 In response to comments from our viewers regarding a special package we brought to you last week, we would like to take a look at it again for our viewers who reached out to us for a repeat. Now, would you like to work in the same office with your spouse? And if you did, will the two of you be best friends or take your fights to work? Well, there are people who work together and go to the same home together. Plus TV Africa's Jacinta Obuquo caught up with a broadcasting power couple on one hand and a mechanic couple on the other hand. Their stories. This is how these two on-air personalities resumed their dream career jobs together every day. Collins and Adreah Teke were renowned individual broadcasters before they fell in love and caught married. Not few people think that relationships are hard enough to deal with on their own. And when you throw walking together into the mix, it can get even tricker. One interesting thing about the tickets is how seamless the couple anchors the same show together. A first of its kind in an angelic video. They didn't always work together. Collins used to run a production studio and it was at work that he met Andrea. I needed a female voice. The client demanded for a specific female voice. That sounded a setting way and explained it to one of my staff or team members at the time. And he said, no, I know this lady. This lady, she has a great voice. It's fantastic. She's beautiful. She's a boss. Women like the bibs, you know, that kind of thing. And I said, okay, let's let's hear. Before you know it, or the phone call before you know it. And then Pat was timely. She came into the studio working, you know, she just stole the presence of the room like, you know, and I couldn't do anything. I didn't have anything in mind because at the time I was in another relationship. What happens at home? Does Andrea take up the role of a traditional African wife and mom? I'm not sure that I would be able to meet up if he has not been the way he has been, that is being super supportive. So we share that responsibility. It's more like sharing the responsibility at home and also sharing the responsibility at work. So it makes it easy for me. When we started working together, because I had a better understanding, this is not a situation of me going to work, coming home. Oh, what's that for daddy? It is a situation of you are going to work together. We have to leave at the same time on time and then do our show. We have to prep afterwards, do everything together. So I can't go back home and start saying, where's my food? Where's my food from? Spending time together may be good for their relationship, but this couple also faces challenges, especially in maintaining their individual identities. It took a wife of people to recognize my presence because at the end of the day, you are his wife. You are supposed to come down when he's talking. You're supposed to be quiet when he's talking. And you know, this is my job. I was a broadcaster before I got married to him. And so it is my job first. And that's what people took a while to embrace. Especially when you're in public space, people tend to just make what they make out of the situation to whatever you present is what they get. So before you know it, your individual brand starts sinking in the joint brand. Sharing an office space requires this couple having as little time away from each other as possible, as nefs may become afraid. We have to create the fun. Exactly what I was going to say. And make it a fun field. That's what we do. That's what we create our fun. We create our fun. Even though we see ourselves each other, we see each other almost all the time, we intentionally create our fun. A number of private organizations don't allow their staff get romantically linked. Collins shares his view about this. It's a world that is changing from, you know, what it used to be making laws just because you want to make laws, but doing it for the best interest in the best interest of those involved. So it's a question of, you know, the interest of those involved. I don't think it changes anything. If anything, couples working together has proven, at least in our case, that it promotes bonding. It also promotes, in fact, I've been a better broadcaster, you know, from the moment she drives the radio and even the listeners notice that. From the office of the techist, we head to the home of another interesting couple that has been into automobile mechanics for many years. Wally and Tyre of Shifuya have been married for 10 years and working together in repairing vehicles. This home doubles as one of their workshops in Liga's. Marin Wally was a dream come true for Tyre. This work started through my husband. Even when we were doing courtship, he has been on the field. I was not on the field, but I loved the job. So after we get married, I have to join him so that we can work in together because it's what I've been willing to do for long. And I just love that job. I just love it because when I was small, it's my dad's feed. So I used to assist my dad when I was in primary, secondary school. So it's got me the glory after my school and everything, getting married, going out, give me someone that I love and the field I love most. Meet my wife. We married together. And I have to tell my wife that this is the kind of work that I'm doing. And because someone that I love so much and she loved the work. So when I say, well, I have to tell him to come and quit where he's working before. There's one company that's working and managing the company and she agrees with me. She surrenders. She says, okay, she quit from there and we joined the work together. And time got for now. The home of Oshikoyaz's well-managed according to a lady mechanic, Astayo, is scored. My work did not disturb my home at all. Even when I stay behind, maybe we close very legs. My husband will tell me very early that we'll go home. Children are home. They have off from school, go home. My husband will be doing the job. By the second day early in the morning, we'll go to balance off the job. Personal and marital issue and not allowed to link into the workspace. We both have our hops and dance, but it doesn't affect our business. Our hops and dance is inside our room. Once we are in the same bed together, our hops and dance is off. It doesn't affect our work. Customers cannot even see it in my face. Sometimes we'll fight. We'll fight. We'll call each other. Go and do this work. We say, ah, I'm tired. Each can tired. My friend, you have to do it too. You don't say I'm your boss. Say, okay, okay. You don't know that I'm tired. I'm a woman. You have to do it because you love the job. You say, okay, okay, okay. And you do it. Wale and Tayo have had to endure side talks from people who think their line of profession is strange. There's one man I used to work with him. He just called me and said, Wale, I said, sir. He said, why are your wives used to following your pandan? I said, sir, my wife is my colleagues. But I said, ah, why are you following your husband? Why do you tell your husband to open a supermarket for you and do business and selling under the same month? That's your own time. This is my own time. If I'm going out now, wash my body, clean my hands, you won't believe that this person is a mechanic. I fix fingers as well. I do make-ups if I'm going out. You won't even believe that I am a mechanic. Our findings point that some couple craft go away to try even love and work by understanding each transition and knowing what questions to ask and what traps to avoid. Just seem to have a beautiful close to the Africa.