tv Quarks Deutsche Welle June 23, 2021 5:30pm-6:15pm CEST
5:30 pm
every week we get to the point on a current topic, the controversial committed to that point on d. w. ah ah ah ah, for them it's a necessary evil, but for others it's a beloved pastime shopping. whether or not you enjoy a stroll down the aisles or a scroll down there on line equivalence. it's unavoidable to be human is to shop consumption. why do we buy a question that a lot of us can probably relate to and asked thing today on made data we use
5:31 pm
business magazine? now, real world stores, the ones made of bricks and mortar, have had a particularly tough time during the pandemic. often they've had to limit the number of customers they allow in, if they've been allowed to open at all. on the other hand, it's been a boom time for shopping online, and there's another trend that's quietly been gathering steam, social commerce nowadays, it's not unusual for the entire retail experience to happen on social media. the media, social media is like a mole that has everything. and this is a huge potential in europe alone. i think there is something like a 100000000 users and in many of them are very young businesses are really interested in having a presence to their site. ah, once upon a time social media with a platform to chat with friends and post photos the days, it's
5:32 pm
a wash with influencers plugging products. instagram even features its own shop. the way products are promoted is tailored to individual apps. a bit like subliminal window shopping, and when it comes to social commerce, one demographic is especially interesting to businesses. it's been, i'm lannie, i'm 17 from hamburg, and i'm a school people use only is on instagram and has their own youtube channel. she's been a social media devoted for 2 years. and even though her shopping there to on least a young people get their fashion tips on social media, especially on instagram time, media. and so you can say, oh look such and such a thing is in right now, maybe i'll get it. like all for generation. the refers to today's 11 to 26 year old internet savvy. they're the 1st generation to have grown up with
5:33 pm
smartphones. they're known for their environmental activism and consumerism phases. muslim by i've got the sense that it's so ambulance on the one hand everyone wants to do load city environment, which is definitely great because that's the way we need to go home. then manhandled her name on it. but on the other, you wind up supporting companies that damage the environment for these contradictions or rather present, present for the instagram generation shopping, made easy fashion and fashion accessories are their top purchases. beauty products are hugely popular to followed by fitness related. good. so how companies target individual, the answer lies in algorithms code, they can recognize users interests and decide which products to show them. lay on his last, instagram purchase was made 2 weeks ago. just, it's called a sunset lamp. when you connect to tap it costs,
5:34 pm
abusive glows. that reminds you of a sunset, sunset lamps, promotional video was shown to lay only 20 times. the size of it looks so dreamy and made me think of vacations. the companies know exactly what they're doing. and they know repetition raises that profile. it probably lodges in my subconscious. it's always bad because when i see the ads i straight to, i think i've seen that before. and so positively and dom at some of us put the trend is only set to continue in the next few years. social commer sales are expected to expand 7 fold. e commerce giant shop, a fi develops marketing strategy for smaller companies with minimal advertising budgets. its focus is on platforms like instagram, antic talk, social media is social media is so important for friends because it can make them even more successful in this. and it's like
5:35 pm
a virtual high street. is going to meet friends and find inspiration and enjoy shopping and that you can but where does consumer protection come into it? all of these orders. we have our own teams which are constantly on the lookout for what i'd call questionable behaviors and slides for level by she's got cases where companies were selling f, f p to mass. they didn't even have in stock of law cropped up a lot. last year. i'm going to be on time and again we have case where we found shelves, but isn't questionable to encourage kid to consume, we are moving to the job. we try to encourage parents and guardians to get to grips with these media them and ties. because obviously anyone who can get that hands on smartphone can also view all these offers to go to school shopping as much as it is, the videos and everything else. the crucial point was learning to deal with social media responsibly. with the traditional pedestrian shopping zone is nothing more
5:36 pm
than a distraction for really only and her best friend hannah. even hear the talk revolves around instagram's dazzling displays. have you seen those leather coats? the ones on instagram? they're all over the internet, the lovely. this 18 year old is savvy enough to know why social media shopping function. so well to be mentioned was there times where i think i didn't have to buy that. but in the moments i figured that's just what i need right now, which of course isn't true, it's all with time. no, you learn to say ok, that's a lovely picture, but i don't have to have it. instead, i'll wait for something i need this and that the 2 friends say happens more and more often these days. now shopping drives economies, that can be no growth without private consumption. and nowhere is shopping, a bigger part of the economy than the united states. the home of the concept of
