tv The Stream Al Jazeera May 10, 2022 7:30am-8:01am AST
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all livelihoods out of access to water, having to make the decisions about there will be the income from your across borders. we are looking at the evidence in, at generating dated. understand better. but what we have available in the case is the majority of people will move within their own countries in vicinity of the area where the are even the conditions. one of the most recognizable portraits of marilyn monroe i sold for a $195000000.00 at auction in the united states that make sandy walls 1964 painting the most expensive american or what ever sold at auction. the proceeds are going to be donated to charity. ah, this is our 0. these are the top stories. violence is continued late into the license for lanka were 5 people have been killed including a member of parliament. rival demonstrations escalated into st battles sparked by
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the worst economic crisis in decades. the prime minister stepped down, but his brother, the president, is under pressure to go to the law. course family may be returning to power in the philippines on official results of the presidential elections suggest ferdinand marco's junior as an extensive lead. he could become the next leader 36 years after his father was overthrown in a revolution. ukraine's military, this has at least one person's been killed, and 5 have been wounded in russian air strikes in the port city of odessa. it says a shopping center in a warehouse were hit in south korea, a new president's been sworn in former prosecutor use. so key old in his speech, young called for the complete de nuclear reservation of north korea. robert bright has more form. so he is a conservative a. we have just had 5 years of liberal administration here which was bent of throughout that 5 years on trying to get better dialogue with. busy new career it
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facilitated all of these as summits with president trump at the united states. well, there has going to be a change to that. the conservative yoon has said that he's going to take a much tougher line with north korea. it does, does come of course, after we've seen this uptake in missile testing from the north, well over a dozen missiles tested since the beginning of this year. a fight between rival gangs at a prison in ecuador has left at least 44 in maids dead. and dozens on the run. the violence broke out after a gang leader was transferred to the bella vista jalen santo domingo. demonstrations had been held in mexico city to demand justice for a rising number of journalists had been murdered to women, a director and a reporter was shot dead in the city that a cruise on monday was the headlines coming up next and out is, is the stream of i talked to alger, cyril, we ask,
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what is the time table in your mind? when do you think that you can be off russian gas? we listen when i have seen and played football with these refugees, i look at them and they're happy smiling. we meet with global news makers and talk about the stories that matter on al jazeera why are you watching the stream coming to you today for my child, who thank you and tell them that the story being who, who plays episode in that milestone nissan and the lessons that we can land around the world. the ration can cause don't, we'll talk find you running any easy. honestly, you're going to have that time you got to go to general my site.
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i'm running to see how many welcome to the student. can you? i'm sorry, yes, thank you. i just wanted to tap into what was thinking about why, what was the last time you saw that's full story. some like instant watching. ready for me, you guys probably every day, every time we say a story coming in the news, the leaving the news. you think here it is a guy here it goes again. i'm the stories are around since i finished watching the book. i think we've already had time to put that story in as well. but that constant, i'm constantly sort of evolving my view on school and stories in the news. just keep on inspiring and also making you want to have other people discuss them and
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actually come to some conclusions about sports fall into a shame for going to gamble. thank you. to begin with, the last time you say yes, i think, i mean, it depends what aspect of life really. i mean there's challenges or struggles or a story, but i mean, i work a lot in the intersections of race and gender and sport. and quite often, my beat is not a happy one. so when we talk about struggles, particularly for women, athletes are non binary athletes. that happens quite often, whether it's an issue of abuse, whether it's an issue in the quality of pay. i mean very specifically on a fund note, i was having a very animated conversation with my colleagues at burn it all down this morning about the joy of saudi oman, a and we were speaking about senegalese football and the pre show, but just having not to talk about joy and now i tried very hard to
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incorporate joy into some of my practice as a journalist. otherwise it would be very, very depressing. the world of sports, i mean, can be very depressing. so i try to insert that intentionally. hallmark homelessness you want to see what you when you choose either the depressing also taught us for the choice of whatever you want to share the lessons you have done. if you're new to jump into the comments section, part of the day that i'll start with the j. thank you. so a key we, we also we can issue the house to the base issue in my spot. i believe we're connie facing and i believe this is an all i was a football from the cross rues all the way through am to the top lives in a world. and from being ex player i to work in sports media. now i passed the phil, this one, and i think the biggest issue for me is racism, annapolis, like
