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From hidden royal ties to heartbreaking survival stories, these family tree bombshells from “Finding Your Roots” are the kind of revelations you have to hear to believe. Join us as we revisit the most jaw-dropping discoveries from celebrities like Lupita Nyong’o, Edward Norton, Wanda Sykes, and more. Which ancestry surprise stunned you the most?
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00:00What?
00:03That is crazy.
00:05That is crazy.
00:06Welcome to Ms. Mojo.
00:07And today we're counting down our picks for the most jaw-dropping,
00:10eye-widening, and downright shocking revelations
00:13from the acclaimed PBS series Finding Your Roots.
00:16You don't make that connection at all.
00:18I never even dreamed of anything like this.
00:26Comedian Hassan Minhaj grew up knowing little about his parents' lives
00:29before they came to America.
00:31So when Finding Your Roots dug into his paternal family's roots,
00:34the revelations came fast.
00:36Extremely, um,
00:42very powerful and very, um,
00:48I had no idea.
00:50Researchers traced Minhaj's father's family to northern India,
00:53where his great-grandfather, Mohamed Sibgat Ullah,
00:56was identified in British records as the, quote,
00:58principal sheik of Dampur,
01:00a prominent landowner with serious local clout.
01:03But the moment that really got Minhaj was a 1948 photograph
01:06confirming his father's family owned two adult elephants.
01:09Your father told us that in the back of the house,
01:11there were quarters to house elephants.
01:14What?
01:15Yes.
01:16And your aunt remembers that they owned two adult elephants
01:19and a baby elephant.
01:21The irony here is that Minhaj's father
01:23apparently refused to let him have pets growing up.
01:25Instead of asking for a dog or a cat,
01:28maybe he should have set his sights higher,
01:30or in this case, bigger.
01:31When I was a kid, I asked my dad,
01:33well, my sister really wanted a dog.
01:35Mm-hmm.
01:36And he was like, no pets.
01:37We have Hasan.
01:40And he had a...
01:41In his family, they had elephants?
01:43Three.
01:44Two adults and a baby.
01:45At the time that photograph was taken.
01:47Number 19.
01:48Danielle Dedweiler.
01:49It's like, we don't have to adhere to, you know,
01:55these structures and traditions.
01:59Mm-hmm.
01:59Uh, and starting with your name.
02:02Mm-hmm.
02:02Is critical.
02:03Long before Danielle Dedweiler was captivating audiences on screen,
02:07her ancestor was doing something far braver
02:09than anything Hollywood could script.
02:11In this season 12 episode,
02:13Dr. Henry Louis Gates Jr. revealed that Dedweiler's
02:15fifth great-grandfather, Stanley Sprigg,
02:17walked up and registered to vote on June 29th, 1867 in Georgia.
02:22Date of registry, June 29th, 1867.
02:26Names of voters, Stanley Sprigg colored.
02:34Boom.
02:34This was not a mere symbolic gesture.
02:37It was right in the thick of Reconstruction,
02:39when white opposition to black voting rights was violent and deadly.
02:43The sheer courage that act required is staggering.
02:45Danielle's reaction said it all.
02:48She was visibly moved and overwhelmed by the weight of what Sprigg did.
02:51Yeah.
02:52This is, this is, this is so rich.
02:56This is so rich.
02:58And Danielle, he couldn't even read or write.
03:00This is the richest.
03:02Yeah.
03:02He did it anyway.
03:03Did it anyway.
03:04Yeah.
03:06Sprigg.
03:07Number 18.
03:08Carly Simon.
03:09Few things rattle a person quite like finding out a core piece of their family story
03:14was quietly rewritten.
03:15For Carly Simon, that moment came during season four of Finding Your Roots,
03:19when she discovered that her grandmother, Ophelia Oliete Heinemann,
03:23had been living under a fabricated identity.
03:25She always wanted to remain completely private.
03:27She never shared any of her, of her past with us.
03:31It was always a mystery and she kept it a mystery.
03:34And she stopped us short whenever we asked any questions about her.
03:38Her grandmother had presented herself as being of Spanish and Moroccan heritage,
03:42an identity she had carefully constructed and maintained.
03:45But in truth, she was a black woman from Cuba.
03:48Have you ever heard those names before?
03:49No.
03:50I've never seen the name All Right before.
03:52Did you know that she was born in Cuba?