5:37 pm
shop till you drop in 2019 private consumers spending made up a massive 68 percent of the economic output of the us. americans are ravenous spending, sometimes balancing multiple credit cards or taking out loans to fund their shopping habits. in germany, consumer spending makes up a comparatively modest 52 percent of gdp in china is just 39 percent. but it's conversion from an agricultural society. it's a one centered around services and sales means that likely to change and change. it is exactly what many economies have undergone over the last couple of years. the current of ours pandemic has altered shutting behaviors all over the world, perhaps for ever. here's a look at its impacts on germany. could see if my colleague christian priscilla was one thing that couldn't be lumped in its tracks during the pandemic was hair growth . with salons, closed sales of electric clippers skyrocketed in germany. sales on
5:38 pm
e bay went up by more than 1500 percent in 2020 so how else has the corona virus influences germany's buying habits? as the country went into locked down, e commerce increased by 24 percent in 2020. and the trend is continuing this year but for many businesses times are tough. while supermarkets were allowed to stay open, other stores were forced to close to limit the risk of infection. this meant to a dip and sales brick and mortar sales in clothing. retail, for example, shrunk 23 percent. as officers shot their doors, many employees were forced to turn their homes into their workplaces, leading to an increase in tech related purchases. sales of web cams were up by a factor of 8 last year compared to before the pandemic ants. and
5:39 pm
so many germans were spending more time at home. decorating became more popular. sales of paint supplies, for example, increased more than 7 fold. many people also began avoiding public transport for fear of infection, opting for 2 wheels instead. and 2020 more bicycles and bikes were sold than ever before. 61 percent more than in the previous year. still, all in all german spent much less money than usual in 2021 big reason was canceled vacation. and even now the desire to spend still appears quite muted. so what actually makes us buy gives us that it resistible as to reach into our pockets. and hand over our hardened cash, or that is the art of advertising. experts are able to plan to ideas in our brains
5:40 pm
convincing that that product is something we simply can't live without goes way beyond simple branding and catchy ad campaigns. it's enough to make you wonder how much choices are actually our own monitor rover coleman reports on the mind. bending concept of neuro marketing. about a 100 years ago, companies in the western world ran into a problem. consumers had everything they needed. so the companies came up with a great idea, you know, desert, persuade people that they need more things, even things they didn't really know. they needed that for the sam with the and nowadays companies are studying your brain to get you to keep buying more stuff. this is called neuro marketing and euro marketing. that's like marketing on their own company is no better than the
5:41 pm
norm. so the brand is nowhere else. but in the end of the consumer, you're going to tell you how companies are getting into your head. the 1950 s clever markets shook the world with an astonishing experiment. he flush the messages, drink coca cola and eat popcorn on the cinema screen to briefly for the audience to even notice. he claimed that people rushing to the countess and drove to buy coke and popcorn. this story sounds too good to be true then. that's because it is. thankfully, we are not very easy to brainwash. turned out, it was all the she made that up. there's no such thing as a brains by a button. this is prince goodman, marketing professional. he engineer a scientist met johnson, wrote a book on how companies tailor their marketing to our brains. so the good thing is
5:42 pm
we are not mindless shopping zombies. but we do make a lot of our decisions subconsciously. and that's when you're a marketing comes in. companies are trying to better understand how the brain works, to figure out what we really want. traditional marketing studies work like this. someone will ask me, do you want an apple pie one chocolate box? and i say i of course want the apple do i really want the apple that we feel is if we're in control, we deal with the author of our vision that we're very rationally the study as we are extremely irrational in that work. generally speaking, pretty unaware. of the full range of factors and ultimately inform and sometimes actually decide for different behaviors and passively so we don't always know what we want. we don't know if we actually want the apple or if you prefer the chocolate . but our brain doesn't live. and that's why you marketers have adopted
5:43 pm
a range of technologies in the marketing studies to see what's happening under the hood inside consumers brains. functional magnetic resonance imaging and electrons fella grams measure activity in the brain. i tracking shows where we direct tension and hydrated skin conductance. so what we find exciting for better or worse people are complex from the brain is newly comp whom a common kinds of scala is. research revolves around how we make decisions. what nurse claims does is it gives us access to some of the emotional elements or elements that might not be fully conscious. and tell us a little bit more about some of the things that might also be contributing to people the experience that take kiddos, for example, when a parent company free to lay off consumers, how they felt about the brand. many said, well, it's a bit of
