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  • 7/4/2025

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Transcript
00:00In this video, we're going to help 2,000 people walk again!
00:04The video you are about to watch is unlike anything we've ever done.
00:09Walking is something most of us take for granted every day.
00:13But for millions of amputees all around the world, they don't have that same luxury.
00:18But in this video, for 2,000 people, that is about to change.
00:22I had an accident back in 2020 and I shattered both my ankles.
00:26When he first got sick, they didn't even think he would live another year.
00:31I was in a car wreck when I was 17. That's how I lost my feet.
00:34And to kick things off, we're going to help Stephanie.
00:37Hi!
00:38How's it going?
00:39Good!
00:39We're so excited you're here.
00:41I'm so nervous.
00:42How long has it been since you've been able to walk on your own?
00:45Um, I have not walked on my own since 2009.
00:48Almost 15 years since you've been able to walk on your own.
00:51Yeah.
00:51Wow.
00:52Well, we might have something that can change that.
00:54This is your brand new leg. Here you go.
00:57Thank you!
00:58What do you think of this?
00:59Oh my gosh, I love her!
01:00Are you ready to try it on?
01:01I am.
01:02Okay, let's slide it on in.
01:04Okay, what do you think?
01:06It feels wonderful.
01:07All right, you ready to stand up?
01:09Wow.
01:10Wow.
01:13For the first time in 15 years, Stephanie is actually walking.
01:19Oh, it's wonderful. That's my dad's.
01:22Oh, it's nice.
01:25Woo-hoo.
01:27Does it warm your heart to be able to see her move around again?
01:29Yes.
01:31Very much so.
01:32I'm just glad that she's going to be able to get to do something she wants to.
01:36Not be a prisoner anymore.
01:38You guys can look each other in the eyes now.
01:40We can dance.
01:42And that's exactly what they did.
01:44It felt so good to be able to help Stephanie and her family.
01:51So we did the same thing for Khalid.
01:53It's been seven months since you were able to walk.
01:56I'm ready.
01:57Let's do it.
01:58It's amazing to have another chance.
02:01And we helped David, Adrian, Linda, and Carrie.
02:05But to be honest, we could not have pulled this off without the help of some incredible people.
02:10We've replaced limbs that people have lost.
02:13What's a typical cost for someone to get, like, a prosthesis like this?
02:16Anywhere from $5,000 to $50,000.
02:19And it sounds crazy, but most of the people in this video either cannot afford insurance
02:23or did not have adequate coverage.
02:25Meaning, if we didn't step in, they might not have ever walked again.
02:29And if insurance doesn't cover that, what do you do?
02:31You hope and fundraise and pray that someone like you comes along?
02:35This would take me about 10 years.
02:37Wait, to buy this on your own would have taken 10 years?
02:40Yes.
02:41That's...
02:41Chandler!
02:43Obviously, that's not okay.
02:45So we're going to send you home with $10,000.
02:47No!
02:51This is a deal in my life I would never forget.
02:55No problem.
02:56You came in with one leg, and now you're leaving with two and a briefcase full of money.
03:01Best day of my life.
03:02Oh, man, it feels awesome.
03:04It feels so real, like it's part of me.
03:07You can walk again, and you don't have the financial burden.
03:10This is life-changing.
03:11Here I am now.
03:12I'm very thankful.
03:13As we learn through this process, when you lose your ability to walk,
03:16you also lose the ability to do life's most basic tasks,
03:20something that Greg knows all too well.
03:22Everything's twice as hard as it used to be.
03:24I played tennis all the time with the family,
03:27but I'd be happy just being able to stand up and do the dishes.
03:29Okay, let's see how your new leg fits.
03:32All right, he's getting right into it.
03:34It's a good feeling to stand up.
03:36All right.
03:37Whoa, how does it feel?
03:40I'll tell you what, it makes you smile.
03:42When you're an amputee,
03:44everyday activities can feel like insurmountable tasks.
