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tv   Inas Nacht  Deutsche Welle  December 20, 2021 1:00am-2:01am CET

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ah, and eternity time, it can be measured precisely ended every one experiences it differently as if there are different forms of time. time. ah, the phenomenon a dimension. if we know we won't live forever. an illusion. about time presenting future's past starts december 31st on d w. ah, this is the w news, and these are our top stores. sheila has elected i knew left as president following one of the most to visit elections in decades. the former student protest laid a gabriel burridge came out on top and i ran off against far right. ultraconservative has
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a cast cast was seen as the law and order candidate governments across europe are struggling to stem. the huge increase in corona virus cases due to the new amik wrong variant. the netherlands has become the 1st country in europe to reinstate a christmas lockdown, which will last until at least mid january. and germany has severely restricting travel from the u. k way on mac. wrong is becoming dominant. dozens have been injured in sudan after security forces, 5 stun grenades and t gas at protesters. in cartoon, hundreds of thousands of people gathered in the city to reject the october 25 military protest is from outside the capital traveled to join the match on the presidential palace. this is date of the news from berlin. you can get a lot more news on our website. just go to d w dot com. ah ah,
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ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah. our roving reporter axle primavera, he took to the skies for another episode of axel on the edge. find out more about how he got on later in the show. hi everyone. welcome to another edition of euro max with me, your host. megan lee. here's a look at what else we've got coming. we had to turkey for a ride on a historical street car is temple and we find out how people around europe decorate their homes for the festive season.
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fly like a bird has always been a dream for many people. that's why we see dare devils throwing themselves out of airplanes or jumping off cliffs with just a sheer piece of cloth floating over their heads. well, there's another way for adventurers to get closer to the clouds, and that's in a to seated open air flying machine. duramax report her actual prima facie learned how to fly one in just a single day. today's mike's on the runway and taking off with your in charge. it's cool. oh hey there i'm accepts him. i've easy and here's my challenge for today. i have to learn how to fly this thing in just one day, including take off and landing all by myself. i've never flown anything myself,
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especially not such an open air, a hayley cup, that type of thing that looks quite difficult to handle. i don't. hello, i'm ok sat there. hello axel, i'm young. you my flight instructor can always been right oklahoma and today we're going to fly. this gyro come to her. we'll cough a but 1st i can't go up just like the sunshine i am sighing order of kind of way like we need to get you the right clothing call come along to the hanger in hunger . how it is. it is. oh, what is this good? no, not really gonna pull it out and okay, so right now i know let's find some sensible click isn't ah canada. i can simply fly this thing yard with the nurse. you'll need
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a bit of practice in the loft and in the air. you'll catch on fast for stop for the take off and landing. you'll need some train in about, but you'll get all that during the day. killing enough. in fact, what he's a gyro kupta, said our v and klein. it looks like a small open top helicopter. and it flies like one to hear about, but technically and aerodynamically, it's very different. we don't guns under the main difference is that the rotor is powered by the wind not by the engine either. down over her water has all the upper rotor generates the lift for the actual flying detox. it essentially replaces the airplane wing on the hinge, and the rear propeller drives us forward and provides the necessary power one city in order to get nike. even if you're content, i'm extremely nervous. we're about to take off on the machine is running already. i don't ease up too much on the gas. we need some more rep because the engine is still cold. the air field we're about to take off from is in the file west of
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germany, between is, are louis and do you have an on the french border? louis in 4 days that mike, mike, mike had delta mike over charlie to runway 25, please. data, data, minute tech, seem to the runway for take off, and then we taxi right onto the runway, right? not left, inserted. no problem. we'll stop here in the middle. now let go of the red button and pull back on the stick. let go of the break and let it roll. remember when the nose of the machine goes up, the stick must go forward, and then we'll press on together. ok? okay. okay. so let's give it some, got me know this coming up. we'll press down on it together, pull out the throttle and take off the very good and
