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What is climate change? - The Climate Question, BBC World Service

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23.11.2023

Looking for a climate change 101? Here to help you brush up on the basics is Jordan Dunbar. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 0:00 Intro 01:40 What is climate change? 02:15 What are greenhouse gases? 03:49 What are fossil fuels? 04:15 Why climate change matters 05:17 A warming world and extreme weather events 07:20 Why climate change will affect all of us 08:30 Green energy transition 10:10 Is it too late to stop climate change? 11:50 What can I do to help climate change? More from The Climate Question 👉🏽 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #climatechange #cop28 #environment

Is there a way to get Israeli-Palestinian peace back on track? - BBC World Service

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07.12.2023

The contradictions and obstacles preventing Israeli-Palestinian peace from breaking out 25 years ago have grown, if anything, more complex. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Many argue there is no military solution to this conflict, and that peace will only come if Israelis and Palestinians accept the other’s right to statehood. But advocates of a two-state solution believe the violence unleashed since October have paradoxically advanced their cause. As the international community searches for a solution to end this round of violence, global leaders are exploring the possibility of a more lasting peace - and a familiar phrase has resurfaced, the ‘Two State Solution’. BBC Arabic’s Issam Ikirmawi explores what it means and why it has failed in the past. Watch more documentaries from BBC Arabic ➡️ 🤍 0:00 Introduction 0:53 The Israeli stance on the two-state solution 1:36 The Palestinian stance on the two-state solution 4:10 Are settlements a barrier to peace? 5:24 History of the two-state solution 6:24 The Oslo Accords 7:55 Benjamin Netanyahu and a new vision for Israel 9:00 Israel's changing politics 9:36 How much support is there for a two-state solution in Israel and Palestine? This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #israel #gaza

What is COP? - The Climate Question, BBC World Service

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06.12.2023

It's the world's biggest and most controversial climate conference. But what is a COP and how do they work? Jordan Dunbar investigates. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 To help get some simple answers to simple questions, Jordan is joined by climate experts: Dr Mosunda Mumba, Secretary General of the Wetlands Convention Professor David Victor of Innovation and Public Policy University of California, San Diego, USA Adil Najim, Professor of International Relations and Environment at Boston University's Pardee school in the United States. Check out our other simple climate explainers: What is climate change? 🤍 Why is 1.5 degrees important? 🤍 0:00 Introduction 0:34 What is COP? 0:45 The world's first Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro 1992 2:00 How the IPCC was created 3:00 The start of COP 3:45 Who organises COPs 4:10 How countries make pledges at COP 5:40 What's it like at a COP? 6:25 Who will be at COP28 in Dubai? 11:50 How to measure progress 12:28 Why should we care about what happens at COP? This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #climatechange #cop28

How do Paris and the fashion industry help each other? - BBC World Service, Business Daily podcast

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17.10.2023

Paris is one of the most visited cities in the world and one of the things it’s known for, is fashion. But what is it about the City of Light that makes it a popular destination for businesses? Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Hannah Mullane speaks to a personal shopper, who relies on fashion tourists for her business, as well as fashion start-ups choosing to base themselves in Paris. Hannah also meets a stylist and fashion agent, who moved from Italy to Paris, to make the most of the opportunities that the fashion industry has to offer. Watch more episodes of our podcast Business Daily here 👉🏽 🤍 Producer/presenter: Hannah Mullane 00:00 Intro 01:30 'Personal' shopping in Le Marais 05:40 Growing a fashion business in Paris 10:21 Technology and fashion 13:45 Fashion business opportunities in Paris This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #paris #fashion

Where do we go when the seas rise? - BBC World Service

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26.01.2023

After learning how long it will take the Earth's ice sheets to melt in the previous episode, we continue our journey in Greenland. Listener Johan isn't too optimistic about governments' ability to curb greenhouse gas emissions and get a handle on climate change. So from his coastal perch in Denmark, he has asked where we should live when the poles have melted away and coastlines creep inland. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Along with the help of BBC correspondents around the world, Marnie Chesterton scours the globe for the best option for listener Johan's new home. BBC Mundo reporter Rafael Rojas takes us to a manmade island off Colombia's Caribbean coast to see how we might be able to live with the seas. Meanwhile, reporter Furkan Khan takes us into the high, cold desert region of Ladakh to see if heading for the hills might be the answer. As Marnie searches for a climate-proof destination, she speaks to conservation biogeographer Matt Fitzpatrick, from the Appalachian Laboratory at the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science. He's made a map that shows what towns and cities will feel like in 60 years and where you should visit in order to get a preview of your home's future climate. But Matt also tells us that we might not be the only ones on the move. And as climate scientist Ruth Mottram from the Danish Meteorological Institute tells us, waters are not going to rise evenly around the world. So can Marnie find a place to go, away from the expanding seas? Check out more videos on climate change and the environment here: 🤍 Explore the North American map mentioned in the programme: 🤍 You can also find episodes of CrowdScience here: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: BBC Website 👉🏽 🤍 Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #ClimateChange #Science

