tv The Stream Al Jazeera July 5, 2022 11:30am-12:01pm AST
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he said in celia weren't quite good, but in chile or anywhere else, a new constitution must be flexible and able to adapt to the enormous changes and uncertainties we live in with today's world. how the campaign is now on as intense as any chilly has seen to win the hearts and minds of the people. lucy and human al jazeera santiago. ah, hello, you're watching al jazeera. these are the top stories this our shall anchors. prime minister is wanting inflation will hit 60 percent by the end of the year as an economic crisis worsens. the government has brought in daily nationwide power cards to conserve dwindling fuel supplies. and al fernandez has more from a petrol station in colombo. the situation is absolutely dire now in sri lanka, as you can see behind me, the cues are basically at one of the few fewer sheds that are receiving supplies.
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it's one run by an indian company, whereas the state petroleum, fewer sheds, are not receiving any stocks for a long time. so there is an absolute desperation in every single shed that has supplies, opposition, groups in sudan have met to respond to the military's announcement that it's stepping aside. the military rulers said politicians and civilian groups should start talks on forming a transitional government. police in the us have detained a man in connection where they're shooting at a 4th of july parade in chicago. 6 people were killed and more than 30 others injured when a gunman opened fire from a roof, tom palestinian officials have rejected the findings of the u. s. investigation into the killing of al jazeera, jenna sharina. abby. the us state department says it's likely she was killed by an i unintentional gunfire from his rally positions, but did not offer clarity on how they reached that conclusion. ukraine's president
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says the country is working directly with the un and turkey to guarantee the security of its grain exports. ukrainian officials have asked turkey to confiscate what they say is tons of stolen grain on border wash and flagged cargo ships. 5 people have gone on trial in hong kong, accused of sedition for publishing. a series of children's books. authorities say they have a hidden message and inside hatred towards the government and 50000 people in eastern australia have been put on a vacuum. patient alert as flood waters rise and downpours continue. it's the areas for the flat emergency in just 16 months. experts say rainfall has been aggravated by climate change. those are the headline states you. now for this stream there's a wave of sentiment around the world. people actually want accountability from the people who are running their countries. and i think often people's voice is not heard because it's not part of the mainstream news narrative. obviously we cover
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the big stories and we report on the big events going on. but we also tell the stories of people. we generally don't have a voice. and then whenever a child that's never be afraid to ask a question. and i think that's what everybody does. we ask the question for people who should be accountable, and also we get people to give their view of what's going on with . i am for me. okay, i'm taking you div into the marvel cinematic universe today to meet comalla con. she's just an ordinary muslim american teen who happens to have some very special super powers. let's take a look at miss marble. okay, so for, sorry, i just want to say i school. huh. another venture shirt q. see things and some kind of weird out the we're boys. he's
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me, you're going to my sure. sorry. by sharing at the window and you're a little fantasy more already really like you. i have to figure out my whole future before a launchers. ah, maybe they're right. they spend too much time in fantasyland. that is not you don't really the brown girls from jersey city to say so that's the fantasy to well, i guess today are involved with the production of miss mobile. they can be talking about the joy, the challenges of making it, and what the production means to muslims around the world. i'm going to say hello to gina to rich to as a. thank you so much for me on the screen today. i'm gonna get you to introduce yourself to our international audience and tell them your connection with ms. malvo
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trevino. you stopped. i'm tribune. a springer. i played tai etha hill named conn. i'll miss marble. lovely savvy, hello race. welcome to the stream. introduce yourself. try, hello. i'm british all i play can role and he's the new boys out there. mr. very nice as our so lovely to see you. great to have you on the street, please introduce yourself to abby was and your connection to miss novel? sure. well, thank you for having me. my name is a small, i'm a standard comedian from chicago and i'm a cure called naj off the euro king. nice small recurring committee role. very nice. nice to see you in the miss mobile unit as well. all right, so view is if you're watching right now and you on youtube, he's got comment, she's got questions about miss mobile. how did they make it? what was that thought process? what happened behind the scenes?
