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  • KELVIN DOE: My name is Kelvin Doe, aka DJ Focus.

  • KELVIN DOE: Alright. Alright. It's the youngest DJ. DJ Man Focus.

  • KELVIN DOE: I'm from Sierra Leone,

  • [Music]

  • KELVIN DOE: and I love inventing.

  • [Music]

  • DAVID SENGEH: Kelvin is extraordinarily talented. He literally goes through trash cans - finds

  • broken electronic parts in the garbage and makes stuff on his own.

  • LAURA SAMPATH: He's taught himself how to do incredibly intricate things with very,

  • very little resources.

  • [Music]

  • KELVIN DOE: In Sierra Leone, we have not too much electricity. The lights will come on

  • once in a week, and the rest of the month, dark. So I made my own battery to power lights

  • in people's houses.

  • [Music]

  • DAVID SENGEH: Kelvin represents "learn by making." He takes apart, looks at it, tries

  • to reverse engineer it.

  • KELVIN DOE: I made my own FM radio transmitter. DAVID SENGEH: He made his own FM station because

  • he wanted to give voice to the youth. He made his own generator because he needed it.

  • KELVIN DOE: The generator supplies current to the radio station. This is the capacitor

  • and this is the spark plug.

  • DAVID SENGEH: This trip is his first time leaving his family's home. It's his first

  • time leaving Sierra Leone. And it's tough. But it's an opportunity to create the future

  • that he wants to live in.

  • [Music]

  • DAVID SENGEH: My name is David Sengeh. I'm from Sierra Leone. I'm a PhD student at the

  • M.I.T. Media Lab where we have unlimited creative freedom. I wanted to ensure that young people

  • like Kelvin also have this experience.

  • [Music]

  • LAURA SAMPATH: David has written visa letters, found places for Kelvin to stay - he's really

  • got invested in him. DAVID SENGEH: For quite many years, Sierra

  • Leone, and many other African countries, received aid. But it does not necessarily get us anywhere.

  • We're not looking into the future. We're not designing our own future. Unless we have a

  • host of young people who can think, at any given point, that here's a challenge, here's

  • a problem, and it's an opportunity to solve it, there won't be a steep growth in national

  • development. KELVIN DOE: If we have a radio station in

  • my community, the people can be able to debate about issues affecting our community and Sierra

  • Leone as a whole.

  • DAVID SENGEH: I first met Kelvin at Summer Innovation Camp that I runned in Sierra Leone

  • that challenges kids to think about the toughest problems in their community and have them

  • solve it. Kelvin's team applied to build an FM radio station for community empowerment,

  • and people listened, religiously, to his radio station. People text into his show and he

  • reads the texts from people. It's very inspirational.

  • KELVIN DOE: I'm DJ Focus, live broadcasting all the way New Yor-- Um, Boston.

  • KELVIN DOE: [On radio] Live broadcasting all the way New Yor-- Um, Boston.

  • KELVIN DOE: People normally call me DJ Focus in my community. Because I believe if you

  • focus, you can do an invention perfectly. I DJ every day.

  • KELVIN DOE: Alright, for sure for the meantime don't forget DJ Man Focus passing through.

  • KELVIN DOE: "Sounds Like Gun" by Bobby.

  • [Music]

  • KELVIN DOE: A born Sierra Leonean artist.

  • KELVIN DOE: Your satisfaction is absolutely guaranteed for your ultimate priority.

  • [Music]

  • DAVID SENGEH: So Kelvin has been in the United States for the past two weeks. I line up a

  • pretty busy schedule for him. First we went to New York. The next day we went to Cambridge.

  • Next week we have a talk with the president of Harvard University.

  • KELVIN DOE: It's a big opportunity for me to learn from people who have experience and

  • to meet with them. MARK FELDMEIER: How do you want the antenna?

  • KELVIN DOE: Like this. MARK FELDMEIER: Like that?

  • KELVIN DOE: Yeah.

  • MARK FELDMEIER: Kelvin had these RF transmitters that he had made, and we spent yesterday,

  • kind of, trying to figure out how we might be able to make some improvements.

  • [Drilling]

  • MARK FELDMEIER: Alright. Hopefully that's big enough.

  • CAMERA GUY: Have you ever used a drill like that before?

  • KELVIN DOE: No. MARK FELDMEIER: Be careful with it.

  • KELVIN DOE: Yeah.