Climate change on trial - BBC World Service

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13.07.2022

Nick Beake travels to Norway to meet the young people taking on their government in an attempt to prevent further drilling for oil and gas. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 They believe their country's export of fossil fuels is putting the planet in peril, and it's one of many similar fights emerging across Europe. More on climate change and the environment here: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService

Should I have children? - CrowdScience, BBC World Service

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29.11.2021

"To be or not to be" was never your decision. No one alive today is an “exister” by consent - your parents made that call for you. But who can blame them? Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Animals are hardwired with strong impulses towards their procreative goals, and we humans, by and large, are no different. But for some conscientious people alive today, this most fundamental of biological impulses is butting up against a rational pessimism about the future... With apocalyptic scenes of natural disasters, rising sea levels and global pandemics causing existential dread and actual suffering, it's understandable that CrowdScience listener Philine Hoven from Austria wrote to us asking for help her make sense of what she sees as the most difficult question she faces - should she have children? In this episode, presenter Geoff Marsh helps Philine to predict what kind of a world her hypothetical child might inhabit, and explores the impact their existence, or indeed non-existence might have on society and the planet. Plus, we'll explore what ‘antinatalism’- a philosophical stance which argues against procreation, can tell us about the moral landscape of the unborn. With Ms Caroline Hickman, Professor Mike Berners-Lee, Professor Noriko Tsuya and Professor David Benatar. Download CrowdScience here: 🤍 Presented and produced by Geoff Marsh for BBC World Service Thumbnail credit: Getty Images This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService

'This superfood will save your life'. Or will it..? - BBC World Service

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20.01.2020

It's that time of year where those New Year Resolutions are getting harder to stick to. Perhaps you promised to have a better diet. If so - you've probably heard of the various health benefits of superfoods. But are these claims simply too good to be true? Subscribe: 🤍 In another video in our series looking at the myths behind our food habits, the BBC World Service programme The Food Chain talks tries to find out the truth about super foods, and what happens when people use food myths for their own benefit. Get The Food Chain podcast here: 🤍 Why did a chronically ill woman lose thousands of followers and receive abusive messages, after abandoning a strict diet? How did an Australian woman convince hundreds of thousands of people that eating healthy cured her terminal brain cancer? And is an obsession with healthy eating really on the verge of becoming a new eating disorder? Website: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍

How can smart tech tackle climate change? CrowdScience - BBC World Service

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03.09.2021

Humans are responsible for emitting over 40 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every year – and we all know that we need to reduce that figure to prevent devastating climate change. BBC CrowdScience listener Saugat wonders whether smart technology and artificial intelligence can help us do this more quickly? Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Green energy will go a long way to tackling the problem, but integrating wind and solar into our current electricity grid is complicated. CrowdScience hears how artificial intelligence is being used at a wind farm on the island of Orkney to predict periods of high winds, so that excess energy can be turned into hydrogen and stored, then converted back to electricity when there’s greater demand. Digital mirrors are also playing a major role in optimising performance. Scientists say cloud-based “twins” of physical assets like turbines can improve yield by up to 20 per cent, allowing engineers to identify problems via computer without ever having to be on site. Presenter Marnie visits an intelligent building in London’s financial district, where sensors control everything from air-conditioning to lighting and machine learning means the building knows which staff will be on which floor at any given time, switching off lifts that are not in use and adjusting ventilation to save power. Its designer says incorporating this kind of digital technology will help companies achieve net zero more quickly. And in India, more than half the population are involved in agriculture, but the sector is plagued by inefficiency and waste. Tech start-ups have realised there’s potential for growth and are using drones to monitor crop production and spraying, giving farmers apps that help them decide when and where to fertilise their fields. Find more videos like this in our climate change and the environment playlist: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #bbcworldservice #crowdscience #climate change

Rural electrification in Ireland - BBC World Service, Witness History

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07.11.2023

In 1948, Bansha became the first village in County Tipperary to be connected to the national grid under Ireland's Rural Electrification Scheme. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 In May 1948, Canon John Hayes flicked the switch that brought electricity to the parish of Bansha in Ireland. The village was the first in County Tipperary to be connected to the grid, under the Rural Electrification Scheme. The ambitious programme ran from 1946 to 1964 and saw 300,000 homes powered up. Vicky Farncombe produced this episode of Witness History using archives from the Irish electricity board, the ESB. Watch more Witness History videos here 👉🏽 🤍 Listen / Download the podcast here: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #electricity #ireland #history

