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Transcripts For DW Arts And Culture 20190507 17:45:00


who tried to bring heaven down to a late abstract artist also pino. but joining me straight away is john anderson the boss of all drug addict records this is a classical record company which is a bit special because it s a nonprofit making co-operative which puts the artists in charge it sounds wonderful joel. but how does it work because you have to make some money to pay people who who work for you of course we have a team of fifteen effect that we have to pay and that is a talent obviously but the goal with with all to take was to find a way of making. something in the world something which is not really of the world soul music which is priceless which is not transactional which is as a value completely different from commercial value. but in some way finding a way to come out a size and to put it in a marketplace and to do
a service to the artists who are collaborating with us ok now and i like the way you choose who you will record it s a bit like one of those things on the something called the voice on the television whether you know it s kind of behind oldish and as you say you exactly this. is the scientific peer review process that we ve co-opted for for arts. again the idea here is that we re trying to find a way to. choose our artist choose a repertoire in a way which is not motivated by a profit motive by marketing decisions and and things like this and so what we have what we built was a online platform to which people can apply in a demo but that is evaluated by the actual rostrum members themselves of the label and they receive a link with just the music so we don t know who they are where they re from and a woman. if there are all the young famous knots we evaluate on the bases the music
itself and the interest of the program a list let s hear someone who who got through those were additional process this is the italian finnish victorio forte playing a piece. i should just mention that it s rachmaninoff but it s an especial arrangement is that yes ok now the record strong of the label just seems to be mostly contemporary i mean the very first thing you brought time was bugs piano music or first of yes you
know i mean that s quite a nice market well the interesting thing about this is that is not a decision of myself or any explicit policy of the label but the music which does tend to make it through this filter which we have by the pure of you filter is the more innovative programming stuff which is less represented the stuff which we have already heard thousands of times just as a natural result of our selection process i think we are in the doing all. now you said in an interview although we just don t quite buy the c.d. s decades it s all going to go wild laws so how are you going to make money or should i say make enough to keep going so it s certainly true that cd players are being built on the cars and the computers is going to go the way of vinyl at some point there are always the collections and there always be artists who need to to make see these also because it is a good business card having
a tangible product that s very good but but yes there s no doubts that the market is moving towards digital and we re moving in that same direction or developing various online platforms which we hope will position isn t a good place to be. the interface between musicians the music industry and the public and you ve got a jazz label again let s hit some music this is again an italian artist a massive media know. hopefully are pronouncing and his bad let s have a quick listen. please a rainy day on your jazz mabel just briefly what are you doing here in germany the
home of the mighty dortch a gramophone and you re hoping to sort of put them out of business all in all there s no not even any intention of competition in the sense what we re trying to propose is an alternative to that. so the major labels they control more or less eighty percent of the market but it s a dime market it s also also they re struggling and in my opinion. the fact that the digital revolution that s part of it of course but it but it s actually a symptom of i think taking music in the wrong way and so we re trying to present it in a different way which we think is actually a positive way for the way that will get us out and of course the digital revolution for us is a good thing he told sound it s really fascinating we need more enterprising on for prose. in the business especially in the music business ventures of course changing good luck with this film anderson thank you from. thank you very much for joining
us you might be interested in this next piece if you want to place in london a little office in london. the olympic park in london encompassed five hundred sixty acres of east london but after the olympics finished in twenty twelve what became of this vast sites well most of the buildings have been put to good use including what used to be the press center an enterprising group of architects have now turned it into a technology park for startups. in east london compact and colorful studios have been built in the space that served as the international broadcast center during the twenty twelve olympics. making gascon splitsville for conspiring architects he and his colleagues designed began training. hugely positive for london i think for local area but because of the level of
development it happened. it s swept away a lot of the sort of local history and so we want to do this project as a way of reminding people about parts of the local history that they could be proud of. the bright colors used to the studios façade for example echoed the rapper s of suites that used to be manufactured close by. the architects didn t draw inspiration only from local businesses one studio facade commemorates an unusual landmark that used to be in the area. before the olympic. there s a very frank famous local landmark on the canal which was nicknamed fridge mountain . just a few years it was europe s largest white goods dumping ground. the tenants of the twenty one works spaces are as varied as the studios facades the mix includes a record label to music studios architects engineers and designers.
is house manager his employer the transfer he was hired by the technology park to look after the studios and its tenants. he explains what really sets the gantry a past. we can make beautiful spaces you can design amazing spaces you can have great views but ultimately the thing that makes this place tick make it last beyond me to the tramp or even as a company will be the stories and the cooperation and the network that happens for people interrupting day to day covering their business to go. there sure to be a lot more fun in these colorful studios. now the art museum just outside barn in western germany is named after her and sophie are up who were two of the pioneers of abstract art in the early twentieth century the current exhibition their features works by auto pina it was actually
one of the great abstract artists of the second half of the dredges century concerning himself predominantly with light fire and the culture. how do you bring heaven to earth how do you paint with light how can you reach outer space. the exhibition alchemy list and stormer of the skies explores artist otto pinas universe and finds his work exploding with raw power. like this volcanic eruption which practically flings its lava towards the viewer pina did not paint pictures like this with a brush but with fire here trying to here it really seems to explode on the canvas . it s called a fire because all peano always took a circle as his starting point and then sprayed it with a national paint focus to manipulate it with
a fixative and then ignited the whole thing that s going to ensue and it and then during this process of ignition cheering the heat the paint would run you can see red spots the pay. read down like a melting pot so to speak and he meant it as certain moment he blew out the fire line. and what remained was solidified match up the material. let s hope you know it was using new painting techniques at the end of the one nine hundred fifty s. it was also during this time that he co-founded the artists group zero. this wasn t season it was a kind of turning point after the second world war that they wanted a more ideal world that was basically a transition to silence to tranquility. so what did pina have to say about that in twenty thirteen he visited an exhibition of his work in cars with. his instinct and . there was a need to see something in the light instead of in the dark there and shot him in
the depression in the deepest your own we wanted to get to know one another world a new world and if necessary build it or help to build a new front in there to own your own health and. an artist whose work was truly inspired by the stars. and then in that museum is in an old railway station on the banks of the river rhine it s quite a place finally one of the world s most famous paintings go reading a letter it s an open window by the great loss a young man has been partially restored by the commander got to be in dresden and in the course of the restoration there was a sensational discovery parts of the picture had been over painted and not five a man detected by x. ray in the background there was a naked cupid and this figure is now piece by piece reveals and the cupid will be
completely exposed to further restoration next year. and that brings us the end of ops and culture for now check out the website at d.w. dot com slash can. all face folks. now thanks very much for watching my thanks for the crew. join us again so far.
