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tv   Wunderschon  Deutsche Welle  June 17, 2021 11:15pm-12:01am CEST

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pulled out of the upcoming grand slam it wimbleton in order to spend time with friends and family. soccer recently said that she had struggled with anxiety and depression. after she withdrew from the french open. or agent says that she will be ready to return to the court in time for the olympics, which take place in her home country. japan is the w news, w business. steven vincent of next stick around will be right with the, with the law what people have to say matters to me. that's why just in to there still a reporter every weekend on
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d. w. i was interested in the global economy. our portfolio d w business b on here's a closer look at the project. our mission. analyze the flight for market dominance . with the w business beyond me, the disappointing results for german vaccine maker care vac its long awaited m r. n a shot is only 47 percent effective in the 1st reading of trial results. shareholders have shown their displeasure, but the companies does, it's not giving up yet. also on the show, the u. s. looks beyond vaccines that announces billions and funding for anti virus
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treatments for over 19 the goal. a pill that could replace the trip to the hospital and its boosters caught the pursuit of south africa. now the makers of bill tom, i tried to meet snack once, put an international trademark on their product. it wouldn't be big bucks, but it will be easy. because the show i'm sitting here in berlin. shares in german biotech from cure vac plunge thursday after the company revealed disappointing trial results for its corona virus vaccine. candidate. the him or in a shot was 47 percent effective in a trial involving 40000 volunteers. and that's far lower than vaccines from rivals, biotech, and moderne a cure back share price was down by half. at one point on thursday, germany's caravan was supposed to be one of the big players in the fight against cove at 19 that you had ordered 400000000 doses of its vaccine. now the bad news stage 3 test results have shown an efficacy rate of only 47 percent,
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far less than vaccines made by competitors and under the 50 percent minimum rate set by the w h o b on take on the dosage of biotech and modernity can be increased between 3 to nearly 10 times because they very slightly chemically modified the renee with cure back. the idea was that the r n a would be potentially injected without changes. fundamentally, the approach is right, but unfortunately, and it needs to be said, it didn't work, needs to be at the stock market reacted immediately to the new with cure evac shares plunging a time by almost half their worst daily performance since the company's august 2020 . i p o they cure vac vaccine was meant to be a major part of the worldwide campaign against coven 19. now the countries who are counting on the job are left hanging. like those who will suffer the most will be the poor countries as well as other european countries,
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because i think the cure vaccine didn't receive the significant results that were initially expected one. and the claim about the research continues. i cure a vax labs, but for now, the company is unlikely to play a major role in the short term fight against the virus. as we just heard there, turbotax discipline results are just a setback for the company. there's step backwards for the global race to vaccinate his chelsea, delaney in frankfort. its been a spectacular rise and fall for sure vac, which is seen as one of the front miners at the beginning of this race for a co vaccine so much so that the trump administration had reportedly tried to lure them to the united states and exclusively secure the rights to that vaccine for themselves. what we've learned is that this vaccines doesn't stack up to the other m r n a vaccines out there. your back is blaming the different variants that are making it's vaccine, less effective and they say they still do plan to go ahead with,
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with plans for regulatory approval. but it's unclear if they actually will get that because most regulators want to see africa syria above 50 percent use as this is a huge setback for the block because there's a very strong pipeline of other vaccines now, but it will likely deal a bigger blow to the global race to vaccinate because the cure back back seen was seen. it's one of the easier ones to transport and ship and store because it didn't require super low temperature refrigerators. so certainly a setback for that global race to vaccinate the world. chelsea delaney in frankfort . they're now the focus on developing vaccines has for good reason soaked up a lot of public funding. now, the us is turning its attention and money to groan of ours treatments. washington announcing $3200000000.00 and funding for development of coven 1900 anti viral. the goal, according to officials, is a pill that can help reduce the severity of an infection. multiple drug makers are
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already at work on treatments, including including pfizer merrick and eli lilly. the funding will also support research into treatments for other dangerous viruses. court in new york joins me for more. yes. how promising is the development of anti virus at this moment? well, i mean, 1st of all we had washington spending about 18000000000 dollars last year for the so called operation warp speed to, to get the development of the exceed going. so now we see the antiviral a treatment. i mean, the most important line of defense probably is still will be the vaccine, but also to help actually people who got the virus to actually do better. that would be an important extra step. even if the stock prices of those companies involve them have not really reactive in such a strong fashion. yes. is this a shift in attention from vaccines for the us?