Obama, Clooney and French Gates on child marriage - BBC World Service, 100 Women

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27.11.2023

Each year, 12 million underaged girls are forced into marriage - a crisis that at the current rate will take over 300 years to fix, says the UN. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Now, three of the world's most high-profile humanitarians have vowed to tackle the issue together. In a BBC 100 Women exclusive, Michelle Obama, Amal Clooney and Melinda French Gates talk to BBC Gender and Identity Correspondent Megha Mohan about the work they do to combat child marriage and amplify the efforts of grassroots organisations. 0:47 Introduction 02:54 Urgency of child marriage issue 04:18 Michelle Obama visits Ludzi School 06:36 Melinda French Gates on talking to world leaders 09:12 Child marriage in the US 11:42 Clooney Foundation on "waging justice" 12:37 Amal Clooney visits a mobile law clinic in Malawi 14:58 The attention on Obama visits 17:13 Amal Clooney on marrying late 18:01 Girl Boss v Collectives 20:37 Reproductive rights rollback in US The BBC 100 Women team has a mission to address the under-representation of women in media. If you are interested in their content check out these playlists: "In conversation" with inspiring women 👉🏽 🤍 Docs with a gender viewpoint 👉🏽 🤍 More videos with a gender perspective 👉🏽 🤍 Produced by Yousef Eldin This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #BBC100women #obama #clooney #gates

Gilligan Moss - World Service (feat. Betsy) (Official Music Video)

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05.05.2021

"World Service (feat. Betsy)" from our self titled debut album Order the vinyl & new merch ▶ 🤍 Stream the album ▶ 🤍 Released by: Foreign Family Collective Directed and Edited by Zach Stone 🤍 Produced by Madeline Leshner Cinematography by Isaac Berner & Zach Stone Starring Joe Harkins: 🤍 Follow us on socials: Twitter: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Newsletter: 🤍 Merch: 🤍 #gilliganmoss #worldservice #musicvideo

Is the 'sunshine cure' a real thing? - CrowdScience, BBC World Service podcast

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14.02.2022

CrowdScience investigates the conflicting scientific evidence around warm weather and wellbeing. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Imagine spending six months of every year living in total shade. That’s what life is like for residents of the Norwegian town of Rjukan, set so low in a valley that they see no direct sunshine at all from October to March. Marnie Chesterton heads there to hear about an ingenious solution: giant mirrors that beam rays down into the town square, where locals gather to feel the reflected heat. The man behind the project was motivated by a need for winter sun, but how much difference does it really make to our health and happiness? That’s the question posed by this week’s CrowdScience listener Michael, who has noticed living in the rainy Australian city of Melbourne is taking its toll. Many pensioners claim sunshine relieves aches and pains, as well as conditions like arthritis, but one of the biggest scientific studies found temperature actually has no impact on reported pain levels, while factors like air pressure and humidity may play a role. When it comes to our mood, it seems that spending time outside is more important than feeling the heat, and the optimum temperature for wellbeing is around cool 19 degrees centigrade, while excessive warm weather has been linked to an increase in violence and crime. Check out more episodes of CrowdScience here: 🤍 Contributors: Dr Anna Beukenhorst, University of Manchester Professor Oscar Ybarra, University of Illinois Professor Solomon Hsiang, University of California, Berkeley Martin Andersen, artist This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #CrowdScience #Weather #Health #Wellbeing #Sunshine

Is a vegan diet better for your health? - BBC World Service, CrowdScience podcast

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04.02.2020

The number of vegans is on the rise across the world, with many people swearing by the health benefits of a plant-based lifestyle. But does a vegan diet really improve your health? Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 This episode of CrowdScience (broadcast on radio in September 2019) explores the evidence about whether vegans are likely to live longer. With new, highly processed meat alternatives becoming increasingly available in supermarkets and restaurants menus, what effect are they having on our health? Presenter Anand Jagatia talks to the experts and joins listener Samantha in following a vegan diet. Download the CrowdScience podcast here: 🤍 0:00 Introduction 1:55 Does eating plants help you live longer? 5:19 Meet the nutritionist 13:16 Meet the epidemiologist 17:02 Meat alternatives 26:45 West vs East - and veganism This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #Vegans #Plant-based #Veganism

How hidden oil pollution puts millions at risk in the Gulf - BBC World Service Documentaries

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28.11.2023

A BBC Arabic investigation has found that harmful air pollution from big companies including BP and ADNOC is spreading far from their oil fields in the Gulf. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 This pollution can cause or make worse serious health issues such as breathing problems, lung and heart diseases, cancer, and other health conditions. The oil companies and governments in charge of these emissions aren't sharing information about how toxic the air is, so the BBC did their own research on gas burning in Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, Dubai, and Abu Dhabi. Flaring gas is meant to be a last resort, but the BBC found that in Iraq, Iran, and the UAE, this is happening every day, sometimes non-stop. Flaring is meant to be an emergency measure only. And most governments and oil companies have signed up to end what is called “routine” gas flaring by 2030. But the BBC’s observations indicate that flares in Iraq, Iran and the UAE are burning gas every day and in some cases around the clock. The President of COP28, Sultan al-Jaber, who is also the CEO of ADNOC, is responsible for sites where the BBC observed a lot of gas burning affecting people's health in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. These findings come a year after the BBC's 2022 documentary that showed the deadly impact of gas burning on children living close to gas flares on oil fields run by BP, Lukoil and Eni in Iraq. You can watch the film here 👉🏽 🤍 00:00 Introduction 01:48 Iraq - the biggest pilgrimage in the world 02:45 Living near flaring in Basra 07:17 Investigating the impact of flaring on millions 10:54 Iran - "Ahvaz Can't Breathe" 12:56 Kuwait - more dangerous than dust storms 19:38 UAE - The host of COP28 25:02 "We pay the price" To watch more investigative journalism from our award-winning BBC teams check out this documentary playlist, perfect for the biggest screen in your home 👉🏽 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #cop28 #uae

