tv Tiertransporte gnadenlos Deutsche Welle January 10, 2021 3:00am-3:46am CET
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prevent bacterial growth. use safe water and safe raw materials to avoid contact. food producers are the ones primarily responsible for the safety of the food your body but you can protect yourself and your family from diseases and of all by plying the 5 kilos to sea for food use them you also have a role to play. this is deja vu news and these are our top stories indonesia as a navy has sent a search team to the site where it located the wreckage of a crashed passenger plane the jet plunged into the sea minutes after taking off from the capital jakarta officials say the 26 year old boeing $737.00 was carrying $62.00 people. the social media platform twitter has
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announced it is permanently suspending u.s. president donald trump's account due to what it calls the risk of further violence that's as democratic rivals in congress make moves to try to bring an early end to his term in office. at least 4 people have died in spain after a powerful winter storm dumped what the country's weather agency is describing as exceptional amounts of snow on large parts of the country storm filomena has grounded planes at madrid's main airports in the region is bracing for even more. this is g.w. news from berlin follow us on twitter and instagram at news or visit our website w dot com. or. go on.
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this week on world stories. devastating small concurred a stock. gymnast sound the alarm on abuse in germany. but we begin in china things have returned to normal in. mohan from which coronavirus originates and the city is celebrating its success. it is almost as if nothing had ever happened here life is back to normal in the city where the coronavirus 1st emerged china has brought infection rates down to almost 0 in an exuberant exhibition the communist party celebrates victory in what it calls its war on the epidemic with tributes to soldiers and medics who work themselves with
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sourcing during the outbreak but 1st and foremost the party celebrates self and the general secretary xi jinping was hailed as the man who led the country to victory. john hi is one of them he is on his way to the municipal government. but isn't this the people's government taking pictures is not allowed. to look like a country by music i think they should change their name from the people's government of one to the bureaucrats government of mohan. john hi normally lives in the southern city of shenzhen but returned home to one hand in january when his father broke his hip the elderly man received free treatment at a military hospital this was where he caught cold and later died.
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john who says his father would still be alive if the authorities in one hand had not covered up the early stages of the outbreak he's trying to file a case in court against the government. quite a while. i've been very upset since i came back to war. he is also i'm sad and angry at same time. that's my current state of mind which i shouldn't under all that i can't stand. all this propaganda about the achievements in the fight against. of all the people who died the innocent people who left this world have never been paid proper respect. but few people still speak publicly about their grievances many others appear to have put the experience behind them night life is back on the streets especially young people enjoy their newly returned freedom just one of many places in the woods to struggle with the pandemic the city where it all began is moving on.
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in international air pollution rankings chinese cities are normally ranked the worst but recently the title has belonged to the curtis capital of bishkek. coal is selling like hotcakes in the freezing cold winter temperatures in the city of bishkek average at minus 6 degrees celsius call is an essential good because homes on the outskirts aren't connected to the city's central heating network. bishkek made headlines several times in december for being the number one most polluted city in international air quality ratings but people here say the smog is a problem every year in the winter she kicked in it's just there's a god of fish character that's like this when you leave the city the sky is clear but. i think this is because of the negligence of the government and no one is
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monitoring the situation and the smog as a direct consequence of that look at the remote the most. collides in a valley and smog covers it like a lead kid it is authorities admit they don't know the exact source of the pollution the country's prime minister recently said this mainly coal powered heating plant could be behind up to 20 percent of the emissions he ordered the government to look into switching to gal. for now though air quality sensors in the city show the air is hazardous to people's health the concentration of cancerous particles is several times higher than the norm and. environmental activists feel authorities are all talk and no action they're protesting against the city's latest planning document they say new buildings are blocking the wind and locking the smog inside the city. the plan is only in the interest of the construction lobby the