pick up. their goals go lower but everything is still a program. even after the third to last match i m going to sleep it seems. to come german gentleman. will qualify for europe. and we ll get. it done. and action packed life. anything s possible as long as our coffee and his friends can treat this movie theater. refugee camp. his life story ground to a. twenty seven years ago but there s no holding back his dreams. thank you for. sergeant may twenty seventh free on t.w. . some time in the twenty six. my great
granddaughter. of the world be like in your lifetime. around half a century. when i was born there were three people you ll share the planet with nine billion. you world be around two degrees more. evidently sea level rise by at least one during this century. we re going to have some climate impacts which are greater than what we see already. it s really frightening. why are people more concerned. to be first on the

Way , World , Something , Al-l , Making , Goal , Soul-music , It , Value , Marketplace , Size , Artists

Transcripts For DW Arts And Culture 20190507 18:45:00


tried to bring heaven down to a late abstract artist also pre-nup. but joining me straight away is john understand the boss of all drug addict records this is a classical record company which is a bit special because it s a nonprofit making co-operative which puts the artists in charge it sounds wonderful joel. but how does it work because you have to make some money to pay people who who work for you of course that we have a team of fifteen effect that we have to pay and that is a talent obviously but the goal with with all to take was to find a way of making. something in the world something which is not really of the world soul music which is priceless which is not transactional which is as a value completely different from commercial value soul but in some way finding a way to commodifies it to put it in a marketplace and to do
a service to the artists who are collaborating with us ok now and i like the way you choose who you will record it s a bit like one of those things on the something called the voice on the television whether you know it s kind of blind auditions as these are you exactly this. is the scientific peer review process that we ve co-opted for for arts. again the idea here is that we re trying to find a way to. choose our artist choose a repertoire in a way which is not motivated by a profit motive by a marketing decisions and things like this and so what we have what we ve built a platform to which people can apply in a demo but then is evaluated by the actual rostrum members themselves of the label and they receive a link with just the music so we don t know who they are where they re from man or woman. if they are old young famous knots we evaluate really on the basis the music
itself and the interest of the program let s let s hear someone who who got through this right decision process this is the italian finesse victorio forte playing a piece by man and. i should just mention that it s rachmaninoff but it s an especial arrangement is. ok. the record strong of the label is seems to be mostly contemporary i mean the very first thing you brought time was some bugs piano music or first of yes you
know i mean that s quite a nice market well the interesting thing about this is that it s not a decision of myself or or an explicit policy of the label but the music which does tend to make it through this filter which we have by the end of the bureau of your filter is the more innovative programming stuff which is less represented the stuff which we have already heard thousands of times though just as a natural result of our selection process i think we d be in the doing ok now you said in an interview although she told me it s not quite the cd is that it s all going to go wild laws so how are you going to make money or should i say make enough to keep going so. certainly through the cd players are being built building the cars and the computers is going to go the way of vinyl at some point there are always be collections and there always be artists who need to to make see these also. it s a good business card having
a tangible moment was very good but but yes there s no doubt the market is moving towards digital and we re moving in that same direction or developing various online platforms which we hope will position isn t a good place to be the interface between musicians the music industry and the public and you ve got a jazz label again let s hear some music this is again an italian artist no please hopefully i m pronouncing right and his bad that s our quickness. that s. a rainy day on your jazz label and just briefly what are you doing here in
germany the home of the mighty dortch of gramophone are you hoping to sort of put them out of business all in all i know there is no not even any intention of competition in the sense what we re trying to propose is an alternative to that. so the major labels they control more or less eighty percent of the market but it s a dime market it s also also they re struggling and in my opinion. the fact that the digital revolution that s part of it of course but it but it s actually a symptom of i think taking music in the wrong way and so we re trying to present it in a different way which we think is actually a positive way for a way that will get us out and of course the digital revolution for us is a good thing you told this really fascinating we need more enterprising on for pros . in the business especially in the music business ventures of course changing good
luck with the film anderson thank you from. thank you very much for joining as you might be interested in this next piece if you want to place in london a little office in london. the olympic park in london encompassed five hundred sixty acres of east london but after the olympics finished in two thousand and twelve what became of this vast sites well most of the buildings have been put to good use including what used to be the press center an enterprising group of architects have now turned it into a technology park for startups. in east london compact and colorful studios have been built in the space that served as the international broadcast center during the twenty twelve olympics. making gaskins works for conspiring architects he and his colleagues designed the gantry. the olympic games were hugely positive for london i think the local area but because of
the level of development it happened. it s swept away a lot of sort of local history and so we want to use this project as a way of reminding people about parts of the local history that they could be proud of. the bright colors used to this studios facade for example echo the rapper s of suites that used to be manufactured close by. the architects didn t draw inspiration only from local businesses and one studio facade commemorates an unusual landmark that used to be in the area. before the olympic. there s a very frank famous local landmark on the canal which was nicknamed fridge mountain . just a few years it was europe s largest white goods dumping ground. the tenants of the twenty one works spaces are is buried is the studios for sands the mix includes a record label to music studios architects engineers and designers.
