Scan date : 08/06/2024 06:55
Day | Hour | Type Event | Name Lang | Event name | Short Event | Extended Lang | Extended Event |
08/06 | 02h00>02h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 02h02>02h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
08/06 | 02h30>03h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | REV | The Global Auto and Mobility Show | eng | The Mini has fans the world over, especially women. A British pop culture icon, it’s starred in films and won rallies. Plus: Ride with a teen who lives on trains and go for a spin with South Africa’s Queen of Smoke. |
08/06 | 03h00>03h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 03h15>03h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Planet A | eng | ||
08/06 | 03h30>04h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Tomorrow Today | The Science Magazine | eng | Our cities are growing, becoming more crowded and hotter. Mini-forests and green facades can help to cool them down. And fewer sealed surfaces cuts the risk of flooding through heavy rainfall or rising sea levels. |
08/06 | 04h00>04h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 04h02>04h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
08/06 | 04h15>05h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Indian Age | It’s Youth and the Future | eng | The median age in India is just over 28 years. That’s very young in global comparison, especially with western industrialized nations. How do young Indians, who are exactly 28 years old in 2024, experience their country? A nation that’s often referred to as the world’s largest democracy, but where rising Hindu nationalism under Prime Minister Narendra Modi is resulting in repression and sometimes violence against Muslims. A nation where economic growth surpassed that of China in 2023; one with designs on becoming one of the world’s most important global players, both economically and politically. A nation of contrasts: Alongside up-and-coming startups launching groundbreaking business ideas, it’s estimated that one in every five people in India can neither read nor write. There are few countries in the world where the gap between rich and poor is so wide, where hunger and luxury are present cheek by jowl. At the same time, advancement opportunities continue to be determined by an officially obsolete system of social castes. The documentary observes 28-year-old Indians as they go about their everyday lives. Some live in poverty in rural areas, others work in one of the many startups in urban centers. Some are members of the Dalit caste, also known as the untouchables, still marginalized in India today and often only able to find jobs that no one else wants to do. The film profiles Hindus and Muslims, an illiterate woman fighting for a future for her children, a businessman with a life full of luxury. What are their dreams; what prevents them from realizing them? And as India strives to become a new superpower, will it take all its citizens along for the ride? Parliamentary elections are taking place in India from April to May 2024. Will Narendra Modi and his Hindu nationalist BJP party continue at the helm of the country? |
08/06 | 05h00>05h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 05h15>05h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Interview | eng | ||
08/06 | 05h30>06h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | To the Point | War in Gaza: Israel ever more isolated? | eng | War in Gaza: Israel ever more isolated? Israel’s war against the terror organization Hamas is souring relations with its key ally. Will US pressure to support a new ceasefire plan convince Netanyahu to commit? Our guests: Kristin Helberg (middle east analyst); Ronen Steinke (Süddeutsche Zeitung); Markus Bickel (Security Table) |
08/06 | 06h00>06h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 06h15>06h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
08/06 | 06h30>07h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Euromaxx | Lifestyle Europe | eng | What makes Berlin’s Olympic Stadium so famous? Plus: how falling down can be choreographed esthetically. And: what goes onto a British sandwich? |
08/06 | 07h00>07h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 07h02>07h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Arts Unveiled | The Truth Behind Two Iconic Artworks | eng | They have this in common: Fascinating stories that combine politics and art. Where is the famous Amber Room? - and why is the iconic Nefertiti bust so controversial? |
08/06 | 07h30>08h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The 77 Percent | Street Debate: What is driving young Nigerian professionals to "japa"? | eng | Nigeria is losing a significant number of its most talented professionals, who are leaving the country in search of better opportunities abroad. This mass migration of Nigerians is commonly referred to as 'japa.' In this week’s show, Edith Kimani asks young Nigerians what is driving them to leave the country. |
08/06 | 08h00>08h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 08h15>08h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Interview | eng | ||
08/06 | 08h30>09h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | REV | The Global Auto and Mobility Show | eng | The Mini has fans the world over, especially women. A British pop culture icon, it’s starred in films and won rallies. Plus: Ride with a teen who lives on trains and go for a spin with South Africa’s Queen of Smoke. |