5:44 pm
a kids snack when they looked at their brains and turns out people got a new kick out of getting their fingers messy with the orange dust that covered it . it is fun. there was something subversive about that orange dust on your fingers . there was something a little unusual about it and people kind of enjoyed it. even though it was that respectable. the, you know, other people are trying to do their laundry to free to lay, took these findings and built an entire ad campaign around just feeling of sub versus pleasure. those are the whites and try if it can be a huge success. me more and more businesses are investing in this type of research, most of which is happening in secret through neuro science. but also with the help of psychology and behavioral economics, they get a pretty good idea of what makes us take. and they use this knowledge to get us to
5:45 pm
buy more of this stuff. and i'm going to give you full examples of this that you've probably seen in your everyday life. one day where you down brain operates in 2 different thinking most. that's what called system one, which is fast, unconscious and automatic. and then the system to which is deliberate and conscious . it takes a lot of effort to ask you, what is your name system one will immediately have an answer to that question. to ask you, what is 23 times? 48. you're going to have to switch the system to require effort. now imagine you're going grocery shop. you have to find your way around to different ios and make loads of decisions in a short amount of time. when you finally get to the checkout counter, your tires, one way in which you can get somebody to be more system, one oriented is actually through wearing them down. the system to very resource intensive requires a lot of metabolic resources. we're tired when we're malnourished for much more
5:46 pm
likely to go with them much more impulsive system response. and that's fine, right at the end of your shopping trip retailers tempt you with loads and loads of sugary snacks. you might just pick up at the very last moment. and shopping malls exploit the same situation. they're confusing and overwhelming, they're quite frankly exhausting. so you're more prone to spend money on something . you might not even need to. they tell you what the right prices before you walk into a store and you see a bottle of wine for i don't know. let's say $15.00 to brain doesn't really know if this is a loss or if this is not a loss. let's immediately start to look for some context. typically, people don't really have a sense of crisis, but they don't know how much wind should cost or what's the price of wind. this is moran stuff, computer neuroscientist, and business professor. the people who create their, their kind of impression, the price range not by no spring formation,
5:47 pm
but either by assembling the oddity and the store will happily give your brain the reality to latch onto placing a 2nd bottle next to its costing $50.00. now your brain things for $15.00, that's actually a pretty good deal. so it's very likely you're going to buy this bottle. our brains are like ships. we're looking for places to anchor. right. and adding any sort of context or understanding a value, having an anchor house 3, they keep you on the treadmill. another quick of our brain that brands are using us, that is constantly seeking pleasure. keywords seeking, once you're experiencing a thing that you wanted, you don't just get some back in that here pleasure for a long time. it's not the type of emotion which is that enduring over time. and that's a very, very good thing for brand. because pleasure. so fleeting brands keep sending us to what's called the hid on
5:48 pm
a treadmill. the i phone thick. the i phone. this is i phone by phone. i phone 12 by the, by i phone a. it's a brand new physical design. and you're loving. and just like clockwork. 12 months later, a s comes up, whatever pleasure you got from achieving and purchasing the phone is now immediately gone. and now you're looking to again jump on the don a treadmill and look chase the next pleasure full. they hide little nudges in plain sight. so do you remember the cinema story from the beginning? subliminal marketing message is like this. so things that we can pick up on consciously, are actually legal. in most countries, a few companies must have thought, well, why don't we just hide them in plain sight? check out this ad from kfc. see anything unusual? well, look again, as an actual dollar bill photo shopped into the burger,
5:49 pm
which happens to cost $1.00. and check out this can coca cola made it look like it smiling to tie in with its brand image of happiness. and then literally every ad for watches, the time is set to 10 past 10 because that makes it look like to watch, just smiling at you. these types of subtle, here's the called primus. so i would say right now, because i mean works that say that we 50, that's been in school in the business as kind of a mechanism we should be aware of because it implements a fit for this, most of it does work. why not try it? if you find something that you see what, you know, you're not compelled by some difficult course to go out and go over the weekend to buy it. but if you're already feeling like buying a lot to maybe you've already favorite brand. you know that additional data point is going to push you maybe a little bit further. and this is not limited to visual triggers. an experiment showed that if a wind store plays french music,
