self-reliant and was a very important reason
for his success. In fact, my friend,
Hans showed extraordinary genius at school. It was like clockwork, my friend! He excelled in mathematics and languages. He knew that in order to travel abroad,
he had to learn languages and was able to master French and English. At that time, it was rare to find a German
who spoke a second language to begin with. When Hans was at school,
he befriended a boy from Switzerland who told him about his Swiss city,
La Chaux-de-Fonds, which is a city famous for watchmaking. Of course, for dramatic purposes, once Hans heard that,
a light bulb appeared on his head and he said, "That's it!
I want to be a watchmaker. I've found my niche!
This is exactly what I love! I want to be a watchmaker!" Indeed, in 1900,
when Hans was 19 years old, he went to La Chaux-de-Fonds and worked in a large watch company there
called Cuno Korten. His job was to supervise
the company's correspondence in English. Hans was smart and intelligent. Little by little, his role began
to increase as he grew in the industry and learned more about watchmaking. And it was his job, my friend,
to wind the watches every day. "How did he wind them, Abu Hmeed?
Were they missing a hand?" Let me explain what it means
to wind the watches, my friend. Back in the day,
before quartz watches, smartwatches and even automatic watches, watches operated using gears that had to be
wound daily so that the watches could work. This process is called winding the gears. It consists of winding
the watch crown multiple times until you hear a soft ticking sound. That set of gears
is called a timepiece movement. "What a tedious job, Abu Hmeed!
He was winding crowns all day?!" Let me tell you that for Hans, this task
that seems boring was an inspiring task. That process made him ask two questions that went on to change
the watch industry forever. The first was, "Why do people
have to wind their watches daily? Can't we come up with a way
for a watch to wind itself?" The second question,
which was something Hans really hated, was, "Why are all the men's watches
pocket watches? I mean, I want to know what time it is. Why do I have to put my hand
in my pocket, look for the watch, and accidentally pick up nuts instead? I want to know what time it is quickly! Why don't we do as women do
and wear them around our wrists?" At the time, my friend,
men's watches were put in pockets and only women wore them
around their wrists. Women's watches
were regarded as accessories because there was no movement
small enough to be fitted in a wristwatch, thus, it was impossible for it
to measure time accurately, so women used to wear them just for show. And you know women, my friend, for them, an hour
is worth 12 in the parallel market! "Abu Hmeed, you have prejudice
against a certain gender!" Get a girlfriend from a public university! At the same time,
men were accustomed to pocket watches, "Do we have to change?" Apparently, Hans was the only one
upset about the pocket watch. Hans became a firm believer in wristwatches. He said, "I see the future in them." He sent messages to his friends saying, "Did he have the audacity
to do that challenge, Abu Hmeed? Abu Hmeed, do you think
his prophecy was correct?" My friend! I'm out! Of course you are waiting to hear
the story of Mr. Hans' struggle how he overcame his long road
full of difficulties and challenges, and how some people stood by him
and others discouraged him until he got up on his feet
and founded Rolex. In fact, my friend, none of that happened. It was easy and simple. The man founded Rolex
when he was 24 years old and achieved his dream very easily.
You are a loser. Hans went into partnership
with an Englishman named Alfred Davis, and they founded Wilsdorf & Davis. Its mission was simply to import
watch movements from Switzerland and place them in the watch case which is the metal that covers the watch,
and then they put the bezel on the front, after that, they engraved the letters
W&D on the back of the watch. Import, put, engrave and sell. From there, they set out to sell
their product to watch dealers in London. However, Hans' mind
that couldn't stop thinking wanted a different name
for his company, a unique name. There, like a smart marketer, he started thinking
about what makes a brand's name successful, number one, it had to be a short name,
so it could be written easily on the watch. I mean, Ghandour for example
would take you two hours to write. It also had to be easily pronounceable
for anyone in the world. Number three, it had to be a name
that indicated luxury and authenticity. Indeed, the man tried
hundreds of names, as he said, but none of them felt quite right. Until one day in 1908,
while he was on a double-decker in London, a "good genie", as he put it,
came to him and whispered "Rolex." An idea came into his head. Since then, the company has become Rolex which is a made-up name
that has no meaning! During that period, cooperation began
between Rolex and Hermann Aegler. That company was specialized
in manufacturing Rolex watch movements. Through that cooperation,
Hans was able to achieve his dream of designing the first wristwatch
that could measure time accurately. "Praise to the Lord!" A wristwatch with a Class A certificate
from the Kew Observatory which is one of the most important
observatories in England. "Sorry, Abu Hmeed, but where is the drama
and the ups and downs? I feel like he succeeded easily!" Don't rush, my friend.