03:53I thought that she was born in Valencia.
03:56The revelation reframed Simon's entire sense of her own background and ancestry.
04:00It speaks to the painful reality that so many families,
04:03particularly during that era,
04:05felt compelled to conceal their true heritage
04:07just to survive in a racially hostile world.
04:09So that could have been the demon that Sheeby was fleeing,
04:13the demon of race,
04:16as defined by American racial codes that she was leaving behind.
04:19I'm sure that that was it.
04:20Number 17.
04:21Sanaa Lathan
04:22When she appeared on Finding Your Roots in 2026,
04:25actor and director Sanaa Lathan discovered that her great-grandfather,
04:28Wesley Deer McCoy,
04:29had been part of a major civil rights victory.
04:32Isn't that incredible?
04:33Yes.
04:33I mean, you have a race pioneer.
04:35Yeah.
04:35A civil rights pioneer on your family tree.
04:38Yes.
04:38Born in Texas in 1879,
04:41McCoy enrolled in a veterinary college in Michigan,
04:44which was remarkable enough for a black man of his time.
04:46But when he was denied readmission for his second year solely because of his race,
04:51he sued and won.
04:52I'm surprised that granddaddy,
04:55we used to call him granddaddy,
04:56that he didn't tell us that.
04:58Maybe I just didn't pay attention, you know,
05:00but I don't remember this.
05:03This is amazing.
05:04The legal challenge became one of the earliest successful anti-segregation lawsuits brought
05:08by a college student in the United States.
05:11Lathan was deeply moved by the discovery,
05:13saying she wished she could sit across from him at dinner and hear the whole story firsthand.
05:17What a determined, you know,
05:22Yeah.
05:22kind of mind and soul to have endured that cruelty.
05:30Number 16.
05:31Larry David
05:31There were several bombshells lying in wait when Larry David appeared on Finding Your Roots in 2017.
05:37First came the revelation that his great-great-grandfather, Henry Bernstein,
05:40was one of roughly 3,000 Jewish men who fought for the Confederacy.
05:44Larry's face alone deserved an Emmy.
05:46What?
05:47Are you kidding?
05:49See that?
05:50Now that's something.
05:51That's something.
05:54I can't, that, that's mind-blowing to me.
05:57I can't believe it.
05:58The idea of a Jewish Confederate ancestor was already bizarre enough to short-circuit his entire worldview,
06:04but Gates was not done tormenting him.
06:06After David jokingly blurted out that he hoped no slaves would show up in the paperwork,
06:11Gates had him turn the page.
06:12Professor, I'm, I'm, I'm,
06:16I'm so sorry.
06:19You can see why my father didn't want to tell me anything about his family.
06:24That's called the, I don't know where you got this stuff.
06:26This is really incredible.
06:27David's horrified, incredulous meltdown was instant and painfully on brand.
06:31It collapsed any neat, comforting narrative he had about his ancestry.
06:35Sit with stuff for too long and it doesn't, things don't impact me a lot,
06:41but this, this has had just an effect on me.
06:44I mean, I, I, the whole German thing and the Southern thing, that's, it's pretty wild.
06:49Number 15, Questlove.
06:50The weight of this discovery is almost incomprehensible.
06:54I, like, I'm not overacting.
06:56I'm not, uh, uh, yeah, I'm at a loss of words.
07:03Questlove, the Grammy-winning musician and cultural force behind The Roots,
07:07learned on Finding Your Roots that his ancestors were among the enslaved people transported to the United States on the
07:12Clotilda.
07:13This happened more than 50 years after the international slave trade had been officially banned
07:18and was the last known ship to illegally bring African captives to American shores.
07:23I'm on the absolute last ship that ever came here.
07:32The Clotilda's voyage in 1860 was a criminal act, an obscene defiance of law and human dignity.
07:38For Questlove, tracing his lineage directly to that vessel meant confronting one of the most harrowing chapters in American history
07:45in the most personal way imaginable.
07:47Until an hour ago,
07:52I didn't know who I was.
07:59I said I wasn't going to cry, man.
08:01Number 14, Darren Criss.
08:03When Darren Criss sat down with Henry Louis Gates Jr. in the season 12 premiere,
08:07he made a discovery that gave his entire career an almost mythic symmetry.
08:12I never really thought about it.