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don't call back too much perfect. you are in control of them. we're going to fly straight and stick to about 100 kilometers an hour and with that is still don't feel up to it. but i'm actually piloting this thing. amazing will turn right here on the stick slightly. i use the stick mainly to adjust the speed and it's extremely sensitive. i'm really struggling with it. general copters were invented in the 1920s. but nowadays it's mostly emma to pilots flying them and complete beginners like me . ah, isn't that awesome? it sure is. and now we're taking a right turn like cause of after getting a handle on flying,
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i faced my next challenge landing when i bought, when we get closer to the ground, we'll pull on the stick of it together. now the ground is getting closer, pulled a little, just a bit. and now we hold the stick. just hold and wait on. keep waiting. now pull the stick a bit more. he pulling very good. and now we pull it all the way back with perfect. good landing on so i'm, i'm back on up, safe and sound but it's really been difficult to and law this things at the same time and keeping the pace and the hey, and blessed and riots and enjoy the view in the meantime i,
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that's a lot. so how was my 1st flying lesson sooner? just as of in you definitely did a very good job. you really reacted to my input. we're good for me. and so you made huge progress in this 1st lesson, mega fortunate from india, and next will make sure you can handle take off and landing a bit better on your own and visit i. and you'll be right on track. no vista of i'm good with it was much tougher than i thought. i mean handing this stick and the throttle checking this speed and the height and everything at the same time . but in the end, i was able to control this thing and i like that feeling. and so i'll be out there again before long getting some more practice taking off and landing. but one thing certain, i won't have my pilot's license any time soon. and you can always check out more of actual adventures on our youtube channel. here's what you'll find
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there. want to see how far one man can go ah, join are extreme recorder when he exceeds his limits. don't miss out on axle on the edge and subscribe to d w here, a max on youtube. if you're looking for some collin airy ideas for this year's holiday meals, you might want to turn to the good old british pie. now the brits have been enjoying their pies either with sweet or savory fillings for centuries. in fact, they're so popular that you can find them everywhere. now i know there's the sangh, it's as easy as pie, but i think making a really good pie is pretty challenging. so to make something impressive,
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returned to a top british chef who creates a gourmet version. ah, the 1st thing you get is that smell so good. a beautiful, karen realized on the cheese, the hutch that those was the layers and lovely. and so, you know, defined youth, but the cheese and the i get in the middle. yeah. hi, she's crispy, i'm really happy with . hi, i'm kind of franklin, i'm the head chef of hope and dining room. and i'm gonna take you through the all to pi making in my point i feel very lucky that i have found like my true love and my so direction and cooking is 100 percent in pine. my hing, i'm i now i, i,
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i count my blessings, thought quite an early age. i found out that thing that really makes me passionate and so by inside london chest calum, franklin. this is a great deal of love and care into short lived works of art. the type of crust depends on the pies filling the moist, written, the crunchy, or the crust needs to be his favorite. due is the classic short made of flour, butter eggs. but in wine require law, so i like my thought is to be really tasty. so it always season, well i'm the key to this don't is controlling temperature because we want to have within that so little nuggets of butter which will create pockets in cooking and then create flakes. probably the hardest thing with this is making sure that, but it doesn't mel as you're rolling in in the u. k. mass produced pie is can be found on almost every corner. in the loft, the hood cuisine,
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the art of baking the luly pie. with sweetened savory, had nearly faded into oblivion. a coincidence started tell him franklin, on his path to becoming the king of pi. on a tour of the sellers of london storied rose, who to tell the grooming shake, spotted an antique heighten with interlocking parson, keith. but he was puzzled. i knew roughly what it was for, but i didn't know the technique items. i brought up to my kitchen and asked my senior team as anybody love the technique for using this for pie making. and none of them had hoping to preserve and even revitalized the tradition column. franklin and his team worked for almost a year on re learning and refining the methods of pi, making. soon to man grew to where the restaurant kitchen was no longer able to keep up. a new police had to be found, especially for the purpose. in 2018, the ruse would hotel opened its pipe. it was a room borne out of necessity, which is why it's always worked to basically design to perfect pie. my. he varman