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we have juice. we're happy to share with you comments that can live right here. i am going to get and guess festival. we talked to some, some little ones about miss martha, what it meant to them. and this is what they told her. i want you to late take a look at this video and then immediately react. let's take a look at the youngsters. your future critics, a . oh, she's scared of gaining goes to the mosque while she goes to school and has many friends and gets in trouble with her teachers. this made me really happy and proud that there could be a girl just like me being a super hero. some of my favorite scenes are ones the showcase, must oxidation, like painting, hannah and the discussion again. all right, let's start with your vantage arena. you're watching those little girls and you're thinking it really just amazing and overwhelming to see
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the positive feedback in what this theories mean to so many young people. i'm just really well emotional about it. i bet it's huge for the young girl and children, the someone that reminds them of themselves and they can see themselves and their family in those characters. so i'm just excited and really moved by. oh my goodness . wish don't cry. you'll make us quite wish when she was smiling so boldly as, as little as little ones were like, yeah, i can see my dad. i wanted to go right on somebody who has thought about being able to be involved in the show. and i have young nieces and literally got a message from the dr. mark, my cousin today. and he was and they just sat down. and so the 1st you have chosen the facts, yet people can relate it to themselves. and when i was young boys or girls and it
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looked like course, i mean that's, that's a beautiful thing. i do. i makes me really proud. and i'm glad that they consider themselves in a really excited and feel like they finally have someone to look up to you as i what, what, what caught me by surprise as if somebody had told me that disney was going to make a series. and it was going to portray muslim american life every day. life normal life, nothing special part from the supernatural part. i would be surprised. i would be thinking days. ne, yikes. oh, i saw what happened because that wasn't yes. well that, that's the real big use. so statement would you be like should i be yikes yanked because you would be abby or would you be like? yikes. i ordered for by was anxious until i saw the 1st 4 episodes and then my shoulders went down and i relaxed. i was up. tell me about your ex,
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new experience working on this because it is a big job to take miss marvel as a muslim american teen putting on the screen and then for it to connect with people this, right, i mean, i think 1st of all, i'm kudos to the team that reduce the whole show. and i think that especially i would say the original team that created all the source material. i'm talking specifically about, you know, g, willow, wilson and of course son amana to has been evolved from the very beginning. could co creating the character of kamala on, but then also shepherding the tv show in the marble cinematic universe. because i think that, um, you know, whatever authenticity people are able to feel in the show to day really has its origin in the authenticity of, of the writers and the producers and the original creative team that really took
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incredible pains to make sure that every detail was indeed authentic and was indeed attempting to do to do justice to what is ultimately a very nuanced experience of being a muslim in the united states. or i imagine in europe as well. you know, it's a very interesting time to be part of that minority. and certainly growing up, i think, for young people coming up in the post 911 world quote unquote, the prejudices, the biases, this cultural and social attitudes, some folks have towards muslims, and a slum can make it even more difficult. and so a show like this where clearly young people are responding in a very positive way and they're feeling seen and they're feeling represented. you know, that's really just a tremendous pleasure for all of us were involved in the show. how it is, and you change our wondering, i haven't seen this novel yet. what? ah, miss motto c palace. what can you tell us about has super power so far in
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the series? this is just getting to grips with i love that, you know, if you find something you find you've got super proud. you're not going to be all sick with them and she's not sick. she's very no sick. i think that was so really work. yeah. you know, she's one of, she's got like very normal problems surrounding, i mean she's in high school and boys and religion and strict parents and then yeah, she's on powers. i know it's a matter of like, how do i even i miss in. busy was going through all of that and normal teenagers. and yeah, i think one of the reasons that kamala 7 darren is a car. ready like you said, she's not slick. you see her kind of taking her time and trailing with bruno and trying to figure out, i mean, she ration literally and don't call you know, that goes to so like where her imagination goes, why would i i think that's why she's really wanted because she's like most
