I hope Viv finds her biological Fathers family, I think she will be content with her life then. I hope there is an update to find out what happened.
@annieclaire23489 сағат бұрын
I could listen to Professor King talking about all the research and findings through genealogy and genetics for hours! Absolutely fascinating! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
@Ponkelina21 сағат бұрын
Incredible story
@kimtozer5517Күн бұрын
Fascinating. Hopefully her wishes will be answered and shared.
@traveler5094Күн бұрын
Please update us on Viv’s story as soon as you know something.
@kazikazkaz8007Күн бұрын
Excellent…
@morriganwitchКүн бұрын
I hope this lady finds out more
@Nameless-tp8np12 күн бұрын
Lol after few generations your consciousness dissappears
@truthsaviour880413 күн бұрын
I enjoyed your presentation. I have a question. If my wife and I have the same 15 percent from the same racial group, how many generation will it take before that percentage would disappear?
@s.lucius885315 күн бұрын
I love these shows. But after Professor King explained that skin tone is complex (paraphrasing from memory) it reminded me of my own family. My brother was born with milky white skin and cottontop white hair. Both of my parents had black hair. When I came into the world my Dad said I looked like a “black Chinese” (his words). My face was big, eyes swollen and slanted, and dark skin. In the summer I would darken to a dusky color. I looked mulatto. Same parents. Different skin tones. I got bullied ad the “ugly duckling”, my brother was idolized. It’s families and it’s life. Honestly, though little things like this are not fun growing up, I truly feel blessed to have been different. What I experienced with the bullying made me more compassionate toward others and I am the one who will step in if I see anyone abused, even strangers. I understand this beautiful young lady’s quandry. Had all the children had the same father she might have just let it roll off. But it happens in biological, intact families as well. Great show!
@bksmurf80816 күн бұрын
Look like moviestar Tom Wright 🧐
@lynneheal-xc2qg17 күн бұрын
MS is in my DNA
@ORISONTV21 күн бұрын
Your still white
@missymason237721 күн бұрын
Beautiful outcome....
@missymason237722 күн бұрын
One child law/ China
@pourquoipas97124 күн бұрын
She looks white to me.. and really, is it a new standard to classify people like this… by the color of their skin ? Strange evolution … extra white, white enough, bright withe , dark white, light brown brownish… etc ..what a bad evolution of society…the point is, she would like to Know who her father was. She probably racism or exclusion ?
@patriciamitchell936525 күн бұрын
They don't want contact...until one of them needs a kidney.
@albertconstantine5432Ай бұрын
So glad to have found your channel and podcast here. Thank you very much for the information (and sharing the experience of having your research bang up against the news media and the often-shallowly-informed public they claim to serve)! WHY were media people given control over so much? I've been there and I applaud you're navigation skills. If they ever find King Arthur you'll be prepared! (Joking.)
@sigal42Ай бұрын
I'm a 34 year old who needed this video to understand this concept 😂💜💜😂
@71kimgАй бұрын
Well the i would add that you get 50/50 from mom and dad - but the chromosomes is a winner takes all situation. And which chromosome is a lottery (besides one from mom and the x/y lottery from dad) - so you have 46 parts from parents - 44 is mixed and 2 is the direct mom/dad (moms always being her moms - and dads can be moms or dad). In theory you could have 0 genes from granddad - if all you chromosomes from dad is from grandmom (or visa versa) - there will however always be one chromosome from mom (and mom’s mom etc…)
@andreapirringer7008Ай бұрын
When I saw his face, I immediately thought: This man is not purely African. You can see the Chinese influence (especially around the eyes) and also the French. But also the Filipino, in the tone of his skin color.
@SMcCaskillАй бұрын
The "New Mexico" ancestry is Native American. The minute I looked at Anthony I knew he had Native American ancestry. It's that straight thick hair of his. I grew up with several friends that are Native American.
@jonathanconnor8190Ай бұрын
The question is how many Gummy bears were eaten before the video was finished?
@channahcastelobrancoАй бұрын
Half siblings..Half cousins...
@missymason2377Ай бұрын
Lovely conclusion
@lawrencejames8011Ай бұрын
Before clutching are straws ( a Ricardian trait ) , it would be of value to have an autopsy to establish sex, age and social background - the latter by testing for sugar traces.
@debbielb23252 ай бұрын
My late father was Scottish and dark skinned, he was always mistaken for Italian.
@peachygal41532 ай бұрын
I found 2 DNA cousins on both sides of the family doing my DNA. One was a woman who had been adopted at birth, but she knew her birth mother as she was related to her adopted father. Bio mom had no idea whom her bio father was because of the lifestyle she was living at the time. Since we matched as first cousins (730 centimorgans) we figured out it must have been my maternal uncle as my mother had only one brother. We thought possibly my maternal grandfather, but she also matched my grandmother's sister's grandson, so we were able to rule him out. The other match was my paternal side and hers was a little more traumatic as her mother allowed her to believe her father who adopted her at 2 years old was her bio dad. Her mom told the story they had dated, broken up, and got back together a couple of years later and got married. All true but he was NOT her bio dad and her mom and him both knew this because they had split tup 6 months before she was conceived but had not told her this, anyway she had a feeling he was not her bio dad because she wondered why he would need to adopt her when he could have simply been added to her birth certificate as her sister,18 months older had him on her birth corticate although their parents were not married. We matched at 500 centimorgans which I knew was probably first cousin once removed but we were not sure how we matched as her supposed paternal grandmother was born in 1943 and several of my uncles had joined the military (my dad had 6 brothers) there was always a chance that before they were shipped out to Europe that they had gotten a girl pregnant where they had their military training. She got her supposed full sister to test, and they came back as half-sisters. Then we had to figure which of my 15 paternal cousins was her father. One of my dad's sisters had lived in her town until retirement. she had one son; I gave her his name and she confronted her mom. It turned out hey were high school sweethearts but both married other people. Her mom had been long divorced, but my cousin was still married but separated from his wife. They had a one-night stand after reconnecting at their 20th high school reunion. My cousin got back with his wife no longer after, (only to divorce 3 years later) so her mom never told him. Anyway, he was delighted to meet her and find out he had another daughter. Three years after meeting he died of a heart attack. I am so glad he met her before that happened and I was able to help them find each other.