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adds that. so we did, you know, i sat down and i drew out the room. i collected these beautiful antiques from all over europe to fill that room. i so the 8 rudy felt like you were sat in a victorian pirate. london's project market, like the foreign market furnished 39 year old callum franklin with plenty of inspiration for the seasonal ingredients too hot. he picks up specialized to lend them a touch of elegant. his newfound was pie is based on a classic british pie combination. chief petty tooth and under the so the title element is based on a classic type dish grants an ad i from os potato. so we've pre cooked that and then the onion, we've caramel eyes and the cheese. we found an incredible montgomery cheddar,
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which is from some a sat really rich cheese, nazi bascom b, lay it in between the pie. so in the audience. when pressing down the loop here must be taken not to leave any ear between the filling of the 2, or it'll give rise to unsafe the bubbles. he brushes the pies to help with a q and feels the edge. and then you can get down to the decorative stage. so what we're doing decoration, very fine detail. one of the things that we found helps with that to make sure she stays cold, is we put these chopping boards into the freezer in the morning. so they're super cold and then when we were fired, charles does that temperature, so the fat and the pi street and keeps nice temperature for the decoration of his pies. the architecture of london born franklin's hometown provides inspiration. he sees it as a nice way to connect his patients to their surroundings,
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to the british capital, and give them a sense of place. this pi recalls the old seeds church, a market strand. i love it, it says neo gothic church kind of unusual from the outside with different color breaks and or yeah, like a really unique, locally outside on the inside. incredible. i mean, yeah, there's one stained glass window. the i've been obsessing i have in there and i saturated the detail, but i want to put on to the pie. it's gonna reflect that beautiful, so of hidden detail and su step by step a past he is transformed into an edible artwork. if you look back through written history of pi, making this country which is 600 years of it's always there and our free culture
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for me, it was very woodson sir. celebrate the pi again. i never seen that is, you know, i've been in the past i've, i've used the techniques and knowledge and ingredients that we have nowadays to achieve la pelham. franklin is not keeping with, he's learned the secret. he's collected recipes in his book, the pi room with its health, even beginners, turn on. the culmination of all the effort is always the moment the shift puts into a freshly peaked creation. thank you for joining me. i hope you've learned something and a house as far as you go home or make some parts. it's a british tradition. you can really sink your teeth into. oh no, all right, well next step we take a sentimental journey back in time. now lots of cities have hop on hop off. bus is foreseeing all the sites, but the turkish city of is temple has something
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a bit more romantic, a so called nostalgic st cart, but takes visitors on a ride to some of the most charming spots in this city. now the line isn't very long and the tram moves at a slow pace, but it gives passengers a memorable experience. if one of is done bored, most famous attractions. the historical street car key to trundling down. se cloud shad se independence avenue. there is plenty for passengers to discover. hello, this is our laura lawn. i was her guide from miss sambal and today will be very nostalgic travelling right together. the route is only 1.8 kilometers long, running between toxeme square and to no station at most to
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a street cars roll along the avenue at any given time. this is both the main shopping street and a center of its on bold night life. a ride in one of the 100 year old tram cars is a unique experience and not only for visitors to the city. i remember that my 1st experience near it was when i was 13 years old. and as a teenager being here, taking the tram ride or watching people around think it was very delightful for me. the 1st 3 car ran in istanbul in 1871. eventually the network would carry over 100000000 passengers annually. but in the 1960 people turn to cars and the tramps that appear in 1990 the t 2 became the 1st route to be revived. today, 5 tram lines are back in service and installed a little bit in the like the tram because it's and,
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and it recalled old time and it brings those old times back to life. and that's why there is such great interest in this line to do a tourism from around turkey and all over the world, take photos here. and none of them returned home without having seen our tramp. so i think it's become a genuine symbol of stumble. ah, the stops along the route have stories of their own. it's just a 5 minute walk to the pair. a palace hotel. it opened in 1895 as a luxury accommodation for travelers on the famous orient, expressed celebrities from around the world have spent the night here today. guests can still rebel in the historical atmosphere. you see something very french, very british and done something very moorish and oriental. so this is like a melting pot altogether. this is definitely