08:13You know, I'm sure my mom after this would be like,
08:15you knew that!
08:16And I'll be like, I guess I somehow compartmentalized in a place that wasn't in my frontal lobe.
08:21Criss learned that one of his ancestors was directly involved in laying the physical foundations of Lower Manhattan,
08:27specifically at the corner of Broadway and Stone Street,
08:29the very street that would eventually become one of the most iconic entertainment corridors in the world.
08:34The lot was located at the corner of Broadway and Stone Streets on the southern tip of Manhattan.
08:40What you're telling me is my earliest ancestor on this land was on Broadway.
08:47Yep.
08:48That's insane.
08:50Criss, of course, went on to become a Broadway star himself,
08:53winning two Tony Awards for producing and performing in the musical Maybe Happy Ending.
08:58His family helped build the stage,
09:00and generations later, he is performing on it.
09:02If that's not a full-circle moment, nothing is.
09:06What would your father have said?
09:07Would it have been meaningful to him?
09:10Yeah.
09:12Of course.
09:13Of course it would.
09:13I wish he could have heard this, you know?
09:15But the great thing is that, you know,
09:17my kids will hear this, and their kids will hear this.
09:19It'll be an amazing sort of goalpost.
09:21Number 13.
09:22Joe Manganiello.
09:23Terviz Rose de Rocjan, the great-grandmother of actor Joe Manganiello,
09:27endured horrors that strained the limits of comprehension.
09:30The Turks came into her home in 1915 under the guise of World War I,
09:35and tried to enact the genocide that they had begun.
09:38In 1915, during the Armenian Genocide,
09:41her husband and seven of her eight children were murdered before her eyes.
09:45Rose fled with her eighth child strapped to her back,
09:48swam across a river to escape death marches,
09:50and arrived on the other side to find her baby had drowned.
09:53There were these death marches where they would just handcuff
09:56and chain the Armenians together and march them out into the desert
09:59and release the Kurds and gave them military coats, horses, and guns
10:03to then go do what they wanted with their mortal enemies, the Armenians,
10:07and she escaped that.
10:09She sheltered in a cave before being taken to a camp by German officers,
10:12where she was impregnated by one of them.
10:15Manganiello had always known pieces of this story,
10:17but Finding Your Roots identified the officer,
10:20Carl Wilhelm Beitinger.
10:21Beitinger had a family in Germany,
10:23including a son who later became a Nazi SS officer during World War II.
10:28So you have two genocides in your family tree.
10:30That's right.
10:31As it were.
10:32And it's on either side.
10:35Mm-hmm.
10:36Which is...
10:37Victims and perpetrators.
10:38Exactly.
10:39Yeah.
10:40Which is...
10:41I mean, it's like...
10:43It's a heavy thing to ponder.
10:44Number 12, Ruben Blades.
10:46Would you please read the number in red on your right?
10:50Whoa.
10:51Zero.
10:52Zero.
10:53So you know what that means?
10:55That means that Ruben Nathaniel Blades is not your biological grandfather.
11:00DNA doesn't lie.
11:01And for Panamanian musician, actor, and activist Ruben Blades,
11:05what it revealed was extraordinary.
11:07Through analysis of his father's genetic material,
11:10Henry Louis Gates Jr. determined that the man Blades believed was his biological grandfather
11:15was not, in fact, his grandfather.
11:16His true grandfather was Ricardo Miró, one of Panama's most revered literary figures,
11:22and the author of Patria, a foundational patriotic poem.
11:25Holy crap.
11:28Oof.
11:32Incredible.
11:34Mm.
11:36Ha.
11:37This is gonna be a bomb in Panama.
11:39The parallel to Blades' own celebrated body of work,
11:43much of which pulses with that same fierce cultural pride, is stunning.
11:47Blades called the revelation, quote,
11:49a bomb for me.
11:50Through Miro, he's also connected to Amelia Denise de Icaza,
11:54the first woman to publish poetry in Panama.
11:56His talent, it seems, runs in the blood.
11:59It may sound now like, oh, so normal, or so, of course, you know, but it's not at all.
12:04You don't, you don't make that connection at all.
12:07I'd never even dreamed of anything like this.
12:12Number 11, Lizzie Kaplan.
12:13I have thought about, you know, what it would be like to be on
12:17a boat coming to a place where you knew nobody, not a soul.
