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tv   Euromaxx  Deutsche Welle  January 28, 2023 2:30pm-3:01pm CET

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the 77 percent in 60 minutes on d w. so we've got some hot tips for your bucket list with no magic corner check hot spot for food and some great cultural memorials to boot w travel off we go ah, ah, this young man is a pretty good breakdancer, but yeah, joseph or lind, sky is creating a buzz for another reason. we'll find out more at the top of the show.
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i want to welcome to another edition of your max with me or host megan lee. here's a look at what else we've got coming up. why germans are crazy about their bread. and how acro beat are heating up. berlin, dance clubs, opera and break dance are 2 activities that you wouldn't normally think about combining. but for jak up usa or landscape from poland, both are his passion as an accomplish breakdancer and a rising star on opera stages around europe. and in the us or lensky is part of a young generation of artists who are injecting fresh life into classical music. we met up with him in paris for a look at how he got his start in both disciplines. blue, he's yeah. cove yoseph, olean sky,
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arising star of the old pro wild blue . he's $32.00 from poland, uniquely charismatic, and a master of an extraordinarily high vocal range. oh i at the age of 8, he began singing in a boys choir in both back. then he had no idea. he would eventually make a career as a county tena. oh, did the beginning, i didn't even know that it's a full set of technique that it's a countered than her voice. i was just singing, i was just literally producing sound. so i was exploring experimenting, trying to melt into the, and sort of other voices of the, of the group. and then later on when we went for some workshops and i got the information from the, from one of the teachers that look all your economy than her. and i was like,
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are you trying to offend me? what's, what's that like? and then i got the older information, but he has a hobby to break down an even while on tour with the opera. he practices almost every day. as a teenager, he spent a lot of time dancing in the streets with his friends. but at the same time, he was discovering a love for on pra. i was hiding it, but i was not coming to a practice session saying, hey guys, i recovered dinner 5 for so. so it was just sort of like, some were there, and at the beginning i have to say i was living a little bit of let's say, 2 lives over opera, singer counter turner and a dancer like a breaker. and then it's kind of finally got together. he sees no contradiction in his love of the opera and break down things. it is sort of different, but actually, you know, there are
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a lot of common things and it actually fulfills me in a very good way because of course i love singing and that's what i do for living in every day. but also like dancing is my passion. it's like everything. what i love, the music is the physicality, acrobatics and freedom. it's sort of like a, i don't know, meditation, some people have to just sit down and i don't know, close their eyes and i have to then specializing in barrack opera, his chum and talent, fill concert halls across europe in the united states. even when in younger audiences to our friendly leasing. ah, it's really nice to see young public coming to our concerts because really it, it is, it is fun. the energies is different, the atmosphere is different. i don't see better, but it's different. oh, the music videos for the 7 albums he's caught,
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so song very like those major pop stars. so it's little surprised that he does some modeling to as here for the publish edition. instead, they do things my way and it's, i don't like when, when somebody says, for example, like all you should do this because it's like, brings a lot of views. all this brings a lot of followers on my gosh, there's going to bring new public. i don't like this kind of thinking because it's, it's for me not authentic. and what i, what i want to do is to do things which are correct with me. and what i thing is, is, is good morning. sky landed his biggest success to date in shorts and sneakers. this performance in 2017, at a music festival in exxon provence. southern france has racked up of 10000000 views on the internet. how it broke at some level. this kind of, let's see, stiffness of, of,
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of classical world because we were in this beautiful patio and it was just, you know, 35 degrees outside. so everybody was just melting and we were wearing was, you were in, you know, this over friends, just lose nice clothes moose, lou in the 1st half of 2023. the busy opera stall will be appearing in the us to poland, france, spain, portugal and germany. but he's sure he'll still find time for a little break, dancing with about 3000 varieties to choose from. it's no wonder germans love their bread so much and they they certainly miss it when they travel abroad. well bred here in this country is a staple in many households, but to understand why germans are so crazy about their bread, t w's, hannah homo,