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a broken record, but you would have fall off the euros for england and the free blood plasma, snip noise and abuse. they got off the back of the campaigns and that went in off that things like kick out races and saw race in the red card. the players taken me off before every much you to for changes have been more clear in the game. but for me, it has been spoken about more, but no, no actual punishment or change that she happened. i think more needs to be done. and it's a big, big issue in the game. the hope is stamped out and say can seriously morsey going forward in football? oh, still spoiled what, what most of what was that anything during globally or into white man's aunt's or on this is an ins old seat over is not impressed me. well, actually school made an impact back on society after that because it was through things we saw in sport from taking a ne, a huge scores events,
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and from discussions around whether the need should be taken through to say actions which were commendable. life i felt of the players and the officials throughout the n b i and sometimes refusing to play. if that was a necessary action. i think that sport was instructing society in some ways on, on how to behave. and these things come from the top. i mean, i've said many times over the years, i've refused to go on as a reporter or correspondence and say, well, faithful you a for has had did out of fine over to spencer and was stadium closure. so what? kick a club out of a competition. kick a nation out, not for a 1st minor offense may be are you, but you have legal difficulties then, but then needs to be strong. actually comes from the top when in this country, on a sports program here, many of which aren't fit for purpose. there was a discussion about racism and they tried to have a grown up conversation. it didn't work because the grown up amongst them started
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talking about it coming from the top and from government level where taking in the was found upon they were shut down because hang on, we are outside the sports bubble. every one is uncomfortable. i think that disgraceful, and i think that's where it comes on from the top. yes, progress has been made from when i started repulsing on footballs. crikey, at the end of the eighty's round, $9090.00 boiler different society now. but my good this there still so much progress to be made and so much that we say on a daily basis that is wrong. so i'm just gonna jump in here and to say that i'm, i will agree to some parts that there has been progress made. but if you look at the demographics of football media, for example, it's white men. where is the progress? i haven't seen enough racial as you see sports journalists, i look like me. so in fact, who tells the story is as important as what the story is. and when we're confronting issues of racism or massage any and those intersections than i, i mean,
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i mean, i'm not trying to be cynical here, but let's be realistic about this. also, i would like to quickly just tweak something that lee had mentioned. it wasn't the n b a that stood up after the murder of george floyd, it was actually the w, n b, a and black women in that the that have set the blueprint for how and t black races and can be eradicated and sport. and let's not forget that because that's one of the problems that happens. black women are often excluded from these. and the 1st ally, the white ally to neil is calling copper. nick was in fact, megan robina was a white gay woman and she was an on the cover of sports illustrated. so let's be careful how we chronicled us and, and we remember it. so as much as i would say that there has been a catalyst on the murder of george floyd was very instructive. it also made newsrooms and reporting rooms realized that they were badly equipped to handle discussions of racism. and like, let's not as you know, how i realized sharing,
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sorry to jump in a lot, but you want to bring this up. i tell you how i realized, i know for a fact how they realized because people who were phoned by bosses that lead organizations and said we need to have a more diverse workforce off the mother of a black mine in america. and then i got a phone call specifically i got a phone calls, visit my for that reason that they were, and i got my, i alone agree. it's my lived experience. so what my point was was that these discussions need to be had, but it's, it's not just about quickly hiring for a contract position and then laying off somebody cuz you're done with them. we haven't eradicated racism. this is not a post racial. and i think media needs to be quite responsible and need to understand how they're complicit in these type of systems. i mean people are stole . absolutely. you know, writing terrible things and british sport media in particular. you know, like i think fits particular players. got the i are particular players are, you know, dealt with in women's sport is essentially not covered in the ways that it needs to be. so literally very honest about thought,
