tv DW News Deutsche Welle January 17, 2025 4:00am-4:16am CET
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the, the we will not say the way starts february full teams on d w. the business dw news lives from balance is really prime minister status. he's ready to go ahead with a ceasefire deal in guys. benjamin netanyahu, whose office says he's ready to put the deal to a boat and cabinets, but he's far right. security minister says he'll quit the government if it passes. also coming up hollywood users, one of its more off beat icons. american filmmaking on rights a. david lynch, eyes of the age of 78. the
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. now i'm told me on larry boy, it's good to have you with us. the office of is really prime minister benjamin netanyahu says a deal to release is there any hostages in gaza has been reached? and a statement put out early on friday morning and that's knows office is a vote on cuts on that goal. shaded ceasefire. deal can go ahead and cabinet late during the day. but is there any national security administer? it's him up and give or has threatened to resign from the coalition government. if the deal is the crew cabinet must agree, before the sci fi can take it back to dw correspondent, constituting a good has more on what the possible resignation of is. my vancouver could mean falls the sci fi deal. well it seems thats the deal. uh, we'll still go through and uh, the resignation for there for resignation of either might have been good. been been
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giving it to him. his policy is departure from the government will not impede this uh box. um it will decrease the majority vibes of the kind of government a come mom's in the connected to these really parliaments. uh it will be something like 62, i guess 58 or something like that. so basically it will be a fit our majority. uh and i think a lot of people here in tourism say a lot depends on another um voice ring. think of the minister of finance visit low smart reach has his own policy is also pretty hard, right? uh she is so criticized this agreements, but whether he will leave that's a different measure. he has been meeting with mister netanyahu, the prime minister netanyahu in the last few hours, so we shall see probably tomorrow i will see what, what will that the story mean for the future of these really coalition and uh,
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for the future of the deal. okay. um, well guessing from mister netanyahu looking like is willing to risk the, the, the, the state of his, his government, um for this deal and it appears or uh yes, she does, because uh, 1st and foremost to go. as i said, it seems like he will maintain a 2nd majority in the can. it sits secondly, the old position said that it will support the government on the hostage of dealers . so he has this kind of bet king from the whole position. and this goes basically against the background of the public opinion, which is in his majority. see the deal. and this is something that mr. nathan, yahoo cannot ignore. right. i'm just wondering how people, as you mentioned that there is a public feeling full the deal. but in light of what's been happening with, you know, up and give her and, and, and other members, it's
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a threatening or saying they don't want the deal. does this affect the, how the public is, is feeling as well? yes. i mean the, uh is really suits uh, is rarely democracy institute measured the public opinion. and then once we have a, have a give or take a 68 percent. oh for the deal. and let's go to a different chaise or public video. and generally the people who say the deal should be implemented and as a whole o at least the 1st stage with the release of the 1st stage of release of hostages, i should also be implemented then we'll see that's the aptitude. so it is the minority that is totally against the deal. and 1st is vicky. you know, when i was walking to the bureau here, i saw people in the square and not far from the bureau already celebrating the deal . i'm not seeing them. they, the by means is just the one thing that i saw, but just if you look at the pervasiveness of this feeling that hostages should be
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set free, the needs needs to be some kind of a decision to that. i think it's very clear the will of the majority. okay. you know, this goes into an aggregate reporting from jerusalem. we appreciate your work. thank you. now if the deal goes ahead, i'm us with hand over $33.00 hostages in exchange for israel freeing hundreds of palestinian prisoners. i had also ceased by israel has carried out and strikes in gaza, which the how must run. health ministry says has killed at least $8.00 to $1.00 palestinians, mixed feelings among thousands celebrations at the news of a ceasefire. mixed with doubts that will happen, and tinge with sadness that everything that has been lost. that trepidation is backed up by events since the announcement that is where the air starts pumping to
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celebrate to be moved. taking more lives with them. the deal is supposed to come into force on sunday the on certain days ahead and making some here novice again. we must remain cautious. we were afraid that could be an even was not boston before i saw him anything of it the next few days could be even more difficult than the whole of the last year. i am in the middle of summer. we just hope the blood shed stops by sort of others and noticing the positive impacts. the news has already had on the everyday lives. the price of the sponsored vegetables used to be 30 seconds . now it's 5. the ceasefire. news has reduced the price of a spot of oil cost $10.00 cycles. now, it was 30 before that. we weren't cigarettes, the price has to be cheaper to the others as thinking about the future. let me know who we need to start thinking of solutions and enough destruction and was
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we're exhausted. 15 months of humiliation and living and trying to tense. and during this time, i hate on the winter cold and this the children who died of cold, why nobody is riley's also appear to be apprehensive. receive free like is there is a threat from the from come us like if we just like going to let them guys i guess there might be 3 of the recipients. again, like knowing that it guarantees differently. i think we, we gonna fall back to a well again, with a was the guys a citizen was because we've come with some us. i think the agreement is a good agreement. the once we get all the hostages back into the bodies that are being held there captive, but i think that's how much that will re i'm regroup again. as we see in the correlation that they have been some, this court against disagreement with home us a deceased by a deal is far from certain. and it seems that few on either side are willing to