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building companies and big all of dark. in other countries they would have declared an emergency situation by now but here they just pretend nothing's happening. but for now local environmental inspectors are stuck in forcing existing norms today they're checking the quality of the coal used to heat the boiler at this local school even many government institutions are still heated with coal. regular people will keep eating with coal because it's the most cost effective we can ban the use of coal in the winter people have to live they have to cook. once everyone has access to a gas connection and to an affordable electricity supply there's simply won't be small here anymore. so when you. but kyrgyzstan's gas provider raised prices this year and the coronavirus has hit the country's cash strapped economy
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hard so for now the move away from coal and from this layer of smaug fields far off . some young gymnast's in germany have been subjected to intimidation humiliation and painful training from their coaches 2 of them share their stories with v.w. . now you know me and ruby van dyke are learning to love gymnastics all over again for many years their love for the sport hatch disappeared. aged 10 and primed for big things the twins moved to an elite training center near cologne but when their performance is dick's they say they were called fat and lazy by their coach thus slim's the front is the worst thing was when he said he wouldn't come to competitions with us because we were embarrassing him when you're 14 or 15 you need
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a coach who supports you no matter how badly to be statement one on one occasion injuring a boss exercise naomi said she was purposely dropped on her head to teach her a lesson before had he pushed me 2 or 3 times to go down lower but i knew he wasn't holding me properly that's why i didn't go lower and then i did under pressure but he let go of me and said there you see. if. they complained to the local gymnastics association but say they weren't taken seriously or believed it makes a field day with a problem with devastating effects on their development. at the time naomi and repeat were given 3 options either put up with the coach quit the sport or if they ended up doing move to the olympic training center in penates earlier this month problems. there were uncovered by def spiegel magazine a dozen other gymnasts accused the head coaching chemists gabriella fraser of
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bullying them and making them train through injury naomi and really say pain killers and injections were handed out freely without prescriptions and without the knowledge of athlete's parents but the twins felt they couldn't speak up because of the package they'd come with. for ruby that acceptance came at a price and she was forced to ignore her constant back pain with one coach telling her it was just pretty competition of so. and she would often tell me i was imagining the pain in my back that i didn't know the difference between so muscles and real pain that went on for a year and a half and at some point i believed i was imagining it. being one of those not if no i don't know if it wasn't her imagination though ruby having been denied access to her mit scans would eventually need an operation. fraser who's been suspended pending an investigation has called all the allegations baseless and says she never
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overstepped the mark it was her strong denials that prompted naomi and ruby to tell their story. these days the twins only compete in the national the no longer dreaming of international success but at least now they can perform again with a smile on their faces. long commutes to school or a huge problem for many children in south africa. and then geo wants to change that . is the child who starts the day with a very long walk to school there's no public transport around her children often a rifle late to school or just don't go she goes to include primary school the deputy principal says a number of issues need to be addressed. it is a problem of late coming as it is all of that is that is the issue that driving and
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then that is walking on the road and this program of crime nor the crimes of a good figure has that problem or. a few kilometers away is the base of an ngo that wants to solve the transportation problem for poor local children not iraq's most i under my son gamey and some part of the team of sweet bike there on loading 472nd hand bikes recently delivered from switzerland they'll go to kids at various schools here in the area around margate 140 kilometers south of up and. presently when the new concern arrives it's very i feel like a small child who's a bottle opener like a park and it's really like this is the change that complaining to the country doesn't have a feeling that idea when that happens in our lives really could be. sweet by got going are still here and has already provided more than $1800.00 bicycles to
