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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  March 29, 2024 11:02pm-11:31pm CET

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the country music world today, her new album, cowboy carter, includes icons which is really nelson. and the only part there's even a very modern day cover of dolly parton sit jolene. but this album also includes the beatles and even some oper. so is it all country? no way partner this is all beyond say her radio on the radio. i'm progressing berlin. this is the day. the cod down the when i heard the 1st notes of texas i was i got really excited and i felt like so that's why women sometimes we shy away from
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that that a country by what beyond say that, but it didn't bring the whole no, like light onto the most, everybody in our put huge had just put into that. she wants to change that and i respect that. the polls are coming up. turkey heads to the poles in local elections on sunday. president richard type. every one has his eye on regaining control of symbol. and that is really going to almost quarter nights add on for the foreseeable future. and that he will remain as the president of the country until he basically quits pulled ethics. which of our viewers watching on tv as in the united states and to all of you around the world. welcome. we begin today with the unexpected tweeting and tunes or the pop star. suddenly number one in the world of country music beyond
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say, has, has a new album in she's singing her way into new territory. the title kind of gives it away, cowboy carter is beyond say, country debut. her 1st time at the ready of if you bill a pop diva. bringing millions of our the fence along for the ra, a 16, a pop idol turned the country, music star. beyond seas, new tracks are putting black country in the spotlight and also highlighting the work of other artist the man i just for doubt. listen and listen to it said to all my friends. and so yeah, just got got really excited for what this, this moment means in the vast history of black country music. i definitely think this is a historical moment in bringing black countries to the main stream. beyond
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seas. new venture is even shedding light on segregation in the country. music industry. holly cheese, who runs the black music collective, has been exploring this history. once black artist started charting, they did not want white and black people and the same charts, so separated into hillbilly music and race records. hobbling music became the country music industry and race records became r and b. it's hope to be on seas. crossover from r n. b and pot to country will bring more ears to black country musicians. the like it's opening up country music as a whole to completely new demographic people who probably primarily listen say hip hop are in be wrapped all the things like countries not even on their radar. they're not even thinking about it. this is one of caraway carters. $27.00 tracks
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of the album includes collaborations with well known country music stars, the texas native said it would be on to album, not a country album or unique sound for any music lover. well, enjoying now by entertainment journalists runs sun vedo. he is in washington dc process. good to have you with us. this is our 1st time talking together on there. so this is our 1st time at the rodeo as well. it's good to see you. what about the on say thinking country. so i think that willie nelson, the only pardon they've joined or and yet it's still being discussed as is if it were a taboo break or what's your tech overs i would correct you. i had we've spoken before. it was probably 2 years ago or 3 years ago. so we had spoken and glad that to see again. and i would say to you guys, that's just for us. i think it's, it's a fantastic album and i think will be hard seem to make it to
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a country album is across an artist cost over without including so the guy is of modern college country music. you know, so a lot of you and i think was a great choice and, and i think they, they did brace her and i think they are in some ways taking a stand against all the devices. and this has come out of the caution country music . you know, because the students has to be on say, 1st floor it into the space about yourself. and you know, yet beyond a headset herself that this is not a country music album of the she has is i think it is. you know, the country is the dominant, is honored. of course the it's, she'll be, she's, she's an army vocalist. so everything she seems will have that social fuel to it. but as a country album, 1st and foremost, and i think by including you, we know someone mentioned dolly parton, but also they were not students to tell which is a popular black country singer that has been somewhat of
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a song 0 listeners. so i think it's very much to be honest with you there, there are some critics who say that it'd be on things brand. um, it's just that i'll be beyond say i, there was an opinion piece that was published in the washington post recently and caring a t a. she wrote this um, i can box to her. well also understanding that she is a capitalistic tabula rasa. standing for everything and nothing at what, what kind of sounds like she's describing pop music, doesn't it? precisely, i think it is, is it's an unfair statement to make in some ways because we, we don't ask that much of every pop star and i don't think it is fair to expect on pop starting to, you know, lead the way for every political move and i think beyond say, does try, but she's a pop star, 1st and foremost. and she is, you know, a paper, she's