5:50 pm
customers buy more french wine and different plays german music, they buy more german. one lot of this stuff is having an archives for companies and it isn't their best interest not to reveal it. but we would be silly to think that this isn't part of the experiential design that companies are creating to better engage with the consumer. so where does this leave us? are we ultimately just puppets, without a will of our own buying whatever corporations throw away? or do we have a choice of mindless behavior? is there total control is also there. and in between there's a wide gray area and we can hold data between whether the choices that are very informed and very kind of low, all impulsive, and not to know if you like something that's going to be the most important determinant of whether or not you choose to spend money or your time on it or your
5:51 pm
resources in general on it, and not speak a lot to the power that we have as consumers and individuals. know, neuro marketing is a very powerful tool. it gives companies access to something that even we don't have access to most of the time, our subconscious. but just knowing that and knowing how the brain works can already help us make that decision. a little spooky though, isn't it? my, we should just hand the control of our wallets over to the advertising executives and be done with it. mines on the only thing though, the market is want access to. they also want to get their hands on our data. why am i saying as much information as possible about shopping habits, they can work out what we're likely to buy in future. that's the principle behind the so called test supermarket, swear. in exchange for your data, they can have access to a range of products. some of which aren't even on the market yet. from the fetch
5:52 pm
our reports from vienna. the shelves are full of various products. a lot of space for the customer. everything is clean and tidy. i feel like being in a very conventional supermarket, but a lot of items are not even available yet. you know regular supermarkets. how about a smoothie for dogs? that's not the only unusual product. here you can find aside a drink with vinegar, flavor, or water with as a temp, but would these items succeed in a regular supermarket? that's what companies want to find out here. before they launched a new product, the manager of the story explains how it works. first, you have to register to become a so called test customer. he's a woman asleep, and he's into visual sign up for a subscription, and then they can shop every month to test and evaluate the products. they can buy a minimum of 55 years worth of products per month,
5:53 pm
will not meet to name and even to test message. one thing that's hard to overlook, there's a lot of cameras here more than a regular store. they are gathering data on how long you spend looking at a product and which package and you choose the customers to shop, you know, they are being watched. isn't the that's, that's of the thing. i don't think that's a problem. as it's you know, beforehand more or less involved. this is the thing to christian pace, 12 euros, and $0.90 a month to shop for items for 55 years. what made it into his basket today? regarding the legal spread case, a crime sausages made it meet and merge and something for the kids in the team. the some of these products already tried to see. yeah, it looks like sometimes it's just about testing new packaging and he can
5:54 pm
familiar brands and different packaging. so what helps increase stamps? that's really exciting how a product is being developed. take the cheese, but there's one in a big packet. the you might pick up the 1st and also one in a small packaging guy from down. the line. feedback is the currency here. the more feedback you give when checking out the more money you are given to spend. so am i basically buying these products with my data? i asked the founder, he's currently in cologne, germany, where he's opening another store with the same concept into transition spaces. there's no cast data. it's merely about identifying people as a target group who are immediately anonymized. we're coming and registering their behavior. i mean the data is not passed on to god knows what research
5:55 pm
a market research and advertising to because that's all this laboratory supermarket is but not looking to get off the bus. if you have to ask whether these consumers are actually representative of the entire population of people who register here are of course, open to innovation for your own and back in the store, people are ready to check out their items. who knows, which of the products they're buying here today will actually make it into a real supermarkets. but even if they do, they could still get replaced. they change but do they really next time your taste change? ask yourself whether, if you, that's made the change or in fact the market as i'm starting to wonder if i've ever made a truly independent decision in my life. that's all from this addition of made the business magazine. thanks for joining us. we'll see you next time. goodbye. ah
5:57 pm
the, the, the the ah. the devastating. how are we? can we carry the climate change while people are station in the rain forest continued carbon dioxide emissions have risen again. young people all over the world are committed to climate protection. what impact will change doesn't happen on its own. the make up your mind.
