tv Frag den Lesch Deutsche Welle November 27, 2020 12:45am-1:01am CET
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and also coming up, what's for dinner? kids around the world pose for portraits, with the meals they eat. the differences are astounding. and the french designer who's giving london more than just a splash of paint the 1st, remember climate change that issue? we were all talking about before covered 1000 happened. well, the problem hasn't gone away. it's just out of the spotlights a new film and to change that the documentary now follows young climate activists fighting for the planet's future. the film was meant to be playing now, but because of the pandemic, it's currently set for release in january they're young and they're angry. they want change. now was was
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he was their passion made a huge impression on german photographer, jim keaton, known for his black and white celebrity portraits. now he's focusing his lens on today's youth. for a year he followed young climate activists in the fridays for future movement, including this film is called now the smog over to i think this was the last chance to make this film and he does not. i don't think we have much time left for films that explain the way out of this climate catastrophe. time is running out if you did set them and it was young people who changed his perspective on activists taking the older generations to task. smart, eloquent, strategic, like german fridays for future organizer. the reason why bella, who features in the film, it's a david against goalie
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a thing. yeah. we just think of resources that are unique and this is for us. it's young voices, it's young minds. it's john, people who have a right to have a future. no one can take us away from them. and the strongest argument i have it will only affect my generation peripherally. but you can't just shout it out if you know that you're living on a planet, maybe a few more decades, and the whole future will be determined by this alone. it's insane to go from bush to sanford to go bombs, and likely also in lists. director of inventors and singer patti smith has crossed generational voices cheering on young activists efforts. the film now documents german protesters occupying a coal mine demonstrators from the civil disobedience movement extinction rebellion and the youth climate lawsuit against the united states government. this is about our lives. this is about our future. we're seeing the
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executive branch of the federal government for causing climate change and try living our constitutional rights. different movements with the same goal, getting the world's leaders to act. now, that heated doesn't hide his admiration, allusive, be sure they're all very polished and their delivery well rehearsed. and in the case of friday's for future, exceptionally polite phrase for future of about us name to flourish. and his team were in new york when glitter too in bed addressed world leaders at the united nations general assembly after sailing across the atlantic on his own future generations are upon you. and if you choose to fail, as i say, we will never give you the documentary strength lies in the hope of the young people. it features time for show raise a family destruction people on the frontlines far that put us past see it,
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will it happen? and it will he do it? no idea. it's a gripping question. it's beyond this, we're starting to see some signs that it's possible. we're getting close dust. doesn't that we've nothing but his constant. no future without food photographer greg siegel for trey's children from around the world, surrounded by what they eat. some have more. others less, some eat real food, others largely junk food. see those pictures tell us a lot about their cultures about disparities in wealth and health and about the state of humanity. because in the 10 years old from needs sausages, melon eggs, my son, 11 years old from dakar, hard white bread filled with peas and noodles. 7 years old from ham fish sticks and french fries. great. siegel sees children's nutrition as
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a topic that's too often overlooked food is, is sort of the, i think of it as the kind of the social glue. you know, it's the thing that binds us together. and it concerns me that so little attention has been given to such an important thing. siegel shows how globalization influences what children eat, the poor. they are the less junk food. they consume. pizza from a major chain in mumbai, costs $13.03 times what i'm child's father earns in a single day. the photo shoot in brazil with color conny, a 9 year old girl from the indigenous yellow p.t. tribe. she lives in the national park, which is in the amazonian basin. she traveled by boat and by bus and by car to get to the studio, the food that she's eating is do very simple. her daily bread,
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it's because salva and it's she uses it to wrap around fish that she catches in the river. and she said to me, you know, whenever you're hungry, you just go to the river with your net. greg siegel lives in el to dina. northeast of los angeles, he works for international publications. when he was a child, his mother remarried and they moved around a lot. and his teenage years photography became a way for him to gain a certain clarity. this was good. in another series, he photographed people lying on the garbage. they produced in a week when i was a kid. and even then i was kind of curious about garbage. we have a neighbor where i was growing up in new jersey and this neighbor seemed to produce a mountain of garbage every week. you know, and they were just at the curb, there would be this pile of garbage bags. and i remember as a kid wondering,