trip scally is house manager his employer the tramper he was hired by the technology park to look after the studios and its tenants. he explains what really sets the gantry a past. we can make beautiful spaces you can design amazing spaces you can have great views but ultimately the thing that makes this the place tick will make it last beyond me to the tramp or even as a company will be the stories in the collaboration network that happens for people interrupting day to day carving a business together. they re sure to be a lot more fun in these colorful studios. now the art museum just outside born in western germany is named after hans and sophie are up who were two of the pioneers of abstract art in the early twentieth century the current exhibition their features works by auto pina it was actually
one of the great abstract artists of the second half of the tried to century concerning himself predominantly with light fire and the culture. how do you bring heaven to earth how do you paint with light how can you reach outer space. the exhibition alchemy just in stormer of the skies explores artist auto pina s universe and finds his work exploding with raw power. like this volcanic eruption which practically flings its lava towards the viewer pina did not paint pictures like this with a brush but with fire here friday here it really seems to explode on the canvas. it s called the fire because often i painted always took a circle as his starting point and then sprayed it with a national paint focus manipulated it with its citizens and then ignited the whole
thing that s going to end soon and that and then during this process of ignition the cheering the heat the paint would run you can see red spots the pain. red and down like a melting pot so to speak and cemented a certain moment he blew out the fire proof that jesus and what remained was solidified matter up to material. also pina was using new painting techniques at the end of the one nine hundred fifty s. it was also during this time that he co-founded the artists group zero. wasn t it seems there was a kind of turning point after the second world war that they wanted a more ideal world that was basically a transition to silence to tranquility. so what did pina have to say about that in twenty thirteen he visited an exhibition of his work in cars with. his instincts and bit there was a need to see something in the light instead of in the dark the image that indoor
in the depression into deep as your own we wanted to get to know another world a new world in it and if necessary build it or help to build a new country and we had to hear oh no bone here from. an artist whose work was truly inspired by the stars. and then in that museum is in an old railway station on the banks of the river run it s quite a place finally one of the world s most famous paintings go reading a letter it s an open window by the great. a young man has been partially restored by the command of the galaxy in dresden and in the course of the restoration there was a sensational discovery part of the picture had been over painted and not by a man detected by x. ray in the background there was a naked cupid and this figure is now piece by piece revealed and the cupid will be completely exposed after
a further restoration next year. and that brings us the end of arts and culture for now check out the website at d.f.w. dot com slash come. fullface spoke at v.w. culture from all old bose topics but for now thanks very much for watching my thanks for the crew of course here in berlin join us again soon bob barr.
pick up. their goals go mark but everything still programs. even after the third to last match is going to sleep this isn t. going to come german champions. will qualify for europe. and will get relegated. to keep. going to. form. and on demand. pass language courses. video and audio. w media sector. plus ninety the new channel for an
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Way , World , Something , Al-l , Making , Goal , Soul-music , It , Value , Marketplace , Soul , Artists

Transcripts For DW Arts And Culture 20190508 06:45:00


tried to bring heaven down to a late abstract artist also pre-nup. but joining me straight away is john i understand the boss of all druidic records this is a classical record company which is a bit special because it s a nonprofit making co-operative which puts the artists in charge it sounds wonderful joel. but how does it work because you have to make some money to pay people who who work for you of course that we have a team of fifteen effect that we have to pay and that is a talent obviously but the goal with with all to take was to find a way of making. something in the world of something which is not really of the world soul music which is priceless which is not transactional which is as a value completely different from commercial value soul but in some way finding a way to come out of size and to put in a marketplace and to do
a service to the artists who are collaborating with us ok now and i like the way you choose who you will record it s a bit like one of those things on the something called the voice on the television whether you know it s kind of behind the additions as you say you exactly this. is the scientific peer review process that we ve co-opted for for arts. again the idea here is that we re trying to find a way to. choose our artist choose a repertoire in a way which is not motivated by a profit motive by marketing decisions and things like this and so what we what we built was a. platform to which people can apply in a demo but then it s evaluated by the actual rostrum members themselves of the label and they receive a link with just the music so we don t know who they are where they re from and a woman. if there are old young famous knots we evaluate really on the basis the
music itself and the interest of the program let s let s hear someone who who got through that is right decision process this is the italian pin is victorio forte playing a piece i write man enough. i should just mention it s rachmaninov but it s an especial range as you know ok. the record strong of the label is seems to be mostly contemporary i mean the very first thing you brought time was some bugs piano music or for c.b.s.
you know i mean that s quite a nice market is not well the interesting thing about this is that it s not a decision of myself or any explicit policy of the label but the music which does make it through this filter which we apply the the pure review filter is the more innovative programming stuff which is less represented stuff which we have already heard thousands of times though just as a natural result of our selection process i think we d be in the doing ok now you said in an interview although she told me just don t quite buy the cd these days that it s all going to go wild laws so how are you going to make money oh should i say make enough to keep going so it s certainly true that cd players are being built building the cars and the computers is going to go the way of vinyl at some point there are always the collections and always be artists who need to to make see these also because. this is a good business card having
a tangible product is very good but but yes there s no doubt the market is moving towards digital and we re moving in that same direction or developing various online platforms which we hope will positions and a good place to be the interface between musicians the music industry and and the public and you ve got a jazz label again let s hit some music this is again an italian artist a massive media know. hopefully pronounce it right and his band that s our quickness. that s. a rainy day on your jazz label just briefly what are you doing here in
germany the home of the mighty dortch a gramophone are you hoping to sort of put them out of business all in all i know there is no there is not even any intention of competition in the sense what we re trying to propose is an alternative to that. so the major labels they control more or less eighty percent of the market but is a dime market it s also also they re struggling and in my opinion. the fact that the digital revolution that s part of it of course but it but it s actually a symptom of i think taking music in the wrong way and so we re trying to present it in a different way which we think is actually a positive way for a way that will get us out and of course the digital revolution for us is a good thing you told sound this is really fascinating we need more enterprising entrepreneurs entrepreneurs in the business especially in the music business which is of course changing good luck with the film anderson thank you from. thank you
very much for joining us you might be interested in this next piece if you want to place in london a little office in london. the olympic park in london encompassed five hundred sixty acres of east london but after the olympics finished in twenty twelve what became of this vast sites well most of the buildings have been put to good use including what used to be the press center an enterprising group of architects have now turned it into a technology par for startups. in east london compact and colorful studios have been built in the space that served as the international broadcast center during the twenty twelve olympics. nicky gaskins works well for conspiring architects he and his colleagues designed the gantry. hugely positive for london i think for the local area but because of the level of
development it happened. it s worked away a lot of sort of local history and so we want to do this project as a way of reminding people about parts of the local history that they could be proud of. the bright colors used to this studios facade for example echoed the rapper s of sweets that used to be manufactured close by. the architects didn t draw inspiration only from local businesses one studio facade commemorates an unusual landmark that used to be in the area. before the olympic games there s a very frank famous local landmark on the canal which was nicknamed fridge mountain . just a few years it was europe s largest white goods dumping ground. the tenants of the twenty one work spaces are as varied as the studios facades the mix includes a record label to music studios architects engineers and designers.