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well, i mean, what we do have to wait and see if those treatments are really working. i mean, what i've seen and heard quite a bit today is that it actually might take some time before you really have a home run product on the market. so far we only got approval for an anti virus treatment from jelly at from ram desert year. and actually the benefits them have been quite modest. so let's wait and see if pfizer, if merc, as they are saying at the moment, might come up with an approved and to viral towards the end of the year. what we've seen so far. and that's why it took so long with the anti virus in relative terms, this at the beginning, those anti virus got mostly tested with patients you've already been hospitalized. and that has shown that it doesn't really work that well. it doesn't work much
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better. if you give the anti virus right after you caught the vaccine so meaning it would have to go hand in hand testing and then giving those anti rivals for positive cases as early as possible. ryan's cord in new york. thank you. let's go now to some of the other business stories making headlines. switzerland is the world's most competitive economy. that's according to the latest ranking by the lows and based institute for management development. rankings are based on government efficiency, business efficiency, and infrastructure. singapore had been the most competitive for 2 years in a row, but its economy shrank by 5.4 percent in 2020. the u. s. retains its 10th position . an hour long blackout had airlines banks and other companies around the world with angry customers, unable to access websites and mobile apps. the us base tech provider a. com, i admitted it was the sorts of problems the outage shows how vital behind the
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scenes companies have becomes running the internet. the revenue tick tock owner bite dance more than doubled last year to $34000000000.00. that's according to the wall street journal growth underscores the video apps massive global reach over all by dance posted a loss as the company was forced to compensate staff with shared dividends. well here in germany dependent mix toll has been especially noticeable in cities were already tight. living space has become tighter and the distance restrictions and the culture and service industries were all shuddered for a period. so are fed up city as well as striking out for the countryside. well, not just yet. the economic effects of the pandemic hitting german cities harder than rural regions. most obviously evident in rising unemployment. but the business situation for companies is also now much worse than in the countryside. status and you are especially hard hit because the areas of social consumption are much more
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abundant here. and there the economic sectors, which have been paralyzed to so long by the lockdown measures on mass. now, it's from the long alarm, leaving the munich base depot institute says the regions are doing well in the panoramic. their homes are more industrial companies. and now many more people are moving out of the cities, partly due to the higher infection risks there. but he f o says it's also too soon to determine if these trends will continue beyond the pandemic media. people in the countryside or perhaps to encourage even more to move there will require creating certain conditions and start with infrastructure connections to transport networks . but above all, digital infrastructure, fast unstable internet internet digital infrastructure is essential to working from home. even if some only want to head to the countryside for the peace and nature, is it really the pursuit ho of south africa?
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bill tang homey and dried meat stack is getting a certain marketing polish these days. global market for dried meat or jerky has actually surged during the pandemic. south african producers now want to get in on that wave and trademark bill tang for global push. here it says african favorite is being made. built on his beef marinated with a mix of spices, salt and vinegar. it has been dried for several days, which gives it a unique, savory taste that has become popular all over the world, hoping that uniquely. so there are more for shoot off on even call it sort of what we find it's being copied and made all over the world at the moment . under the name we feel the main bolt on should be protected as a service. and product factory alone produces 40000 kilograms of built on each
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month for the local market to capitalize on surging international interest. so the african producers want to trademark built on and prevent manufacturers and other countries from using the name for experts warn it may be too late. it's very popular term and a popular product. i mean, if you look at the mortgage just there are the $200.00 applications, including the total indicating effect or on 15 and other states $37.00. and then this is very popular. and the question for the challenge really is to put the genie back in the bottle or able to resist this and encapsulate this term and on it. local products like roy, herbal, tea, already internationally, trademark. so that's where we're adding built onto the mix. won't be easy so that can be, can only be exported once. it has been approved by local officials and undergone stringent testing by authorities abroad. that means built on has a hard time reaching potential international market. what we looking for is
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essential protection ports or producers got for portugal and champagne producers got for problems. we're not going to solve the problems of getting a product exported, but we at least might get a 14 little trade marketing. it's complex for the struggle to that's going economy would welcome any potential boost in exports and that's it for me and the dw business team here. berlin, check us out online dot com slash business. also on facebook. i've seen beardsley, thanks for watching. ah, we don't want to see them putting our, their street, our water in our fear. hoping your eyes to be on our new global 3000 series. about the threats you're facing. the
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heroes taking a stand just got them back up. and the mobile 3000 series starts june 21st on d, w. in the climate change, the people who hear what ideas do they have for their future. d, w dot com, african megacity, the things you can click and enter. i look closely, i listen carefully.