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a most people. so and so i think it is unrealistic to think young faith is going to take some stats that i put survey on capitalism was you know, a lot of people expect big things from big stars in an interview in vogue. last, maybe on se, refused to identify herself as a feminist. and she said that that word can be very extreme. i'm wondering, is this the, the secret or a succession? if she's like taylor swift, i stayed stay on message. they stick to the singing. i use the of the, this is some ways she doesn't get the benefit of being like to was that because she is a work woman. and so while she gets charged more and there is still more demands of her to make statements. so her existence fundamentally different in that way, but yes, she is somebody to start and she has, she has to appeal to a lot of people and i think she's done a fantastic job to maintain that appeal for almost 3 decades. okay,
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so i have to ask you on the ticket you've listened to the album of her cover of dolly pardons, hit jolene. is it brilliant or is it really it is absolutely excellent. and are you, it's a shows it shows either the main character we'd be using. this is in this instance stand up against julie. so that's a more victorious story. i propose to dolly parton version of which lawyers which is more of a victim that so. and i think is really to have dolly part of their dolly t as a culture as often as on there to kind of give her a step. yeah, exactly. and when you let me get the royalties from those dolly, pardon songs today? well, entertainment journalists, ron's who, yes rods, we have spoken before. thanks for correcting me. it's good to see you. thank you. yes. all right. the turkey goes
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to the poles on sunday in nationwide local elections that are being seen as a test of national political sentiment. president, richard, probably a better one is seeking to recapture the economic powerhouse of stem ball, which is just as in development party last 5 years ago to the opposition. there is an old saying and talk is politics, wins a stumbling winds, talking the country's largest city and commercial heart is home to nearly 16000000 people about a face of photography electorate. 5 years ago, president bridget, plenty of ad one is moving, is allow me conservative ac lost a symbol to the opposition. now they want to say good the good news that we will work hard day and night and god willing on april 1st. december will be reunited with its owners. our goal is to add one isn't even
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running into selection, but you wouldn't knew it. listening to his support as i am with tie, a better one until i die, god willing we will win the leader of the entire world. he stands up to everyone ad one has been using his own popularity to support the a t p candidate who might environment minister more that call them a symbols elections are not just about who will be the next man. the outcome is also possible for president ad one. this is the city where he grew up and where he launched his political career as mayor in the 1990. it's also where he sold the west political defeats office to decade room because of this man, a criminal mom little from the secular opposition. c h p is stumbles, incumbent mia. 6 back in 2019
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a managed, sold impossible. he won the city hole in a heavy contest, did repeat, an action against ad one's candidate devoted to mano into an instance figure of hope for the o positions. today he's why he sees as the main rival president add one political scientist back, as some tells me where were a when is the metal seats in this stumble has access to enormous amounts of public resources, employees, tens of thousands of people and gains, a national platform to conduct politics. so e mal can win this election, most likely. he's had this for becoming the main contented for the presidency against as long as she mama lose re election campaign has been focused on using the cities chronic traffic problems. it's making it simple, safer,
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given the major earthquake risk and region. but he's also faced with growing poverty among the cities rather than mainly because of the government's failure to bring flooring installation of the controller. although the elections are local, the stakes are high. for the main o position party, this is really a crucial election because if they were to lose a stumble and quite possibly own cut out, then they are, the voters are going to be the motor life and probably lose much hope of and see think are gone through the ballot box, and that is really going to almost coordinate add on for the foreseeable future, and that you'll remain as the president of the country until he basically quits pulled. ethics poll suggests the vote in houston. bull will be a close run the fast a consequential rates. not just for the c t, but for turkeys future. for we get more now from our corresponded dorian jones. he is in is stand bowl,
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the city that everyone wants to retake during is good to see what are the polls showing as of now, as well as to close to columbus being light as soon as the campaign started. and that's quite remarkable in many ways, fully incumbent that criminal molar because he won when he was the head of a broad coalition of parties, tucker's nationalist slammed his body and also a pro coverage policy. now that coalition has collapse, all the policies are starting their own candidates. but having said that, a criminal movies was wrapped and his cool fingers that can cross the deep political devise in turkey. and he has been reaching out beyond his, he's on base. and on top of that that he's the main challenge of rod chrome is seen as a political rookies never stood for office before and he is why be seen to be struggling in this campaign and also talk he's facing in the a 70 percent plus inflation. i might read this, causing a great deal of anger in the country. so all those parts together means that it's still too close to cool. how significant are kurdish drugs in these elections?