patrick scully is house manager his employer the tramper he was hired by the technology park to look after the studios and its tenants. he explains what really sets the gantry a past. we can make beautiful spaces you can design amazing spaces you can have great views but ultimately the thing that makes this place tick make it last beyond me to the tramp or even as a company will be the stories and the collaboration is a network that happens for people interrupting day to day covering their business to go. there sure to be a lot more fun in these colorful studios. now they are museum just outside born in western germany is named after hands and so feet are up who were two of the pioneers of abstract art in the early twentieth century the current exhibition their features works by auto pina it was actually
one of the great abstract artists of the second half of the trojan century concerning himself predominately with light fire and the culture. how do you bring heaven to earth how do you paint with light how can you reach outer space. the exhibition alchemy just and stormer of the skies explores artist auto pianos universe and finds his work exploding with raw power. like this volcanic eruption which practically flings its lava towards the viewer pina did not paint pictures like this with a brush but with fire here trying to here it really seems to explode on the canvas . it s called the fire because often i painted always took a circle as his starting point and then sprayed it with a normal paint focus. with
a fixative and then ignited the whole thing that s going to end soon and that and then during this process of ignition during the heat the paint would run you can see red spots the pay. red and down like a melting pot so to speak and cemented a certain moment he blew out the fire proof that jesus and what remained was solidified matter up to material. let s hope you know it was using new painting techniques at the end of the one nine hundred fifty s. it was also during this time that he co-founded the artists group zero. this wasn t season it was a kind of turning point after the second world war that they wanted a more ideal world that was basically a transition to silence to tranquility. so what did peter have to say about that in twenty thirteen he visited an exhibition of his work in cars with. his instinct and with there was a need to see something in the light instead of in the dark against it and go in
the depression into depression or and we wanted to get to know another world a new world and if necessary build it or help to build a new front in there to buy or not a bone health and. an artist whose work was truly inspired by the stars. and then in that museum is in an old railway station on the banks of the river rhine it s quite a place finally one of the world s most famous paintings go reading a letter at an open window by the great lost a young man has been partially restored by the commander they got me interested in and in the course of the restoration there was a sensational discovery parts of the picture had been over painted and not by a man detected by x. ray in the background there was a naked cupid and this figure is now piece by piece revealed and the cupid will be completely exposed to father restoration next year. and
that brings us the end of arts and culture for now check out the website at d.f.w. dot com slash co. all face folks at v.w. culture for more on all those topics but for now thanks very much for watching my thanks the crew of course here in berlin join us again soon bob barr.
it is important that no star in his lifetime tune in to get to the bottom of how this act of terrorism accrued the u. turns on christ church crimes of hate in a peaceful country speak the names of those who were lost rather than the name of the men who took them new zealand after the terror attacks. close up in thirty minutes w. . sometimes books are more exciting than real life. preparing to read. what if there s no escape. church or a list. german must treat. closely.