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set out on a fact finding mission. what can i get you? i'd like some bread. we have white bread, rye bread, pumpkin bread, lucy, grain, bread, full grain, bread and many mould off b. i'm more turns aren't germans are pretty crazy about their breads. i no wonder, in fact there are over 3000 different types of german bread. not means if you ain't a different kind every day you could keep going for 8 years. i grew up in scotland where sliced bread is pretty much the standard. but my german died used to be a different kind at home for us every week. so i got a taste of the culture from a pretty young age. but why are germans so crazy about their bread? let's find out. first of all, no bread baking was not invented in germany. the oldest spread remains
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are over 14000 years old and were found in what is now jordan. bread is one of the world's most common an oldest birds. many countries have their own types of bread and flour. by the way, the country where the more spread is consumed per capita is germany, but turkey. all you need to bake bread is flour, salt water, and yeast or sour dough. different types of flour and such ingredients as grains provide variety. oily kinsley is a master baker in one of berlin's oldest bakeries, but ingredients alone do not make good bread. the process does true need the dough correctly shape it and let it sit. then bake it in the oven for just the right amount of time, but tunnel is done, gosling out. no other country has such
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a distinctive bread culture as germany sized for it is one of the things germans abroad, mister, most esteemed also. so why are there so many different kinds of driving bread? well, it all comes down to history generally wasn't always a united country. they used to be divided into several independent states, each of which had their own kind of grains and own ways of baking bread. but the centuries old culture is under threat, a few traditional bakeries are still thriving, but many supermarkets and discounts stores are taking over. they don't make their bread from scratch, but they do sell it on the cheap meaning that the number of bakeries and the people wanting to learn the trade is in decline. 60 years ago there were over 55000 bakeries in germany. now that number has dropped to just under 10000. well, many bakeries are closing day. others are puting new concepts to the test, like the kite bakery in berlin, where they believe less is more only 5 types of bread are available. owners. coney,
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our school and tunnels pollutants gave up their jobs that germans sports brand added us to open the bakery with its 2 branches. all the ingredients come from within a 100 kilometer radius off berlin. as i'd say, is considered what anita ika. bread is available everywhere from, especially in germany and on. so what you can get it in the supermarkets filling stations and on every corner walbridge dish off to thought it was also important for us to show the grid can be enjoyed and on does the food was on a could be so special that we say we make only a few lows about but the really good hold. i grew up appreciating german bread, but it was only when i moved to germany that i realized just how crazy germans are about their bread. and who can blame them when it plays such a huge role in daily life and is so connected to the history of the country. hopefully, germany's baker is, will be able to keep the craft alive for many more years to come. o
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reefs are known as the rain forests of the sea. they come are only about one percent of the ocean, but are home to about 25 percent of all marine life corps. reeves also play an important role in protecting coastal communities from storms and water surges by acting as a buffer. but they are under increasing threat due mainly to climate change over fishing and pollution. now, one artist from england is on a mission to help save coral reefs. one paper cut at a time with by 2050 scientists, estimate of 70 to 90 percent of old o rings will be extinct primarily as a result of warming, martian temperatures. we must take action now, and that is why i'm using my aunt as a vessel or positive environmental change. my name
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is j ot she was on that said sensually the name of japanese subway line in tokyo. but esl sire aligns with my initials. i'm 20 years old and i've been paper cutting for around 7 and a half years. so i sense of our young age. i've known that i want it to be an artist or a creative and some way. i'm inspired by japanese paper cutting woods, kidding me, to create lodge original paper guns and spied by coal reefs. i find the process of paper causing incredibly meditative, and it's a grounding experience that enables me to really reach this flow site. this piece is inspired by a type of golder coral. i'm looking into at the moment, but i am currently working for memory. i think the challenge of tape the cutting and should probably be the intense data as for clients. so each piece through,
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i find that at several mental challenge trying to make a change pace. and you have to have that drive in order to carry on with the pace because i can type like 3 for 5 months more. so my piece is named off to japanese subway lines or subway stations. i'm a student at university at the moment and i study japanese studies. i'm also an artist. i've exhibited my wag internationally and across the u. k. so i've had to work in japan, australia, the u. s. and across here, i started selling 5 years ago. so i tend to sell the room social media marketing on social media, but i will so south through off as and tech submissions. occasionally, i'm essentially donating i percentage of all of my revenue of my original out sales