03:48But for Travis, there's a special occasion coming up
03:50that he just can't do sitting down.
03:53My daughter's been planning a wedding since she was three, four years old.
03:57I've always dreamed of having my dad walk me down the aisle.
04:03Do you mind telling us a little bit about yourself?
04:06Yeah, I used to run six, seven days a week if I was bored.
04:10And I was in a car wreck when I was 17.
04:13I had osteomyelitis, and that's how I lost my feet.
04:16How long has it been since you were able to walk normally?
04:20I don't know what normal way is anymore.
04:24Are you guys excited to see him walk again?
04:25Yeah, super excited.
04:27Here's your right leg.
04:28Here you go.
04:29And here's the left leg.
04:32This is awesome.
04:34You got this.
04:35First step.
04:38You want to go for it?
04:41Wow.
04:41He's walking better than some of the people with one leg.
04:45You're making this look easy.
04:46I'm just ready to start running.
04:48What's it like to see him walking?
04:49It's awesome.
04:51I'm excited.
04:52No hands.
04:53No hands.
04:55Now you can walk her down the aisle.
04:57Yeah.
04:58Walk her down the aisle, have a father-daughter dance.
05:01I know this wedding is important to all of you,
05:03which is why I asked your soon-to-be husband
05:05how much the wedding would cost.
05:08And on this wheelchair is the exact amount.
05:11We're going to cover the entire cost of your wedding,
05:14and now your dad can join you down the aisle.
05:19Thank you for not telling her.
05:20I really appreciate it.
05:21Thank you so much.
05:22The real question, though, is are we invited?
05:24Yeah.
05:25Got to bring some feastables.
05:26Oh, deal.
05:27And he wasn't kidding.
05:28Later in this video, we actually do go to Travis's daughter's wedding.
05:31And while we're paying for all the prosthetics in this video,
05:34that won't always be the case.
05:36And while $5,000 to $50,000 is already too expensive for most people,
05:40that price tag is felt even heavier in developing countries.
05:43Which is what brought me to Guatemala to meet David,
05:46who founded the Range of Motion Project
05:48to address the lack of prosthetics for the underprivileged.
05:51One of the ways that prosthetic care gets delivered to the poor
05:54is poor technology.
05:56So what makes it so expensive?
05:58Very expensive pieces of technology.
05:59And David found a simple way to maintain quality
06:03at only one-tenth the cost.
06:05Everything that you see here
06:06is part of our global inventory of recycled components.
06:09So everything in this room is recycled from some other prosthetic.
06:13A lot of it is still functional.
06:14So if you have a prosthetic that you want to donate
06:16so he can use it to help more people,
06:18just go to this website right here.
06:19That's how he's able to make it so cheap
06:21so he can help the poorest of the poor all around the world.
06:24And for us, that means we can help even more people
06:26get back to their full lives here in Guatemala.
06:28From everything, as adventurous as riding motorcycles.
06:34You're making this look easy.
06:35Playing soccer.
06:37Down to the smallest pleasures of life.
06:40You guys are adorable.
06:47You're taller than your mom.
06:51Like hugging your family.
06:53How's it going, everybody?
06:54Let's take our first step together.
06:56Or watching a child reclaim their independence.
06:59At any stage of life, a new limb can mean everything.
07:04And by the end of the day, we had helped so many people.
07:07But our mission was just getting started.
07:09You were saying some people can't even make it to the facility.
07:12It's just a mountainous, tough country to travel in.
07:15Rivers that people have to cross.
07:16Jungles that people have to get through.
07:18Not being able to walk is really kind of trapping patients in their homes.
07:22Which is why David sometimes has to leave the clinic
07:25and visit the patients in their own home.
07:27Which comes with its own difficulties.
07:29Where's your truck at?
07:30I thought we're taking your guys' cars.
07:34No, no, no.
07:34We don't have a truck.
07:35You don't have a truck to go reach these people in remote places?