Why do I feel hungry? - BBC World Service

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01.08.2021

Food. For all of us it is a basic necessity and for those lucky enough, it is something we spend a lot of time planning and enjoying. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 CrowdScience listeners certainly have a lot of food related questions; in this buffet of an episode Marnie Chesterton opens the fridge door to pick the tastiest. Starting with the seemingly simple question of what makes us feel hungry, and ending in outer-space, Marnie investigates flavour, nutrition and digestion. After a year when watching TV has become a core activity for many people stuck in their homes, one listener wants us to find out if eating food whilst watching the TV affects our perception of taste. We then journey to the skies and ask if it is true that food tastes blander on aeroplanes, what does that mean for astronauts’ mealtimes? Back on Earth, Marnie explores whether humans are the only animals that season their food. Tuck in your napkins and prepare to feast on a smorgasbord of scientific snacks. Download more CrowdScience podcasts here: 🤍 Check out more podcasts and videos on food habits around the world and our relationship with what we eat: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService

Could giving nature rights help fight climate change? - The Climate Question, BBC World Service

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18.07.2022

Around the world a growing number of rivers, mountains, nature reserves, even marshes have all been given legal rights. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 It’s an idea that’s being tested in courtrooms around the world. But to what extent might this help reduce the worst impacts of climate change and help us adapt to a warmer and wetter world? Find more videos on climate change and the environment here: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #bbcworldservice #climatechange #nature

Dave Clarke - World Service (Electro Mix) [REACT CD 199]

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05.09.2017

A double CD album, with Techno one disc and Electro on the other. The mixing and selection is done by Dave Clarke, and the end result is an unforgettable classic that each collector of Techno and/or Electro should have. Tracklist: 00:00 Tuxedomoon - What Use (Heinrich Mueller Technik Mix) 04:04 Atomic Nation - Atomic Nation 06:37 Anthony Rother - Redlight District 10:06 The Neon Judgement - The Fashion Party 11:47 MAS 2008 - Straight Into The Future 14:20 Alden Tyrell - Krenk Box 16:52 ADULT. - Hand To Phone 18:50 Japanese Telecom - Character Maps (Perspects Remix) 21:02 The Hacker - Fadin' Away (Dima Remix) 23:48 Adult - Silent Property 25:52 Dexter - Z.W.A.M. 28:18 Radiohead - Idioteque 32:09 Da Halz - Standart 37:21 Sir Real - Distant Sun 40:02 Anthony Rother - Simulationszeitalter 41:57 Mr. Velcro Fastener - Who's Gonna Bend 44:52 Tobias Von Hofsten - I Love My 808 46:20 Keith Tucker - Oscillator 48:28 Digitek Intelligence Assassins - Shock 2 The System 50:29 Decal - Free The Flange 53:25 Zeta Reticula - EP 2 56:48 Fisherspooner - Emerge 1:00:42 G.D. Luxxe - Red Follow Techno Scene for more updates: 🤍

The Billion Dollar Scam - BBC World Service

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13.04.2023

The billion-dollar scam: How companies used Premier League sponsorship to target unsuspecting football fans. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Investigative reporter Simona Weinglass leads a #BBCEye investigation into a criminal network, believed to have scammed more than a billion dollars from victims across the globe. The organisation sponsored a top-tier football club to promote its online trading platform, promising investors the chance of astonishing returns. But what lies behind the claims? The search – from a mansion in London, to a forest in Scandinavia and a call centre in Georgia – reveals a web of deceit. We hear from victims, undercover agents and police, in a bid to track down who’s in charge. To watch more investigative journalism from our award-winning BBC Eye team check out this documentary playlist, perfect for the biggest screen in your home 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: BBC Website 👉🏽 🤍 Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and for following us! #BBCWorldService #WorldService

Space: What is dark matter? - BBC World Service, CrowdScience podcast

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23.01.2020

Dark matter and dark energy make up around 95% of the universe and the remaining segment is normal matter - the stuff we’re all made of. Given that there’s so much of this dark material, could dark life have evolved? That’s what Gautam from Delhi in India asked CrowdScience. Marnie Chesterton investigates with Dr Matt Middleton, Dr Burçin Mutlu-Pakdil and Dr Renato Costa. They unpick the physics behind dark matter and dark energy and test out some listener theories about what these mysterious mediums might be. Yoseph from Ogden in the US questions whether black holes could account for the missing matter and it turns out he might just be on to something. Subscribe - 🤍 Download more podcasts from CrowdScience here:🤍 Website: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍