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a showing us the lifestyle or death time that multicultural atmosphere. the next stop is gelato sri the famous flower passage opened an 1876 that of a has held in here you can enjoy classical turkish cuisine, for instance, in this of each restaurant with 25 different kinds of mazda, the turkish appetizers on the menu. and it 1st thing this lay you everything in the small portion. you see if you choose it undone, you order it like today. now these are real poor. she thought not too slow like these sample, and they are all my fair with one of the
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historical tram line with just 5 stops, carries around 1500 passengers a day. and fans of traditional turkish candies can enjoy them along the way. the ucc yielded sheka lemma. sweet shop has a huge variety on offer. a be relied to finishing our meal when the swift, it's always part of our meal. and you, when there is a common item that we say, let's, it's sweet and talk sweet. after less than 2 kilometers, the historic street car reaches toxeme square and the end of a journey through time. and he stumbled a city which is as modern as it is steeped in tradition. the count down to christmas is on and it's not too late to print out your
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decorations. for many people, this is a busy time of year as they get their homes ready in time for the holidays and of course decorations vary from country to country. oh, we take a look now at some of the most beautiful holiday items from across europe, starting right here in germany. there the clinic, the christmas tree. ornaments the baubles from lasha in central germany here. they're still traditionally hand blown in the run up to christmas. the ornaments can be found on every corner in this little town. as i want ornament is prettier than the next. it really was your heart, disavow, traditional or original. they have all been made by hand for about 170 years. to lincoln, the legend tells of a poor glass blower who didn't have any apples or not last week in those days. that's what they decorated the tree with, but he didn't have any money for them out when you say he reproduced them in glass
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glass. no. allegedly invented here at 1947, the delicate christmas tree decorations became a hot export item shipped as far away as the united states. now she's still home to glass blowers soon spend the whole year, making nothing but christmas tree ornaments that always artistic. sometimes rather catchy, but certainly not mass produced from lasha we had to london. the famous heritage department store carries everything for a traditional british christmas. including of course, the famous christmas stockings that hung on the mantelpiece, waiting for santa to fill them. the most exclusive ones cost more than $500.00 euros collins and designs on unlimited even though i'm not young anymore. um we still love to fill up stockings for each
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member of my family. it's like a nice surprise and nice thing for christmas day. if you're a kid, you can open up a smoking and you can get anything from a president suites. moving on north to stockholm, sweden and oven. nordic countries have a tradition all their own. at christmas suites put out there use books. billy goats woven from school. they used to represent the recurring fertility of fear, the yearbook hanser tradition from from the christmas play. where, where people go around villages and, and ask for money. and one is dressed in a gold mass. the youth book is an essential part of a swedish christmas for people of all ages. gretchen were tiny town in italy, reminds us that christmas is about the birth of jesus. this is where the nativity scene is said to have originated. in 2023, francis of assisi is said to have started the tradition in this grotto. gretchen
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has been considered the nativity town of italy ever since. the museum here displays representations of christ's birth from the will over the world. rather than nativity, that these are all wonderful, especially this alaskan one alaska, the lobby that are present the la from the birth of jesus has to do with family noise, cynthia morris. so it's a special aspect of religion. validity, june, back in germany, in the mountains of saxony. siphon celebrates christmas all the year round, the wanton handicrafts on display here are the creations of the local. what workers . the small town is home to over 120, with working shops. and since the mid 18th century, they've been carving christmas decorations, also with images from early m mining days. the figures embodied stories from the region just as a christmas to vote in them on the blows and visitors aren't just taking
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a christmas arch or pyramid back home with them. i'd say they're taking a piece of the or mountain without guns us. so i think we really help spread good cheer here to renew the carvings from siphoned our world famous today as a highlights the festive christmas decorations and with that we wrap up another show. but just a quick reminder before we go check out our website for this week here was draw and a chance at receiving a d. w backpack. as always, thanks for tuning in policy again, same with
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ah, with no to nuclear power. that's what the brock doth protest is about. one last time after 35 years of struggle. by the end of 2022, germany stop using nuclear power. other countries, meanwhile,