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Way , World , Something , Al-l , Making , Goal , Soul-music , Value , Marketplace , Soul , Size , Artists

Transcripts For DW Focus On Europe 20190621 02:30:00


downloads he has to come from super. to. have a huge cost is put into active exercise and i think the public d.w. dot com is trash documented on facebook and the app store. jammin for free with the devil you. act. alone a very warm welcome indeed to focus on europe with me peter craven and we begin in belarus with a development project of trance european proportions which is though stirring up major controversy it s a new international shipping route called the east 40 waterway 2000 kilometers inland it s designed to link the baltic sea in the north with the black sea in the
south the idea is to create another global passageway through eastern europe and also to give better rules which is a landlocked country access to the sea. but environmental activists like constantine chicle of are up in arms saying the e 40 will impact 11 nature reserves in belarus and lead to the straightening of the pripyat river described as one of europe s last wild river. this might look like a casual boat trip but for constantine she colored it s a protest for their breath for a peak it s this is the 3rd year the chairman of the belorussian environmental organization has organized canoe tours like this one his goal is to show people here the unspoiled nature along the river and to demonstrate against the 40 waterway which could be built here constantine has been protecting nature and wildlife around him since he was a. child. there is
a company for us the purpose is like a european version of the amazon river. this place is unique because people can come here and see what rivers used to look like what nature in europe was like once . and if we could preserve these large areas of wild nature we re also helping to keep the ecological balance on the european continent. the 40 waterway would cut straight through 11 nature reserves and the activists say it could destroy a unique ecosystem the canal is supposed to connect the baltic sea with the black sea its route goes through the so-called police one of the last big wetland areas in europe with rare black alder forests 90 percent of the birds and bella bruce live here including endangered species some animals nest directly on the untouched banks. this time the canoe route stretches for 35 kilometers mainly along
wild sections of the river which would have to be dug out to allow commercial traffic in some of the tributaries even canoes have to go slow on the way the group stop several times in villages on the river to talk to locals about the planned waterway. often people in the villages only have limited sources of information become one of those sources for them so that they don t only get information from state media but also hear a different opinion. should be sure the war and then they can decide for themselves . do they want the rivers infrastructure to develop or do they want to protect the environment around them and keep it healthy. with us they are. the river has always been the center of life in the villages like so far no one here has heard of the planned for the waterway but some locals are quick to welcome anything that could give the region s economy. push. the waterway would be good for us
boats used to go to ukraine from here as well. there was a lot of traffic on the river. with of course it has a negative effect on the environment and that would be burnt. there isn t much water here anymore used to be able to fish now the rivers drying off more and more . things will get more civilised there will be more people things will be exciting and we can take a trip all the way to the black sea. the government is still looking for investors for the waterway a final decision on the eve 40 project or its construction hasn t been reached which is why the belorussian transport ministry canceled an interview with us at the last minute but the chairman of the trans national export commission on the eve 40 project highlights the advantages of transporting cargo on the water he says it s better for the environment and routes over land or at full capacity already infrastructure. does not as you walk into
a structure has to be developed in order for the surrounding region to develop its . using the potential of the river for the good of the people is the main task of the government. day 2 of the canoeing campaign for many of the participants it s the 1st time on this tour during breakfast and at the campfire constantine can share his concerns about the eat for the waterway with him he s convinced that bellerose should be investing in eco tourism rather than in cargo on the river peak it. people don t think about leaving these spots untouched simply leaving them to nature itself. to just sit down peacefully just like this and simply watch the birds singing or watch things slowly changing. so it s. the activist warns that the construction of the canal could dry out the wetlands
here just like when the swamps were drained for large scale soviet agriculture programs the riverbed would have to be deepened to allow big ships to pass the people at river flows through areas that were contaminated by the chernobyl reactor disaster for constantine that s just another reminder to heed the lessons of the past otherwise the peak it could become another example of an ambitious economic project with catastrophic consequences for the natural world. now alliance people sometimes say it s a long story and that certainly appears to be true in bowl garia the poorest country in the european union more and more people there are becoming lottery tickets buying up millions of so-called scratch cards so let s go to the village of turk and shaver oh and i always drive from the capital sofia where we meet some of the local residents who have little hope of escaping grinding poverty and woman called the laws or of who did actually strike lucky.
about 50 kilometers east of sofia lies the tiny mountain village of chick cancer though at 1st glance it looks like delic a 2nd glance reveals the abject poverty only about 300 people live here. after all those are still life is hard because our pensions are small notice it could could well be what can we do with these little pensions you could pull measurement. we can t travel the most and we can t do anything at all and most used to disappear. there are hardly any jobs here the only ray of hope many of these people see is the national lottery. scratchcards who the promise of winnings that would lift them out of poverty all they need is a bit of luck. so you have all lost your the last year off is the village hero in 2018 he won the equivalent of 50000 euros with
a single scratch card he s 2 counterpose only big prize winner so far. the. look of most little i play because there s nothing else. there s nothing in our country no laws. the truth lies no lottery is the only real chance if you win you re somebody but you re if not you re not so that s all there is to it. so your gay sister page sells the scratch cards she s an avid player herself. that the bit that i spend the equivalent of 50 euros a month on cards but i ve never won more than $75.00. was the cards cost from 3 to 10 euros apiece not exactly pocket change in a country where the monthly wage seldom exceeds 300 euros but i some people give up quickly when they don t want anything. it s a scam but in 100 cards you might find one or 2 with 5 euro winnings and that s all
they are just scamming people out of their money just as sick is for example the new games company in sofia. bulgarians are inundated with their ads promising instant riches whether on the street on the internet or on t.v. . as a big winner to got to be a television star for a day go for you a little very well for fools pulled off the trophy porticoes before. new games is owned by a bulgarian businessman. the director has to meet again if 57 percent of bulgarians play the lottery and in 2017 the company sold $100000000.00 tickets but none of the revenue goes towards social causes as it s mandatory in every other e.u. country even so gahn of sees himself as a philanthropist. of course relax positivity in every sense we can give people positive feelings and help them have fun getting news that it is due in but i
really can t understand how anyone can get addicted just from buying a few scratch cards to try their luck for the last couple of. psychologist plan and dimitrov disagrees he has no doubt the gambling addiction amongst bulgarians is a problem. of. the long 3 is the stock market of poor desperate people who are just mashed if they had a different socio economic status they d be investing in other things my god the effects almost home from young people honest i ve seen children using their lunch money to buy tickets child days late. but it is a. jackpot winner gheorghiu luck didn t last long. he bought a house for his young family but recently he lost his job as an auto mechanic. now he worries that he ll have to sell the house to get by.