How birds and turtles navigate across the planet - CrowdScience, BBC World Service Podcast

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25.05.2022

Animals are remarkable navigators but what are they using to guide their journeys? To what extent might birds and turtles be sensing and using the Earth’s magnetic fields? Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Many animals undertake remarkable migratory journeys; travelling thousands of miles only to return to same burrow or beach they departed from. Yet, unlike humans, they don’t have digital or paper maps to guide their way, so how are they able to orientate themselves with such accuracy? In the second part of this migration story, CrowdScience’s Anand Jagatia explores how animals are able to navigate using the sun, stars, smells, landmarks and magnetism to help guide them. Anand journeys to the coast of Florida where he helps to place a satellite tracker on a sea turtle in order to follow the long-distance journeys of these animals. He then visits a lab in North Carolina to meet a team that is recreating the Earth’s magnetic fields to examine how sea turtles might be using these forces to find their feeding and nesting grounds. Anand wades into the hotly contested topic of just how birds may be sensing magnetic fields – and hears about one of the latest theories that suggests birds eyes may be exploiting quantum physics. The range of navigational tools we encounter throughout the animal kingdom from whales to ants is beguiling, Anand asks what does our increased understanding of these feats might mean for animal conservation as well as human development of mapping systems. Contributors: David Godfrey – Sea Turtle Conservancy Rick Herren – University of Florida Tim Guilford – University of Oxford Ken Lohmann – University of North Carolina Kayla Goforth – University of North Carolina Henrik Mouritsen – University of Oldenburg Check out more CrowdScience episodes and videos here: 🤍 #migration #science #birds #turtles #animalbehaviour #crowdscience #podcast This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService

K-drama: Min-ha Kim meets Uhm Jung-hwa - BBC World Service

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30.11.2023

Singer and actress Uhm Jung-hwa is one of the most influential women in the Korean entertainment industry and has been described as Korea’s Madonna. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 The star of Doctor Cha speaks to fellow leading lady Min-ha Kim, star of Pachinko. They talk about how women’s roles have changed in Korean dramas, ageism in the entertainment industry and the transformative impact of streaming on K-drama. 00:00 Introduction 00:27 Change in women's roles 01:43 Korea’s patriarchal society 03:13 How changes in society are being reflected in roles 03:55 Global hit Doctor Cha 06:10 Age discrimination of women 08:47 Motivation and role models 11:34 Overcoming cancer 13:22 Rise of streaming 15:40 The future and K-drama’s Korean identity Produced by Julie Yoonnyung Lee, Samantha Haque and Vibeke Venema Filmed by Hyunjung Kim and Woongbee Lee Edited by Chanseung Kim Check out more women creating change here 👉🏽 🤍 Listen to this episode of The Cultural Frontline where actress Min-ha Kim explores how K-drama is evolving 👉🏽 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #Kdrama #Koreandrama #MinhaKim #UhmJunghwa #Doctorcha #Pachinko

Can animals evolve to deal with climate change? - The Climate Question, BBC World Service

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06.07.2022

Climate change is bringing rising temperatures, droughts and shifting patterns of rainfall - can animals adapt to keep pace? Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 There is evidence that bird’s bodies are growing smaller, their wingspan longer, lizards are growing larger thumb pads to help them grip more tightly in hurricane strength winds and beak size is changing. We visit the Galapagos, where evolution was first discovered by Charles Darwin, and investigate the many ways animals are adapting their behaviour and physiology to survive the impact of climate change. Changes to climate are also influencing animals’ genetics, meaning that we are seeing species evolve within our own lifetime. However, most animals won’t be able to adapt quickly enough to cope with the speed they need to in order to survive in a warming world. Find more videos on climate change and the environment here: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #bbcworldservice #climatechange #evolution

Does recycling help fight climate change? The Climate Question, BBC World Service

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12.10.2022

Reduce, reuse, recycle is a familiar mantra the world over - but how climate friendly is recycling? Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Recycling has been described as "one of the easier climate-friendly acts” that individuals can do. A recent poll found that, globally, most of us believe that recycling is the single best thing we can do to tackle the climate crisis. But there isn’t much mention of “reduce” and “reuse”. This week, presenters Kate Lamble and Neal Razzell explore how successful the world’s recycling system really is, visiting Port Klang in Malaysia where huge swaths of the globe’s recycling gets sent only to end up... well, watch and you’ll find out! Kate and Neal will also learn how climate friendly recycling really is and whether there are other more important actions we can take to improve how we manage our waste. If you liked this then check out our playlist featuring videos from our podcast The Climate Question ➡️ 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #bbcworldservice #recycle #climatechange

