You moved countries. You learned a new language. You built a life somewhere new. But part of your brain is still tuned to what’s happening back home.
The politics. The sports. The cultural conversations. The news your family discusses at dinner that you’re no longer part of.
You used to follow local news naturally — it was everywhere. Now it requires EFFORT:
Meanwhile, you ALSO need to follow news in your new country — in a language you’re still learning.
Two countries. Two languages. Zero extra time.
audiclip bridges the gap:
A Nigerian in Toronto saves articles from Punch and The Guardian Nigeria AND the Globe and Mail. They hear everything discussed in English — or in Yoruba, Igbo, or Hausa.
An Indian in Berlin saves from Economic Times and Handelsblatt. They listen in Hindi, English, or German — their choice, daily.
Immigrants who stay connected to home while integrating locally are:
Your community spans continents. A shared public station curated by someone who follows both home and host country news becomes a resource for the entire diaspora.
Home isn’t where you live. It’s where you listen.