vierailija
"Ä" and "ö" shouldn't be too hard. The former is in plenty of English words like "cat" (a bit longer in "can't" with an American accent) and "ö" is also fairly common, like "hurt" and "bird". Y is tricky though as not many languages have it (in Finnish it's neither "i" or "j"), let alone diftongs like yö or Pöyhönen.Yes, B can pronounce the V-word just fine (he did that at one of the Finnish concerts: after K swore in his speech after Ccc B said something like he's not sure what Jere said, but that he could understand v**** and s******). Words with "ä" and "ö" in them are a lot harder though, even if you're great at learning languages, that's why this sounds a bit funny. He's confusing the words for day "päivä" and night "yö". Can't for the life of me understand how the interviewer isn't getting it though...
I mean, B says it's supposed to mean good day or smth.