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schools each one 1st has to be assembled and tested at the sweet bike workshop the project depends on donations depending on how much money comes in some venue and the team by an important to several containers full each year. the workshop has 5 trainee mechanics. is in charge here together they process about 40 pikes a day vocational training is another core element of sweet bikes mission. the aim is to end hot skills and create jobs and new opportunities in bicycle assembly path and distribution the idea is at the end of the year to equip them we have enough skills so they can either open their own workshop or be placed in a drab that you can see in the field these spikes are for in kulu primary school. progress is slow on the unpaved road. the children are
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excited about the bikes. especially as a child do for her it had been a long wait. balancing on 2 wheels takes a little practice but to see he is keen to learn and would like nothing more than to cycle to school the very next day hard. place. player why did this person his claim. there are answers players. play to the result that can be done playing
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make up your mind plays. young moroccan emigrants play. the police will stuff. they know that the road is not a solution. they know their flight could be fatal. but going back is not an option. i'm on and are stuck in the spanish border area alongside other young people there waiting for a chance that will probably never come. shattered dreams starts january 18th on t w. america
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is voting on the future of the wealthiest new glucose to cure me we have to fix the pandemic so that we can fix the economy the gap between rich and war in this country is wide and it's getting wider. new york was hit hardest by the pandemic and the poorest most affected. of trying to get reelected i do see nothing is really going to change from holiday right not to chicago way worse the coronavirus put the focus on social injustices right in the middle of an election year only one person of the 2 candidates even acknowledges the systematic racism in this country we need someone who can bring together the country. who can unify the
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country. 8 months one city 3 quotes the city's upper middle and lower classes this film shows an idealized city trauma toughest taking a look behind the shrink for sonce and lays bare one of america's biggest failings inequality. spring 2020 and back to kevin smith kirkwood takes a walk on board right features of closed he and his colleagues around of work it's really intense it's very intense. and it's scary not knowing where. there's an end in sight. there are some pretty dark days
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because that fear set in. and. our business is already in the. with insecurities times of insecurity but as i have no. idea. of. anything on the horizon. new york confirmed its 1st coronavirus case on march 1st 2 weeks later the city started going into lockdown. by the end of the month the u.s. metropolis had become an m.p. sense of the global pandemic sirens the only sound to break the silence in a city usually impulsive with life new york's world famous theater district broadway closed quickly in a new mood here it would attract millions of visit has. its way kevin had fulfilled his lifelong ambition to become an actor and singer an ambition he reached despite
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the odds. a little black a kid from the ghetto obsolete ohio. who saw his dream come true you know i spent 6 years in this building you know winning it's holy award and that tony's and winning the grammy award. is bright through came with you who are doing musical kinky boots which still kevin also dressed up as a woman he was finally on the verge of his own directorial debut as a small fish outside of new york. i was just starting to feel like i had a footing in the industry. you know and then this happened a are. a few blocks away from broadway tiffany's on 5th avenue and. that's when they
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reached over moon woods or did until much. my job was to package any retail items that came downstairs because my order online it will come downstairs i would check it examine it wrap it up and package it for shipping. the personal take on the world to severely different one in the marines who lives in a high rise in the south bronx new york's poor spiral tiffany's gift boxes remain in t.v. in the reach of $100.00 for a 2 room apartment a rent that was manageable once she still had a job. in the richest parents came to new york as latin american immigrants and ended up some with it couldn't be further from the affluent center of manhattan. as a little girl my mom will watch a body of old movies and one of her favorites was breakfast at tiffany's.
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i understand why you know walking in front of the store was like a big thing for what you have earned you know you want to lavish lifestyle might be i think you know be given in new york that's what i always embody for myself i made my breakfast that's if you drink. now the dream is over in the region no longer has her job she has to send to children to stay with other family members because money is so short. the viki family has gone to stay in the summer house in the hamptons 2 hours drive from a manhattan apartment. and function in a helixes and can work from anyway. just a fun fact about my cause and i work 2 with a girl who is a professional organizer and she came out here before i arrived in the hamptons and
