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Home » We Need To Talk: w/ Dami Hope on Break Up with Indiyah (Transcript)

We Need To Talk: w/ Dami Hope on Break Up with Indiyah (Transcript)

Editor’s Notes: In this powerful and exclusive episode of We Need To Talk, Love Island star Dami Hope sits down for a deeply personal conversation about the end of his three-year relationship with Indiyah Polack. Dami opens up about the moment his world shifted after Indiyah was spotted with another star, sharing his perspective on why “her story didn’t add up.” Beyond the headlines, the interview delves into Dami’s life before fame, the profound impact of his father’s passing, and the unwavering importance he places on loyalty. It is a raw look at heartbreak, growth, and the man behind the public persona. (April 21, 2026)

TRANSCRIPT:

Introduction

PAUL C. BRUNSON: Dami Hope, we need to talk.

DAMI HOPE: Sweet.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: I haven’t seen you to sit down to do a long-form interview like this.

DAMI HOPE: This is my first ever one. I feel like there’s certain reasons why I actually stepped away from doing things like this.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: Okay.

DAMI HOPE: Yeah, so. Okay.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: So why talk now?

DAMI HOPE: Why talk now? It’s ’cause I feel like I have a lot to just get out. So it’s not even to try and convince anybody, “Oh, I’m this or I’m this person.” It’s just to actually speak my truth. And you can take away whatever it is that you want from it, but hopefully you actually take an actual understanding of me. Okay, that makes sense.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: I love it. I love it. So I think in order to get to know who you are, let’s go to the roots.

DAMI HOPE: To the roots.

Nigerian Roots and Moving to Ireland

PAUL C. BRUNSON: The roots. And I feel like the roots are Nigeria.

DAMI HOPE: The roots are Nigeria. And it’s something I’m proud of. I’m proud of being Nigerian. I’m proud of my family. I’m proud of what my family did to try to give us a better life. Because my dad was a dreamer. He’s the reason why we probably migrated to Ireland.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: Yes.

DAMI HOPE: And just as a kid, I can remember flashes of me getting to this point where we’re in Ireland, obviously probably not legally or whatever way, because we’re very clever people.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: Very clever.

DAMI HOPE: Very clever people. So obviously there’s a plan in place to how to make sure we’re able to stay here. And I feel like back in them days was a bit easier.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: Yes.

DAMI HOPE: As opposed to now.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: Because this is the ’90s?

DAMI HOPE: Yeah, yeah. I say ’90s, I was born ’96.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: Okay.

DAMI HOPE: I think I was in Nigeria till maybe I was about 3 years old. And from there I remember me and my little sister, she was 2 years after me, so it was just me and her. And then it was me and my mom and then my dad. And then he’d bring us over to Ireland.

And I remember, I think at first we used to live in a hostel with like a bunch of loads of different people. Because obviously when you come to this place, it’s like you’re trying to find a place for your family and for yourself. And I remember little flashes of just, as a kid, you can remember just little dots of moments of like, “Oh, I’m in this hostel.” I can see my mom playing chess with people that she’s just making friends with in this situation.

And I know everybody was against him doing this because I remember my grandmother told me, because my mom is from my grandmother’s side, and she told— she was like, “You don’t have to go and do all these things.” But obviously he wanted to make something out of himself, for the family.

I remember this memory with my dad. I was sitting on my dad’s lap, and he has a car, and I’m sitting on the lap, and my hands are holding it, but he’s there, and I’m only like— I think at this point I’m only even just 5 years old. But it’s a very vivid and clear imagery I have of him.

And then I remember alongside that, we finally got an estate house.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: Okay.

DAMI HOPE: So now we actually got a place and it was like maybe 3 bedrooms. It was like our first home there. And we’re shifting from one house to another house. It’s just me and my sister until obviously they start adding the new members. Now, that’s the clever part for why we’re going to be able to stay here or whatever.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: Yes.

DAMI HOPE: So they start adding them and then, you know.

PAUL C. BRUNSON: Can we expand on that? Because I get what you’re saying. But if you could paint the picture, because I don’t think your family is going to get in trouble because almost everybody was doing that. Yeah. So it was you and your sister.

DAMI HOPE: It was me and my sister first. We were Nigerian, we came from Nigeria. And then I think we had my younger brother and he was now Irish. Now he was born in Ireland. And then every other sibling we had after that, me and my sister don’t have any Irish or English names. But those lot, they got the names too. Like he got David, they got Cynthia, they got Amanda. Me, it’s just Femi and Dami, you know what I mean? It’s just straight, straight Nigerians. But the ones that came with the Irish passport, they got the Irish names. They got the names too. You get me?

The Celtic Tiger and Family Life in Ireland

PAUL C. BRUNSON: Yeah, definitely. So with you coming in, I wanted to— I looked at that period of the late 1990s, early 2000s in Ireland. One, because I’m just fascinated about Ireland, but secondly, because you were coming. And I saw that that period was called the Celtic Tiger, where Ireland traditionally had very high rates of unemployment.