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many ways they are seen as possibly key. the account for around 10 percent of the voting is stumble on. both sides have been reaching out to this cottage, both the mother. they are having a pro, cut his polity and his own right. standing in my most be releasing videos inc could, is she's starting much seems to be trying to reach out to that cody folks and also heard one in the speech earlier this week, indicate e could be opened to have grown to mall. curtis rights to the cookies lodge kurdish minority. see this a plateful that key code is supposed to in many ways they could be the king, make cars in the selection in the states and they are high in these elections and not just a symbol. right? yeah, absolutely. i mean, is stumbles, it's sizes. and these economy is equivalent to a mid sized european country in its own right. so in many ways it is seen as a 2nd because pricing tucker's politics. and that's why the other one is so determined to bring back what he sees as his key stronghold back into the fold as
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it will be on that is far more important for the rest of the country. and it's all about political momentum. load one once a carrier will not momentum, but the that the a chieftain lost g is a surprise. victory for the one. why the 50 would lose. he won the he devastated the opposition that defeat and he wants to chi, it up my mind, some thoughts read, taking a stumble would be a number, crushing both the all positions and thoughts and pull them 3rd one because he's expected to be wanting to, to introduce a new constitution possibly ending term limits, and he would need a referendum to achieve that. so he very much was the month demoralized the opposition. but in my model, if he wants to win the realtor, he's credentials as a man, but can the feet of one of these vaults faulty machine. and that's crucial because he's why the tip to be a kind of the in the next presidential election. right. dorian jones on this boy for his in his symbol dory, and thank you very much. i wants to take this opportunity to say thank you past me for all the wonderful
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messages of support and feel understanding last night being recovering from surgery, it has been an incredibly tough couple of months from tough on me. but i've had a fantastic medical team who's taking great care of me for which i'm so grateful as well. that was a katherine princes, as well as even l. just one week ago today that she has cancer. now like kate, we all put our trust in our doctors, our hopes in new research, and we are doing that at our own risk. and then it has a lot to do with a series of retracted medical research articles involving fabricated figures, manipulated data and flawed findings. new detection tools powered by artificial intelligence have lifted the lid on what some are calling it epidemic of fraud. in medical research and publishing, last year the number of papers retracted by research journals top 10000 for the 1st time. one case involved the chief of cancer,
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surgery division and columbia university medical center and investigation found the dozens of his cancer treatment studies contained dubious data and recycled images, other scandals. if he had harvard on the east coast and on the west coast, it was stanford university of scandal. there resulted in the resignation of that school as president last year or to talk more about this. i'm joined tonight by arthur caplin t is the director of medical ethics at n, y, and use language medical center in new york city. mr. kaplan, it's good to see. i appreciate you taking the time to talk with us on this friday. were you shocked when you learned about these cases? sadly, i was not. we have had fraud case after fraud case being unveiled to us in the netherlands. indeed around the world. there are many journals
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complicit. they will publish what you pay them to publish. they don't really do care for you to review by cali, either in a risky runs a center here in my program. and then while you cover tract and watch, he thinks there are tens of thousands more papers to be. uh, you have to be discovered that are products then for viewers thinking about the saying, well, you know, that's a science problem, because you start to say bread. it's not a victimless crime. doctors based their treatments on the published literature. patients try to look at the journals to see where the latest research might be for their disease that might help the this kind of falsity gets into the literature. it really hurts people with diseases and it really files up their best treatment. well, you know, here and you said this could be the tip of the iceberg. here,
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tens of thousands of articles need to be retracted. possibly if that is the case. well, what does it tell us then about the credibility of just the body of new medical research that is on offer right now. as well as to be a little careful about rushing to the 1st announcement of a breakthrough. whether it's a pig to the going into a recipient or hearing about an alzheimer's drug. that seems to have great results . the real test of science is rep location, not just the 1st publication. so until things get repeated 2 or 3 or 4 times, like different groups and teams, one wants to be a bit weary of just jumping after the way just it answered by the way up the road is in. yeah, that's even true for the media. sometimes we get