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don't know how to listen to the go the field, the magic the discover, the world around subscribed to d w documentary on youtube, the the, the drama and gowns and a film festival for the public. but that's not all the berlin are that have never shown right away from the big issues that affect all world films with heart hitting political content have always been main protagonists. on this red carpet magnet was
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welcome to arts and culture. it's always been known as europe, political film festival hollywood stars. welcome. but it burns international film festival. they've never been the main attraction. over the years. we've got used to welcoming filmmakers who are dissidence or his work has been banned in the countries. this year's edition again spotlights real life injustices, and in particular, tells the stories of confident, influential women whose courageous actions will go down in history and event that any one just for you push back away from the table given as quick as we can. the 100 obey detention camp in cuba, massey hollander. this is fine. i so see it. we wish to represent you from laura pena is arrested on suspicion of having helped organize the $911.00 terrorist attacks he's held at guantanamo without being charged. and he confesses a lawyer,
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discoveries, his confession was attained under direct. the film is based on a true story. jodie foster plays the real life lawyer. nancy holiday has been interrogated. he has been held against his will for 6 years without a single charged weight against nancy hollander came to berlin for the films premier. i'm really thankful that this film is premier in here because it's the most appropriate film festival that we could have imagined. and i want an audience to know what happened to my home to do, and to bring alive the, the torture and the terrors of animal so that people don't forget to call this number to my wife. and more, we know not to trust. never did. i believe that the united states of america. what do you fear and karen, to control no matter how dramatic this is. the reality was more dramatic than this
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. because this is beyond anything you could imagine. you need to tell me what happens. well, how do was detained in us prison for 14 years without ever being charged with a crime. he kept diaries documenting his time in prison. the film is based on those diaries, that's a fly. he would you please raise your right hand and repeat after me. i also want the german audience to know that mohammed who has a child born in germany and his wife lives here, kitty and he should be able to travel here. another film, screening at the bailey not as i. one is also both violence and the long shadow cast by the wind, by the protesting for the 1st time against male power to protest with spark by the
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mass rapes into here square. during the spring demonstrations in 2011, the women held up knives, symbols of the violence used against them. this is the only thing that change in the mentality of woman. the way how they start to realize just students and their rights. and they are not here anymore. they're not ashamed to talk about this anymore. and this is what we used to be afraid of saying now we don't. and i think this is, i hope it will lead us for a change. my hair, a quality connect to the sexual assaults during the rebellion with her own story and the memories of her pregnancy in the name as a child, she was also taught that girls were worthless and never ending chain of disempowered . namely,
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duly me . ah, i mean, i've seen what have been in the square. it's just open up. every thing thing thing thing that happened to me 20 years ago is all named was my dad. i know i'm to meet because they've been making more money to the arab spring men, different things to men, women, but egyptian women are now rising up and driving far reaching changes in their country. powerful
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stuff. and someone who has seen both those films is scott rooks per welcome. scott: now the martini and presents a totally different take on the 911 narrative that we see where the muslim characters with the bodies it's been nominated for a host of woods. jodie foster, one a golden globe. what did you make of it? yeah, you're completely right. i mean, in this film, the villains are the u. s. government and the, the victim is this muslim man, mom did allow he who was falsely imprisoned in, in guantanamo bay. but the story of a prickly nancy hollander is struggle. her fight to get him released from guantanamo bay is, is really sort of a hollywood heroic struggle. and so it's great to see it getting the sort of proper hollywood treatment. and it's a phenomenal moving great, a former president barack obama famously promised to close 110 am i bay over a decade ago. it still open with dozens of inmates, some of whom have never been charged. do you think this feel might be the one to
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really make a difference to those people or will it, i mean, i think guantanamo bay is sort of fallen off the agenda for many people worldwide. we haven't seen a news recently. and when i spoke to nancy hollander on the red carpet, the premier of this film here in berlin, she said she hopes the movie draws attention back to the fact that guantanamo bay is still open and maybe puts pressure on the u. s. government to come through on its promises to finally close that person. okay. now let's talk about as i want. we got a taster in the report setting cairo during the spring, the director has called it an examination into the agenda. inequality arab societies suffers form. yeah, this is a really interesting documentary because it looks at the arab sprinkling completely different angle than most of the used to seeing. and i'm eating a lot of us. remember the news reports from the time. but the fact that there was such a large group of female activists protesting mailed violence with something i think got lost in this film. really put these female activists back in the center and
