WATCH: The coronavirus left this grandfather jobless, now he's a YouTube star

Screengrab from YouTube/Tito Charly

Screengrab from YouTube/Tito Charly

Published Jun 26, 2020

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Mexico City - A 78-year-old Mexican man has become a YouTube

cooking star after the coronavirus pandemic forced him to stay at

home.

"This has been a boom. I try to make people have fun, that's what's

most important to me," said Carlos Elizondo Frias, who is known by

his 420,000 subscribers as Tito Charly.

Most of his nine YouTube videos show him working in his kitchen,

making dishes such as dried meat, grilled cheese, sausages and

hotcakes.

The joyful videos, in which he once even breaks into a dance, have

received 1.3 million visits on YouTube.

The widowed father of three daughters and grandfather of six had been

an entrepreneur all his life.

He had a transport company and then dedicated himself to providing

electricity to buildings under construction.

After Elizondo retired and his daughters married, he took a job as a

packer at a supermarket to keep company with other elderly people

working there and to earn a couple of extra pesos.

But when the coronavirus hit, the elderly packers - who are among the

most at risk - were sent home, and Elizondo suddenly had nothing to

do.

"I'm so active that in just a moment I had cleaned the whole

house," Elizondo told dpa from Monterrey, 900 kilometres north of

Mexico City.

His youngest daughter, Veronica, and her son had the idea of a

YouTube channel and Elizondo started appearing in videos shot partly

by Veronica, whose voice can sometimes be heard in the background.

"He likes the good life. I remember that since I was little, he liked

to make people happy," the 47-year-old daughter said.

For the time being, Elizondo is only putting out a video every

Sunday, but he says he may start publishing another one during the

week due to the high demand.

The YouTube channel has also helped family friends who use it to

market their home-made sausages, cheese and marmelade.

Surprised by his success, Elizondo does not yet know what he'll do

when the pandemic subsides. "Whatever will come. However things

develop. I don't particularly want to grow - what I care about is

having fun."

dpa

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