Why does it feel so good to use bad language? - CrowdScience, BBC World Service

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01.06.2021

The sudden agony of stubbing a toe or burning a finger can make even the most polite of us swear our heads off. It’s like a reflex - a quick-release valve for the shock. But why do expletives give us such a sense of relief? Why does it sometimes feel so good to swear? Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 We set out to explore the science of swearing, prompted by a question from CrowdScience listener Gadi. Psychological studies have shown bad language can relieve pain, or even make us stronger; we test out these theories for ourselves and try to figure out why certain words are charged with such physical power. We don’t just use strong words in shock or anger, either. They can help us to bond with others, to express joy, solidarity, or creativity. And although people curse all over the world, it’s not quite the same everywhere. We hear what people like to swear about in different countries, and whether swearing in a second language can ever be quite so satisfying. Download the CrowdScience podcast here: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService

How birds travel thousands of miles every year - CrowdScience, BBC World Service Podcast

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27.04.2022

Why do animals bother making such long and precarious migratory voyages? Is the lure of an arctic spring feast worth crossing an ocean for? Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Why animals migrate - part 1 of a two-part CrowdScience investigation. Wherever you are in the world, you are probably near an animal that has undertaken a remarkable migratory journey, be that a butterfly, bird or sea turtle. But what CrowdScience listener Moses in Kenya wants to know is, why they bother making such long and precarious voyages - and how they're able to reliably navigate over hundreds and sometimes even thousands of miles. In this first of two episodes, presenter Anand Jagatia travels to the Americas to meet the scientists finding and tracking these animals in order to solve the puzzle of where they go and why. Deep in the lush and noisy Belizean jungle, Anand joins avian biologist Abidas who is collecting data on the beautiful birds that visit tropical forests to escape harsh winters. Here, using misting nets, Abidas and her team carefully catch birds to measure their health and status before tagging and releasing them so they can continue stocking up on jungle food. Anand finds out why having long term data on migrant birds can help in understanding why some birds, like the wood thrush, have been declining in their native homes further north. Anand then jumps aboard a turtle boat in Florida where scientists from the Sea Turtle Conservancy have been collecting data on these dinosaur-like creatures. But finding them is harder it might seem. They move fast, so Anand accompanies the research team who are experienced in safely catching them, will he be lucky and find one of these magnificent creatures? Presented by Anand Jagatia and produced by Melanie Brown Contributors: David Barrie – Navigator & author Tim Guilford – University of Oxford Abidas Ash – University of Belize Kristen Ruegg – Colorado State University David Godfrey – Sea Turtle Conservancy Listen/Download: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #CrowdScience #Science #Migration #Animals #Birds

Dave Clarke - World Service (Techno Mix) [REACT CD 199]

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05.09.2017

A double CD album, with Techno one disc and Electro on the other. The mixing and selection is done by Dave Clarke, and the end result is an unforgettable classic that each collector of Techno and/or Electro should have. Tracklist: 00:00 Angel Alanis - Tube 07:52 Midfield General - Coatnoise (Dave Clarke Remix) 11:22 Technasia - Force (Voxless) 15:30 Black Odyssey - The Stand 19:54 Alessandro F - Car Crash 23:27 Cozmic Spore - Alien Artifacts 25:47 Gaetano Parisio - Pain 23 29:17 Jel Ford - Blowout 31:35 Marco Bailey vs. Redhead - Watch Out 35:19 Joey Beltram - Metro 37:48 Jeff Mills - Robot Replica 40:38 DJ Urban - Jack Your Big Booty 43:57 Ruben Andersen - Running Scared 46:44 Aaron-Carl - No No 48:19 A.Squared - Pump 50:55 Recycled Loops - B2 52:51 Surgeon - Midnight Club Tracks 2 55:32 Umek - Ceroxol 1:01:23 James Ruskin - Version 1:03:51 Artefact - Are You Jackin' 1:07:53 Steve Rachmad - Zero ID 2 A1 1:10:34 Karl O'Connor / Peter Sutton* Guiltless 1:12:25 Terence Fixmer - Body Pressure 1:15:23 Dave Tarrida - Horrormone (The Horrorist Remix) Follow Techno Scene for more updates: 🤍

Can putting a price on nature help us care about it more? - The Climate Question, BBC World Service

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21.08.2022

Could giving nature a dollar value make us care about it more and help us fight against climate change? Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Everyone who steps outside can appreciate the value that the natural world brings to our lives. To some people, the idea of placing a monetary value on trees and mangrove forests is wrong because nature and its gifts are priceless. But others say the love of nature has not stopped it from being polluted or destroyed. The natural world plays a major role in capturing the carbon from our atmosphere. A marketplace now exists where countries and big business can pay others to protect their forests, swamps and bogs in return for offsetting their emissions. The Climate Question asks whether putting a price on nature help us protect it? Find more videos on climate change and the environment here: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #bbcworldservice #climatechange #nature