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shows how much, how vital they are to any process of democracy in the middle east. it's really past the documentary. ok, i will look forward to that now least the one the this is burning out a documentary award for new sets in the suburbs of paris, where she herself grew up. tell us a bit about this interesting because it's a similar time to documented to take a look at something that we think we know and gives a whole different angle for it. so this, this takes place in the suburbs of paris. this are the phone you which in the news media are often portrayed a sort of hot spots for violence extremism. but the up grew up in these areas and the way she looks at is completely different. she, it takes really so humanistic, empathetic look at the people who live there and also finds real beauty in areas that are superficially seem quite dire. it's a fastening very personal documentary, and i think after you've seen it, you'll never look at paris the same way again. really. ok. got wrong for as always, quite chatting with you now it dates back to ancient egypt
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where it was set to be a favorite of queen cleopatra in india, middle east and africa. its been used for thousands of years, the cultural reasons and who is cooling properties. i'm talking about decorating the skin using hannah is long been popular in the u. k. south asian communities. but one hand, an artist in london, is on a mission to bring hannah to a wider audience. attached with a modern twist. the art of painting bodies with 10 paced, goes back to antiquity. today it's become a veritable fashion trends. paula and dom job runs london, head of bar, where anyone can get their body painted henna tattoos are created using a paste made from a certain plant. typical head of patterns and designs are painted onto the skin with this dye, which stains the skin and slowly fades after about 10 days. so
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the design means a lot for me because growing up we used to design, especially on weddings for us. it holds true significance for a spacious occasion. for me, while i was growing up, i thought, wouldn't it be amazing to share this with everyone and not just have it for wedding, for my aim has always been to make it accessible for everybody. but not everyone welcome some say westerners wearing henna tattoos are engaging in cultural appropriation. knowing little to nothing about the roots of this art. for me, i feel like if someone's wearing hannah and wearing it with 270 and they really enjoying wearing it, then there's absolutely not nothing wrong. i feel like if someone was going to wear it just to ridicule it, they wouldn't go through the hassle, went on the skin for 10 days. so that obviously appreciated, obviously love it. and that makes me feel good. henna tattoos originated in north africa, the era in indo asian world. so years and centuries ago used to be used to called
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the skin. so they used to crush up the leaves, make it into the pace, add with water, and put it on the hands on the palms of the feet. a nice a cool you down. then over the years, it became decorative, when it became decorative for wedding, just because it's color. so a form of make up pop stars like liana, and us icon madonna helped popularized pen attached to the 1990. many celebrities have hired poverty. don john to get similarly unique tattoos done the 36 year old who's bars based in london salvages, department store is revolutionizing this art form. she experiments with new colors offers, do it yourself. hannah says for home use and even makes me on hand design even though this fancy effect wears off after 24 hours. so
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i think the tradition, what was be that always we are considered a modern brand, but my roots lie with the tradition. that's where it came from, and we will ways all of that, whether traditional or more modern designs, this glorious art is definitely an expression of cultural diversity. such intricate patterns. it must have a really steady hand to do that. well. well, we've come to the end again, but you can find more stories on our website, that's the w dot com slash culture. and we'll give the last word to diana ross. the u. s. senior and former supreme has a new single out. is the title track from her 1st studio album in 15 years recorded in her home. and it's simply called find you enjoy
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the use use use the me on the green. you feel worried about the need to? i'm the host of the on the green fence is clear, we need to change join me perceived the green transformation for me
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to use how many portion of lands occur now in the world climate conference stores? this is my way from just one week. how much was can really get we still have time to act. i'm doing all this in the the the 2010 world cup winners and european champions in 20082012. the things have gone straight,
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quiet and then actually saying don't seem to be one favorite for the upcoming arrows. they're all that the book is worth like of france, belgium, england. so who would bet on spain? but wait, reach out to us and we checked. they're still worth putting money on. hi, i'm danielle, and i'm going to be giving you 5 reasons why you should bet on spain at this summer here. hi everyone. hi there. hi guys. today i'll make a case for a to lease balance. first, the pressure is, well, practically 0. now this might sound strange, but the golden years between 20082012, we're saying we're the absolute best actually put the brakes on the resolution. back home, people and things thought that their team would just dominate and continue winning everything. really, why would you change a winning team? but that also meant no new blood and spend fortunes took a rapid dive after 2012. the subsequent disappointment had an impact,