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when we absolutely butchery who's making the decisions, this is the thing, don't you form we all fall into the trunk of side. oh, well that looks like a diverse on the screen that looks like a diverse workforce on a minute. who's making the decision? some of the people making the decisions, will have terrible track records of diversity. i'm just not making the right decisions anyway. over many, you know, the winning awards for their coverage of such things as like law smarter'n sport. whether the sleep little the were implies the least funny if i may, some of what we're talking about isn't just the governing bodies. the school is not just the sports authority. it's also how we, as journalists, all sports corresponding handles stories. so shooting, i, we happen to have an ever her. erica is a free lance. once she spoke to us a few hours ago, this is what she shared with us and illegally off. erica finish. his test with one
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of the problems that i see in sports is truly the coverage. generally speaking, sports journalists are either not encouraged to or not equipped to have conversations. we're a sports intersects other entangled parts of our life relationships where politics or education, or advocacy and social justice. so my solution would be at 1st we hire more diverse journalists to are able to cover and interweave sport stories with some of these other things. my 2nd solution is that we and then train journalists ongoing to have these conversations in sports. what a joy to see miss. erica allah, who is single handedly created a media space called black rosie media. and she's absolutely right. i mean, she's a colleague and a friend, she's an afro. let bina, and i think she brings i, you know, at a different identity to a newsroom or 2 coverage. and i think that's imperative in someone that covers, you know, whether it's football, basketball, or ice hockey ones,
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ice hockey. i think this is really important. and in addition to, ah ha, hiring a diverse journalist what i'm looking for. and what my and as an instructor of journalism at trod toronto metropolitan university. i teach sport, media, and sports journalism. i'm not only encouraging my students to go be broadcasters and presenters. i would like them in decision making rooms. i would like them as editors, i would definitely like them as producers because the quality of the conversation that happens when you have racialized women as producers on a sports show is extremely different than if you don't. so i'm very, very clear on what my expectations are of my student students. and to also be very honest with themselves. do journalists have the ability to say, well, i'm going to amplify somebody else who doesn't look like me. i've never had that happen to me before. to be quite honest truth our point, i was my case. i mean that literally the exact point i was making. so, you know, i mean, you know, you're agreeing with me that so i'm please is, you know,
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there should be some agreement here because we have different experiences. but we have many of the side views because we're using are always, are, is, and all brands. and not everyone in this industry. in fact, not pop hobby, anyone into sports industry sometimes seems to be one thing to do. there seems to be wanting to go deeper. you can look at little examples like if hooliganism brights out in photo stadium. i wanted to ripple on the much. none got the story now you're going to have to deal with it. and one thing that really strikes me about you is that you're talking about. so to power fi, you know, creating spices and anew signing your money using brilliant. had talked, talking about you have to call those feel self cobalt. a pulse will progress be when people don't have to do that the actually they succeed because of the system rather than despite it only i had a thought came from big rain on the june. and this when you said yes,
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i totally agree with me. tell the story, math and then as opposed to education, you discovered lee as he was talking about thinking about so even on the instant what happens is 18 when we say that story and one yeah, big part of a big part of writing this book was you know as a belfy, people in society need to listen more. so i just needed to listen to what was being said, and i needed to actually make sure that i spoke to people extensively who were affected sometimes more than me before about anything. now, i like to think that i've been bold and i've tried, blazed during my career, which had up 30 really tell us the story because we know the mileage is raina williams. now, but it's important the context if i may because it's the one time this is why i'm
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giving the context is the one ton of bottle. i've bottled there. i was going to tweet to say that serena williams, behavior was disgraceful. the reason i was going to do that was very simple because it was, it was attention, pure and simple. no difference really from the john, lack of our country. you know what tennis plans are probably just a tenant, sometimes a problem to be pompous, but i bottle. the reason it would have been, i promise you misconstrued because the amount of viral vices and this directed up my favorite tennis plant survey, you know, who was covering tight for me. i had so much otherwise, you know, background to know a back story. we had virtually signaling patch and i think condescending john, this loaded journalist who was telling us, well, look at the box or look what happened that night. i felt sorry for the soccer, and in the book i talk about how it was her night. it was really and i what was