12:25And for whatever reason, I never imagined it as a 19-year-old kid.
12:30Lizzie Kaplan's episode uncovered a Holocaust survival story so brutal and specific,
12:34it felt impossible to process in real time.
12:37She learned that her great-grandfather, Abraham Leib Miodovnik,
12:41left the Russian Empire for New York in 1906,
12:43a decision that likely saved his life and permanently split the family's fate in two.
12:48The idea that he was coming to join his sister, who I've never heard of,
12:53and even just the correspondence that would be required to make those plans
12:57and how long that would take and how, I mean, it's crazy.
13:02The relatives he left behind faced catastrophe.
13:04Most devastatingly, Kaplan learned that her great-granduncle, Wolf Miodovnik,
13:09was in Belgium when Germany invaded the country in 1940.
13:12Wolf survived three concentration camps and a transit camp during the Holocaust.
13:16So how do you think Wolf found the strength to keep going?
13:19I don't know.
13:21That's just human will to survive, because, like, what is this life?
13:27Mm.
13:28Why would you want to keep going?
13:30His wife and their child unfortunately lost their lives at Auschwitz.
13:34Kaplan had no idea she had a direct link to the Holocaust,
13:37and learning about that connection certainly took her by surprise.
13:40Survived the Holocaust, and we were very aware of who those grandparents were,
13:44and my grandparents were not in that group.
13:45Mm-hmm.
13:46So this is news to me.
13:48Number 10.
13:49Anthony Ramos.
13:50On the 10th season of Finding Your Roots,
13:52Emmy-nominated actor Anthony Ramos learned that his 15th great-grandfather, Andres,
13:57wasn't originally from Spain as he had always believed.
14:00Instead, Andres was an indigenous inhabitant of Tenerife,
14:03one of the Canary Islands colonized by Spain in the 15th century.
14:07He was then enslaved by a Spanish conquistador.
14:09But we believe it was for at least 10 years,
14:11considering the conquest of Tenerife ended in 1496.
14:18That's a long time to be a slave, man.
14:21Andres managed to regain his freedom by persuading his enslaver to accept a substitute,
14:26likely one of the enslaved Africans recently brought to the islands.
14:29But then, after securing his freedom,
14:31Andres chose to align himself with the very people who destroyed his homeland.
14:35He joined the Spanish military and took part in the conquest of North Africa,
14:39where he is believed to have lost his life.
14:42It's that every man for himself kind of thing, you know what I'm saying?
14:45Like, I can't imagine that he was really thinking about morals.
14:48No.
14:49In that moment.
14:50No, no.
14:51But what a story.
14:52Number 9.
14:53Kenan Ivory Wayans.
14:54Comedy legend Kenan Ivory Wayans received an agonizing surprise when he went on Finding Your Roots in 2016.
15:01Wayans learned about his great-great-grandfather, Ben Pleasant,
15:03who was the personal servant of South Carolina Governor John L. Manning.
15:07He looks exactly the way you would expect him to look.
15:10Yeah.
15:11Exactly.
15:13Wow.
15:14This is Ben Pleasant.
15:16In the 1840s, Manning took Pleasant on a trip to Canada,
15:19where he was kidnapped by a group of abolitionists who intended to grant him freedom.
15:24However, Pleasant chose to return to slavery.
15:27The story you want to hear is that your great-grandfather was Couto Quintin.
15:32He cut off his foot and ran away.
15:35Led all the other slaves to freedom.
15:38My story is, he went back.
15:41While such a decision might seem befuddling,
15:44it is believed that his family remained enslaved under Manning.
15:47And rather than live freely apart from them, he chose to go back.
15:51All I could think about was my family and my kids and, you know, would it be worth it?
15:58You know, that's not freedom.
15:59To leave them behind, that's not freedom.
16:01That's anguish.
16:02Wayans also learned that his ancestry traces back mostly to Asia,
16:07from people who later migrated to Madagascar.
16:09When you find out things like this, you know, I'm a black man and I'm Chinese.
16:16Number 8.
16:17Sigourney Weaver
16:18It's remarkable to think about the ordeals people once endured for what is considered normal today.
16:24For actor Sigourney Weaver's great-great-grandmother, Barbara Hunt,
16:27that ordeal meant being institutionalized after suffering a miscarriage.