there were so happy missions it was a great satisfaction because michael i thought it was so much it was such a big deal. i thought accomplished so much but things didn t work out that way in reality i ran out of money again pretty fast. pensioner very slow dimitrov has never won anything at all but he still spends about half his meagre pension on scratchcards. he and his wife dream of visiting their daughter in germany some day for at least a month they can t stop playing now. but you. can see munich a noise from stein that wonderful council in the alps and spend 30 days there and if you like moment people. good to trick. dreams die hard in the village of to catch. wealth remains scarce in bulgaria but the scratch cards reach even the
remotest of places. and you do keep an eye on both gary as neighbors georgia and moldova are it ll be interesting to see how things go there when those 2 countries introduce scratchcards as they both plan to do now it s impossible to really imagine what it s like for children to live through war but objects like an old swing might perhaps evoke the trauma that young boys and girls have faced which is why the wall of childhood museum in the bosnian capital sarajevo has collected old books and goals for instance as well as personal testimonies from children who can now as adults still remember the desperate days of the bosnian war in the 1990 s. minimalize min of h. is among those who has a story to tell and her memories go back to the day when the war came right up to her front door. bullet holes
and shrapnel the marks left by the war on the building in mina had to flee are still visible. more than 25 years have passed since the tanks suddenly appeared beneath her window. and what i could see in my father s eyes that something bad was happening. that s enough to dash our. i mean it was 8 years old about the age of the girl who lives here now when the enemy soldiers came her parents center along with their neighbors who fled to croatia the same day. tackles with a partner and i want them. we waited for night to fall and i packed a few things. i had a backpack and i remember that my teddy bear kept me company on the back where we kids were sitting with full wallets and. what was meant to be a few days away from the fighting turned into years i mean it made it to germany. and although her host family welcomed her with open arms she was homesick she
wanted to return to sarajevo even as the war was still raging. but for that she needed her passport in the rush her parents had forgotten to give it to her. the passport she was issued as a replacement it was very different. to my thumb a dot digital misstated my date of birth. that was all i knew at the time. i didn t have any papers with me when i left syria to a few things were missing from the passports the element that in particular my complete id number did not dash this is the passport i came home with but i. saw the apostles without outlets for the quote. the war childhood museum in sarajevo has collected thousands of pieces including i mean his passport. every exhibit represents
a child s story that the museum s founder. has collected. originally conceived as a book project it s become a prize winning museum concept that setting an example for the world. i thought the children s perspective wasn t getting enough potential for disaster and i want to change that there s only i wanted to document the experiences of children whose lives were shaped by what you thought because you got. an essential aspect of the museum s work is to educate visitors about peace. more than $5000.00 children and teenagers come to the museum every year. some are looking for their own parents stories. children back then didn t have what we do we didn t have any toys you should be
a student of freedom. they were locked up at home with no food or water and on the run a double know anybody could be put somewhere i don t know this is my 1st time heading and i see a lot of emotion lots of sadness but also the happy moments people experience during the war version of the rat to. the exhibitions tell not only stories of war but of survival as well i mean i knew immediately that she wanted to be a part of the project she came across her old passport at home and what is. the big maybe i had it for myself so i wouldn t give it away but you could as a reminder. that when the museum started off i really wanted to be a part of it but it s the right place to preserve my memories yes to get to the to what i thought models. bosnia s media is still full of the politicians nationalist rhetoric people seem to be getting tired of it they don t want to see a revival of the conflict between bosnians and serbs. but also suppose i saw.
the exhibits and stories come from all over bosnia i m happy that reports about the museum in the country have been positive for quite rare for projects about the course about it out of. any news hoping for a better future for herself and her family her husband s been working in germany for 2 years now soon she and her children will be joining him near hamburg where she had lived as a refugee. now people across europe are slowly waking up to the fact that we might only avoid a global climate catastrophe if we drastically reduce emissions of carbon dioxide now that in turn means phasing out coal fired power stations sooner rather than later greece though is still heavily dependent on lignite coal for its elec tricity generation and in the country s northern coal mining heartland around the village
of a creamy people like apple store liz kelly a need is will tell you that the industry might be dirty but they give people what they want most which is jobs. this is one of the 5 old power plants in the coal mining region of northern greece. 33 year old apple stole a scallion neatest works as a blaster and a local open cast mind that belongs to the state run electricity company. his father works there too he operates an excavator and even his grandfather used to work in the mine. today apostol s. and his colleagues are setting up explosive charges he earns $1200.00 euros per month not much with 2 kids to feed but he s grateful to be employed because 70 percent of young people here are jobless this is the largest mine in the balkans for villages had to be demolished to make way for it including his own. you know
what it s like if we get this work is very important for us that means we can feed our families that a lot of people are employed here and almost all of them have found us. nikos mauriat see this is a father of 3 who farms and rears livestock here in the village of extreme. but the fields that once belonged to his ancestors are now owned by the state electricity company. in 2011 they were legally obliged to resettle him. but they refused to pay for the resettlement and the reason was because there s no coal underneath their village the residents feel betrayed. i m a little gumbo when they take off from marsh they might as well take up village to 90 percent of people here off alma s sure some villages work for the electricity company but what about the other 90 percent. after putting back up looking like.
my. 8 years ago the company bought his fields 440000 euros. this means he now has to lease agricultural land so he can grow crops to feed his cows. skeff bowman i m about sometimes i think about giving up but making the 1st difficult to gauge i m 54 and have 3 kids. and i love it. dimitrios coal fired power plant is located right beside me coast village. works here she s married to the mine blaster. she makes just $620.00 euros a month on a fixed term contract but hopes to become permanent. even. the company is a lifeline for many people. the entire region depends on coal mining. for generations thousands of families from this area have worked for the company.