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organizes my cars there by color and category. ian became a multi-millionaire at the luxury goods brand coach today he isn't into pending to rectify the shoe company crops and a board member of the cosmetics for. success is the intersection of hard work and good luck good fortune and i really do believe that if he manages his 2 daughters. and shot at $26.00. you know they're sisters so sometimes i just try to keep everyone focused and calm so he and i like to refer to ourselves as fashion bloggers influencers either of our influence our. and my content creator yes. but what we do from like as a job standpoint is basically just. we like to look at ourselves as honestly people
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who are recommend even to people and trying to influence like iowa guy was that way with. the 2 sisters of the pandemic means influences are more in demand than ever for some outfits i think in the scene you know. it's such a cute outfits that are. just perfect that's what people are like or at home like shopping on my in a lot of sales are going on so fast people are just going through and surround all day because they don't really have anything else to do. it is really pushing to talk by asking people to open their judge a little bit about it because it's like people are losing their jobs and things like i am more focusing on my clothes and yeah but like it's our job. some people just don't understand why we're sensitive about you know we yeah we try to be. the
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metropolis of the extremes and the pandemic. by april new york is experiencing days that will take a scout the city's collective memory. under lockdown anyone who can stays home and does so. as many as 800 people a day of dying in the city's hospitals bodies have to be stored in the fridge or a trucks behind the clinics. why was the city so badly affected and who was the pandemic affecting worst. there was 2 groups of those who had the the means to leave or the means to work i'm only and the rest of the folks the rest of us people that have to go to work to continue the system for the people who would stay home and the people who are able to go to and although this divide existed in the city long before the pandemic it has now
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become a matter of life and death to new york with its 8400000 inhabitants 5 barrels full divided into an equal neighborhoods there are parts of manhattan where almost everyone is white but that's not the case in the bronx where people of color are the majority in new york there's a close correlation between skin color and income residents in the poorest parts of the bronx and queens of mostly black or latino and it's here that nice new york is a dying of the coronavirus health is a luxury not everyone can afford out of the top 25 out of 30 have called were in white wealthy neighborhoods and the people who were being hit the most were in the poor black and brown ms immigrant community so we're going to test them i go inside and with the end of lock down angle spears after. the death of george told him a lesson may 25th sparks days of protests after he shot suffocation with
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a white police officer at me and on his neck. there are protests in new york and throughout the country except i missed in washington fish out of the peaceful protests and racism and social justice through i. i was a man disproving frank buckley's who's had a chance to take in a black through was when you combine the cold virus with the barbarous of racist cops you're going to have an explosion and that's what you are witnessing what those are the folks out in the streets who are getting sick yet it is also the people who are being targeted by the police unfairly was the protests go on for months was.
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for him the right to rue no racism is an all too familiar passion flowers i'm not a color you're not a color you're human being and that's how you should carry a softball what you put a title on yourself it changed everything and i think that's the problem with people in today's society she knows the chance of catching covet 99 just district is much higher than in manhattan. as you can see in this neighborhood it's not a lot of wealth funds so a lot of people don't have insurance to go and their feet are sick they don't want to go to an emergency room because they don't have it to pay in neighborhoods like this you're going to get hit very hard when stuff like that happen because it's a poor neighborhood poverty. within a kilometer radius of enriches house in the south bronx 10 percent of residents define themselves as want the average annual household income is just shy of $27000.00 almost half the residents here live in poverty or at risk of poverty.
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before the pandemic 13 percent were unemployed in may the area was among those with the highest number of coronavirus cases. but i did hear some tenants didn't have it and passed it's june and emerita hardly leaves her apartment she's waiting and hoping for a job and to see his sons one of them is spending lock down with his father the other son is within reach his mother in the region his self couldn't afford to feed them all. is about to be worth. 3 months. 3 months without seeing my kids physically i see them through video talked it out but physically touching them physically hugging you know 3 months what's up guys.