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are stepping up production. why is that global 3000 next on d, w, y, true here ellen, wart socialists, construct homo soviet to coast was an ideal in the soviet union. millions were educated according to this archetype. after the collapse of the eastern block, it disappeared or did it pomo soviet to cause a soviet state of mind in 45 minutes on d, w a . in many countries, education is still
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a privilege. tardy is one of the main causes, some young children walk in mind troughs. instead of going to class others can attend classes only after they finish working with millions of children, all over the world can't go to school with them. we ask why. and because education makes the world more just a make up your own mind. d. w. made for mines. ah, ah, ah, welcome to global 3000. profiting from poverty, how slumlord scenario we exploit those most in need. policy pays off how indigenous
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people in mexico, a using the top quality coffee to fend off the competition and atomic power. no, thanks. why germany is turning its back on nuclear energy. chernobyl and fukushima. the west to nuclear disasters in history. radioactive waste can remain hazardous for thousands of years. yet many countries say nuclear power as climate friendly, because the nuclear fission reaction doesn't to med c o 2. there are currently 443 reactors in operation worldwide. most in the u. s. followed by france, china, russia, japan, south korea and india. and there are plans to build more according to the international atomic energy agency. global nuclear production is set to double by 2050. germany however,
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aims to shut down its atomic energy plants by the end of 2022 including blocked off which is the country's most controversial nuclear power station. these protestors are making their voices heard and have been doing so for decades outside a nuclear power plant in northern germany for over 35 years. now, activists have been meeting up once a month to call for the reactor to be shut down. today is the 425th and final time that they'll be here braving the elements. that's because the popped off nuclear power plant. one of the most controversial in germany will be decommissioned at the end of the year for pastor and protest co founder hans good havana. it's a day of mixed feelings. has been sold as is up. i'm glad it's being taken out of operation salon, but i'm also a bit nostalgic in a v because i know i won't be seeing the group again any time soon. so but it is
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mainly a sense of relief that the nuclear power plant is finally history. we never imagined back then that we'd have to hold out so long on the used in risk. it all began in the 19 seventies and eighties, west german students joined forces with other largely left wing groups to form an anti nuclear movement. then in april 1986, an explosion in the chernobyl nuclear power plant caused a reactor meltdown. the entire region was contaminated into this state remains uninhabitable. west germany was one of many countries to register a surge and radioactivity. the pump doff reactor was the 1st in the world to go online after the chernobyl disaster. 6 months later, several 100000 people turned out in some clash with the police consequent, havana and his fellow campaigners were determined to protest peacefully and to
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continue until booked off was closed down. gondola in an shawn chair, i have distinct memories of chernobyl if yet my kids were still small and weren't allowed to play outside in the sandbox. there was widespread panic on this. what is the fall out involved in? what are the effects evict us? we were quite scared, harvest go die if not today. oh, but what helped against that fear was taking a stance and doing something so good by protesting for this to universal, done the law. and they were like to be wary of radiation. a study conducted in 2008 indicated that children growing up near german nuclear reactors including blocked off or it's significantly higher risk of contracting leukemia. tax revenue from the local power plant enabled, the village of walked off to expand and invest in a swimming pool and other facilities. but now a financial fallout looms. donald murphy, don dot tools we as
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a local authority will always support our commercial enterprises. tivo, auto stood your head, can i? we could have kept a few nuclear power plants running a bit longer until the right structures are in place for renewable energy on all few d and o. here are in a game, or also, i think, a shuffle. the 2011 fukushima nuclear disaster prompted germany to declare a nuclear phase out by the end of 2022. but many countries continue to rely on nuclear power. they getting in the levy. this promotional film made by the french nuclear industry depict set as clean and above all climate friendly. a line of argument also favored by that countries president said enough yet donal no. so to achieve our objectives, in particular carbon neutrality by 2050, we will for the 1st time in decades we launched the construction of nuclear reactors in our country of nuclear llc or b. greenhouse gas emissions are lower than those from fossil fuels,
