The world’s longest read-aloud marathon has been accomplished by Samson Ajao, a Nigerian from Osogbo who is 27 years old. He completed the reading aloud for a total of 215 hours, which is just one hour short of nine full days.
In the year 2022, Rysbai Isakov, who was from Kyrgyzstan, established the previous record, which was 124 hours.
For the challenger to attain this record, they need to read out loud from published works in a continuous manner, with no more than a thirty-second silence in between each item that is read.
The total number of books that Samson read was approximately one hundred, and they covered a wide range of topics, including money, sales, management, leadership, politics, health, and mental wellness.
His goal was to “inspire a reading culture” in Nigeria and to encourage the development of literacy skills through the use of this record.
The Speaker of the House of Assembly for the state of Osun, Ngozi Adeleke, and the Commissioner of Education, Dipo Eluwole, were among the many individuals who came to catch Samson’s performance during his bid to break the record.
Samson accumulated five minutes of rest time after each hour of reading, which brought his total amount of rest time per day to two hours. This was done under our standards for all “longest marathon” records. Eat, sleep, use the lavatory and change his clothes were all things that he could only do during these periods.
Samson disclosed in a recent interview that he didn’t get any sleep during his breaks.
He said: “Even when it’s tough, you have to get going to meet your target.”
Samson also revealed that he asked medical experts for advice before the attempt to set a record on what foods and beverages would help him maintain his voice and reduce the amount of bathroom breaks he would require. Samson and his followers celebrated by parading down the street after winning the “read-a-thon.”
Starting in 1987, Englishman Adrian Hilton performed the whole of Shakespeare’s works in a “bard-a-thon” spanning 110 hours 46 minutes.
After reaching a time of 113 hours 15 min, Nepal’s Deepak Sharma Bajagain won the championship in 2008; previous record holder Rysbai Isakov about 11 hours improved upon.
Now Samson’s record dwarfs those amazing achievements. Apart from being the longest marathon reading aloud worldwide, it is among the longest marathon record attempts in Guinness World Records history; only DJ Faber Moreira’s 10-day DJ-ing marathon has exceeded it recently.