in 2950 percent of greek electricity was produced using lignite but today it makes up less than 30 percent. we depend on coal. and it really worries me to think about what would happen if we stopped using lignite limit on my. because of the economic crisis the e.u. wants greece to privatized parts of its state run electricity company. many countries and investors are now moving away from coal and europe has created financial deterrents. fines for high emissions have tripled over the past 2 years. it s making a cold and profitable electricity source. to lift the. dark clouds of coal dust hang over a queenie. because his village suffers from this environmental pollution and they
fear they ll never be resettled. he says the municipality no longer invests anything in the neglected village and morale here is very low we re not one particular painting all water is polluted. old and contaminates because. nobody does anything to improve nobody cares and we keep drinking this water. out of the ground. you know my. family have since gained access to fresh drinking water they were moved to another village located 25 kilometers from the mine where they work. for them the mining industry still remains a blessing. well everybody has heard of bull fights but what about fights where cows quite literally go head to head with each other well the battle of the queen s a staged annually in switzerland violate cantle draws thousands of spectators but
in what is after all a famously peace loving country we join council breeders join clubs or bring in to find out just how he responds when one of his big beasts makes it perfectly clear that she is not up for a scrap. day thomas big day or rather it s her breeder s big day. clinton switzerland whole weigh in before entering the ring is an impressive 672 kilograms some time a is a helen scout powerful and aggressive. santana s mother has won prizes at the national level twice. and she came with 2 if she s in good shape on the day when the. dog is 40. it also depends on how the competition performs
a miracle is one of the favorites and could be a big threat to some thomas. she won a prize here last year as a straight line there she s a very good cow she s proved that already at this show and gets. the 1st calls are already fighting. they follow their instincts to form a hierarchy no callous force to fight but if they choose not to fight 3 times or they lose 3 times their elimination. the cow fight is a traditional spectacle. probably. strengthen willpower that the animal show during the fights are simply amazing. it s just awful it s great it s a fight but at the injuries. around 120 cows are going to fight today finally some tanner is called to the big ring but today she seems to have other
plans she s not up for a fight and to make matters worse is the other favorite miracle that wants to fight some tonya. was hoping for. he quickly gets his cow out to be arena on thomas well being is his top priority but he s still deeply disappointed. and sometimes i wasn t in the mood for fighting. when i brought her over it s better to take. the family stays to watch the final fights anyway. sure it hurts a little but that s the life of a couple. the favorite takes the title after all there s no prize money but the new queen is presented with a beautiful bell. and that s all from focus on europe this time
around thanks so much for joining us and to come back next week until the end by buying found truths thank you. thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you thank you. thank you alex. the food. is going to.
come. to. the by a change in c o 2 emissions are harsh comments. are now supporters of nuclear power speaking out. basically that nuclear power is c o 2 neutral nuclear power a safe. nuclear power is the right solution. we re going to find out whether all the other strokes. made in germany. the.
country going to the international talk show for journalists to discuss the topic of the weak dollar is mass protests over a proposed extradition laws just one skirmish in a larger scramble for how to. get the demonstrators win the battle to lose the war find out on this week s edition of quite forgot. quandary go 90 minutes on d w. o t. m l keep learning my street allison wait a 2nd. we want the whole picture perfect so instead of make i.d. s shift to live us . from our little reality to cryptocurrency to your top picks for live in an ever changing digital world let s talk to devise a similar. shift. on t.w.
. closely. carefully. don t look to suit your needs to be a good. old fashioned. discover who. subscribe to documentary on you tube. early the global tourist guide for germany s booming capital i love berlin the scope of the multicultural metropolis in our duramax series if it. sounds like the term simply means i love you even once you should once again say some let s look at the cups what it s like me inside says 50 missions 50 story. and 50

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Transcripts For DW DW News 20190628 09:00:00


scott 10 or 14. starts july 10th on d w. this is d w news coming to you live from berlin global leaders together and talking during troubled times at the g. 20 summit in japan they re tackling issues ranging from trade wars to election meddling go live to a socket for the latest polls are coming up authorities in genoa blow up the remains of the bridge controlled explosion removes what was left of a motorway by
a dog they gave way last year killing $43.00. hello i m terry martin thanks for joining us world leaders are in osaka japan for the g. 20 summit they re facing a ray of problems stretching from the u.s. showdown with iran to trade tensions between washington and beijing on both those issues the european union finds itself caught in the middle. for 2 days osaka is the center of the political atlas the leaders of the world s 20 largest economies flying in for what promises to be a stressful program. small talk is sure to be drowned out by u.s. president donald trump s heavy footsteps as he continues his campaign of america 1st. the trade war he started with china will dominate discussions though few
expect talks between trump and chinese president xi jinping on saturday to result in a truce to trade relations between china and the us. difficult the. contributing to disrupt of the economy to trumpet ministration has also ramped up pressure on iran withdrawing from the nuclear deal was just the beginning new sanctions and threats of war followed all of that has the attention of those here. maintaining. if in the regional and international security interest. the e.u. is committed to that deal as long as you re on continues to uphold it. outside the confines of the heavily guarded summit site. citizens are urging action on climate
change activists went out not only on osaka streets but also on hong kong s where protesters called for support from g 20 leaders for their pro-democracy movement. beijing has already forbidden other countries from discussing the hong kong unrest at the summit. german chancellor angela merkel arrived in good spirits and osaka this after a 2nd bout of unexplained trembling in front of cameras led to speculation about her health. her good cheer will have to endure she s due in brussels on sunday to negotiate a new leadership for the e.u. . our correspondent max off but is in osaka covering the summit for us and joins us now lex i understand that chancellor merkel held a press conference just a short while ago what did she have to say. the question that many of us wanted to ask is how she s doing because as we just heard in that report. she had
a 2nd shaking attack back in berlin but here she seemed fine calm and collected her usual self we didn t get the opportunity to ask questions but like i said in that department at the moment at least things seem ok and then she gave us an account of her day so far the bilateral with trump didn t say much just said we talked about iran didn t say how that went and the point she really insisted on a little bit is that many members of the g 21 to the reform of the world trade organization to go along as planned you know the world trade organization for example responsible for dispute settlement within the global trade community something that the americans really haven t agreed with in the past and are actively fighting now and if things continue the way they have gone in the last in the last weeks months and years that it would mean that the dispute settlement mechanism and of the w t o would be nonfunctional by the end of the year and that s