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believe it until they see it. i'm at the flood i'll can save is a guys are analyst at this scowcroft and at least security initiative in washington asked him if he believes the sci fi deal. we'll go ahead thanks so much for having me. on the one hand, i very much so think at least the 1st 2 phases of the deal will proceed. i think there's way too much political capital in the united states and by the incoming trump administration. that's tied into this deal happening to stabilize the, gotten the strip to ensure that the middle leases stable enough so that mr. trump can pursue some of his other regional priorities, as well as focus domestically and not be distracted by what's happening in gaza. on the other hand, there are immense obstacles to seeing this all the way through to phase 3, which in my view remains the most unlikely phase of this simply because there,
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i don't see a scenario in which guys it can be credibly reconstructed. while how may i ask, who's in control this deal does nothing to address the fact that her mass will have dominion over the guy district. that there has not been any meaningful movement on what a day after looks like. and unfortunately, there's been a systematic failure by the united states by these rarely used by the international community, and certainly the regions to work over the past 15 months to really have contingency plans for this eventuality. but i do think, nevertheless, there's a high likelihood that we will see the 1st and 2nd pages of this deal go through it . because honest ahmad flat altitude. and here's a look at some of the other stories making headlines around the world. the airlines have been forced to divert dozens of flights over the gulf of mexico to avoid
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debris from a malfunctioning test of space axes starship. this debris found over a t. v up a stage of the rock. it broke up. minutes after launching from texas for the 2nd time in the starship program, space ex did manage to successfully capture the super heavy booster russian president vladimir putin has promised the president of a central african republic continued support. most goes, deployed hundreds of ministry instructors to help battle rebels factions, the fighters from russia's wagner mercenary to have supported government sources since 2018 american. so make a david lynch has died at the age of $78.00 known for his dog. and so real autistic vision and best direct uh, oscar nominations for blue velvet, the elephant man and mulholland drive. from his debut 1977 starkly
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serial eraser head, david lynch's unique and edgy cinematic vision was unmistakable. his 1986 phil blue velvet secured, his status is a highly viewed artist, director burning. and this 3rd for oscar nominations. but it's arguably most influential where it came away from the big screen when he turned his hand to television. equally thrilling and shocking audiences with his serious twin peaks, donald lynch's uncompromising cinematic style as and has earned some respect from peers. ranging from quentin tarantino cohen brothers to steven spielberg, who called him a singular and visionary dreamer, lynched just days before his 79th birthday journalist k j. matthews told me more. i'd like to think of david lynch this way. a lot of his films and even television shows were maybe made you feel uncomfortable or hard to watch
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certain scenes. but they were also hard to forget. he was a surrealistic artist, really. i consider him kind of like the salvador dali, a film here in hollywood, keesha's, remarkable. he's one of those kind of filmmakers, filmmakers, as an artist. and so you just know that when david lynch's behind a project, it's going to be interesting. it's going to be hard to stick and you knew it was going to be great. and he broke around a new ground with twin peaks. how did this series change television? or? you know, i'm trying to think of another shows that really catch something like that. do you remember the scene or not the same, but everybody is going well, i'm saying who shot laura palmer, one of the main characters in twin peaks. the only thing i can think of that really kind of qualifies, or you can kind of compare it to was kind of like who shot jr. there's always those tv shows where something major happens and everybody around the world is really
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talking about at the water cooler. that's what twin peaks was like. the most interesting thing though, about him is that he had success in the field with the elephant man and blue velvet . and most filmmakers here in hollywood once you're really making on the big screen as a feature film. you know, filmmaker, they don't really cross over into television, especially back in the day. they really didn't do that. he did, he left the feature film world and dabbled into television. and that's what we got the twin peaks. but any dabble back into feature film and gave us mulholland drive so it's really a rear artist. most people don't have that level of success in both television and film and certainly they didn't have that 3040 years ago like tv and this month. so it's inspiration in different ways. do you know about the, the chocolate milkshake story or i'm, i'm just learning about that, but he really was kind of like
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a creature of habit having to drink that all the time, which is very, very, very interesting. you look at a lot of his fields and they seem to kind of be, i don't want to say all over the place with artistic driver, whatnot. you would think that he's very, very flexible with that. but it's interesting to find an artist like him is very inflexible when he comes to his day to day activities and what he needs in order to get work done. so i found that interesting. yeah, i think it was something along the lines of drinking the same chocolate milkshake every day for 7 years or something of the sort and and from the same location as well. if you were introducing someone to david lynch's work, what would you suggest they, what would they watch or e mail that mulholland drive the elephant man. and then once you round it up with twin peaks, and i'm telling you it really should be taught and all the classes if you want to be a filmmaker at every field school in america really around the world. david lynch should
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be on the syllabus because his projects and works of art are just classic and it needs to be studied. that's what i would recommend. excellent. and as i mentioned in this case a matthews, always great getting your thoughts. thank you. it says dw news to stay with us, the not just another day. so much is happening all at once. we take time to understand this is the day i'm in the look at current use events, analyzed by experts and critical thinking is. this is the weekdays on dw, the machine you go a car from the communist.
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