  • KELVIN DOE: We'll use this as the power cable. MARK FELDMEIER: Okay.

  • KELVIN DOE: This was a microphone wire converted to a power output. I got the cable from the

  • dustbin. MARK FELDMEIER: Let's give it some audio.

  • MARK FELDMEIER: Cool.

  • MARK FELDMEIER: We kinda get trapped in our own little worlds, and just as Kelvin's getting

  • his world expanded by coming here, so am I getting my world expanded by interacting with

  • him.

  • MARK FELDMEIER: Good working with you dude. KELVIN DOE: Yeah.

  • DAVID SENGEH: He loves to work hard, but he's a kid. He's 15. After while, he also just

  • want to play ping pong. He also just want to play football.

  • DAVID SENGEH: Oh! Come on!

  • DAVID SENGEH: I talk to him, I say, "Look, Kelvin, think of me as your older brother."

  • Alright. I'm tired. "Tell me what's going on. Tell me what's tough to you." It's his

  • first time leaving Sierra Leone, so it's, it's overwhelming.

  • KELVIN DOE: It's just that - I miss Sierra Leone.

  • DAVID SENGEH: In Sierra Leone, if you meet somebody head to head, you have to say "hi."

  • You acknowledge them and smile. Here, when he gets on the train, he says "hi" to people.

  • Nobody recognizes it.

  • KELVIN DOE: And also, I don't love the food in America.

  • DAVID SENGEH: We're here to eat some Sierra Leonean, Kelvin loves so it's gonna be awesome.

  • DAVID SENGEH: What are you gonna get, Kelvin? KELVIN DOE: Cassava leaves.

  • DAVID SENGEH: Cassava leaves. Let's see if they have some.

  • DAVID SENGEH: How are you, Auntie? RESTAURANT OWNER: Normal day, Mr. David [Laughs.]

  • RESTAURANT OWNER: I have beans, okra, cassava leaves.

  • KELVIN DOE: Give me beans. RESTAURANT OWNER: Okay. [Laughs.]

  • KELVIN DOE: Thank you.

  • DAVID SENGEH: You want to try my plantain? Take it.

  • DAVID SENGEH: He misses home a lot. KELVIN DOE: I miss my family so much, especially

  • my mother. KELVIN DOE: [On phone] Hello?

  • KELVIN DOE: My mother, she was so excited because people said good comments about me.

  • DAVID SENGEH: Hello? KELVIN DOE: I want to help my family to provide

  • the facility for them.

  • [Music]

  • KELVIN DOE: Just to help my family. Yeah.

  • [Music]

  • KELVIN DOE: [On phone] Okay, bye.

  • DAVID SENGEH: For Kelvin, his biggest challenge is going to be the scarcity of the materials

  • and the information once he goes back. Here he can go in and pick up a resistor or whatever

  • he wants. He now understands that there are many people who don't have to go through the

  • garbage, so he has to go back.

  • KELVIN DOE: Whatever things I've learned here, I will share it with my friends, colleagues,

  • and loved ones and do it as a team.

  • DAVID SENGEH: He's done an amazing work. But that's just the beginning.

  • KELVIN DOE: My next invention will be a windmill for people to use for electricity supply.

  • DAVID SENGEH: I want there to be many more Kelvins. I do not want it to be a one-off

  • thing. It's a movement. It's, how do we create thousands of young people who are inspired

  • by making stuff and solving the problems that are in their neighborhood?

  • KELVIN DOE: That is my aim. To promote innovation in Sierra Leone among young people. [Laughs.]

  • DAVID SENGEH: Hi everyone. This is David. Thanks so much for watching and we hope you

  • enjoyed the video. The folks at THNKR and I wanted to share Kelvin's story in the hopes

  • of starting the conversation about how we can all foster innovation amongst young people

  • around the world. We are asking you to do 2 things. First, submit comments and response

  • videos below telling us how you think we can promote innovation among young people in your

  • community. Second, if you are inspired by what you just saw, support the non-profit

  • organization I have founded by visiting crowdrise.com/innovatesalone. Your donations will go directly to more innovation

  • competitions that support other young innovators like Kelvin. And if you want to see more inspiring

  • videos like this one, subscribe for free to THNKR by clicking the "Subscribe" button.

  • Thanks very much.

  • KELVIN DOE: I'm DJ Focus and you're watching PRODIGIES.

KELVIN DOE: My name is Kelvin Doe, aka DJ Focus.

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