5:58 pm
5:59 pm
a venture. just don't lead you grid. the treasure map for modern globe trotter's? gone for some of us are wicker breaking and now also in book form the little guys, this is the 77 percent. the platform for african used to be is used to share ideas . you know, we are not afraid to capture and then the topic african population is really a young people clearly have the solutions to job 77 percent. now every weekend on the w
6:00 pm
ah, this is e w. use life from hungary suffers a backlash. i'm very and bill is a she used as it will, was a new hon gary and though that it says target the l g b t, community hungry faced germany in the euros. i said host immunity comes out the rainbow colors, the european footballs gutting, bunny vantage from doing so at the stadium. and it's crunch time for 2 of the tournament favorites. us friends take on portugal for a place in the knockout stage. will bring the latest from the past and the printing presses and digital networks of hong kong, largest pro democracy news source, shutting down. apple daily hopes operation after 26 years to protect staff from
6:01 pm
china's aggressive national security. ah, i'm feel gale. welcome to the program. the you is condemning european footballs, governing body over its decision to block a colorful show of support l. g b t q writes. during wednesdays. europe 2020 game between germany and hungry, and your vice president. margarita says, sheena said, your wife has no excuse for rejecting host city munich plans. delighted stadium in rainbow colors. the display was intended as a protest against a new hon gary in law, that critic se targets the l. g. b t q. community you a for decision has been met with a global backlash from politicians on football clubs, in a sharply wooded statement, european commission president joe's going to find the lion said hungry. the new law
6:02 pm
is incompatible with a you values. the hungarian bill is a shame and i've been struck to, to my responsible commission to write a letter to the guy in authorities concerning or expressing our legal concerns before the bill and just into forth. this bill clearly discriminate against people on the basis of their sexual orientation and it goes against all the values, the fundamental values of the european union. well, let's get more on this from d. w. brussels correspondent barbara phase. welcome, barbara. when does why, from the line wasn't taking such a tough line with budapest last week when this bill is actually passed. oh, she did react last week so, but of course in a bit more cautious manner. she wrote and fitted that she was very concerned about this bill and that her lawyers would look into it whether it was contempt
6:03 pm
compatible with european law. and then of course, over the weekend and yesterday and today she saw the rising wave of protest and all over year different european countries. she saw that in number of europe, ministers from member states, had also issued very strongly worded resolution. saying you have to take this back and this is absolutely against our values and we don't want to look on this anymore . and so she knows that she really now has to sort of act and tried to challenge this new law on the legal level, which she's so if you will. and it is a battle of power, of course, that will ensue if the european court of justice in the end says it's incompatible with hungary, then take a big, big question mark, right? but it reminds us of what this, this new law actually says that it's sort of controversial. it is in fact packaged
6:04 pm
in a rather innocuous manner because the, the hungarian government says, all this wants to do is protect children. it wants to protect children. that is young people under 18 against all context content that is connected to the g, b t q. community. now you would think, what is the big drama, but just think of t v series. they would never be on guarantee. show v b air that shows like a happy and content gay couple or think of advertising. i mean, this is really very broad. how much content of this time can you prohibits in the public arena? so this is what it is about. and also that is even may be worse in the same regulation. peter fields are mentions, so the l g b t q community is sort of tainted by linguistic proximity. and everybody really is very upset about that particular issue to
6:05 pm
a course. this isn't the picture. all bands 1st fight with the a you. what can brussels actually do to bring them into line? they have been trying to bring it, bring him into line for quite a while after they have watched his checking to the extreme right. and towards authoritarianism over a number of years. and now of course is the fact is in the fire and is he was trying to do everything on the legal level. i can count the number of infringement procedures that are running at the moment to sort of bring him back into the fold. but he obviously seems to be really out for a battle just a couple days ago in the public statement. he said, oh, the european parliament should sort of relinquish his power as power should be taking away and the national states indians, the one that decides. so he really seems to be out for war with the european union who is going to win it. of course the you is bigger,
6:06 pm
but how to sort of rain. victor are been in. nobody has so far found the right recipe. everybody thing, so ever, it's the money is they managed to sort of turn off the tap for the billions that are flowing into hungry and into the, to our bands, families and cronies pockets. then of course he might finally relent. prevail and brussel. thank you. okay, so look at some more stories making news around the world. international leaders have a meeting here and burning for a new post to secure a lasting peace in libya. the u. s. in germany, stress the importance of laying a path for elections in the north african nation, the removal of foreign fighters from the country. relatives of the waiting for information about loved ones following unexploded in ethiopians. the conflict t guy region. witnesses say dozens of people were killed or wounded on tuesday. in an ass dry con, a market in the town to go good. health workers say soldiers blocked medical teams
6:07 pm
