Interesting People (of Earth)

Onyinye Ijeh

A digital campfire for meaningful dialogue about life, purpose, society, and all the things that make us human. A space for real, unfiltered conversations with everyday humans doing fascinating things. From artists and thinkers to activists, immigrants, and dreamers, people who may not be household names, but whose stories hold profound lessons about what it means to be alive right now, on this planet

Episodes

  1. Apr 7

    The Omek Story ft Kemo (Part 2)

    What happens after you find Community? More importantly, what happens when you build it on purpose? In Part 2, Kemo moves beyond the early patterns of community that followed him, and into the conscious creation of Omek. What began as organic connection evolved into something far more intentional. Not just a network, but an ecosystem. A space designed to support people before, during, and after major life transitions like moving countries. Because the reality is simple. Moving to a new country is rarely just physical. It’s economic. It’s social. It’s emotional. And without the right support system, it can quietly break people down. Through a series of serendipitous moments, Kemo began to recognize a pattern. The people who thrived weren’t necessarily the most talented or the most prepared. They were the ones who had a community waiting for them. That realization became the foundation of Omek. In this episode, we explore: The shift from building diaspora-based spaces to cultivating a broader bicultural identityWhy pre-built community can determine how successfully someone integrates into a new environmentThe intentional design behind Omek and what it takes to create a space where people genuinely support each otherThe difference between proximity-based networks and value-based communitiesWhat most people misunderstand about building “real” communityThis is Part 2 of our conversation with Kemo, we dive deeper into the philosophy, and impact of Omek.

    57 min
  2. Mar 17

    The Origins of Omek: Building Community for Biculturals in the African Diaspora (Part 1)

    What does it actually mean to move people from point A to point B? Not just physically, but economically, socially, and culturally? That question sits at the center of Kemo’s life and work.  Today, Kemo is the founder of Omek, a growing community for biculturals rooted in connection, collaboration, and shared purpose. But long before Omek existed, he was already living inside the very thing he would later build. Growing up in a large compound in Guinea, surrounded by relatives, siblings, and extended family, community was daily life. In that environment, Kemo learned what it takes to build and maintain a responsible and healthy community, and the quiet work required to hold people together.  When he later moved to the United States in pursuit of “The American Dream”, the same pattern reappeared. Community followed him. First through the Guinean diaspora. Then through informal networks of African immigrants connected by a shared love of soccer. What began as casual gatherings soon evolved into organized tournaments bringing together teams representing different African countries across the diaspora. Without fully realizing it at first, Kemo was doing what he had always been doing, creating community wherever he went. Eventually, the pattern became impossible to ignore. In this episode, we explore: Kemo’s upbringing in Guinea and how communal living shaped his worldviewThe immigrant journey and the search for belonging in the diasporaHow soccer became a vehicle for organizing African communities abroadThe preamble to the origins of building OmekThis is Part 1 of our conversation with Kemo, where we explore the foundations of his story and the early forces that shaped his mission. Because sometimes the work we are meant to do finds us long before we recognize it. “There are no wrong turnings. Only paths we had not known we were meant to walk” -Guy Gavriel Kay

    54 min
  3. Jan 12

    Modern Adulthood is a Scam (Solo)

    Modern adulthood feels like a bait and switch. We followed the rules we were given, school, career, stability, only to enter a world defined by uncertainty, rising costs, institutional failure, and constant change. In this solo episode of Interesting People of Earth, host Onyi breaks down why adulthood feels harder, more unstable, and more improvisational than what previous generations experienced, and why that feeling isn’t a personal failure. This episode offers a grounded, big-picture analysis of how economic, cultural, technological, and geopolitical shifts have quietly rewritten the social contract of adulthood. From globalization and automation to housing crises, education inflation, climate anxiety, and declining trust in institutions, we explore how the old “adulting” script collapsed, and what’s emerging in its place. You’ll hear: • Why the traditional adulthood model worked for some, and excluded many • How global instability and rapid change reshaped work, identity, and belonging • The emotional toll modern adulthood takes on young adults worldwide • Why anxiety, burnout, and restlessness are adaptive responses, not weakness • How change is a feature of human history, not a modern glitch • Why this moment, despite the chaos, may be an opportunity to redefine adulthood on our own terms This conversation draws on global research from the WHO, OECD, IMF, UNESCO, Pew Research Center, and more, while grounding the analysis in lived experience. If you’ve felt behind, disoriented, or like the rules changed without warning, this episode is for you. Adulthood isn’t broken. The script is. And that means we get to write a new one. Sources: Utrecht University — Youth in a Digital World: Complexity & Social Polarization (2023) ScienceDirect — Technological Change, Automation & Labour Market Impacts on Youth WHO — Global Mental Health Update (2022–2023) World Happiness Report 2023 — Youth Well-Being Trends The Atlantic — Young Adult Mental Health in America UNESCO — Global Education Monitoring Report OECD — Housing Affordability & Wage Stagnation Data IMF — Global Employment Outlook & Youth Labour Market Challenges African Youth Survey — Youth Mental Health & Economic Conditions in SSA Pew Research Center — Global Trust & Political Participation Among Young People Edelman Trust Barometer (2023) — Trust in Government & Institutions NCBI — Jeffrey Arnett: Emerging Adulthood Theory David Graeber — The Utopia of Rules

    12 min

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About

A digital campfire for meaningful dialogue about life, purpose, society, and all the things that make us human. A space for real, unfiltered conversations with everyday humans doing fascinating things. From artists and thinkers to activists, immigrants, and dreamers, people who may not be household names, but whose stories hold profound lessons about what it means to be alive right now, on this planet