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but compared to wind or solar power, nuclear energy production is far more expensive. it's really clear those countries around the world that are most intensely committed to civil nuclear power. ah, either countries with nuclear weapons or countries really demonstrably keen on nuclear weapons. the use of nuclear energy for civilian purposes also forms the bed brought in the number of cases for nuclear weapons programs. the point that paris and washington make no bones about. if you do not have a civil nuclear industry, the engine is the special metals. the welders, you can't build a nuclear proposed submarine. so these countries are looking at it, and there are ports in the u. s. that are absolute explicit. even if nuclear power were twice as expensive, we would still be rational to build it. it because it helps us keep this military
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commitment or the blocked off. protesters take pride in their activism. the reenter will be shut down, but the radioactive waste will remain in storage there for decades to come. there's still no permanent disposal site anywhere in the world, which is why the activists plan to continue their fight. but for now, they can at least claim a victory after a 35 year long campaign clean and sustainable environmentally sound. most business sectors of focusing more and more on these requirements agriculture to needs to become more sustainable, depleted soils and widespread deforestation. mean farmers need ever more fertilizers and pesticides to grow crops. research suggests that small scale farms tend to be more sustainable and more resilient, but this tough competition from agribusiness is in mexico. some coffee produces a pouring their energies into quality. are reported katya. dana found out
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more it's early morning in the wave of progress. so a village in the mountains of vera cruz this way. the altar, who are tis their co family live their napa and at home they speak not wattle. no one in black below are no lake near at m listening to what i just said means greetings to the german viewers. oh, mexico is home to some 2000000 napa, which makes them the largest indigenous group in the country. right now. wattle is one of over 60 indigenous languages spoken in mexico, which along with spanish are recognized as national languages. families laughing about a recent incident. a bittersweet story. me said mother, if you so cleverly lawanda. my sister had overslept and was late a book,
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and my father mentioned that he'd seen a commercial on tv for some radio device that cost 5000 pesos you. oh, got them segmented a comparison and i said you can't even afford to put food on the table. and you want to buy an expensive radio device yet. if contract only number with the i'll take was grow coffee. every member of the family owns about a hector of land. so their coffee plantation spans about 5 hector's. they've been growing coffee for generations, but coffee production has never been a reliable livelihood. the family has now joined up with an organization called cafe color, hoping it will help them earn a secure income. and finally lead a more comfortable life. which is the law from india, and also referrals go many families that work in coffee production live in poverty
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. it's unacceptable that they have to live in these conditions. when coffee is such a valuable commodity go just because there are certain aspects of the production process, they aren't familiar with of samples, but we'll certainly be on. the 1st step is to grow better quality, coffee being a coffee call. it buys their families, harvest at a higher price than the going market rate, and then sells it on the coffee. farmers are given advice in the fields and they beans are analyzed to see how they can be pleased, as i am in the coffee called headquarters. and shall apa the capital of the state of vera cruz. the beans are examined and sampled in the laboratory. so most if with yearly there were socialists and quality control. at this point,
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we're examining the actual appearance of the bean. the point of our analysis is partly to give the farmers feedback so they can optimize the production process. florida, this is the is and i will okay. as you can see here, we found coffee bore beatles a type of past that has infested the crop on one is with us. so we have to do something about that eco nice, but that means we need to tell the farmers that they have on the problem blevins. so it's very important for them to keep their fingers clean in order to get rid of this past. but i gave them was just a deposit of the coffee beans that aren't infested or then processed for sampling, roasted wade and ground. the experts gather for a 1st round of aroma testing. initially, they keep their opinions to themselves. when clinical, zachary, of anything you say might influence the others, the law. so no one speaks while we're sampling those as he no,
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not over this. oh, oh no mister at this stage, identifying the best tasting beans isn't the main priority. ethan mendoza? los hamilton is the health and safety aspect is important that mozilla or a coffee beam has been roasted too long, isn't healthy. i mean, we'll do bulky on gov. we also need to identify if any contamination occurred during the processing was over for over fermentation war. fungus infestation is important to consider that though, the experts also share their findings with the coffee produces the goal is to improve the production process so that ultimately the product can fetch a higher price. kathy cole has also set up
