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tv   [untitled]    December 25, 2021 3:30pm-4:01pm AST

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to come to him, his self, the central cup to him to was the presidential polish. and we've been told that they are there. they are now about 100, a few 100 meters away from the, from the presidential poly start study. they just, we have seen that happening last time. suddenly, bridges were opened. everybody is to ask questions about what happened and how it happened last time. but now we have this huge push from within the cup of the central cops or cartoon itself. apparently, some of the protesters were able to move probably yesterday, or overnight to this area because they know the bridges will be closed. so they move into the central area of cartoon to the south and they are pushing. there was a presidential police about one kilometer away from it. as i speak. we only have about 2 minutes left of this bulletin mohammed just quickly tell us about the mood of the protest. is there seems to be relatively peaceful, same from what we're saying live from cartoon. well,
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that's usually the case until they get attacked by the security forces. we have seen a pop up in sudan protest as usually don't resort to violence on their own. and that what they do is a kind of reaction when they are taught by security forces. and the way they do that is they, they burn tiles and they sometimes is a proxy to police many reaction. but until they are, until they are blocked, passage is blocked, they remain calm and they continue to march to was the destination where they are supposed to make a city. and if they want to do a sitting a sitting or they just want to deliver a message to the oddities so far, that's, that's the case. they are marching peacefully and slowly towards the presidential police. and we are expecting no doubt about it, but they will be met with violence while we appreciate that update and we'll speak sure at the top of the hour with more developments,
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no doubt. thank you very much. mohammed val live for us in cartoon. and just returning to our top story now, the james web space telescope has successfully all voted in to space, is going to take 27 minutes to ascend into and controlled explosions. that's it. taking off just a few minutes ago to avoid back to the birth of the project has taken about 30 years to design and build. and it's regarded as one of the grand scientific endeavors of the 21st century. and we'll have all that news and more coming up in the news hour at 13, at jam taste. so please stay with us. in the meantime, those are the headlines you can head to our website outages, era dot com, in case you want to get all the latest information. but in the meantime, stay with us. we'll have all the latest news shortly. ah,
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ah mm. welcome to portal, i am sandra. gotten back with more great content from the digital side of al jazeera . that's our website, social media and podcast. now for many people around the world, this is a festive time of year. so this week we've got a mix of stories that all have something uplifting about them. call it art, feel good episode if you want. we've got a story from jordan about female footballers, you surprise themselves and the people around them with the power of sports. and we'll show you a beautiful film from italy about a photographer taking an old school approach. and by that, i mean, really old school with a camera from 19 o 7. the cameras are for later in the show, we're actually going to start with refrigerators. because all across the u. s. fridges full of free food have been popping up on street corners. the idea is you take what you need and you donate what you can in this episode of the 80 plus
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series, eat this jamara. alum? sure. he goes to philadelphia to see how it all works. ah, this is me opening a fridge in the middle of the street in philadelphia, and it's bursting with free food. here's another one, and another one, and another one, b yogurt. o waffles. nope, and again, all the food is completely free. these are community fridges, basically bridges full of free food that anyone can help themselves to. they're popping up in major cities all around the world, from bangkok to one osiris. and there's a ton of them here and feeling. many of these community fridges were started as a local form of covered relief. helping neighbor struggling to feed themselves during the pender. but now they've become a massive grassroots movement for food justice. a lot of supermarket close in our community storefront on the ferry state were knocked out. how can you expect that surprise when you are not allowing us to? hi, i'm your and i'm here to talk to the organizers behind this 900 pound fridge,
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a fridge. they say gives out 1200 pounds of food every week. it's a story about how a community came together to help one another when the powers that be couldn't act fast enough. if that left over aid at law, you can have whatever i don't need, whatever i have you have and whatever you have i have. and that's what makes it mutual aid. i'm traveling to west philadelphia to check out the people's fridge and find out how community fridge works and what it takes to keep it running. you fill it when you can, and we'll take from it when you need it. that's on him per week. sony has been running the people's fridge with their sister sonia, since they opened it in september 2020. and it's such a simple idea. anybody will feel that they are able to come if you can contribute. it's kind of an autonomous zone for a given the food isn't given, right? everybody should be able to access food at all times the longest. i'm thinking fan, the friend has like an hour and a half maybe can stay or like literally say day before someone or someone takes it