Cycling across Europe in the pandemic - BBC World Service

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18.01.2021

Over a billion euros has been invested in cycling across Europe since the start of the pandemic. Some of the continent's biggest cities are being transformed as people seek alternative, safer, greener ways to move around. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Anna Holligan travels across Europe to see how people are getting on their bikes and asks if the surge in cycling is the start of a much bigger change in the way we travel. This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService

The online groups who believe germs don't exist - BBC World Service, BBC Trending Extreme podcast

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06.11.2023

Conspiracy theories about viruses and vaccines have exploded in recent years. At the same time, something arguably stranger has spiralled… groups online who don’t believe germs which cause disease exist at all. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 They believe that there’s no such thing as viruses and that all diseases are caused by living an unhealthy life, particularly our diet and environmental toxins. It goes hand in hand with a rejection of vaccines and other forms of conventional medicine. The BBC's health and disinformation reporter Rachel Schraer investigates how germ denial has grown and spread on social media. In South Africa, a small group of germ deniers, influenced by American conspiracy theorists, is awaking painful memories. 00:00 Intro 01:33 🤍DebunktheFunkwithDrWilson on germ theory 03:36 What do germ theory denial groups believe? 05:09 Meet Veronica, a germ theory denier 05:50 What is terrain theory? 07:27 What one germ theory denier believes 09:12 What do germ theory deniers and anti-vaxxers have in common? 10:01 How the Covid pandemic influenced views 12:59 The darker threat of germ denial Watch more episodes of our podcast series Extreme here. BBC Trending explores the ways social media is shaping behaviour and beliefs on the fringes of the internet - and in some cases, making it into the mainstream 👉🏽 🤍 Presenter and producer: Rachel Schraer Editor: Flora Carmichael This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #germtheory #germs #germdeniers

'No one is safe' - the Russians speaking up against Putin's regime - BBC World Service

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11.05.2023

In Russia, it’s been dangerous for ordinary people to speak up against Vladimir Putin’s regime for years, but new censorship laws introduced since the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 have made it tougher than ever. Click here to subscribe 👉🏽 🤍 Despite huge risks, Russian filmmakers have been filming the impact of the war inside their country. Whilst many thousands have fled, those that stayed are having to choose - to oppose, support or stay silent about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. 00:00 Intro 01:06 Russian State TV Channel 03:35 Meet Lyonya, from PSLCh Art Collective 07:44 Meet local councillor Nina 11:05 Meet YouTubers Alla & Misha 13:06 Meet artist Uliana 16:00 Vanya's story 51:00 Update on the contributors This BBC Eye documentary was first published in February 2023. To watch more investigative journalism from our award-winning BBC Eye team check out this documentary playlist, perfect for the biggest screen in your home 👉🏽 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #BBCEye #RussiaUkraineWar

Why is 1.5 degrees important? - The Climate Question, BBC World Service

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04.12.2023

In this Climate Change 101, Jordan Dunbar speaks to 🤍ClimateAdam about why 1.5°C is the world's target for limiting global warming. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 0:00 Intro 0:35 What is 1.5°C of warming? 01:55 The Paris climate agreement 02:28 Why 1.5°C protects us from the worst consequences of climate change 03:18 Sea level rises 04:38 What are degrees of global warming? 05:26 History of 1.5°C at Paris 2015 climate summit 07:05 What happens if we miss the 1.5°C goal? 09:27 Net zero and staying under 1.5°C More from The Climate Question 👉🏽 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #climatechange #climate

How do you like your eggs in the morning? CrowdScience podcast, BBC World Service

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31.01.2022

Should we be washing our eggs before we crack them open? CrowdScience answers this and other egg-stremely intriguing questions about chickens and eggs. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Should you wash your eggs? Well believe it or not, there is quite an international debate about this question from CrowdScience listener Susan. In Canada, where Susan grew up, commercially sold eggs are washed before they reach stores, whereas in the UK, where she is now living, they are not. So what is best to avoid contamination? It’s one of a number of egg-themed questions that CrowdScience tries to crack in this episode. One of our presenters, Marnie Chesterton, heads over to Susan’s home in London to cook some eggs and explore other egg cooking questions from our listeners, such as what is the science behind frying an egg without it sticking to the pan, and why are some boiled eggs harder to shell than others? Meanwhile, this episode’s other presenter, Anand Jagatia, explores questions about eggs after they have hatched. He investigates a case of curious chicken behaviour sent in by listener Laurie, as well as working out how a cuckoo knows it’s a cuckoo when it’s been raised in another bird’s nest. Presented by Marnie Chesterton and Anand Jagatia Produced by Jonathan Blackwell for BBC World Service Featuring: Dr Vincent Guyonnet, Dr Valérie Lechevalier, Dr Siobhan Abeyesinghe and Dr Ros Gloag Listen and download this episode: 🤍 If you liked this episode why not check out our CrowdScience playlist ⬇️ 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #CrowdScience #Science #Biology #Chickens #Eggs

