tv Arts and Culture Deutsche Welle March 5, 2020 12:45am-1:00am CET
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unlikely places that classic cars go to. start with an explosion of energy in the form of one nicholas kurla he hails from 5 in southern germany and even though he's only 15 years old he's got star quality on stage as a dancer all at the recent world dance cup in baja guy in portugal he was named dancer of the year from a field of 6000 participants bought poetry in motion doesn't come easy. yes there was you let go you let your body do what it wants. to thank you do everything to take the audience with you. know when you've got them it's such a relief there is just goosebumps joy. before
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the goosebumps the hard work nicholas trained 5 times a week at his freiburg dance school repeating the same movements over and over until the perfect. kid some i hadn't had on but on the one hand it's just to get warm to reach the right level of fitness to get the post to 100 but it's also about expression and getting the feeling of the dance and so on and sometimes feeling i think on nicholas cole is 15 years old one metre 66 tall he weighs 53 kilos and he's the star of his dance group release. and then there's the moment when you run onto the stage you hear the other steps that's the goose moment when you just want to knock the audience dead. on. with this choreography the dance group became world champions in just dance in
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glasgow for chicle. and then nicholas was going to dance with the you know 2019 act age just 15. 'd back in freiburg. under the watchful eyes of his trainer nicholas rehearses the new choreography. is you can be. trained many dances in my 50 year career but hardly anyone was as goal oriented as focused and it's clear about what they want it comes to are by some of you. when he was just 6 years old and because he enjoyed his 1st performance so much he
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never stopped. you. love. to give. nicklaus doesn't know yet if he will make his passion his profession but for the moment he just. chose his role. could move like that while march 8th is international women's day that's a day that as of just last year berlin actually recognizes as a public holiday unfortunately this year it does land on a sunday so no extra day off for us but to mark the occasion my colleague rachel stewart has looked into the ups and the downs on the lives of women here in germany
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and whether or not we really have come a long way. hold on to your friends and save me the german is all about women. 50 percent of the general population is female the most popular names of girls over the past 15 years have been. more recently about the life expectancy of a girl born into the day is just over 83 years that's almost 5 more than the male period. experience quality in the life. it's been an example of. and it's have not yet along in this is from my that's. printed this much of this as a. preview of these images to give you not have to modify this. adamant about what's in my spine just just fyi this message is on the hoof in that aspect of the team that you see you have. that is you have said into the present tense of calling them to us this is just a lesson in balance of the disciplines of. the global gender gap tracks progress in
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gender equality in areas such as health education economy and politics germany is ranked 10th of $153.00 countries not bad but it still has one of the biggest gender pay gap in europe and if you're on the board of one of the top german companies you're more likely to be called michael thomas or stephan then you are to be a woman. allow me to introduce you to louisa otto peters back in the mid 19th century she was one of the early trailblazers in women's rights they were fighting for the right to vote to get an education and to work but what came next let's kick off with a victory. in 1000 women in germany won the right to vote. under the nazis women were pushed back out of political life and encouraged to have large families across the on it was even awarded to especially productive members. men and women shall have equal rights that became part of the german constitution in
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1949 last week thanks to the complaining of politicians. the end of the sixty's saw civil unrest ripple across the black. women in germany became fed up of being treated as assistants on the sidelines of a social movement remember that tomorrow from the beginning at a meeting of the socialist german student union think a kluger had had enough she started launching tomatoes at the met on stage. this action ended up being a catalyst for the female students to get organized. in 1971 having an abortion could land the woman and her doctor in jail for up to 10 years that's why this magazine cover shook the country hundreds of german women including some household names declaring we've had an abortion the 2nd wave of feminism in germany went on to put all sorts of topics on the agenda such as wages for housework female sexuality and discrimination against gay women. the reunification of germany showed just how different women situations have become in the west than in the east women
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in the east often went to work full time and there was a good childcare system in place whether or not you can call that a month the patient when it was more or less forced by the state is arguable and of course they were still expected to deal with the kids and the housework. are you ready for that f. word. i don't know how good it is one of the most influential women in the world she has said that gender equality is logical and yet she was never keen to label herself a feminist let's see what i want to also say deterministic my absolute make me. die to deep insight into the commissioner's office and this investment in system had. to resort to extreme cause it sure is hard i'm talking with. richard out of him in the small stuff falling on the suppression curtain bust men are all. wrong songs it's only in dorset.
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yes they should and speaking of equality meanwhile it's not just the y. chromosome carriers who get quite excited about cars but while most people these days are talking about the future of mobility we've decided to shine a light on the jalopies of the past especially those models that quite literally qualify as lost and will be doing it with a couple of photographers who have the necessary newness and the care. sneaking through the undergrowth at night looking for rusty cars. flown and tend to about the older and more derelicts the car the better. like this ford town is 17 am from the 1960 s. abandoned in the middle of a forest and. dozens from and it's all quite emotional new cars have personalities a voice
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a face and eyes and that's why i feel closer to them than to other objects somehow . and they're a bit like skeletons like you find in archaeology the remains of a car of the. cars in their final resting place the 2 photographers have even published a book with 110 photos of forgotten car wrecks. they found them in abandoned garages barns and backyards amongst other places. and territory got to know each other while studying photo design in the late eighty's. they are always hunting for new motifs for their lost cars projects together. chad or bart does photo stories around the world sometimes staging fast cult cars. flown takes photos for companies and experiments with artistic concepts. the lost cars is
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a joint project which sometimes requires long trips. they keep the exact locations to themselves. looking for car wrecks is often detective work on site. like here in the i phone south of cologne hoover seems the tip from a friend that an old ford town us disposed of sometime in the seventy's is supposedly located somewhere close. in the twilight hours. the 2 photographers enter the forest. and move and need the darkness for their photos. only then can they completely control the lighting using torches and remote controlled flashes. in the boats that are going to give us that there's a certain dramatic atmosphere about the situation which we want to support and at some point we realize that it's really beautiful to eliminate the interior of cars
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because they seem to come alive. here to a bar to take 4 shots using time exposures. the camera automatically lays them on top of one another. known shines lights from different directions this analog technique is called light painting. the process takes about 2 hours. the next day in ted or studio in colona the finishing touches are made to the photo . just a little brightening is necessary. other of facts were done on site. all this can be worked on and we can create a reflective contemplate of mood. for thoughts a little bit apocalyptic this. rusty rack rediscovered and brought to life one last time before it's sent back to oblivion.
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enter the conflict zone year after year the war in yemen goes on with no apparent indian sites but who's really trying to stop it my guess is we here in munich is the country's foreign minister mohammad abdullah al muhajir most of the thousands of civilian casualties to be enormous human suffering all being from nothing. complex of that. in 30 minutes d.w. . 8 has lived with death threats for 30 years. rushdie was forced into hiding and survived countless attacks but he's not afraid anymore. a great writer speaks about using humor as a weapon. and the power of the painting soundman rushed. in 75 minutes on d w. 9
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gemini if. at any time i've come to any place he's a news radio méliès you have an abundance of caution almost to sing along to you he has to come from super fancy. for an interactive exercise. everything is online mel file an interactive gemini frame with d.w. . is the human race of destroying itself. we are ruining the basic elements of our existence. we're using too much water and losing. water juice in life.
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we may think our water supplies will last forever but they want to play when the rains strong wind storms march 20th on to w. . this is news and these are our top stories italian officials say the country's coronavirus death toll has surpassed 100 authorities of ordered schools to close for the next 2 weeks over 95000 people have been infected worldwide with over $3000.00 deaths in total.
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