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you know, where the hell is all this garbage going? the average american produces 13 kilograms of garbage per week. that's more than $4000000000.00 kilos of new waste each week in the u.s. alone. while i was shooting that i was respecting of the photographs as a kind of instant archaeology sort of, you know, so that we can see right away what the, the peoples, not only what they're there surrounded by, but also kind of what their values are. siegel has also photographed grown men reenacting the american civil war. the battlefields of the past are now fast food, joints, or parking lots, has photos shown a style just as an irrational illness, a longing for a past the people themselves never experienced. it's interesting because with a lot of these reactors, they play both,
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they play the north and they play the south. but generally they prefer playing south greg siegel approaches his photo series, with an almost scientific precision. his pictures show incisive, but also of society. colors can play a huge role in how we feel, since a lot of people started spending more time at home this year, paid companies have seen sales go way up. now mostly they've been selling more soothing paint colors, london based design, or comey while it's taking the opposite approach. mission to turn london into a more cheerful place through geometric and colorful patterns. trying to change that by bringing out a bright coals on big things. all i can from the space i think is just, you don't realize the impact of corals how it does on people. the designers, most famous work of art is in late. a working class district in north london meant
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to break up the main streets monotonous, looking at a splash of color to its facades. the work was a commission organized by local residents who raised more than 40000 heroes through crowd fund nicknamed her range. the piece covers building is one of london's largest public art i was in the us and you could see one of the building and to make them smile was a really nice straightaway. and this really proud of being like big scale these days. i think other women as well, sometimes it's not always going to like, easy to get through. the french born designer is based in hip east london. she initially wanted to become a textile designer, a professional, fast moving trends were drawing in a realistic style is important. but camille, well, i think certainly in hatter today she really designs textiles. instead,
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she prefers to give the facades of houses a fresh look. she fights urban dreariness worldwide with patterns and colors. for instance, here at an office building in brooklyn, new york, or at a gas station in the u.s. state of arkansas. the pop up house she's designed for like, oh, it's currently touring the world. while his work is inspired by the american pop artist, keith haring, as well as the memphis design movement, she grew up in the south of france, where her parents own several designer items have not started founded in 1980, the milan based memphis group was made up of post-modernist designers, they used a playful and colorful style as a reaction to functionalism, which dominated at the time when he's spoken of those style of design because i grew up in the eighty's. so just on the facts, i don't know if it is, you know,
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for a rules or they create their own rules in the design, which i love. and it's really yes, really vibrant. i find that when the joy for him and his bit of sense of humor, i think in that style, i mean, maybe, i mean, there were at myself, but that's what i get from it myself. so something i really connected me with current project in london's financial district canary wharf shows how she manages term aintree diverse times. while continuing to experiment, she's transformed a bridge in an op art style with stripes and lines to create optical effects sets for the future. she says her big dream is more collaboration with architects. so it might be just a matter of time before a while longer style office buildings has more color to london's financial district . and that's almost it for this edition of arts and culture all leave you now there with a look at british georgian singer, katie melua, her 1st in 2 years. it's called simply album number 8. there's a song,
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to the point of strong opinions, clear positions. international perspective, sir donald trump stays in the white house, now appears to be number one. as joe biden begins to presenting a skull from a team, we'd ask if i'm where in america can i get to be a global leader to join us on some point shortly. to the point is i'm going to be the 1st on the issue of who's lived in the womb going over the central bank. good luck in putting the names of the most focused on hello gentlemen and doesn't know how life could be any different. what do they think can feel most not usually like, but the ear bud in your obit fights for peace? the plan is for her to do everything to achieve that. here they put you in prison
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don't simply to get discovered who subscribe to the documentary on the day that we news and these are our top stories. large crowds have lined the streets of one desirous to bid farewell to football legend, diego maradona. as his funeral procession passed earlier, tens of thousands of fans filed past his coffin at the presidential palace. maradona died wednesday at the age of 60 at home after suffering. a heart attack.
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