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a fun to help families, such as they're all take was they paid in advance on their harvests, which means they no longer under pressure to sell their coffee to the 1st distributor. they can find the fund is backed by, by often a project launched by the international climate initiative in mexico. most coffee has grown knotted mano cultures. but in traditional shaded coffee plantations, which benefit the environment, the ot, if our family had almost given up on coffee cultivation was good. but with the support of kathy cole, they're more hopeful now that it can provide them with a secure livelihood. come your me mentally. that my perspective has changed that our home was her lacy. we're the am i used to think what will be will be who's familiar with other boston? i didn't know anything about the quality of my coffee beans. cafe. he thought. so this is a success, and we're going to continue growing our color hook off hook. so far,
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kathy cole is working with 180 producers, but hopes to increase that to 600. the project will help secure the coffee farm is the steady income, and ensure that the local climate friendly plantations can thrive. o v t is on the rise across the glass. thanks in thought to the many crises facing us, including the pandemic, poorer districts, are expanding in cities, take the slums of nairobi, for example. more and more people are moving that out of financial desperation. oh, because drought has devastated their villages. many slumlord see it as a business opportunity. they ran towns substandard housing to tenants who are already in dire straits. my tara is one of kenya's biggest slums. landlords such as peter chica,
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offer the cheapest possible housing with no kitchen or running water and collect rent with violence if need be. they taken a lot of money and have the reputation for exploiting kenya's poorest got on. well, i've got 30 houses here and matter that i've been building them since i came here and i want to expand. my big goal is to have 40 houses. it's good to be a landlord when you're getting money from all these households. you can make a lot and expand faster than the income lets you build a lot of new houses, the dell id or your business. but the housing market is not regulated here. tenants have to pay whatever the landlord demands. people share living space to make it affordable. an average $2.00 people live in a one room shack which costs the equivalent of $30.00 euros a month. peter check a usually collects the rent himself on camera,
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he makes an effort to be friendly. m. hi, how are you? you got something for me gone la? sure, i'll fetch it. okay, okay. if it does allow, is your husband home walker? no, he's not there. no problem. and when he gets in this, tell them hello from me. we'll go. when tenants don't pay the rent on time, the sun lords higher, gangs to collect it, gangs who can be quick to resort to violence. for about 10 euros. they'll strong arm the tenants or throw them out. almost lose my chair. and some night when i did his office hours were there were 2 in one of our landra crushing a bed on some on st. louis armoire, the tenant was beaten up. i myself. i've written some people out. lots is. yeah,
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you have to be done. so then to begin video, so to have that gosh, you must be job. so the, to the boys and see that you do a good job in the law just on the bolivia they had been tougher you out of there will you become. 6 6 agnes moved. visa has been living here in montana for 18 years now. colquitt, on other causes, i came to the slum of my tare, so my children could go to school. or there's no work for me right now. like i used to get by and dan labor to pay the school fees or hook up sna corona virus made things a lot harder. there are no jobs anymore. it in the class. i don't have money for food or rent. happy things become much harder because they're hardly any chances left to earn money in a book which i sometimes i'm so stressed i could single one good hospital. her plight is a common one here. life in the city can quickly become a trap. the informal economy as
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a strangle hold on the slum food, water, electricity, and rance all cost more than in the countryside. peter chang keeps meticulous records. those who pay get a receipt. those who don't can expect a visit from a street gang hilliard in minister lou, another one of the young gangs know the locals here even better than the police said when you had to be in a yard work to do a go and are always willing to collect the rent, lynette accardo, but if you go to the police, they'll ask you for a pile of money. first of your present means you end up paying more than 6000 shillings. the tenant owes you, there were 1009 or 40 or they did over the average if they're magnus,
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new heavy. she lives with her husband, children, and grandchildren. o 8 people in a one room shack with no kitchen, bathroom or running water. if they can't pay the back rent soon, they could be out on the street. since the pandemic hid, a lot of people here can no longer pay their rent. so many of peter take his houses are standing empty. come, my dear, i haven't been able to contact the tenant of this place for 3 months in this apartment. the tenant has been out of work for 3 months so far. i can't get anything from him yet. allow this rent are moved out after not paying for 6 months because of the corona pandemic. lego, the place has been empty since then. enters. enters peter che got might be complaining,