07:39No.
07:39With the bulk of ROMP's resources going into staffing
07:42and the prosthetics themselves,
07:43they can't afford reliable transportation to get to hard-to-reach patients.
07:47That is, until now.
07:49I could have sworn that was your truck.
07:52If it's not, why does it say ROMP on the side?
07:56We worked with the staff.
07:57None of them told them.
07:58This brand new $65,000 truck is fully equipped
08:02to traverse even the most difficult terrain.
08:05Thank you guys.
08:06Congrats, man.
08:06Let's go break it in by giving away some legs.
08:08All right.
08:09And the further away we got from the bustling streets of Guatemala City,
08:12I realized David wasn't kidding
08:14when he said these places were hard to get to.
08:17As we headed to a home located on the side of a literal volcano
08:21in the middle of the jungle.
08:23I now understand why this truck was so valuable.
08:25Oh my.
08:26Yeah, I could not imagine driving a normal car down this road.
08:31We finally made it here.
08:32And our journey up the volcano brought us here to meet Kevin.
08:35Hola.
08:36Who was left severely burned
08:37and without either of his legs in an accident 24 years ago.
08:41You're living on the side of a volcano.
08:43How do you get around?
08:44This is very difficult terrain.
08:45It's too rough for him,
08:48so someone actually does need to push him in a wheelchair.
08:51And that ends today.
08:53Gracias.
08:55You're about to take your first step.
09:03All right, now we're walking down the side of the volcano.
09:05Come on over here, mom.
09:08Aw.
09:09Thank you very much.
09:12There are many people who sometimes have difficulties.
09:14And thank you to the creator for putting them on our paths.
09:18That made Kevin the 71st person we've helped walk again.
09:24And David and I took that momentum with us
09:26to help even more people over here in Ecuador.
09:29Like Kelly, who spent six days busing from Bolivia to here,
09:34not even knowing if she would get a prosthetic.
09:40This is why we're doing this video right here.
09:46All right.
09:46It's been two years since you walked.
09:49It's a big moment.
09:51You want to take your first step?
09:59Kelly was so happy to be walking again
10:01that she then asked this.
10:02Can I dance?
10:03Can I dance?
10:04Yes.
10:05Yes.
10:05I can accompany me.
10:07You want me to dance?
10:08Yes.
10:09Oh, boy.
10:10I don't know what I'm doing.
10:11You wouldn't even believe.
10:12This is her first time walking in two years.
10:14She's already dancing.
10:15What?
10:16There are some appearances.
10:17And even though I clearly don't know how to dance,
10:20watching this family be reunited with such an important part of their past
10:24meant the world to me.
10:25Oh, gracias, gracias.
10:26And as for Eduardo, he had a really touching reaction to kidding his new leg.
10:30Oh, he kissed it.
10:31That was adorable.
10:33He hasn't walked in months, which is obviously a shame because he's only five years old.
10:37It's a big moment.
10:38Whenever you're ready, Eduardo.
10:39The mom was saying that he would have to drag himself around and was even embarrassed of
10:44not having the leg.
10:45So to see him moving like this is wonderful.
10:48Here you go.
10:49All right, you want to throw it on?
10:51What's it like seeing your daughter walk again?
10:53I mean, look at this.
10:56She hasn't walked in over a year.
10:58This is honestly my favorite video.
10:59This is crazy.
11:01Hola.
11:01How's it going?
11:02Santo Dios.
11:04Wow.
11:05Que tal muy bien.
11:07Meeting Fede is cool and all, but the real reason we're here is your brand new prosthetic.
11:11This is all yours, 100% free.
11:14Muchas gracias.
11:15Muchísimas gracias.
11:15Estoy agradecida.
11:18Que se siente caminar de vuelta.
11:21Una felicidad enorme.
11:22And to further inspire strength, in the 50 amputees we helped here in Ecuador, David
11:28shared with us one of his favorite rituals.