The problems are coming! I've just told you that the man was German
and he went to work in England, do you see where this is going? Do you want a problem? Two weeks after Hans had designed
the first accurate wristwatch in the world, I don't know if you have heard of it,
but an event called the World War started! World War I was not just an ordinary war. This could be the only war
where we saw camels, horses and swords along with tanks, planes
and chemical gases! A war that has caused technology to evolve
and shaped the world as we know it today. One of the things that evolved
during that war was watches. The war proved Hans' right
regarding wristwatches. When the watch was worn on the wrist,
it became useful to officers and soldiers as it became more practical and efficient without the need to reach for it
and wonder which pocket it was in while holding a machine gun and another gun in my right hand,
when would I be able to do all that? That's why, in 1915, Rolex began manufacturing
large numbers of Trench watches which were hybrid watches that were worn on the wrist
but had the same cover as pocket watches, as well as two lugs to attach a watch strap to them
to wear it around your wrist. Of course these watches were sold widely especially, because they were
certified accurate watches. Everything I'm telling you, my friend,
was not enough to redeem Hans, Hans Wilsdorf, the German name, who lived in Britain at a time when the two countries
were not on good terms, to say the least. Hans then decided to move Rolex
from Britain to its headquarters in Geneva, the city where the company's headquarters
are located to this day. Let me point out the irony here, my friend, the most important
Swiss watch company currently, its owner was not Swiss and it was not
originally founded in Switzerland. Anyway, the company
started to grow in Geneva, employing more than 40 employees. Mind you, all that happened
before Hans even turned 40! And he was able,
thanks to his parents' prayers, to marry his partner's sister and that was when Rolex
turned into a private family business. Unfortunately, my friend,
Hans didn't get along with her mother. -"Why, Abu Hmeed?"
-Because she always had the upper "hand"! I'm kidding, of course! From there, the real launch of Rolex began and the genius of its founder
began to appear clearly. In the early '20s,
wristwatches began to spread widely, but Hans, who had a great marketing mind, was not convinced of that success, so he followed
the most famous marketing rule and started thinking
how he could increase his sales, so he studied his product's problems
in the market and tried to solve them. In fact, the customers
had the same old complaint that had been upsetting Hans for 20 years, people didn't like
winding their watches every day, especially since that required them
to set the time every day. The second point was that the watch case
that protected the gears was very weak, even if it was sturdy, and whenever a drop of water
or a little dust entered among the gears, the customer had
to have the watch repaired. The watchmaker at that time
worked more than the mechanic! Hans started working,
until he was able to buy the rights to a watch case that allowed
neither water nor dust into the gears that was named the Oyster. He started marketing it very widely
as the first water-resistant watch. Let me surprise you
that this was not accurate. "He was a liar? Didn't he know
where liars go, Abu Hmeed?!" They go to the marketing department,
marketing and sales! Let me tell you that there was
a company called Depollier that had designed the water-resistant watch
8 years before Rolex did. "He really is a liar!" That watch wasn't a success
because the crown was too wide, poked the hand's skin
and messed up the sleeves. There, Hans came up
with a clever and innovative idea. He went to some of the large, authorized
watch stores in Britain and Europe and changed the storefronts, so that they looked like large fish tanks in which, among the marine creatures, there were Oyster Rolex watches working that accurately displayed time. "Can you see, people?! Can you see how my watch is working
underwater while the fish are swimming?" And he named it Oyster
to give you a visual image! That was in 1927, my friend. People couldn't believe it and went into the store to make sure
there was no optical illusion or something that made them see the watches
accurately set underwater. "Is there no magic or thin threads
that move the hands?! Is it a watch
that works underwater normally?" It was an extraordinary watch! "Abu Hmeed, this man
was a genius! He was incredible!" There is more, my friend. Let me tell you a story
that happened at that time. When the press paid attention
to swimmer Mercedes Gleitze who wanted to be the first British woman
to swim the entire English Channel while journalists followed her on boats to document that achievement
and convey it to the whole world, with the presence of journalists
on some ships to document that achievement. Who do you think was watching intriguingly? Hans. He said, "Why doesn't this swimmer, whom journalists will see swimming,
wear a Rolex watch?!" Hans invented influencer marketing
before it was cool! So he asked Mercedes to wear
an Oyster Rolex watch around her neck and in return, for that swimmer,
that watch would be a gift. "You won't believe
what Rolex sent me today, guys! Let's unbox." Mercedes swam in the Channel for 10 hours, 10 hours! If she were an actual Mercedes,
she would've stopped two times to rest! But due to the extremely cold water
in October, she fainted and they had
to pull her out of the water. Anyway, a journalist
from The Times newspaper was on the ship that pulled out Mercedes and he noticed the watch. Surprisingly, my friend, while the girl
was lying on the ground and shaking, he noticed that the watch
displayed time accurately, and when he picked it up and opened it,
he found it completely dry. Mercedes: I am dying, guys?