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yet. it's not just sonya and so on him. we're working on the fridge. we have an incredible team of volunteers who put in some serious hours to keep this thing running. we do grocery runs around like 9 am full t m and then 3 p. m. and then we do it like at night time run, which is really, really important to do. that's when supermarkets, clear out their stocks outside of us. there's about 60 hours of labor put into the bridge on a weekly basis, at least. and of course, the fridge couldn't run without electricity. that comes from mean as a cafe in community space that sony owns with their partner key a car. but electricity isn't the only thing that powers the people's fridge. it needs a lot of food, since donations alone aren't enough to keep the people's fridge operating. we're heading out on a grocery room for sonya and sonya, the people's fridges about more than just keeping people flu, to survive off, or try to make things read in like work together somehow, but people can create meals. we the thought, 360 ag, 30 count in 30 carton leg. 1200 baby carriage. we bought
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about 48 apple. this is a very thoughtful sort of purchase of produce. it's really important not to just tell people. here is what's left over here. is what you've asked for here, the ingredients that you specifically requested from me. we have for the immigrant population in west philadelphia and as the children of immigrants, it feels really good sometimes to see something from home in a place that isn't at home. you saw a lot of community for just during our time in philly. most of them are well stocked with good nutritious food. this was pretty good, apples onions, pasta. most of all the bridges to use the service in their community. so there's a specific philosophy behind the people's fridge. more on that later. for now, we're heading over to village produce. it's like a truck market. it's like an impromptu ad hoc truck market to grab some more fruits and veggies that you might not find in your typical supermarket. better men?
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oh, wow. maybe on coconut. we got a how much do you guys spend on the bridge every week? we probably send $3500.00 a week. wow. yeah. every week. that's a lot of money, which mostly comes from grants and demo donations. anyway, after that, we loaded up the truck and i did my best to help. oh, that's pretty perfectly, i think, until i was invited to stop helping you do good at the interview. i thought it might be my then headed back to the fridge to fill it out. that long after we started loading up the shelves, people were arriving to see what the fridge had in store. and suddenly folks showed up to drop off even more supplies. so cool, so many people are shown up to donate food. this is like better cale to the supermarket. now my uses the people's fridge. i spoke to some of the folks stopping
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by to find out we had a very, very hard month where the health related financial needs that, that really impacted our budgets. when i come from a home, it is great, it keep me. lou delfiner is one of the poorest major cities in the u. s. as of 2018, nearly a quarter of philadelphians lived in poverty. the city council had an action plan in place to help 100000 people out of poverty by 2024. but then the pandemic happened. a lack of healthy shopping choices was already a problem in philadelphia. and as the spread of coven 19 worsened, started to close down a lot of food spaces shut down in our community, having no place to buy food is its own agony in 3 months into the pandemic. 90000 pennsylvania workers still have not received any unemployment benefits. when
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the stimulus checks finally came through, it was too little too late. as it was for many americans, a number of things and fire the freds, there is a huge uptake and placed violent. there was a pandemic that was logo and personally affecting black and brown communities, especially this one communities like ours had been taking care of each other for hundreds and hundreds of years because the government has failed to. we strongly encourage folks to just open their own bridges. we can all share this incredible active giving and doing together. so if that doesn't get you feeling all the feels are next story definitely. well, i just love this film. it was made in jordan where football is not usually a sport that's open to women, but that hasn't stopped this group of women getting a kick out of playing while making a point at the same time. ah, and i don't, so throw in another. i need them to my la sure. and they i needed meta, you the icy thought you shall like to go look, let's play a little committee,
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a shot now. who can hit him and have us look up the corner? decide. i'm not my mom. i'm getting him the he but good luck in did to lab be in did so we put both was more than a game. it was an act of defiance. it was a demonstration of resilience. ah . 2 mm mm mm. ah . celebrity of it maralie cloud looked adela could self inside
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pickup would re, ruh, ivy. she wouldn't lose a while. obvious blockage a deal at the libo. and would you like to get lumped a luggage, the last bill that he bought. now give a title of li, i mean with i a pot shot it hooked up here to my lesson i had to make when my daughter, nyah, elder saw had the pool hot tub, but stay outside. absolutely. does she have a cube, a concert b as usual, had or going ballistic the lid l'oreal the from germany elder? my son who observe a little bit best monologue, was what when he and arch how jani, my barbara has not played few legally corn. yeah. any membership and i'm central and i sent him another that's go wow. yeah, that's what he on what i even he, i had gotten one example luggage here that it only been that will come for lunch l'oreal leah, an instant. i've been coming here to help you all