of course something that the countries that are in favor of a multilateral trading system are trying to prevent with all their forces but it s difficult with countries like the united states so trade clearly on the agenda there at this g 20 max what exactly do the g 20 leaders there hope to achieve during this 2 day summit. advancing trade multilateral trade always was the goal of the g. 20 that s the reason why they were founded to coordinate their efforts there nowadays it s also very political and the problem now is in these days and times that you have leaders with very different goals and targets at the moment they used to be more or less on the same page but now you have a u.s. president who says i do not favor multilateral trade i want bilateral agreements and that s why he s here he has a series of bad lateral agreements including the one you just mentioned earlier with the chinese president xi jinping so what do they want while countries like the
states want to get the best out of the whole system for themselves you probably would say that country like germany want to do that as well but they have a different philosophy a different path towards that and that s why they re struggling to find a wording they can all agree on for the final declaration so trade obviously at the very center of the discussions there but as you say max this has become also a political gathering what about issues such as climate change or security are those topics also being discussed there in a stock of this year. climate change is the 2nd very contentious topic we re hearing from the so-called sherpas and so the ones that are negotiating this final declaration i m insisting on that part because it is really is one of the most important things of such a g. 20 summit some say you know it s just words it doesn t really matter but if you look at what is decided in those declarations then quite of
a bit of it actually gets implemented for example of the things that were decided in one is iris close to 80 percent of those decisions and statements made in that declaration are on track to be implemented so it is important and that s why those sherpas have already negotiated all night last night and probably going to do the same thing again tonight and they say trade and how to fight climate change and climate change in general are the 2 topics where they re having a really hard time because of the united states max thank you very much for inside correspondent max hawk down there in osaka. now let s take a look at some of the other stories making headlines today u.s. presidential hopefuls have clashed at the 2nd democratic party debate in miami florida former vice president joe biden was looking to smash his position as front runner but california senator come on the harris foot him on the defensive last night are among $25.00 candidates vying for the chance to take on donald trump in
2020 so we could see 2 people have been evacuated from the sea watch humanitarian ship for medical reasons the boat entered italian waters in defiance of a ban from rome 2 days ago italy is continuing to refuse a permission to dog the ship s captain is accused european countries of abandoning the migrants. engineers in the italian city of genoa have demolished the last remaining pillars of a major motorway bridge that collapsed last year. thousands of residents were evacuated ahead of friday s planned demolition and extra police have been for have to do with your public safety 43 people were killed when the burundi bridge collapsed without warning and august last. earlier i talked to freelance journalist seem
a good in rome and i asked her were people around italy following this devon s demolition yes they were very closely i mean it was being covered by local television channels as well as news outlets now seconds before it was demolished the sirens ran out and we didn t seconds the entire remains of that bridge would demolished a few things of dust spilled smoke rise rose into the air as the residents that could see the process applaud it now it appears it things have gone according to plan but he s still seeing those want to cannon s heating up to control the die. i think for many of those watching there s a feeling of relief that this i saw is finally being removed but at the same time a feeling of sadness as everyone remembers those 43 people that were killed as a result of that tragedy back in august last year built the new bridge is expected to be the most expensive in europe what can you tell us about the plans for that
new bridge understand that the foundation has for at least a foundation stone has already been laid yes and they plan to go full steam ahead if you understand this is really a key challenge for this populous government in power now it s really they came into power in june 28th and then in august this tragedy happened that hit the morandi ridge when it collapsed so it really was the off key challenge and they re keen to show that they can fulfill their promise says the century they say the new bridge will be up and running and traffic will be running on it by april 2020 so the plans are in full steam ahead you have both deputy prime ministers my tail salvini as well as he need to be my present to be at the demolition keen to show a united front on one issue that they want this project to go ahead the project of course that sign of the new bridge by red so piano the italian aki stop now he essentially has donated his fee for this the building off the breach and the
project is expected to go ahead but as you said expect to be $1.00 of europe s most expensive bridges in its final construction sima thank you so much journalist sima cooked up there in rome. it s. now to the women s world cup where england have taken the 1st slot in the semifinals they dominated norway last night to win 3 nil. a close game was expected between these 2 evenly matched sides but in just the 3rd minute england took the lead you see bronze went on in the routing run and her cross found jill scott. the midfielder providing a perfect improvised finish and sparing the blushes of strike at alan white. came to prove that it was a one off white almost put england to nought only the post denied her an eye catching 5th goal of the tournament but she didn t have to wait much longer in the 48th minute nicky to paris race 3 and unselfishly set up white norway simply
couldn t cope with england s movement all whites like to go. after halftime bronze caps an outstanding performance with a goal that brought the coach and superstar fans alike to their feet a rocket to make it 3 nil and getting liniments and going into the semifinals. and england will play either host team france or the united states in the semifinals those 2 teams play in front of a full house tonight in paris and tickets are going for big money on secondary markets co-captain megan rypien will likely play a key role for the u.s. team and she s already become a focal point thanks to comments spade earlier this year she suggested that if the u.s. were to win she would turn down the expected invitation to the white house because of the president who now resides there or as a troll has tweeted his response. a war of words has disturbed the u.s.a. s
quarter final preparations comments meghan rypien ohad made at a photo shoot back in january resurfaced this week. i m going to. now not going away i have nothing we re not going to be invited you know to be invited i doubt if u.s. president donald trump took offense to these comments responding with a series of tweets he claimed to be quote a big fan of the american team and women saka but meghan should win 1st before she talks finish the job he then said quote we haven t yet invited meghan or the team but i am now inviting the team win or lose meghan should never disrespect our country the white house or our flag especially since so much has been done for her and the team. but meghan repeat no is thick skinned and has stood her ground at thursday s press conference she made only
a small concession when it came to her previous remarks. i stand by the comments that i made about not wanting to go to the white house with the exception of the ex but if my mom would be very upset about that i don t think that i would want to go and i would encourage my teammates to think hard about lending that platform or having that co-opted by an administration that doesn t feel the same way and doesn t fight for the same things that that we fight for the team s quarterfinal match with france will be decided by the tightest of margins rypien oh says if anything this incident will make them stronger. for you know just reminder the top stories we re following for you here today on d w there is world leaders are attending the g. 20 summit in osaka japan they re facing an array of problems stretching from the u.s. showdown with iran to trade tensions between washington and beijing. and the remains of a collapsed bridge in the italian city of general have been demolished in

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