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but he's doing very well compared to his tenants who face extreme hardship. he's a man of 2 faces. he might leave the tenants alone for a few months, but then he'll send a gang around to settle, matters by force. meanwhile, the residence of maternity remain at the mercy of him and his fellow slum lourdes. escaping poverty can seem almost impossible. one way is through a good education and that doesn't necessarily mean a business or medical degree. deafness and imagination, for example, can be very useful. and then very much in demand in one rather magical place on the outskirts of cape town. ah, and to vote. love counselor color. all that in the school opened its doors every saturday
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with a bit of juggling a bit of balloon swallowing. and all the classic magician tanks by teaches in a timber which he 1st came here as a student himself, 16 years ago. it teach me a lot of things that goes dodge best would have to start discipline to love myself or to, to, to respect other people are to work hard in life and to be honest as well. that's what he taught me. magic. so from here, yep. and her hand here we go. yup, is gone and then suddenly opened a hand slowly. and then you put your hand behind on them. and then you roll the ball, roll the ball. so this from the side underneath here, the roll,
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the ball i among i 2 foot, he is one of approximately $200.00 students at the college of magic in cape town. hall. they once a week training and take 6 years old in many of them go on to work in theaters or as performers, the children's birthday parties and corporate events. legit it's mind blowing. that's why i love doing magic. i love to see proposed amazed by me. like i, a banga to footy, most of the students come from the townships where poverty has been further exacerbated by the pandemic. he's an ambitious young man. he wants to be an engineer. magic is mainly a hobby, but it also teaches him useful life lessons. when it comes to minutes, you have to practice every day. also in. if you need to be good. also magic if you want to be good, you have to try again. try again that i'm getting the same team,
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then you'll find yourself good enough. his family probably won't be able to afford to pay for him to study engineering. he'll be graduating from the college of magic in a year and hopes he'll then start to make some money himself. oh yeah, i see the image you can de turned on now cause i don't that he can do magic i in cleanable boxes didn't that was you can help us have a better life. some dental plan, no tindy cool, big again, i like longer has told me that how guy asked what we need when he starts to perform and get paid. the rest of us are unemployed. as the pun, gailey, we are going with the young the titian practices every day. he doesn't have juggling balls, so he uses potatoes instead. his teachers in a timber wood, he comes from google letter, another township. he says that magic helped him stay on the straight and narrow in these neighborhoods. it's all too easy to be led astray to see god that you are
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growing up doing to drugs and then they're doing both staff and in a feel bad, you know. and then you look at them and, and what affect your life? is it. thank god, you know, i'm still here today and then you look to some people to say, no, no, no, no, no, i don't wanna be like, you know. so that's why we people like me was kept really is what i was getting this by younger kids. so i don't for, for the same about the people for he performs at corporate events and for children in hospitals. but wherever he is, he always has a trick of his sleeve, almost double in. well, this is 10 rather they've been hold up boardington and polls the began. when i'm done holding it will turn into 100. ready? oh oh. oh oh, his audience. awesome. can't believe their eyes a,
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it really is 100 ran a students from all sorts of social backgrounds take part in the 6 year training at the college of magic. it costs the equivalent of $350.00 euros. the year. sponsorships and grants are available to students who can't afford the fees. everybody hands off in the sky with offering us on the calendar for you. don't forget to set a magic word. oh, there is no holy signs of life. now not all the students will go on to make a living as magicians, but still they will have learned many valuable lessons here. i feel juggling and, and drop the ball it's you must ben and pick up the board is
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a lesson a teaches you as well. ah, once, once you're for the life, you have to pick up a soft and, and continue because this is a still a long journey and also you cannot just give rob, so that's all listen ah. 5 that's old from us at global 3000 this week. do you drop us a line with your feedback? you can reach us at global 3000 at d, w dot com, and we are on facebook to d w global ideas. see you next time until then. take care ah ah, with
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