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to coraleive. that money is essentially helping to fund the construction of one of the world's largest car last race and the mo, dave's to sunshine plant. lots of car tables and try to mitigate the impacts of climate change on the cars to regions. i fast a lot about car bleaching at school when i was much younger. and i continued to researching corals. i felt like it was an area of the planet that is too often overlooked, even though charles are in the front line of the climate change in the environmental destruction. yeah, so when i was an issue researching carl bleaching, i saw that sort of the moments before a car would dies stuff such and carl's and metting lots of vibrant colors, especially so of neon fluorescent colors. and i found out really fascinating as of something that i haven't seen before or heard of. so i wanted to sort of capture that final moment in a car sly. and i tried to do that within my many paces. so i have
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a lot of many paces that i lack on that are like little sections of a coral reef and they work together to form a lodge. so unless i'm wreath, southside, they're behind them. i spent a lot of my time in my childhood and east london and i was really inspired by one of the street out there and not help to inspire a lot of the colors i used to day. and it works perfectly with me. ringback clarson corey and the final moment of the current life. so seeing the impacts of climate change on co rapes past times, i'm really drives me to try to take action through went on my heart as thoughts we can restore. i'm co riffs around the world that are being destroyed by warming, arson temperatures. and he said if occasion that they are sion and trying to really
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restore those ecosystems because they protect millions of people across the wilds from flooding and rising sea levels. that's incredibly important that we preserve these areas of our planet for future generations. ah, when it comes to clubbing in berlin, the city is known for its techno music. but another genre of dance music is taking the club culture here by storm. are fro, beats, or rhythms from various parts of africa are becoming a must on play lists. but the journey to get there has not been an easy one according to 2 digits. at the forefront of the afro b movement here in germany, ah nigerian, afro beats, and golden co durrell or the newest south african house tracks. the fests are quite
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spac, celebrates african rhythms digits, know me and mr. wallace are the main club acts to night. as part of the fleet to last week music collective, they've been hosting afro parties in germany for 10 years to life in yahveh i have in the last 10 years, afro beats have definitely become a must in every club at every of out to get smithfield enough of some up, whether it's south african, i'm a piano south of cooper to calais. don't below anything. the willow is up at alice. oh, the new club music from africa has galvanized the club scene when wallace and know me launched their 1st berlin club series, afro heat. they also wanted to create a safe space where people of color via dumber because when we went out back then like there was a kind of quota, what to have. they'd say no,
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we already have 10 percent blacks. that's enough for today. and slots are things like that. are too many turks to me. arabs approved a tour. we just wanted an evening where it didn't matter. it's 99 percent of black . i'm sorry, 99 percent turks within swanson all the main thing is to celebrate and loved this sound. okay, i'll talk to dan, it's good. we'll humans all done. okay. with sexual orientation, gender, age, or origin from the start. these haven't mattered at their parties. what counts is shared passion for new african music, and it's contagious creek to laugh leak are now a fixture on the berlin club scene and also play the really big electronic events with their own sound system. but i feel concerned going, it's good for us to now i'm going to get out of the underground and the mainstream when some of them under no wish heights for moving up, staying power goal is saying that's where we want to go. and we're going to get
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there then, so we believed in ourselves and we made it on campus, are forming an african music. collective in berlin is one thing. holding your own as a woman in a male dominated d, j and m. c seen is something else. but no me is now one of the few internationally recognized afro beats de jane's a slam on that. that was really, really tough. at 1st. the guys didn't take me seriously at all. uh huh. god, they wouldn't even say hello as of. and when someone booked me and i showed up, they were like a woman and tack no way to kind of knew. but when they saw what i had do, they welcomed me numbers. so kind in the last 10 years, they've taken me seriously. thank god that senior huffman, instead of asking them got side bangs, oh, freak, last week, has also been producing its own afro sound for several years. they promote new talents on their label, and know me as happy to support them with video shooting tips. ha,