16:30Here's your great-great-grandfather, Josiah, living with a daughter.
16:34I see.
16:34But where's Barbara?
16:35Where's Josiah's wife?
16:36Your great-great-grandmother?
16:39I don't know.
16:40Barbara had left her husband, Josiah, for a younger man, with whom she became pregnant.
16:45Unfortunately, any hopes of a fulfilling life with her new lover were dashed when she lost the baby
16:49and was committed to a psychiatric facility, where she remained until her death.
16:54If you lost that child and you weren't married, I think it would sort of be like a judgment against
17:00you.
17:01What a tragedy.
17:03It's unclear why exactly she was institutionalized,
17:06but it might have had something to do with a scathing letter Josiah wrote to a British court.
17:11Perhaps inspired by his mother's experience, Barbara's son, Weaver's great-grandfather,
17:16went on to become a doctor in a psychiatric hospital.
17:18Even though what happened to her was tragic, he, you know, he somehow made good come out of it.
17:28Number 7. Wanda Sykes
17:29I had no idea that, you know, I came from free people.
17:37When comedian Wanda Sykes appeared on the show's very first season,
17:41she probably didn't expect to learn that she had the longest documented family tree
17:45of any African-American they had encountered.
17:48And that's largely because of her paternal ninth-great-grandmother, Elizabeth Banks.
17:52Banks was a free white woman who had a child with an enslaved man,
17:56which meant all of her descendants inherited her status, making them free people of color.
18:01Did you know that there were free colored people in Virginia that far back in our nation's history?
18:07No.
18:08But perhaps the most shocking moment of the entire episode came when Sykes learned that some of her free ancestors
18:14of color had owned slaves themselves.
18:17This revelation deeply unsettled her, but in true Wanda Sykes fashion, she managed to find some humor in the uncomfortable
18:23truth.
18:24I just hope, you know, Fanny and Terrence's family don't trace their roots and come and whoop my ass.
18:30Number 6. Paul Rudd
18:32Everyone probably expects their parents to have a close relationship, but not so close that they actually share blood.
18:38How did they meet and fall in love?
18:40Well, I think that they knew each other as they were kids because somewhere in the family tree, as you
18:46will probably tell me, they were related.
18:49That was precisely the unexpected revelation waiting for actor Paul Rudd when he appeared in the fourth season of Finding
18:55Your Roots.
18:56Host Henry Louis Gates Jr. informed Rudd that his parents, Michael and Gloria, are actually second cousins.
19:01This means that they share the same set of great-grandparents.
19:05It is a weird thing. I think there is something like third cousins, or their cousins, well, second cousins.
19:10Second cousins.
19:11Uh, second cousins. That's... is that... it's illegal now, right?
19:15It's legal, but it's unusual.
19:18It's a connection that's undeniably a little too close for comfort.
19:21Naturally, the news left Rudd feeling a little weirded out.
19:25However, that didn't stop him from throwing in a perfectly timed joke to lighten the mood.
19:29So both your mother and father can trace their ancestry back to the Geyers.
19:34Does this make my son also my uncle?
19:38Number 5. Terry Crews
19:40Actor Terry Crews had a difficult childhood, mostly stemming from his troubled relationship with his father, Terry Crews Sr.
19:47According to the actor, his father's domineering and sometimes violent behavior created an atmosphere of constant fear,
19:53leaving Crews so anxious that he wet the bed well into his teenage years.
19:57I went to bed till I was 15 years old, because I did not know what was going to happen
20:03every night.
20:03I'd wake up to screaming, fights, glass breaking, and I said, I gotta find a way out.
20:09On Finding Your Roots, Crews learned more about his father's background and began to understand the cause of his behavior.
20:15He discovered that his grandfather, Edward Crews, spent time in and out of jail,
20:19and had abandoned his kids when they were still very young.
20:22In 1954, 11 years after they were married, Ermel sued Edward for the abandonment of their children.
20:30Your father would have been about 9 years old at the time.
20:33Realizing the pain that this must have caused his father,
20:36Crews admitted that this new knowledge helped him see his father in a more compassionate light.
20:41I mean, hurt people hurt people.
20:44Yeah.
20:45And that's one thing I've learned in all my walks.
20:49Number 4. Mario Lopez
21:02Immigration remains a sensitive issue in America today, but it has been that way for a very long time.