@serenblodwyn79142 ай бұрын
I'll say this. I greatly admire strong women through the ages because I wish I had their strength. I have studied the social experience of women during the time when the mum was a child, a teenager, having her children and onwards. Her life now would be tough, despite all the support systems now in place (that didn't exist then) [& I accept many argue, the support systems that exist now to support young girls as their mum would have benefitted from, don't do enough], & her life then..., would have been really hard. The fact the mum had to really be persuaded to give up her girls despite all her hardship and insufficient support she received, really shows her love of children, her love of her biological children and her deep commitment to them and their family unit. She was a truly amazing woman & mother. She gave birth to such lovely beautiful and wonderful girls.
@evelynmahoney35692 ай бұрын
Where 😭 is the rest of the story or a Part 2?
@cherylbrooks70052 ай бұрын
❤😊❤
@annieclaire23482 ай бұрын
Oh, I love these podcasts. I’m an amateur genealogist and am absolutely thrilled to hear these remarkable discoveries and stories of people’s lives. Thank you so much. ♥️♥️♥️
@juliestenger5702 ай бұрын
I’m the exact same maternal Haplogroup
@BobThomas-e3f15 күн бұрын
Which Haplogroup?
@marinadebeer39962 ай бұрын
So glad you found one another, cant even begin to imagine the heartake she must have gone through
@robertlawrence48272 ай бұрын
I like these but what was the point of Stacey Dooley's part explaining what we were already told
@maxiculture2 ай бұрын
A ripping yarn and I can't help thinking has a whole dollop of Norfolkness in it. I say this after spending the last 4 years sorting DNA matches in order to discover a missing grandfather and explain a strong genetic link to East Anglia found along the way. My unknown grandfather was born in Norfolk, father unknown 😅
@tsouryelbensimeon72952 ай бұрын
A ✔️in your right🖐🏽.....🤫🫡
@patriciafeeney2 ай бұрын
hi i am actually related to richard the 3rd his cousin 13 times removed also warwick the kingmaker. and also should have been at richard the 3rds funeral
@ravenregards2 ай бұрын
Everyone is different and it's sad that the family doesn't want to connect with these two young men. My mom had a half-sister that we only found out about in our later years, but our mom didn't want to provide any info and was totally uninterested in pursuing it.. Three of us children have done the ancestry DNA test hoping to find an unknown close match, but nothing has shown up. Personally I would be elated to find unknown relatives and share our common heritage.
@Ozymandi_as2 ай бұрын
A glorious accident indeed, although one that fell out of Alec Jeffrey's brilliant work in creating the technique that produced the biochemical fingerprints. The leap of faith the police investigator took in using the method was a bold decision. At first it gave him an answer that set him back, by freeing a man who'd a false confession. He then decided to expedite the sweep of thousands of local men, and his perseverance in the face of seemingly inconclusive results eventually gave rise to the information that Pitchfork had arranged for another individual to provide a blood sample on his behalf, and that led to Pitchfork's arrest and confirmation as the culprit. Those two young women he killed cannot have felt anything other than fear and agony as he took their lives, and could not have known that justice would accord them epitaphs for the ages. At least their families have the consolation of knowing their daughters did not die entirely in vain. In fact they changed the world. It's a breathtaking story.
@ruthbaker58902 ай бұрын
Well,at least they know who he was! Its such a shame they werent welcomed with open arms by their fathers relatives,but hey,its their loss! Its obvious now by their lack of interest, that beng given up for adoption was absolutely the right and best thing to happen to them little boys. Coz from then on they grew up knowing they were wanted and loved by a whole other family! And Well done to whoever did raise them,their real mam and dad,as theyve grown up to be mighty fine lads by the looks. All the best to u all.xx
@pennymitchell85232 ай бұрын
I wonder if her brother had the same donor.
@JeffSchwenneker2 ай бұрын
Mrs king is awesome
@JeffSchwenneker2 ай бұрын
Mrs king is awesome
@pennymitchell85232 ай бұрын
I have been fascinated by bog people since I was 6yrs old. My aunt and uncle had a book about the bog people and stayed with me. When in Denmark from Australia it was on the list of must sees
@TheGiacchina2 ай бұрын
So moving.
@TheGiacchina2 ай бұрын
The people in these videos are always so grateful to know the truth, even when it is not always pleasant. I love the look on this woman's face--it's so peaceful and lovely.
@TheGiacchina2 ай бұрын
Such a joyful event!! So happy for them!
@MaryKelly-ji8ve2 ай бұрын
Alot of the time its not the mums fault either
@annazaman96572 ай бұрын
So any updates?
@1littlekrissy2 ай бұрын
King Richard III is my 1st cousin 15 times through his mother's side.