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a cooler because she's monica and yeah, yeah it's, it's great. i mean, throughout the series the. yeah, i was really progress and as we know she is going to be in the models and i'm excited to see how things are going into that as well. but it's definitely a being in movies and i remember we're just letting her palace are so she can stop herself from falling because sort of bicycles or stars, shoot out some parts of her body. show what they are. yeah, i know she's got, i get my high guy who's got like this to happen sometimes. who knows at school, it says it's out of control, watch the series, and then you'll find out what have superpowers are because he's trying to work them out herself. i'm a bra spoke just a little bit earlier and abroad is a video host and producer, and it was really curious about one thing tra, vena has a listen to opera. and then also her question, if you can,
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is my question for the mas marble team is, why do you think the show resonates with so many people who aren't muslim or who are in pakistani and what considerations went into making sure that that would be the case oh, that's a really good question i. i would think that people are really resonating with the series, which i'm very excited about and not completely surprised because we knew we were making something really special when we were creating this. and i think people can relate to kamala, like she's an ordinary teenager living her life. and most of us have experienced being a teenager. and those struggles or will experience that are currently experiencing . and i think that there is somebody and everyone that people can see and they can relate to each of the characters of the coming of age story. it's just
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a really well written, well perform well created story and people connect to good storytelling. and i think it doesn't matter what the background is of who's being portrayed on tv like people in marginalized groups, watched, watch shows that don't reflect them and can enjoy the story. so i think the same thing is happening here. it's phenomenal. any amount of amazing, like you can't watch her and not fall in love with who she is and her portrayal of this character and world that we've created. so i think that's why people really like it and i enjoy it. and people also learning about south asian culture of pakistani culture and will sung ness. and it's being shown in such a positive light and doesn't a different light. i think that people are used to seeing which is probably very interesting. people want different and that's what we're giving them. i was jumping in, i was like, i knew so like,
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i think as well as it is by then seeing like one of my favorite parts of the most recent phases of the shanty. and so need to know how it relates to that story. you know, it's one of the coolest origin stories. yeah. right. you know, people who coaches watch the black hunter and yeah, we have the opportunity to do the say, i think if you really relate to the found the show. i mean, and i said one of benji call unless she wished that she's like, oh, i suppose her moment because there's a little clip i've got. and i'm going to get back to you a little quick cause because coming out wants to go to adventure con, but apparently let her. then the big brother talks her parents into it. so now she can go and then this happens as far as your j singles. i have a surprise for you. the way dread messed it
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down. i got a rash. cringe, cleans, cringe. oh no, i love it. that's the part that i feel people can relate to being a ting and your parents won't let you do stuff. particular if you're a young girl. okay. in particular, if you come from immigrant parents, you don't even have to be muslim pakistani american to appreciate that you can be any immigrant child of rhetoric, i mean, any immigrant family. and then you get that that, that dynamic and, and then you and your parents trying to understand the culture that you love, your pop culture, not quite getting it. it's interesting though, as ana, i'm,
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i'm going to bring this up because there has been some pushback about how muslim culture is portrayed. and i want to bring that into the conversation because it's not everybody saying this is fantastical, that you've got incredible reviews and people really enjoying it. there are some people that are upset about the way that miss marvel doesn't wear had you for instance, she doesn't cover a hair. the elements of the story that they are not enjoying. let me bring a must differ and i know that you're going to be out of debate, not with him live, but after his video comment finishes, he is. as a british pakistani, miss marvel is incredible to watch. unfortunately, in his current form is still somewhat a victim of his own success is managed to pull off being muslim without being islamic, but is also alienate in large part of his potential audience. both non muslims and
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conservative muslims are looked into tuning because they don't think the showcase is what's them? which is a shame because miss marvel has the potential to be the family sick. come to find the next decade of television as i go for it. good. impossible, impossible to respond to. i believe, you know, i'll say this, you know, i'm participating in this conversation because of my involvement in miss marvel where i am involved as an actor. you know, i also am a writer and a producer, and i work on a show called rami, which is on hulu, not to plug it, but it's all for gabby's been on the same. we love rami and okay. yeah. so you know that she has way more adult and controversial themes very well. my point is, you know, we've, yet, my point is we've heard this similar response from, i guess,