What watch are you looking at right now?! Someone change my oil! The whole world forgot about Mercedes and the 10 hours
she had spent in water in October between France and England, and everyone was focused on the Rolex watch
that didn't break down in the water and measured time accurately. Hans took advantage of that buzz and launched an advertising campaign
on the front page of the Daily Mail, a huge advertising campaign
that lasted for 10 days, sponsored! Hans spent a huge amount on marketing. The most important thing to him at the time was to engrave the name Rolex
in people’s minds as an example of precision
under the most difficult conditions. In 1931, Rolex successfully
designed the perfect watch, a watch that doesn't need
to be wound daily. All you had to do was wear the watch and through your hand movement
while walking, a rotating device called the rotor
would move inside the watch that was connected to gears
and would wind the clock and the model's name became This model, which continues
to this day, after more than 92 years, has revolutionized the watch industry, as the old mechanical watches
have almost disappeared, and currently, any watch
that functions using gears, whether it was Rolex or any other brand,
will have this rotor, and these are called automatic watches because every time you move
while wearing the watch, it keeps auto-winding. Can you imagine how much Rolex
has changed the watch industry?! Keep in mind that
that was in the '30s, my friend, at that time, Rolex watches were not
presented as watches for the rich class, rather, ordinary watches
for the middle or the upper-middle class. At that time, it was marketed as practical
and durable, rather than luxurious, therefore, it was the preferred choice
of RAF officers because to them,
while they were in the air, these watches were more accurate
than the planes' clocks themselves. During World War II, many English officers
and soldiers were captured and sent to prisoner-of-war (POWs) camps where the Germans confiscated
thousands of Rolex watches, so Hans launched an initiative, offering the British POWs
who requested a Rolex watch a shipment to their camps to replace
the watches that had been confiscated. "No one should ever
be imprisoned without a watch! How else would they know
when they will be released?" In return, he wouldn't require payment
for the new watches until the end of the war. "Isn't it a gift?!" Imagine being a British prisoner of war, waiting for a visit and a warm meal
and you receive a Rolex watch! Not only that,
but you will also pay for it! Joking aside, my friend,
this was a very great move that made the British appreciate Rolex because that meant that Hans
was sending a message that indicated that he was confident
of the Allies' victory and that the prisoners
would be released from the camps in a condition that allowed them
to pay for his watches. Indeed, thousands of watches
were shipped to the soldiers. Some camps ordered 3,000 watches. Amazon cannot process this order now! "Wait a second, Abu Hmeed! Isn't that Hans,
who kept pampering the English, German? This is the spirit
we want to encourage, Abu Hmeed. Even though he was German, he sympathized with the British prisoners
and sent them watches. How could he be that kind?" That move wasn't out of kindness, my dear, don't forget that there was a war
between Britain and Germany, and he was a German man living in Britain, in addition to the enmity
that existed before the war, all of these things
were harmful to Rolex's reputation, so it had to prove its loyalty
to the Allies at that time so they wouldn't boycott it
and buy Spiro instead! Hans experienced that hostility before, when he launched a watch brand
under his name in 1934 that remained in business until 1940. These watches were
of the same quality as Rolex but unfortunately, the brand failed
and Wilsdorf had to shut it down. All that because
he put his German name on it. That was when Hans
realized the bitter truth, which was that for Rolex's name to live,
he had to hide in the shadows, and that the Western society
he had lived in for 40 years would only view him as a German man who made great watches
that people bought indeed, but under the name "Rolex" which was a lesson
that had an impact on him. Of all the letters from prisoners
of war that Rolex received, Hans' attention was caught by a letter
from Corporal Clive James Nutting in which he ordered a Rolex Oyster 3525 which was relatively expensive