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women in the air worlds do not enjoy equal rights, but in the gaza refugee camp. it's that much worse. it is one of the most oppressive communities for women. enjoy them. if you want me to not, i'm not totally up to that and i'm going to go to products. no, it's low. i'm going to suffer had hope. it's like a good, a few minutes mom, a growth, a buckle, a how you home home for next books. you hope i'm not, i'm not. and i said bad. pick her up a little sad saddle in mother and her mom died when they 1st started to train and to play football. and there was very strong pushback against allowing the
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women to continue to play a wouldn't. why couldn't eliminate bus melinda in the little? yeah, and that's a lot of key legacy mcmillan lives in the any shape. it took an incredible amount of courage from these women to decide not to give up even under a tremendous amount of pressure from at home and from the community. gillian martin give defend, had went away with him and him having dilemma for a bill. and i mean, they meant to how in the, i think the message museum and a lot of the money and better the continuity mat, selma, is she any moves out of the cool with the initial i'm mm. oh . in the last 2 years,
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instances of violence against women and jordan has skyrocketed. and with the onset of the global pandemic, it took a bad situation and made it even worse. this is not only a local problem in jordan or a regional problem in the arab world, but it is a global problem. and here every gen ended the most amount of infant i've been for at fellas, but yeah, and theater and just said the lovely air man, no enough human to see a deaf think that red matt, matt did that. it was in amazon air seeder. benhaven, joseph dusty, could i have deduction that was selling? no honestly, to make a hoff hoffman at the i lead will add that in less than 10000000 doesn't mean nick . they're dead. the she did that with
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a m. wanna add the yen and mom and my daddy nick dicky in the indian because if he ah yes, you're still absolutely bank bin market and as it's bate one lake, i'm right and also the direct them about honey. how did she mention formed, and how it, than to who had shandy, a get it out of the body, the choice ways in that right? not a said either. not very few fearful ahmad a few of the are people. but anyway. yeah, we must though i love to copy of the love she feels comfortable. she'll see to korea to the cookie enough to sort it up, walk a she under the got upset. we chose to play the tournament on
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a hill top at the base of the temple of hercules, the symbol of male power, and considers any. yeah. and we also provide them with just a lot of good job will manzona, who's deborah and how she got to get with it. and also could thought that job it has had to connect back to, hadn't gotten the log in and create to the space where women could speak up. they could be themselves, they could play sport, they could dance, and they could fight for those very things that they believed. what the day, of course. but then a man. yeah. any, a web shift to nibble shifted. blacks and bus up up the next said it had been the nf upon my. hm. oh good him. sure
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of enough to look dan casey from silicon down hammers, or bummer. but he had no clue. no sense was magnetic embedded and an handler was caught, won't leave me a letter. ah, [000:00:00;00]
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with notice of that and no, uh hm. i had to go with the guys. a team didn't win the overall champion trophy, they were awarded the action champion trophy because of the incredible transformation that they were able to achieve both for themselves and for their communities. a year and a half ago, there was a dilapidated field in the middle of the guy's account,
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where boys and men were allowed to play. but women were not with now they have a brand new field in the cam where they have their space. oh, to bring about that change of perception was one of the hardest things to do in a community. and in just one year, they were able to do that and they were able to do that through football, through sport these days we've all become so used to snapping away on our funds. we barely even think about the photos we take, but one photographer in italy is taking the complete opposite approach, spending hours to capture just one picture. and it all started when he came across a camera that's more than a 100 years old. take
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a look. ah it's catching light it's catching a kind of visible light touches very different. i don't know whether i catch dreams most probably my own dream sir. ah my name is kirk moser, and i am the light kitchen ah, ah, i was born not very far away from you really in the middle of the mountains and 1000. let me just see load. if you grew up in the mountains, then of course you have a kind of relationship to this month's this months are you? the full day are here since 200 millions of years. most program they will be here audit $200.00 millions of years. and when you go up there, you can feel it. it just a little small person up there in the middle of the immense,
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huge nature. and i spent 30 years as a cameraman. i was slowly over the planet working. i think this was something deep in me after shooting in wards though and sent on shooting scenes that you really should not see something gross in you. it does a deep neath of they can picture of something completely different. the exact opposite beauty with something like 3 years ago by mistake i found or maybe she found me this beautiful old camera that was covered with blankets were 5 centimeters of dust on it. we took the blankets off and we discovered this piece of history and i restored it for 4 months and then worked. there was this big question, what to do now, if this camera, i mean, it was really nice to look at,
