Two Cubans receive praise for their entertaining live "commentary" on a police chase in Broward.

"They deserve an Emmy!" joked an internet user to praise the way Cubans described the scene live.


Two Cubans triumphed on social media as casual narrators of a thrilling police chase that they witnessed live.

"The police turned on him"; "Damn..., come on, hurry up, old man!"; "Look at where he jumped"; "Oh no, are there two?"; "They're going to take him down"; "They already took him down, completely," were some of the phrases with which witnesses of the scene won over dozens of internet users who praised the spontaneity - not without a touch of comedy - with which they recounted the incident.

"They deserve an Emmy!" joked an internet user to praise the way Cubans described the event live.

"The narration made the video more interesting"; "Cuba in the house! The best narration of events of the year!"; "The narration couldn't be more Cuban"; "I need these guys to comment on everything, hahaha," were other opinions.

Others focused on the ability of the Cuban who recorded the images, who captured the best shots.

"Not even CNN would have a better shot"; "Great camera work"; "Cameramen"; "Finally a cameraman who understood the task"; "This is how you shoot... learn," were some of the praises for the video, published on the popular Instagram account Only in Dade.

"A vehicle involved in a shooting in Pompano led Broward police on a chase to the exit ramp of Yamato and I-95, where they ultimately executed a PIT maneuver to bring it to an end," the cited source mentioned regarding the incident itself.

The images that Cubans documented in voice and pictures show a police car following a dark-colored truck.

Suddenly, a strong maneuver by another police vehicle that was not a patrol favored the PIT (Precision Immobilization Technique), a technique used mainly by law enforcement to stop moving vehicles in a controlled manner.

As seen in the images, it consists of the police vehicle deliberately hitting one of the rear corners of the car that is to be stopped, usually at low speed. This causes the target car to lose control and spin, eventually coming to a stop.

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