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use the term conservative muslims, you know, whatever label you want to use. i think there is something to be said for there's a space in between kind of reality and fiction. and that's where artist take artistic license and what often can be triggering for some muslims is when artistic license is taken by a creative person. and the audience feels that, hey, that license is going to far, it's not faithful either to the religion or to the teachings of the religion or how muslims actually are, etc, etc. these are nuanced debates that are in pos you can never make everyone happy. i'll just say that i read the clarity about this while working on robbie and i feel the same way above as marble. you know, if you're watching a tv show to teach you about religion, you know you've already lost. like, don't go get your religion from religious people and get your entertainment from tv people. and never the twain shall meet i think be
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a really beautiful thing. i can understand with the i can understand what the criticism is here, but then i'd like to counter and say, i think the beautiful thing about miss marble is that it picks different kinds of muslims. we live on a spectrum. there's not one way we're not a model of the community. i'm muslim. i don't vail, and i know plenty of muslims that don't fail. i know plenty of muslims who do, and then muslims who bail in different ways. and i think what's really beautiful and well done about the series that it displays different ways to show up in your islam. and there's not a right and wrong way. we want the show to be accessible to everyone and also where to pick the muslims in america. that something i think that might ball you may catch, you know, this is how muslims in cleveland or the city and i think that's really cool for people to see all they do this. wilson's can do that. and there's not one way which is the truth of my experience as though from person who lives in america. so i
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think that's important. yeah. and i have one more comment as i appreciate trevino's saying tremendously, and i want to add one more detail because i'm going to stand up comedy bull to read on our since stand up comedians we, and you know, i was all support for many years of a show called a law made me funny, the official muslim comedy or do stand up comedy. we got all kinds of, you know, criticism of feedback from muslims. and i had to make this point over and over. i think it bears repeating, you know, islam as an ancient global world. ready legion, it is a set of timeless universal principles. and when it is applied, when those principles are applied in a particular, social or cultural context, you know, islam in egypt is egyptian, is learn personal, appears, persia. islam, in arabia is arabian islam. and india is indian. and therefore, islam in america necessarily is american, and that means is culturally and racially diverse. it is theologically diverse, it is big tech islam that allows and has as much breadth and openness and
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acceptance for every possible interpretation under the sun. and that's part of what i think makes a slum of the united states. so unique and different, but also special and something that is should be celebrated. and i think the show does indeed capture a lot of that and the diversity of, of the racial diversity, the spectrum of types of muslims rep, dotson cetera. all that is part of portraying muslims, actually, as they actually are, which i think is actually extremely authentic. let me bring in a few more comments from i you chief audience who watching right now is rainy says i love miss malvo as another brown case. obsessed with comics. it's so relate to people and in louis herrera says, i'm not muslim. so this show has been great for my family in order to know more about muslim culture. i think the anyway, i would love to describe it to people who are not muslim or that there were little easter eggs. you know, like sometimes when you're playing video games a little,
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oh you go over a little something and then you get extra points, like i say, from his mom. if you know, you know, if you don't google it and is extra points that are going on to mean, i think you are one of the extra points because there is no there's, there's no baggage in both of you marrying miss marvels. oh, the big brother, we know that in america, the african american muslims and then south asian muslims. as a whole trope going home, this drama. it's a difficult conversation. it's an issue. but it's just that. like, it's wonderful there. yeah. actually about yeah. i love that, like taisha hillman, mary's armor. com in the series and patients, the black american muslim girl from jersey and, you know, immersed pakistani american and they are just in love. it's very, it's presented in a very matter of fact way,