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even in spain. they really fancy their team's chances at the arrows, which means the pressure is on, and in the meantime, their line that has been carefully crafted for the future. as a lot of the players either play abroad or very young. that's another reason why a lot of spaniards don't have that much faith in their team, but i think they could go along way. reason number 2. lemme yes, yes, barcelona famous youth academy. and once again, it's come up with a good. it's like eric garcia, only just out of his teens and a product of last year. now he's been honing his skills and in another than pet guardiola. at manchester city, he's already begun to think about life after his playing days and has already begun taking coaching forces at the age of 19. apparently he's even given some pep talks to us, that's a pretty remarkable behavior that says a lot about his maturity. this guy is definitely someone that you should keep your eye on at this summer heroes another. lemme see
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a graduate and you all know 23 years old, and already a key part of the set up at our b live tish, the offensive mid for what are deployed in the center on the wings is an intuitive player. he's excellent ones, the one and a big both threat. he's also one of the top assist providers in the whole boon asleep fit on taurus is a 21 year old midfielder. and another youngster who's made huge progress under pet guardiola at manchester city. he's now challenging alberto, more data for a place up front in the spain team. a challenge that certainly any player can revel and then there is also this rate, the counted individual, which is reason i'm mystery. the new ne aster bats, right? it's petri already being held by many as the new and he asked us, hang on the any i stuff the player who was pivotal to le food, he ro, how's the trio of triumph between 20082012 european football or of the
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year in 2012. yes. still just a teen has it has all this goes it takes to become one of the great the new movie shaker and thinker in spanish make or so the spanish hope at least what is certain . is that padre is already a very important player in the set up that bar. so low, not his reading of the game under pressure is uncommon for someone in age. so is his coolness on the ball. hendry's passing, precision and control. here are ridiculous. another player was way more mature than his years. praise has even been swift from big idol watching him play. you can't believe he's only 18. he just loved having a ball at his feet. and his talents are clearly evident to spain's coach louisa weekend. i understand the comparisons. vinny ask, but petrie has to be pedigree, and i do know spanish fancy say, wait, wait, hold on. he's not in the us. the yet. don't put pressure on him. but he really could become one of the best players that spin has ever seen. so i guess we'll just
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have the reason number for the defensive, stalwart sergio ramos, likely to mr. turn me through injuries. it looks like the calm, cool, collected. sergio bruce guess will have to be the boss on the pitch. this 32 year old dictates proceedings in the mid field where his distribution and passing are subtle, but brilliant, and have been for over 10 years now. he both an incredible passing accuracy of 92 percent. and in fact it's oftentimes the sense who plays that ever crucial panel to pass. he's all see and i of his coach on the field. well luis enrique is the brains of the operation. and last but not least, reason the number's 5, the 433, louise enrique has been playing in a for 33 formation like many other scenes. but lately, it's been very much there for 33 that's on display, as seen and last falls, nation,
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really demolition of jeremy. last 3 of both the ball and their opponent. spain were 6. no winners. germany did all the running and stain . they did all the scoring then there's been highly effective tracking game and they push out the other team has nowhere to go. which ultimately leads to surrendering the ball by the way, fit on torres, he also security hattrick and that historic thrashing germany. sure. they might have a relatively easier group the pull in slovakia and sweden, arguably the right kind of teens that can give saying that massive momentum moving forward in the tournament. and then the spade, their shirts to make the semi finals. so vamos, this the i guys
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max here, you may think of portugal one euro, 2016 against all odds. surely they can't do it again. well, bear with me here might 5 reasons why the rating charms might get more out of this tournament than you'd expect. hi everyone. hi there. hi guys. today i'll make a case for a to lease balance. do you think of portugal as this guy with 10 other blokes running around him? well, i think again the telephone has much more depth than in 2016 when they won the whole damn thing. and that leaves me neatly. so point one also got noticed. the navigators is a teams nickname and they really made it ring truth compared to 2016. the team has spread out all across europe, top leagues with key players at top clubs all around the continent. who know fernandez is the main man my manchester united,
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who finished 2nd in the english premier lead gilbo shot that is the most efficient strike at liverpool. and there are lots when is in portable swat, english champions, manchester city, have we portugal internationals in their rank and silver and attack and welcome fellow. and ruben diaz in defense fear was even voted player of the year. the 1st defend us when that award in 32 years for and i quote his leadership on and off the pitch. and i felt good. and when the german cut with bruce don't going to our feelings. one the leave that lexical madrid. and you'll say font is a defensive story and counts and app surprise friends, champions will alongside very not so sanchez. there's a real winning mentality across the squad unlike in years past portugal and not just a bunch of recent blokes around rinaldo anymore. they've got class and quality across the pit, but of course they still have c r 7. some of us for in the world to me. i