11:30We love to take them hiking on that mountain.
11:34And now we're going to climb this mountain to break in their new prosthetics.
11:37If they can climb this mountain, they can get through daily life.
11:40I can see the symbolism of this task.
11:42Let the journey begin.
11:44All right.
11:46This is actually pretty hard.
11:47This guy went from not walking to literally hiking up a mountain.
11:50I mean, it's truly amazing.
11:51You really like to challenge these patients.
11:54If you can reach a new height, reach a new summit with a disability, you might feel that
11:59anything else is possible.
12:01And I saw just that.
12:02The amount of persistence and ambition that these amputees showcased was unlike anything
12:06I had seen before.
12:07This is what this trip is all about.
12:09He's refusing to give up.
12:10I'll be honest.
12:11I didn't fully understand why we were climbing this mountain, but now I get it.
12:15It's to show them that if they can climb this mountain, they can essentially overcome
12:18anything with their brand new prosthetics.
12:21We made it to the top.
12:22Yeah.
12:23Woo.
12:24Good job.
12:28If you guys can hike this mountain, you can do anything.
12:30I'm proud of you.
12:31Proud of you guys.
12:33And our reward now is this beautiful view.
12:35Now we're going to head all the way over to Kenya, where we found a bunch of kids who still
12:41had their legs, but needed expensive surgeries to be able to use them, which of course, we
12:45paid for.
12:46Look at that.
12:47Before the surgery, some of these kids have never walked their entire lives.
12:50And now look at them.
12:51When I tried to walk, I can't find myself, they were not knowing where I felt them.
12:56I was being left by my fellow students.
13:01So sometimes I couldn't go to school.
13:05How did that feel, taking your first steps?
13:07If I can look like the other people, so this makes me so happy.
13:11And along with providing these life-changing surgeries, we also provided a brand new playroom
13:16at this clinic for the kids to enjoy.
13:18Come check out the new playroom.
13:22And at this point, I'm going to pick up the pace a little bit, because after Kenya, we went
13:26all over Africa, helping people walk again.
13:30My family, my financial status, and everything I know is going to change.
13:34And from there, we went to the Philippines, Cambodia, and Sri Lanka.
13:38Thank you so much for helping us.
13:41Thank you very much.
13:43It's like a second chance for me.
13:44I feel alive again.
13:45My heart is shaking.
13:47And after visiting countries all around the world and witnessing 2,000 first steps, I'm
13:52glad to say we could help change the lives of so many people all across the world.
13:56But as you'll remember from earlier in this video, we still have a wedding we need to
14:00attend, which is weirder.
14:01The fact that we're at a wedding of people we met 24 hours ago, or Nolan's shirt.
14:05Oh, Nolan's shirt.
14:06100%.
14:06What is this little rope?
14:09All right.
14:10Travis is about to walk his daughter down the aisle.
14:12Let's see if his brand new legs work.
14:14It's a big moment.
14:15I've always dreamed of having my dad walk me down the aisle.
14:19I'm about to cry, dude.
14:30This is awesome.
14:34Now I'm happy to give you all Mr. and Mrs. Anderson.
14:40Watching Travis walk his daughter down the aisle made me reflect on all the people's lives
14:45who were impacted throughout this video.
14:47I was able to walk her down the aisle.
14:49It was just amazing.
14:50Thank you guys so much.
14:51Hey guys, I wanted to end this video a little differently than normal.
14:56And I wanted to say that the fact that some of these people had insurance and were denied,
15:00some of these people had insurance but didn't have the right coverage, it just doesn't sit
15:03right with me.
15:04Their only hope right now of getting a prosthetic leg so they can walk again, so they can go get
15:08a job is for a YouTuber to step in and help them, which is absurd.
15:13I don't know what the answer is, but I wanted to say this so the 100 million people watching
15:17this can get inspired because what I saw when filming this video is just obviously not okay.
15:23So anyways, thanks for watching.

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