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i'm getting how's that and. if the bikini family were able to remain together during the pandemic and they have paid help makes a canal design a lease is on a house visit today. i have 4 kids so i'm afraid for my kids especially yeah. right. because i need money yeah. my husband and i will stay home for 2 months so now we start to work a little bit mom never wanted to at least $150.00 an hour out here and we'll have one or she's prepared to take the health risk in order to get that kind of money for the big family work doesn't intend health risk. for extremely fortunate to have the choice of being here versus in new york city
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things are like this or not everybody choice in the city is one of the most innovative places with the virus right now and also. we're so fortunate to have a backyard to go out on and a lot of people are just stuck in their apartments and the virus reaches the hamptons in april that arrives most lonely in a new york city within a kilometer radius around the bt home 90 percent of residents to find themselves as white. around 2.6 percent live close to or below the poverty line and prepared to meet unemployment levels well under 2 percent. at the peak of the crisis so sometimes more people were dying in new york than in the hamptons. so how do societies more privileged members deal with such social injustice journeyed deadly pandemic. is it ok to carry on showing off one's wealth. i'm sensitive about what the girls post on their instagram all the time i'm like
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really why are you i've never before you know to me i mean but that's my opinion it's their brand and they should you know what they want to do with their with their instagram you know it's not for me to say or to control it it's their brand just don't like i mean people sometimes. if it was my brand i wouldn't i wouldn't do what they do but that's not that's not what i'm talking about millions of my gang i'm talking about we don't i'm like no no. no i'm just saying your brand is about you guys your lifestyle young you know that's what that's what it is that's what i think is magnetic about it and what attracts people and and i'm just saying it's not it's not my particular brand or lifestyle or what i would choose to post if i you know you've seen my instagram yeah i do that and yet i own branding my own hangal i got it you got it. came in the lives of performing but now his life is an
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intermission and i train sr without any endings and perhaps more importantly without a stage. not exactly. the are. these my darling. who are the camp in churches taking the place of the theater. world even used. to charge. for. the 1st few were like oh this is kind of weird this is kind of kooky and then i got you know used to it as best as i could it's just it's not as fulfilling you know to be able to look into people's faces and and and hear them singing along with you and standing up and clapping and waving their hands it's. it's a much different experience so it's been
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a challenge for me to to try to keep my performative energy up speak and really as a pastor i'm like maybe i shouldn't preach maybe just single time because it's so you know spirit filling you know and so uplifting. people have lost mothers and fathers and sisters and brothers people are suffering they feel lonely they feel isolated they've lost loved ones and so there's kind of a very it was a heavy heavy mood and it was difficult pasturing in that context we call who is. source of comfort and strength what the son least not in the real religion is an anchor for kevin especially now. like for so many others in forced isolation is tough being able to come here and still getting to worship you know getting to sit and listen to the pastors you know sermon like firsthand in and be in the space you know has been amazing for my
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a levels and my stress levels. after church back in queens kevin snaper would the story. of this neighborhood he's finding it collecting ethnically mixed and diverse it's it's a great shopping area and shopping district. there's a great middle class neighborhood lots of families lots of young people young transplants. in the one kilometer area around kevin's apartment 74 percent of residents define themselves as white. the average annual household income is around $74000.00. 11 percent live around or below the poverty line. before the pandemic around 5 percent or unemployment. the number of coronavirus cases here in april was around
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40 percent below the new york city average. i felt very safe actually during the pandemic i felt like this is a good neighborhood to sort of weather the storm and sort of and i felt a little bit protected i felt really lucky that we were not at the epicenter of infection. but economically the slowdown has been. just harrowing. and the reach of a 1000000 doesn't feel at all safe in the broads but now she's got something to look forward to the youngest son isaac is coming home in 4 days time the 13 year old has just finished his school year on line with my dad who made it. should be very proud of yourself and regardless of the circumstances she was put in a truck or the times when you lose focus on anything you felt part of that which was able to you know catch up and it's not how you start it is how you finish it
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you finish strong you tell yourself around that plus. a full disability and everything else is like i say has been living with his grandmother. answers so i'm very excited for a couple i love smelling my kids and just life you know just different they're here snowbound their neck because it's something about our kids. you know and it does take me back to when he was a baby like oh my goodness. it's june and after almost 3 months of total lockdown the new york cautiously begins to i cannot begin some businesses like a addresses. allowed to reopen under certain conditions. at the same time the effect the pandemic has had on new york is becoming clear unemployment has risen to above 20 percent almost level it was at the time of the great depression our research shows that in my 1000000 new yorkers were suddenly