because it had a chronograph which is the primitive form
of the old stopwatch. What caught Hans' attention in that letter was how a corporal ordered
such an expensive watch while officers of higher ranks
ordered cheaper watches such as Speed King, for example. Hans personally responded to that letter and said, "You must not even think
of settlement during the war." Indeed, the watch was shipped to the camp,
located in occupied Poland at the time, but what Hans didn't know was that the watch that the corporal
had ordered had a secret purpose. It was part of a plan he had in mind which was to time the Nazi patrol movement that passed every night in the camp because he and 75 other prisoners
were planning to escape from the camp and thanks to Rolex, my friend,
they successfully escaped. But the German authorities
arrested them again, executed many of them
and punished the others. By the end of the war, none of them
returned to their homeland intact, except for three, including that corporal. Because of Rolex's overwhelming popularity
at the time of these events which were later known as the Great Escape, Allied soldiers and officers
from other countries started to speak highly of Rolex which led to new markets
opening for Rolex after the war such as the American market. Amid these successes, something bad
happened to Hans, his wife died. Hans then decided to start
a charitable foundation in his name. This foundation played an important role
in Rolex's fate later on, I am not trying to overhype him. After the war, Rolex began
to hold a high position in society and be wrapped around the wrists
of artists, presidents and celebrities, so much so that when it released
the first automatic calendar watch, it was called President’s Watch because President Dwight Eisenhower
used to wear it. Also, in the early '50s,
Rolex began releasing new models that were suitable
for hostile environments, such as the Explorer watch,
used by climbers and adventurers, which has special hinges to absorb shocks and vibrations
and maintain the performance of the watch. They also released
the Submariner watch for divers which is supposed
to withstand a depth of 100 metres which Hans also exaggerated its propaganda and said that it was the first watch
to work at this depth even though Omega company had made
a watch for divers 20 years earlier that didn't only withstand 100 metres,
it could withstand a depth of 135 metres. Also, the GMT Master watch, the watch that Rolex said
can measure two time zones simultaneously which is very convenient
for people who travel regularly, so I could be in Egypt
and set my watch to Saudi Arabia too, so that I can know the time, so if I traveled a lot
between Egypt and Saudi Arabia, I'd need a watch
to show me the time in both countries. Needless to say that
that too was an over-propaganda because Longines introduced
that watch 25 years before them. "Shame on him, that's why
I will never buy a Rolex watch! Because its owner was a liar!" Seriously? Is this the reason?
This is just marketing. When someone says,
"The best chicken in Egypt", have they tried every chicken in Egypt?!
Have they tried my mother's? They have not! So just let it go! The dollar store
sells nothing for a dollar! Let me tell you about the strangest model
of Rolex watches, my friend, which some people believe
is the most hated model among them, the MilGauss, which is designed to operate
in large magnetic fields in laboratories. Clearly, it is not very useful unless you were a physicist
or radiation technician and wanted to know the time
inside the laboratory, which I think is a bit of a rare use. What happened after all these stories
and all these successes was beyond imagination. The deepest point in the oceans
is called the Challenger Deep, located in the Mariana Trench,
at a depth of approximately 11,000 meters. To imagine the enormity of this number, look at Burj Khalifa,
the tallest building in the world, the depth of the Mariana Trench is equivalent to about
13 Burj Khalifa towers on top of each other and there would still be
about 100 meters of water above them. Anyway, an adventurer named Jacques Picard decided to take a private submarine,
designed by his father, and dive into the Challenger Deep in it. Would Hans sit still?
Would he let him dive alone? Wouldn't he attach a watch to his neck? He put a watch around the neck
of the girl who swam for 10 hours, so imagine what he would do
with that 13 Burj Khalifa guy! "Come here!