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a little over enthusiastic about the 1st that whose 1st. yeah, that isn't really the way. so it's a great. yeah, yeah, yeah, it's a good isabel and what we were talking about earlier, you know, why do, why do we miss these stories or why do we not follow through? i mean that there is culpability. here to go around. and i'm wondering to why does this keeps happening and does everyone who is involved and thinking about all the, the names that are listed as co authors in these articles that are published. do all of these researchers and doctors do they all understand the experiments being performed that has their name on them as well. and sadly, some of the people on those papers are junior, they're not willing to cross swords with a senior investigator who may control their career. so normally you'd have some checks and balances, but sometimes they're not there. the other reason that we have, if you will, of proliferation is there's huge pressure on these days to keep publishing research
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money is somewhat for you and the pressure is on there to get those papers out. i think we have to pay attention to that as well. we can't just count how many papers a person has when they're trying to get a tenure position. let's say inter to canada or the us or germany. and we also want to know, are they good? oh, yeah. publish or perish when we've heard that everyone, those, that's the reality. but do universities research hospitals, do they aggressively pursue, prosecute and weed out fraudsters? so mean, are they actively looking for the bad apples as well? again, i think we have to do better. each institution is somewhat protective of its reputation . so more protective of not wanting to offend alumni or donors or future support from foundations or government. so they do investigate. but only in response to
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when a whistle blower usually says there's an issue, they're not doing enough audits, they're not doing enough regular checks, routine checks to see. here's the data there. do they have the image? is there a survey keeping good notebooks to record their findings? in the more of that, i'm going to say whoever's like, i think we need more transparency investigations done. and while you, columbia, the charity hospital, wherever they're still anonymous, you really see what's going on. and i think that leads to too much truck. you know this, this big story was about cancer research, stomach cancer research, a caught my attention bid because it's a personal story here. my, my mother was diagnosed with gastric cancer. and i remember when that happened, the 1st thing i did i, for many years afterwards was read as much as i could in these medical journals to
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know so that i could talk on either i the i with the oncologist and in the surgeons, i was thinking about the story there may be parents relative to advocate for their loved ones. if they're relying on these journals, are they actually pushing and champagne treatments that could hurt in kill the people they're trying to think of? not often, but sometimes, you know, sometimes there's so much hope that you don't really listen to the risk and the benefit for look to the journal. you're trying to journal, show up and you say that sound when it's positive about this drug, for let's say pancreatic cancer. notoriously tough to cure. i'm going to chase that research to do, but it's not a good journal necessarily. it's not been a strategy that others are using. so yes, look at the literature. good advocate can do that. can i ask questions and make sure you know what journals you're looking at? they're not all equal access to information before we let you go. you know,
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we've got access to information like never before, our ability to filter that, you know, our, our information diet. is it as good and as healthy as it should be, particularly when we're talking about medical research. no, the internet is royce with misinformation crack part theory. i see again and again, not just the mainstream trying to struggle to make sure it stays with high standards of integrity. but there's just a lot of social media that i see that i don't trust. right? no to be false. so that uses the last place to look at maybe the 1st it should never be the last. yeah. medical emphasis. arthur caplin, mr. kaplan, as always we appreciate your time valuable analysis. have a good weekend. it's well the day is always done. the conversation is, continues online, you'll find this on ex, formerly known as twitter,
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or either dw nearest you can follow me there. frank got tv and remember what ever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day, have a good weekend. everyone have a happy easter. the
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india asians cross street in india weaving is being done by her and again, the number of autism is growing and so is the income because customers are prepared to pay more to hand with the industries flourishing to take on to the next level. we need to educate and cranes, the eco india, the next on d w. the new will tell here we are
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happy that we are boxing the story. we have a getting a visa is more difficult than finding gold hosted to use the sales force and for the future in the stories and issues that are being discussed across the country. news africa. in 60 minutes on d w, the little guy. this is the 77 percent the platform for advocacy. these issues share id the, you know, or the senate will be a not a great to catch and then you get to talk to applicants. population is really fast . the young people clearly have the
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solution. the future is 77 percent every weekend on dw, the line and evil is, is always a good things, but such in traditions are always what, presenting, hello and welcome. i'm saw the got dividing annual, watching equally traditional knowledge we can offer and help us gain new prospects for the future. speaking of the additions, what did you have for lunch today? well actually addition to in the new offering has
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a beautiful gland of type of real quick to deals and that, and reading and slightly.

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