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left without work the number of people who could no longer afford to feed themselves doubled to over 2000000 a crisis already existed the coronavirus exacerbated as. anyone who can afford to do so has already left the city by only my almost a quarter of new york's uptown apartments are empty. and this country is very very wealthy the reason that we. don't meet the needs of our poor citizens is not that we don't have the money it's that we have had years of tax cuts and tax loopholes and. you know quite lax treatment toward outright tax evasion there are people actually who are literally getting richer as pandemic before and we are afraid to ask them to do civic duty by just paying their fair share and we merely
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have to ask people for true money for 2 to billionaires fairness fees to tell deal with this but. it's july the 1st not far from the b.k. residence the poor of new york protest at the gates of the city's rich legislation has been passed cut welfare spending savings to plug the massive fiscal cliff by the coronavirus pandemic. the protesters are demanding that instead of punishing the poor the city should tax its beginnings. your honor the rich can continue to live their lives now we have to queue up in endless moans for a meal while not 7 the cause. approaches doesn't make it as fine as the b.k. family's house team would be prepared to pay higher taxes he tries to play his part hippie how are you doing all he's become a mentor to people like james his former intern who's just finished college we're
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growing and came in for 20 exciting for me as i'm looking at my job search now it's it's challenging this is what i try to also say to myself. every day you know i think this is a moment in time yeah i mean that's that's that's it i want to do something that passion about that i'm excited about that. that there. was. that it was sophie the everyday life of an influence a doesn't stop because of the carnivores remark. in southampton shopping is allowed again with the mosque. was the son. who was passed in of the ultra rich there's been any sign of the catastrophe ravaging other parts of the country. i would say it's like an idyllic seaside town because remember the ocean is just around here and it's
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a summer place but it's year round as well if you're in york city you go to the hamptons and that's pretty much what it is so any equivalent of like a summer town in germany that's what they have this is for us. the next day back in the bronx and the ratio waits to see his son isaac for the 1st time in 3 months by her brother brings him home. hey i. am just really excited by that the last time i see my baby was i can march or something. and he's actually here so that's good he's healthy he looks tall he looks amazing my son was very great and now he's here in santa hoping that life can get back to normal be found me yeah you got it
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right good good good you go oh oh oh i'm going to. use violence in my home. i like you and like to hear you to free to feel so much safer than before much larger do. it with today nothing's going to spoil than before and the reach of move financial hardship is already looming on the horizon. camera rolling takes it. march 11th 2020 was the last day at what i knew as kevin is putting on a performance in his own front room it's part of a siege a project that combines monologues and documentary new york his experiences of the pandemic the trip to gives instruction. conference call. i was kept in this
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role a choreographer who feels totally blown off cool spy the lockdown. as an artist i have i connected with being lost at the beginning of cold not knowing where my art and inspiration was going to come from to take this art and use it to help work through our feet my own feelings it was really awesome and that's that's one of the beautiful things about what actors get to do. all right. through. the the little dance might help kevin process the experiences of the past few months it won't been him much money the but the but if you just use a dancer and there's a chance in addition to unemployment benefits kevin gets around $600.00 a week coronavirus subsidy but now that scheme is to be wound down i'm optimistic i
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generally am positive. i don't think they're going to be be able to justify cutting that $600.00 totally i think and so many americans would fall off literally fall off a financial cliff i wouldn't be homeless but with the 600 and the base you know i am able to pay my bills. but that's exactly what happens it's august and in new york case numbers have fallen significantly even the rockefeller center is open to visitors again. kevin has to dig into his savings because there are no more subsidies available. to me and became he is back in the city he shows us his apartment on manhattan's upscale shopping side. we have these little guard. dogs that the love is trying to take pieces. they've hardly used the apartment luxury space left empty while many new yorkers don't know how they'll be able to
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pay next month's rent a look at someone like me and look at our family and look at the life that we have and that we lead we have. not being so affected by covert 19 certainly from an economic standpoint because of the opportunities that we have and the flexibility that we have we have options. but a lot of people don't. see. them return or a man can't afford her rent and now she's paying in installments she's been saved to buy a food bank in the apartment block basement canned foods and pasta to get her and his son isaac through this difficult time. in the rita is in freefall but there's no social welfare in it to catch it and she's not the only one. now among those who are declared eligible we only see it on average about 70 percent of them
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actually getting their unemployment check. that's even lower for african-americans it's only about 55 percent. the reason over clinton pure prosy and one that makes many mistakes. and the rate to stay strong for his son god being in the backyard is his therapy. how am i supposed to tell my son at night when i fuck him and you could be whatever you want to be this too shall pass god is a good god and then i'm in the living room on my god the bills being doubtful can do that. evening on manhattan's upper east side he and having dinner with his mentee janes. it's the 1st time they've met in person for a long time. james has great news that they got a job working out or if they are. still at the elevator that i was
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