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love reason number 2, christiano rinaldo. through old age 36. the guy is a machine. he just banged in 29 league gold, making him serious top score. is he still motivated? the guy, passion, purpose, and petulant personified the loved to win and he doesn't care what people say or think about him. he doesn't mind personal accolades either. the years he could break the record for most international goals, scored that on a totally belongs to leave day on 109, but christiana and was just 6 goes short soon. so he's not just interested in himself, though. he's a role model motivator and team player. yeah. really have you ever seen a sub out injured play? a do this on the sidelines. so he wanted the limelight,
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but i say he wanted the trophy. he can't help it. he gets credit where credit you can i get to choose that. leave me a reason number 3, the engineer. that's what they call coach fernando. some source back in portugal because in the seventy's he's studied to become an electrical engineer during what was a pretty unremarkable football career. electrical engineering involves a lining and combining many different components to achieve one single outcome. generating converting, storing, or distributing energy of a metaphor for football. really. this is the approach he's chosen with the portuguese national team. and the emphasis is on team a collective phone. so says playing well is much more important than playing
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beautifully. and even at age 66, he's happy to make changes. 442 is out. they now line up in an attack, the 433 formation in which they are still defensively. solid, gone, other days of beautiful but ineffective football. which leads me neatly to points for the number 4 is then new dna. back in the day, portugal always doubled with good football, but fell short when it mattered most of the 1900. 66 woke up the last to want to england in the semi, at 0980 caught the last 3 to to france. an extra time in the semi same stage at euro 2000 and knocked out by francis golden gold at 02004 in portugal, the last one neil to grease in the final and it will cup 20067. again. the last one new france. but since 2016 and due to mr. santos. everything has changed. after
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winning the years they claim the inaugural your way from nations leak and $29.00 team d n. a change that for everyone to see portugal have won the last 2 tournaments and hungry for more and they'll need that hunger and winnie mentality this time out for sure. the. my final argument is what many will see as the biggest counter points. number 5, the group of death, the know what the, what the, what the fatal portugal have depth and quality like never before. and that's what's required to survive group and they've beaten france before, even though that a bogey team and germany looking shaky. once portugal make it out of the group stage, anything is possible. so mark my words and what's the writing champions? have another crack because the seller south is now far more than just see all 7
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soon. ah. the news . the news the the
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the the enters the conflicts own with sarah kelly and citizens cope with unemployment and inflation. president hardy is getting attention for blocking twitter around for an apparent violent crack down on protesters to call for an end to police violence. my guess this week from berlin is material. ambassador usa, how does he explain the track record of this government? conflict? 90 minutes on w. o. young can immigrants they know the police will
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they know that the route is not a solution. they know their flight could be fatal. like going back, he's not an option. peace ma, i'm on and the other day or spoke in the spanish border area. alongside other young people there waiting for a chance. that will probably never come. shattered dreams starts june 18th on d. w. 2016. that's a good bye to the queen because the wants to see if germany with the last few years have been quite right clearly and such averted on my home when it comes to germany . and of course i would look in the eyes birches, but perhaps the biggest on the new hobby line, 100 on approved to be in the news that person never comes. but when you're feeling more forgiving, you'll realize it's culture. another way of living. are you ready to meet the german then join me right. just do it on the w. oh, can you hear me now?
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yes. yes, we can hear you and hello is german thompson? i will bring you angela mac or and you've never had before the price just so what, what is it going to is medical really want me and want to talk to people who follow along the way, admirers and critics alike. how is the world's most powerful woman changing how they get paid? join us from echo class me is the, this is the w news, and these are our top stories. the us supreme court has dismissed the republican lead challenge to the national health well known as obamacare. the decision maintains affordable health insurance for tens of millions of american despite the courts increasingly conservative leaning, the justices rule 72, that
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a challenge mounted by several di did not have legal standing. republicans have made several unsuccessful attempts to strike down the.

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