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happening here was the what subject that needs to be in the public all the time. but the one case i have gone to friends weren't friends, people in the media, people outside of the media and said, do i have the right to say this? do i have to write about it? and the answer i've got, i've listened is late when you've experienced the not a base, you quickly come in for serena because you know what's coming towards her she thought, well, i mean as somebody who is identifies very specifically as a racialized journalist, my experience will be different than we, i don't need test source and ask friends i can just look within my own experience. and the way that i would have spoken of serena is quite differently. i would look at my position and my privilege and look at the history of massage and war against her in the in the tennis media. i would look at the battle she's faced in terms of maternal black health. i would look at the way that she boycotted a specific tournament because the way or family was treated and i would still look
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at that. but then more importantly, i think i would have defer to other black sports journalists and i would amplify their work for one set of having so much acting on the moment you read this? ok, so i understand. let me, let me, let me finish here. i think that there's that different and you aside, i think there's a different way in which tennis media and sports media holds her to account. i can think of many different block athletes, be at tennis, be an ice hockey, where black a racialized athletes are held to a different standard. and i don't necessarily feel that it's like required for me to add on to that. but like i said, and i will stick by this, i will amplify other racialized journalists who have lived experience in a window that i don't. and that's something that i believe is missing in the industry. it won't hurt me or my paycheck. if i defer to somebody with lived experience on this issue, so part of my personal practice as a journalist is to amplify even more marginalized sports journalists, who may be black, who may have profound things to say about her technique about the mechanics about
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the scale. but a ball, so about the context of what's happening here. and i think that's something that's missing greatly from sports journalism. there's too much ego. it's not about whether you li, personally, can read about it. it's whether the story is shared in a way that's responsible. in take corporate harm reduction and is fair to the subject. our job is reporters is to report fairly and accurately and what we do, but also part of that. and what i teach my students is to amplify people in the margins which is part of the entire problem of sports media industry. it's not about white men with power talking about issues of substance for minorities. it's about whether those people in the margins have a right to share their own experiences and do the same work. i'm white men with power in that case with virtue signaling to within an inch of their lives. it was really ghastly to say because actually it meant there was no nuance. there was no really proper research into what was going on. it was just telling the bike story and actually i think,
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but that night deserve more than that because what i've tried to do in the book and hopefully i've achieved this is actually give the full context. talk about the background with serena's face, things like not getting endorsements because she's not a blond haired, blue eyed russian who was nowhere near as good a tennis player as her. i'm the little guy already like i don't the light i he i he, i auntie and she as well. she not only talking to you, lived experience because it means it you can tell stories about school. they will not leslie calling from office force. janice, i've been to show an image and this is news is often moroccan. heard you know who in the mountain eighty's when so many little girls in rural coating? wow. can you tell us, noel story? it is a fabulous story. a warm thanks to me that i may share, it won't of wifi and thank you, coming for that. and this is the part of joy that i'm happy that i get to. i get
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inspired by my co host bernard all down dr. mirrors davis and dr. brenda elsie and a picked up a bit of a historian bug noel luke, how well was the 1st woman from north africa, arab muslim women who won a gold and the 1984 olympics them loss angela some articles. and you know, i think that when i study and when i write, when i research, my master's degree is on most of women in sports specifically, but and self representation. but when i was doing my research and also when i report on muslim women in sports for which i'm a global expert, people would say, oh must, some women are oppressed, there's being being to be submissive. you know, i remind them of this history and the story of noah to coal is so special because not only was the king of morocco, so excited by her gold medal, when there was a phone brought to the side. and remember, this is 1984, there is no cordless phone, so it was like sometimes well, oh yeah, those phones were my 7. it was stretched out to the track. she got on the phone and she had the, the flag around her. and the king of morocco was so overjoyed that he declared that