and tramping to the c. a caught in ivory coast, a sentence form of prime minister an ex rebel lee that we'll sort of to life imprisonment in. i'm sent here. so those that exile in your from charge with flossing to overthrow present unassigned or taught to close associates received 20 years sentences on the us senate republicans have blocked the election reform bill . the democrats say is needed to counter increasingly restrictive voting roles in many parts of the country. but republicans say the bill infringes dates rights. the 5050 party line vote fell short of the 60 needed to advance most legislation in the senate. hong kong pro democracy newspaper, apple daily is printing its final edition and closing down tonight. authorities of used a sweeping new national security both to silence the cities. most of china critical media outlet and arrested one of its columnists 26 year old papers found to jimmy
6:08 pm
ly has been in jails in december last year. the closure is seen as another blow to hong kong freedoms. a small crowd gathered outside the papers headquarters to show support as a 1000000 copies, and i set to roll off the presses. straight to hong kong, where we joined d. w correspondent, phoebe called welcome. phoebe. how significant is the papers closure? well actually has long been and i call no one of the most critical voices of the chinese ruling party. and also the authorities of china and hong kong has a specialist for 2060th symbolizes i. how they are, how, how the authorities used to taller runs whole rate. 3 patient hong kong and the chinese through the now is closure. i mean, a huge loss of federal journalists and also of a free platform for the opposition opinions or critics. the,
6:09 pm
this is one of the most serious erosion of hong kong post that it's denied by the hong kong authorities. and apple they is shutting down is a website. and also these apps like by midnight in hong kong, and it is very significant and also very sentimental. they of all appetite and also other members of the pressing hong kong. and why is the paper closing? favey, was it just the arrest of apple employees? last week to l. o. 5 rested executives of apple. they were prosecuted for collusion the foreign forces under the national security and all that was the face as targeting me, that coverage under the newest weight paying law and additional little salty, has also frozen $18000000.00 hong kong dollars assets. all 3 companies like to apple, daddy, and that made an apple to be almost impossible to do with any kind of banking operation and even payroll off his employee. so that's why the board decided to
6:10 pm
shut down in his paper by this week. but today, an additional arrest on the columnists for acco duty under the national security. so just by fast in the pace of itself. and that's why you pump the decision off the both of the next this or told the parent company off apple duty to decide to close the newspaper earlier than expected. phoebe cone in hong kong. thank you. the football and what all about the euro's frogs in portugal will face each other to night. for the final, a group matching hungry, the french side will be looking to improve on their last are seeing that it resulted in a shocking draw against hungry recent history. gives from some advantage back in november. they be portugal in the nation's leak when it comes to the european championships holders of portugal, of the upper hand, maybe 3 to from in the final,
6:11 pm
in 2016 but you know so let's join the label her talk from d. w. support who is in budapest at the post. gus arena for tonight's much welcome labor. so will the stadium be at full capacity? yes, it will be, but before trans can enter this quite a few requirements that they have to fulfill. first and foremost, you have to present a negative p c or a negative p. c auto. that's not older than 72 hours and you've probably noticed the risks. the risk right there without special you $800.00 fan said every fan has to pick up as well. and at the entrance, those right before they can even enter this re not the temperature will be checked . once you have to re like you come inside the arena, you can enter these gates. and once inside the stadium, you're supposed to associate this then as well as continue to where your math at
6:12 pm
all times. but the past few game here. in fact the pushed up, the rena have shown that has to have a tendency to not. we have them and the security personnel also have a tendency to not really enforce them. okay, and as far as the match itself goes, this is something of a showdown of champions, isn't it? what's at stake? both sides this is called proof of death. you have the european champions taking on the world cup champions and they both have very, very strong starts to the tournament. but in that 2nd mattress goals and they weaknesses with somewhat exposed to god. of course, it was a defense after competing against germany. as for france, people are still waiting for the hostess attack to hit yes, you have all this talent, but the goal is have not really come and it really struggles in the final. so i asked for the result of the game here in budapest that will also have
6:13 pm
a direct impact on the match in germany, germany against hungary. and i'm sure a lot of germany will be keeping one eye on the munich match on one and one here on the match in budapest. the weather looks particularly good. that is, that is the heat that in budapest, going to play a factor let me tell you about the heat. this country has been undergoing a heat wave. the past few days. temperatures have to 3435 degrees. it's quite humid. and just to give you an idea of how hot it it i went jogging last night along the danube, and that was at 11 p. m. the almost at midnight. and i was hoping for the temperatures to drop and they just didn't. i was spreading like a waterfall. this match also has a kick off at 9 pm. one advantage is of course they won't be any ton, but the temperature will still be really, really high. and i have a feeling which ever tide is able to adapt to the heat might have a slight edge at
6:14 pm
a more talkie, a professor thank you so much. finally, in the city of cologne, as welcome to pair of endangered leemis and just types of lima. and usually you find the force of a gasket for that space is threatened by the hunting and the destruction of a natural habitat as keepers vigor. newest unlikely will become star attractions, not least because human like the system is reminded by top stories at best. our european union chief fund says she will take action against the new law and hungry and she says targets l g b team. people as well as a backlash against your parents, the governing body. you wafer, they'd bond munich from lighting it stating the rainbow colors during germany's match against hungary. contact you're up to date. more world news at the top of the
19 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=2039222249)