I have the perfect watch for you!" Hans decided that Rolex
needed to try its new diving watch, the Rolex Deep Sea watch was designed to withstand pressure
at a depth of 3,900 metres and because it provided
a 25% margin of safety, you can say that the watch was able
to withstand approximately 5,000 meters, but now, we are talking about a depth
that no man had ever reached before, a depth two times its durability limit. Indeed, my friend,
the submarine dived in January 1960 with the watch attached
to the submarine exterior. It started diving,
tick, tick, tick, tick... It took 5 hours to descend. The terrifying surprise
occurred at a depth of 9,000 metres, when a crack occurred in one
of the external windows of the submarine, but, thank God, the submarine’s
protection systems were not affected and the submarine started going up
taking about 3 and a quarter hours until it reached the surface. At that time, Hans was very nervous. Of course, he didn't care about Picard,
his submarine or its protection system. "I want to know what happened
to the watch, hurry up and come up!" In fact, my friend,
Picard sent a telegram to Hans and said, "I'm glad to inform you
that your watch, Mr. Hans, was as accurate at a depth of 11,000 metres as it was on the surface. The watch kept running
throughout the way down and did not break. The submarine's window broke
while it did not." Hans then told him to touch wood. In 2012, the famous director James Cameron,
who directed Titanic and Avatar, dove in another submarine
to the Challenger Deep point and also attached a Rolex watch
to the submarine exterior, and once again, it passed the same test. Hans' journey would end six months
after Picard's submarine journey. Hans Wilsdorf died
after he had built the brand that will continue to live on
after him, to this moment, a brand, experts say,
is the most famous of all the Swiss brands. Rolex built its reputation
on two key points, inventing amazing technologies, whether by purchasing or developing them,
such as the Oyster case, the Perpetual rotor,
the Datejust and the Deep Sea. The second and most important point
is strong marketing, the marketing that succeeded
to make everyone know the name Rolex. The important thing, my friend,
is that after Hans' death, all his properties
and the Rolex company were transferred to the charitable foundation he had built. Do you remember when his wife died? And this, my friend, if you didn't know,
is the surprise of the episode, all Rolex's profits go to charity. So you can go spend a million
or a million and a half and don't worry,
this company is a non-profit company, don't worry at all! Your money won't go
to the pockets of wealthy businessmen. It will probably go to tennis players
at Wimbledon for marketing purposes! Do you think I want to buy a Rolex watch
for luxury, elegance and those things? No, no, no, absolutely not, not at all! I do two good things in my life, my friend. I leave the change for the cashier and buy a Rolex watch! The 20th century, my friend,
was the century of major changes, in health, wars, technology, and most importantly,
in geographical discoveries, humans have reached
almost every point on Earth. The most important companion of man through
all that was the chronometer, or the watch in the era before mobile phones
and smartwatches, so the idea of a watch
performing complications or any other functions other than
measuring time was groundbreaking and valued, and sometimes, in critical situations,
it was the decisive factor. Hans's dream was for Rolex
to be a tough watch that withstands all hostile environments, to be worn by scientists,
soldiers and adventurers, whether they were on the top of Everest
or at the deepest point in the ocean, a durable watch that could
withstand the heat of the desert sun, and the cold of the Arctic, a watch that might cost more than average, but was a timepiece
that could live forever. And still, at that time, anyone
could buy if they saved up for a bit. But after Hans' death, the company's compass
has changed completely, Rolex has turned into a very luxurious watch that is very exclusive
to a certain class of wealthy people. This happened gradually
between the '60s and the '80s, when Rolex began building its new reputation
on luxury, more than precision. While Rolex's name has become bright
and one of the most famous brand names, the dream that many people wish to have, and appears daily
on the right side of the journal, Hans Wilsdorf's name stayed
in the shadow and disappeared, and no one knows him anymore
except those interested in the watch industry. Wilsdorf killed his name
so his creation could live on. And since time is like a sword, my friend, watch the previous episodes
and the upcoming ones, check the sources and if you're watching
on YouTube, subscribe to the channel. Honestly, my friend,
I wish someone would buy me a Rolex, not because I want
to show it off, I don't do that, I've been wearing the same T-shirt
for my entire life! I will only buy it for charitable purposes! Isn't it a non-profit company? I love supporting non-profit companies! But, I love to do good
and I throw it into the sea, my friend, especially if it was an original,
water-resistant model of the year. Subtitled by: Rahma Badr