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every baby born on that day would to be named no. all. so if you meet someone who's close to 40 around that, you might, you and their name is no, all maybe perhaps, or born on that day during this you did during the summer games. and, you know, this isn't to gloss over the fact that they're all are contradictions and struggles and muslim majority countries. and that, you know, i don't shy away from any of those criticisms in my work, but it also is important not to paint all groups. monolithically muslims are not a monolith, neither a muslims in the sports space. and this is the problem with not having enough people that look like myself to be able to report is that you get one lens. you get one perspective and that's what i'm arguing for here is that there needs to be more there. and then my job, not only as a journalist is to create those space. it's not just for myself. what was the point of me being at a table, if i can't invite others to join? so i've decided to create my own dining room. i'm sick of the old table. i don't
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want to see that that table. i'm creating my own and i think whoever wants to come in the margins, whoever wants to be mentor to what wants to be myspace. i reside in canada, but i have global contacts. and this is i want to see ish, a shifting globally of this. what he is an active is a campaigner, an up the could the school in all of it's either city alicia, one image issue, just very briefly tell us why it gives you joy before i leave all too early conical storage semester city. but this is, this teams is blue men. i learn joy and providence. this is the canadian man's national football. this is lee canadian man. what on athletes who wonderful? absolutely, you know, bring passion and bring purpose and bring happiness to the perch. now the reason this is a compelling to me, like, unlike the canadian womens football team,
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which one gold at the olympics and tokyo, this particular team had not qualified for the men's world cup. and i please recall that, and note that i'm using meds because it's important to say men's and women's to distinguish not choose the men's as the standard. so this particular team has qualified for the men's world cup in the cupboard in 2022 for the 1st time since 1986. so this is the, you know, the country is excited about that. we know that are women's players, our heroes, their top of the podium. and we're hoping that the attention to the men and hopefully will bring money stream and revenue stream to the women who are not yet paid equally. so i'm hopeful for many reasons. all right, hope, joy, unorganised celebration. i am going to handle a celebration. i'm gonna take me back to may 2066 years ago almost to the day this was lead reporting out. oh,
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msc, i love it. we only have one mini lesson been asked you to criticize in a sentence that story about nest, the city winning the premium, the sentence lane. what would you central store wonderful joy. on the bigger sports miracle, i bought a car there, empathetic lee. it was just a beautiful thing for a city there was magic could be ever, i've never seen the biggest folks miracle when i get children's career speeches. i press play on by and i love and i get it. and that's what i should like. double leave for wow, this is the old. all really don't bow lane top close the sports team are make i can is she's a, she's just, she's a sports jeremy. she's an inspiration to check out her column and cps. who are jo john as well? i've been wanting to watch you stream think ah
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on counting because the you raises the stakes of the fat level, russian energy, but of what cost the world war hits a 2 year high. but his bruton war against sanctions really working of netflix subscribers did for the 1st time of the decade of view of still watching. counting the cost on l 0. and diverse range of stories from across the globe. from the perspective of our networks, janice on al jazeera frank assessments. what are the political risks of panic? russian oil gas for western leaders, pull sanctions on russian energy exports, possibly for such informed opinions. france is not abandoning to fight against
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jetty, still resumed media debt going to be attaching from nisha and from chad critical debate. could china actually help in russia's invasion of ukraine in depth analysis of the days global headlines inside story on al jazeera? ah, many aspects of afghan culture had been systematically destroyed or forgotten. the afghan films archive has been largely preserved through all of these years. when so much else was burned, looted, or blown up, a small group of people risked their lives to save the national archive. they managed to preserve the films and these records of all of the other afghanistan's that existed saving decades of history. they believe these films had something to give to the present moment.
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in the 19th sixty's, afghans cinema was born. filmmakers went on a whack of the dangers to come ah, demonstrators defy a curfew in shall anchor, to demand the president's resignation, hours after his brother steps down as prime minister. ah, i'm role by this, and this is all to 0 live from doha. also coming up lima, celebrations and protests in the philippines. the son of austin president close likely to become the next leader under fire. the.
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