Thursday, May 26, 2011

THE OPRAH WINFREY SHOW FINALE...A wonderful letter to you!


After 25 years of history-making, life-changing television, Oprah hosts the finale of The Oprah Winfrey Show.

CHINI NI UJUMBE AMBAO OPRAH UMEUACHA KWETU WAPENZI WA VIPINDI VYAKE...NIMEUPITIA UJUMBE WOTE NA HAKIKA MARA TU NILIPOMALIZA NIMEJIKUTA NIKIGUNDUA MENGI KUHUSU MIMI LAURA, AND WHAT HOLDS ME BACK TO LIVE MY LIFESTYLE DREAM!

NIMEONA SI VIBAYA NIKISHEA NANYI UJUMBE HUU KILA SIKU!
ANAANZA KWA KUSIMULIA ALIPOTOKA... NINGEPENJDA KUJUA KAMA MNAPENDA NITAFSIRI AU TUSHUKE TU NA HII PART YA LUGHA YA WENZETU.....

On September 8, 1986, the first national episode of The Oprah Winfrey Show was broadcast into homes across America. Now, 25 years later, Oprah steps onto the stage for the last time to share her greatest lessons and hopes for her viewers.

"After deliberating for some time, we decided to do what we do best, and that is a show about and with everyday people. This show always allows people, hopefully, to understand the power they have to change their own lives.

If there's one thread running through each show we do, it is the message that you are not alone. Twenty-five years and I'm still saying thank you, America. Thank you so much. There are no words to match this moment. Every word I've ever spoken from this stage of The Oprah Show for 4,561 days of my life is what this moment is all about.
...

"When I came here, I was about to turn 30 years old. I didn't have a vision or a lot of great expectations. Stedman talks about vision all the time, but I didn't have one when I came here. I just wanted to do a good job and cause no harm. ... That first day was a shock to me. There was no audience.

There I am in my best Anne Klein II velour outfit, my guests were a few Chicago football players, New Year's Day, 1984. ... I needed people. I needed to have you to gauge how things were going during the show, if you were responding, if you were laughing, if you were tracking with me. So after that first show, we put up some folding chairs in the audience. We brought in the staff.

Secretaries. Anybody we could find in the building and filled the first rows with staff people and the rest with people off the street that we bribed with doughnuts and coffee, and we'd say, 'Come in.'
...

"Two years later, when we went national, I remember at the time, Roger King told me that one station manager said that he'd rather put a potato in a chair in his market than have a big black girl with a funny name. And in spite of that, from Memphis to Macon, from Pittsburgh to Pensacola, from New York to New Orleans, you all let me in."

ITAENDELEA...

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