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and it's celebrated. and i think it's so beautiful and powerful to see what's from love in that way because you don't see it on a scale like this. and i've, i've experienced, acro, asian, interracial marriages, and friendship, people have those relationships and to see it on television is wonderful. but the truth of the matter is because there is a lot of anti black racism in these communities that exist. and it's not just in america, it's a global thing. and i think for miss marble to depict as it is in a comics she's not created for the is it is in the comics in the source material and for their love to be just celebrated and shown in such a positive light in the family. just accepting it's not like controversy, controversial. i think it's really important and powerful. and one of the things that i loved, i mean, i talked about that earlier. we were filming, like, are we going to talk about like the race thing or color is and we were like, no, they just love her. we're moving on and accepting it. and i don't know. i love that
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. i got one more. so i'm going to, i'm going to put this one to you. wish this is amman alley, he's a writer and performer and he sees that this production miss model is incredibly important. his, his thoughts are not enough to have you off his mind. i remember the year 0 time, 15 years ago where you would get on stage and someone will pull a microphone out of your hand saying comedy is her on art, is her on blah blah. and now to how to show that is in the marvel universe about a bad ass superhero is absolutely incredible. and i think one of the biggest highlights for me is this show truly is a love letter to the muslim community. yes, it's a messy, it's complicated. it's layered, but it's also it's loving, it's so warm. and i think that to me is really what brings me so much joy rush. okay. yeah. i mean, yeah, it's been made with so much. i mean like we've said everybody has been involved in
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this project. yes. it was amazing so that's, that's the summer brown people who can relate to the culture. for, for me personally, i cannot use myself. i know other people on this image only if i don't see any kind of wearing or coaching. right. i mean, representing they see culture and that's something which i struggled with growing up and so it's really cool to be able to see, to it's been shown finally and in a positive light. and you know, i think we have to remind ourselves that yeah, this is one story of one going on and actually allow small crazies within the industry to be able to have a chance to tell their story. you know, we're very lucky to be in this position and it's amazing. people are enjoying seeing bands of coach, of a show in a positive light. yeah. please just so this movement and it becomes kind of normality, you know? yeah, that's really the goal here. i think when it's, you know, we can,
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we can imagine a. ready billy brown or well round gal from new jersey. perfect place to be on trevino as our thank you so much for joining us. if you miss malvo you, you're so welcome. thank you. and you want to see miss marvel. you can watch miss novel on disney plus any time and you're not watching out to sara. i will if you will. one last thing for the production. this is the wedding. thanks for watching. take everyone. never have. i seen a couple so certain of their love as they are of themselves. do you accept america as your husband? i do. do you accept on her as your husband? i do. do you accept armand. com as your husband. oh, i do. do you accept a shipment as your wife?
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i do not look at it on you or no husband. i july analogies hero campaign for the kenyan presidency begins in earnest. could a hotly contested battle lead to the violence that his mom previous elections from the headlines to the unreported, people in power investigates, they use an abuse of power around the world to museums, fluked in a referendum on a new constitution. could it spell the end for the only democracy to have emerged from the arab spring uprisings, as india suffers unprecedented, hate way? one or 18th goes to the fiery heart of the crisis. center goal hedge to the pose with the main opposition parties uniting,
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can they wrestle power away from the ruling party, july on al jazeera, to some hello boat is a mechanical or even that self driving train. the apple that android today can be directly humanoid robots, like me, will be everywhere. al jazeera documentary cliffs, the lead on the weird and wonderful world of robots that learn think and even trust . i feel like i'm alive, but i know i on the machine. the origins of the owner is here, new voice thief, heating up the airway. lot of can use listener to kimberly, here, but i really think in your own country shifting power of a case, the rise of citizen journalism has changed everything. how do you happen? it happened on social media and the undeniable impact of the mainstream narrative. australians went to the paula with those images front of mine is a war that is very much came forth out in the media as well as on the battlefield
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there listening post. dissect the media on al jazeera ah shall, anchors prime minister outlines a way out of its economic crisis, but warns inflation could hit 60 percent by the end of fiji. it's really beginning to reflect in terms of every single family in terms of the food that can put on the table at people are beginning to struggle. ah, hello, i'm em, liang gwen. this is al jazeera alive from doha. also coming up. 6 people shot dead at a 4th of july parade ne, chicago. this aspect is around.
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