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with often when you shake, do more with your hands. do more out. okay. yeah. give me a little more like matthew i met, i met there also bringing the berlin afro vibe back to africa. they shot the video to div as d. angola by the openly, by sexual singer serafina sanchez with queer people from angola on site drive. i wrote an offer, but we want to bring this afro vibe everywhere with there are still too few people enjoying it and on. and i think it's also a good way to break down barriers also between nation us to bon office and, and there's nothing better than connecting people through music for turn of offensive. when was it closer to problem i, i do, along with the internationally booming afro beats freaked last week are also spreading the word about other types of modern african music. a bonus,
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not only for the berlin club scene. and finally, we move on to florence, italy. we're all roads eventually lead to the famous pontiff vecchio, the cities oldest bridge. it's a top tourist attraction in florence, mainly known for the shops built along it. like many historical structures, the pontiff vecchio has a long history, and if it could speak, it could share some of its secrets with us. but since that is not possible, we met up with a local guide instead. hi, i am francesca, and today i am going to take you to discover 5 interesting stories about pont vecchio. the bridge behind me the old bridge has spanned the owner river in florence, italy, since 1345 we, we are on the bridge of want to back yacht. let me show you some figure about it. this move to the stunning historical landmark than meets the army. there is
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a secret passage here on point of vecchio. if the bazaar recorder can you see it's a model of the carter is roughly a one kilometer long was made by the magic family, has a safe and private passageway to walk from the headquarters for lots of after the day, a private house, a lot of things you still get to really specializes in function to through florence using a polaroid camera. don't shake it. never. ah. the bridge has always been lined with shops. they displays a full of glistening jewelry and called and have a long history. famous. been night 3, all of your shots are allowed here. before that the bridge was full of meat
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shops and fish mongers. what this think is place in town because they were used to throw the scraps out of the bridge. this change when the magic family build the corridor and since then again, only jewish shops and is still the same today. you cannot open like a sandwich shock up on director. but about 50 years ago, the jewelry was simply washed out of many shops. the flood destroyed nearly the entire bridge, including this jewelry shop, francesco, guess briny, is taking astray home. the water in the day of the 96, a 6 flood or was high to a point that it passes through the windows. so smashing the glasses and taking away the jewels and precious pieces, the pointed akin is when people to signal arch,
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which is in the world. and its history is visible from a distance from up close. aah! one of the things you're actually miss, if not pay attention to it, went on pontiac, your is the sundial over there. and another tiny detail is a small, tiny lizard on the column of the sundial. this was considered a sign, a lock for people walking on the bridge. julie brought some lock to the bridge, which is still here. after 800 hears whispering, saying, ah, who to the city has narrowly escaped disaster. more than once. in world war 2, german troops blew up the breaches in florence to secure their retreat. or what directly or is there on that bridge in florence that survived the 2nd world war?
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there is an incredible story about how the bridge was saved by an old man. and he found a way to disconnect the bombs that were placed underneath on tobacco ah, the pin to make you influence its glistening gold is steeped in history and secret i. and that brings us to the end of another show. be sure to check out our website for this week's viewers draw and a chance at receiving some items from our dw uncensored collection, with instructions on how to access blocked media around the world. as always, thanks for tuning it and we'll see you again soon. a
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ah with
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aah! with the 77 percent. i always wanted to be a farmer, but i can't imagine doing it anywhere else. but at home. why or young african returning home from abroad and a lot of things about home. and when you come back here, we have a chance the 77 percent in 30 minutes on
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d. w. a. they will whistle blowers in the heart of evil. diplomats in the emerging so called the dry during dinner parties, they engage due espionage and intrigues. secret reports revealed their concern and disgust, but also a fascination with the nazi dictate to share with d w. a . what people have to say matters to us got am. that's
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managed by from bought lou 1st. ah ah, this is new news that live from berlin emergency responders are dealing with and i've asked you to an incident east jerusalem, the report injuries the day after one of the deadliest attacks in the city. yes. also coming up vs fights ending in ukraine's east. in doing yes, region shifts new light on the back, not mass and every group you bring you more rushes private military company and it's controversial. put.

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