21:08TV host and actor Mario Lopez got a glimpse into that rocky history through the story of his paternal grandfather,
21:14Luciano.
21:14Lopez learned that Luciano migrated illegally from Mexico to the U.S. in 1952, only to be deported just one
21:21month later.
21:22Luciano was detained by immigration officials and returned to Mexico via what was known as a voluntary departure.
21:31Five years after that setback, he tried to return legally.
21:34By that point, however, anti-Mexican sentiment in the U.S. had grown so intense that it nearly discouraged him.
21:40However, he persevered and managed to cross into the U.S. on foot legally in 1957, and he remained there
21:47for the rest of his life.
21:48I appreciate it. I just feel like going down the rabbit hole just to even learn more and anxious to
21:55show the family.
21:59Number 3. Fred Armisen
22:00Knowing the life and career of Saturday Night Live alum Fred Armisen, it's hard to imagine the level of espionage
22:07in his family history.
22:08Armisen grew up believing his grandfather, Masami Kuni, was a Japanese dancer who had lived in Germany before moving to
22:13America.
22:14It was only on Finding Your Roots that he learned the truth.
22:17Well, that changes many, many things. I was going to say everything. I mean, I guess everything.
22:23Kuni was actually South Korean, born Park Young-in, and only assumed a Japanese identity after the 1923 massacre of
22:30Koreans in Japan.
22:31I think we all assign qualities to nationalities.
22:36So the fact that I love Japanese food, I just assume is like, well, it's because I'm part Japanese.
22:41You like kimchi?
22:43I guess I'll have to now.
22:44But the revelations only got more shocking as Armisen discovered that Kuni was actually a spy.
22:50He aided Nazi propaganda efforts by entertaining German troops, while secretly gathering intelligence which he relayed to Japan.
22:57To say Armisen was stunned would be an understatement.
23:00I can't believe it's taken this long in my life to know such a huge part of my genetic makeup.
23:07Number 2. Edward Norton
23:09Almost every family has a rumor about a famous ancestor somewhere in its history.
23:14For actor Edward Norton's family, the rumor was that they were somehow related to Native American heroine Pocahontas.
23:20He'd grown up hearing that his father's roots traced deep into colonial Virginia's past, and that he was, in fact,
23:28a direct descendant of Pocahontas, the Powhatan woman who married the Virginia settler John Rolfe.
23:35Norton always took the lore with a grain of salt, until he appeared on the ninth season of Finding Your
23:40Roots.
23:41The show's researchers managed to find a direct trail linking Norton to Pocahontas, confirming that she and her husband, John
23:47Rolfe, are indeed his 12th great-grandparents.
23:50And how could you possibly determine that?
23:53Through the paper trail.
23:54It would have been documented?
23:56Oh, yeah.
23:57The paper trail of their children?
23:58Of course.
23:59The revelation caught the actor off guard, and he noted that it only serves as a reminder of just how
24:04vast the world is, and how deeply interconnected we all are.
24:08Makes you realize what a, what a, what a small, you know, piece of the whole human story you are.
24:27Before we continue, check out this single from Sound Mojo's album current, EDM Transformed.
24:32Check out the full track and album below.
24:50Number 1. Lupita Nyong'o
24:52In the fourth season of Finding Your Roots, Oscar-winning actor Lupita Nyong'o made a discovery unlike any other
24:58in the show's history.
24:59It's humbling, for sure. It's perspective-gaining.
25:03Through DNA analysis, researchers traced her lineage all the way to the oldest maternal haplogroup.
25:08This means she is a close and direct descendant of Mitochondrial Eve, the woman scientists consider the common ancestor of
25:16all humankind.
25:17When Mitochondrial Eve was walking around, there were no human beings alive outside of Africa.
25:24Everybody was black in the whole world.
25:26Hmph.
25:26While most people's mitochondrial DNA, which is inherited exclusively from the mother, tends to mutate significantly across generations, Nyong'o's
25:35apparently showed little change, and remains nearly identical to that of Mitochondrial Eve.
25:40Nyong'o was equally surprised and proud to receive the news.
25:43I predate race.
25:45You predate race.
25:46Yeah.
25:47That's dope.
25:48The revelation seemed to be confirmation of many scientific theories that humankind originated from Africa.
25:54Which family history revelation left you the most speechless?
25:58Let us know in the comments.
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