Is homeworking messing with your head? - BBC World Service

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26.08.2020

Working from home may be the new normal for many former office workers - but is it good or bad for business? Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Working from home could outlast the pandemic. But workers' experiences with homeworking in lockdown are not all positive. Manuela Saragosa speaks to some office workers who've struggled to adapt to home life, and to Dr Zofia Bajorek, research fellow at the Institute for Employment Studies in the UK, who's been surveying workers on the pressures they've faced in lockdown. Cary Cooper, professor of organisational psychology and health at Manchester Business School, explains why face-to-face contact is so important for innovation in the workplace, and why flexible working with a mix of office and home will ultimately make us all happier. Check out our playlist, Working in a Covid World, here: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #BBC #Covid19 #coronavirus #workingfromhome

The sounds of Europe's last primeval forest - BBC World Service

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05.10.2023

Take a walk with nature recordist Izabela Dłuzyk as she explores the wonderful sounds of Europe's last primeval forest, Białowieza. 🌳 Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Białowieza Forest is Europe's last primeval wood, stretching for 1,000 km through Poland and Belarus. Hear the marvellous sounds of this forest in an immersive experience rich with all kinds of bird song and animal sounds. Check out more videos about climate change and the environment here 👉🏽 🤍 Produced by Monica Whitlock, filmed by Dovana Films. This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #nature #naturesounds

Lilliburlero - BBC World Service

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17.12.2022

“This is London…” We’ve brought back an old friend – Lilliburlero – to mark our 90th birthday on air. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 First used by the BBC during WWII, it became the signature tune of BBC World Service in the 1950s and was enjoyed by listeners around the world for decades! This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService

ICC's Geoff Allardice on Afghanistan women's cricket - Stumped, BBC World Service

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10.11.2023

Allardice discusses the future of One-Day cricket and its inclusion in the Olympic Games. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Alison Mitchell is joined by the chief executive of the ICC, Geoff Allardice. He gives us the latest on the Afghanistan women's cricket team who have not played since the Taliban entered the country in 2021. Allardice also tells us about cricket's inclusion in the Olympics and the future of the One-Day format. (Geoff Allardice spoke to Stumped before Sri Lanka was suspended by the ICC due to being "in serious breach of its obligations as a member".) Plus, Jim Maxwell and Prakash Wakankar pay tribute to the most successful captain in the history of cricket. Australian Meg Lanning has announced her international retirement at the age of 31 after winning seven World Cups. And the team look back on an eventful week in the Men's Cricket World Cup including Glenn Maxwell’s 201 not out for Australia against Afghanistan. Listen to Stumped here: 🤍 And check out our Stumped playlist in YouTube 👉🏽 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #worldservice #ICC #cricket

Afghanistan's secret to cricket success - Stumped, BBC World Service

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27.10.2023

Afghanistan assistant coach Raees Ahmadzai joins Stumped after their triumphs in the Cricket World Cup. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Click here to listen to Stumped 👉🏽 🤍 On this week's Stumped, Alison Mitchell, Sunil Gupta and Jim Maxwell pay tribute to former India captain Bishan Singh Bedi who died this week aged 77 and look at the influence of Virat Kohli on the current India team. Plus, the team are joined by Afghanistan assistant coach Raees Ahmadzai. He was part of the Afghanistan team that progressed to the 2009 ICC World Cup Qualifiers. In 2010 he retired from playing and took up a coaching role within the team and tells us the secret to their success after their two shock wins over England and Pakistan in the Men's Cricket World Cup. Listen to Stumped here: 🤍 And check out our Stumped playlist in YouTube ⬇️ 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #cricket #cricketworldcup #cricketnews

How the Great London Smog of 1952 killed thousands - Witness History, BBC World Service

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14.11.2023

Seventy years ago, thick polluted smog descended on London bringing the city to a standstill and leading to the deaths of an estimated 4,000 people. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 The Great Smog of London lasted for four days. In response the government passed the Clean Air Act of 1956 to reduce the use of smoky fuels such as coal. Witness History spoke to Dr Brian Commins, who worked for the Medical Research Council's Air Pollution Unit set up at St. Bartholomew's hospital in London in the 1950s. Hear more 👉🏽 🤍 Watch more Witness History videos here 👉🏽 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #london

Virtual technology used to keep track of cows - BBC World Service, People Fixing the World

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25.09.2023

A new gadget is giving farmers the ability to control where their cows go from an app on their phones which creates virtual fences. Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 🤍 Farmers can use the technology to control grazing and keep track of their animals. BBC World Service People Fixing the World went to Epping Forest in the east of London to see it in action. Check out more people fixing the world here: 🤍 This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel. If you like what we do, you can also find us here: Instagram 👉🏽 🤍 Twitter 👉🏽 🤍 Facebook 👉🏽 🤍 BBC World Service website 👉🏽 🤍 Thanks for watching and subscribing! #BBCWorldService #WorldService #cows #PeopleFixingTheWorld

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