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but that's not enough. this camera was made for taking pictures and not for being in a museum. i don't go to a shop and say, i would like to have this lance that would like to have this light meter. and i would like to have this filters. nothing exists. so i have to look for everything that i need in 8050. they found out about this kind of photography, the system, this an sions photographic system. i think this was amazing. i, i could not even imagine that to day somebody could invent something like this. so for me this guys were heroes. there are a huge amount of error was in and you have to get rid of one by one. so the learning process and it never stops. you take like glass blades and you cover it with follow the own, which is a substance made of gun powder out on barrow and it with some are all on eater in
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it and different salts. and then you put it on the glass plate and thrice down and you bring it in a silver but completely absorbs the silver crystals. you expose it on the camera for see up but and as soon as he has done the picture, you go back in your dark room immediately because you have only 5 minutes and you have to develop it. if i make him mistake just by one second, that's kind of a catastrophe. when you've succeeded with your developing, then you fix it, you wash it and you varnish it. it's a complicated system, sometimes slower the on the edge of say come on, forget about. but then there were photographers in 1850, they were able to work with isms or why should they not be able? so when the 1st time a picture showed up, i was kind of blown away. it was and see like wow, route war. it was kind of a miracle. now what i'm doing is one photograph every 3 days and it's just this one. i can catch it. i can feel it,
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it last for some hundreds of years that that's and believable in this kind of time said we are living now. i photographs something that we don't see. i photograph some kind of invisible light with u. v. light, and that makes it very interesting. i think it's worse doing this if you have this one acre in front of you and you look at it than you say, okay, that's why i do it. if i take a photo of, of his own camera, it takes me something likes 2 or 3 hours just to make the lights to fix the camera, to prepare the blades effect. so i have a lot of time to speak to these persons and they kind of learn something of them. you have this huge camera in front of you, or you have this really strong light in front of you and you are sitting there for a long time. that changes you, you don't even try any more to have to smile for a 2nd. so something very, very sincere,
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of your soul comes out. i wait exactly for this moment. and the reaction when people see their portray is wow, yes, that's me. but i have never seen myself like this mom, i completely quit my job as a camera man, and i'm focused on completely concentrated on while i do just in this photographic project, other people still don't understand what i'm doing and for them it's completely crazy when i'm doing and in a way to write because you kind of risk your whole existence and just to follow a dream, there is no guarantee that it will work. i don't i from the children's. i'm living my life to day because i have no idea if in 10 years i'm still alive. i have to live my life now. my aim is not to send the message to the word. i just tried
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to a little bit in the eyes of the people, you know, a, it is enough that he as innovative enough then it's like kind of a crazy love story. well, that wraps up this season of portal. we hope you enjoy the mix of content that we brought you, and that is giving you a taste of some of the original audio and video you can find on our website and social media channels. i'll be back in 2022. but until then, see you online to happy new year. ah and ah,
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look forward to brighter sky's the winter sponsored by cut on airways. hey, there we've been. dallas was heavy, rain for southern california. let me show the scene. hello everyone. good to see you. mud slides here, we're about to see a home about a meter of mud just up against it. the heaviest rain on saturday will be for northern portions of california, heavy snow through the sierra nevada and just as spurts of rain, los angeles in san diego. but we looked toward the east dallas 30 degrees, exceptional heat here. so what's going on is we're getting a surge from the gulf of mexico moving inland. number's way out of whack here, about 10 degrees, more than 10 degrees above average, eastern canada, the u. s. northeast we've got some rain, some snow for the northern portion of new england, maybe even some freezing rain, so dodgy travel conditions. and look at d. c. a 20 degrees. now on the flip side of things, western canada western us temperatures are about to plunge for now, vancouver at 0. let's go to monday. the dark of the purple, the lower the temperature, vancouver minus 5. look at edmonton minus $26.00 central america
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a few spits in spots of rain for costa rica and panama. and for the top bend of south america. some explosive storms for brazil is by yet state where we have seen flooding in the past. and we've got heat in patagonia commodore over 30 degrees on saturday. stay cool. that's it. soon for the weather. sponsored by cats are always african stories by african filmmaker, terrible are a really short documentary from booking of hospital and a man who plants a west africa. i just know what happened in we know places that others hang on. i like to put
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on her. i still am going on with the way that you tell the story is what can make a difference. ah, this is al jazeera ah hello, i'm emily anguish. this is the news ally from doha coming up in the next 60 minutes . more protests in sudan against the country's military roll. we'll have a live update from cut to what we see, what happens? oh, more for i think johnson ami cron throws travel plans into disarray,

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