08/06 | 09h00>09h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 09h15>09h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Sports Life | From Addiction and Homelessness to the Stage | eng | This week on Sports Life we meet Jacobus Claassen. In his teenage years the South African hit rock bottom. He was homeless and addicted to substances such as Mandrax and crystal meth. With the help of an outreach-program Jacobus joined Zip Zap Circus School in Cape Town. This was the turning point in his life. Through his acrobatic talent he became a star in the circus arena. |
08/06 | 09h30>10h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Tomorrow Today | The Science Magazine | eng | Our cities are growing, becoming more crowded and hotter. Mini-forests and green facades can help to cool them down. And fewer sealed surfaces cuts the risk of flooding through heavy rainfall or rising sea levels. |
08/06 | 10h00>10h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 10h15>11h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Endgame for Europe | The European Union at a Crossroads | eng | What consequences would a shift to the right have for the EU? This documentary accompanies Members of the European Parliament, while analyzing the political shifts that have taken place under Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. For example: EU Commission President and radical right-wing Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni profess to different political agendas. Yet, friendly embraces and amicable conversations are indeed suggestive of a world where an ability to get along with each other might prove mutually advantageous - something almost symbolic of the EU itself. "Endgame for Europe - The European Union at the Crossroads” takes a close look at the battle being waged between pro-European forces and their radical right-wing opponents over the direction the EU will take in coming years. Bones of contention include topics like migration, climate change and the distribution of power within the European Union itself. A look at von der Leyen's tenure to date (2019-2024) shows the extent to which the struggle for compromise has shifted political positions. When it comes to migration, many EU measures are now in line with the demands of the radical right. The EU’s climate policy, known as the Green Deal, is in danger of failing. But many questions remain unanswered: Will the current veto right of individual member nations be reformed in favor of a majority principle? Will the EU remain capable of action? Might the EU gain in power? Or lose? The documentary seeks answers to difficult questions. How much compromise can Europe tolerate? And where do European politicians draw the line? |
08/06 | 11h00>11h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 11h15>11h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Sports Life | From Addiction and Homelessness to the Stage | eng | This week on Sports Life we meet Jacobus Claassen. In his teenage years the South African hit rock bottom. He was homeless and addicted to substances such as Mandrax and crystal meth. With the help of an outreach-program Jacobus joined Zip Zap Circus School in Cape Town. This was the turning point in his life. Through his acrobatic talent he became a star in the circus arena. |
08/06 | 11h30>12h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | In Good Shape | Keep your hair, teeth and skin fit | eng | Excessive skincare and hair styling is ineffective and potentially counterproductive - leaving lackluster hair and pimples. Over-brushing can also be a source of harm. In Good Shape with top tips to ensure you stay looking good. |
08/06 | 12h00>12h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 12h15>12h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
08/06 | 12h30>13h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Arts Unveiled | The Truth Behind Two Iconic Artworks | eng | They have this in common: Fascinating stories that combine politics and art. Where is the famous Amber Room? - and why is the iconic Nefertiti bust so controversial? |
08/06 | 13h00>13h03 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 13h03>14h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Under Poisoned Skies | Iraq’s Toxic Oil Fields | eng | Gas flaring, the harmful practice of burning excess natural gas during oil production, contributes to global warming through carbon dioxide and methane emissions. That’s why all the top oil companies and many countries have pledged to end routine flaring by 2030. But in 2021, Iraq was the world's second-worst gas flaring country and is warming twice as fast as the global average. "Under Poisoned Skies” reveals how some of the world’s biggest oil companies have managed to avoid declaring a substantial amount of flaring emissions, giving the impression to investors and the public that they are on track to hit these targets. Filmed in southern Iraq, home to some of the world’s biggest oil fields, the documentary also follows Professor Shukri, a professor of environmental pollution, as he tries to find out why people living near gas flares say that for them, "cancer is like the flu”. People like 20-year-old cancer survivor Ali, who lives in the middle of an oil field that he and his friends describe as "the cemetery”. With the support of global pollution experts specializing in environmental pollution, Professor Shukri conducts tests to measure pollution levels near oil fields. It’s the first time public data on pollution levels has been recorded in these communities. The results are concerning, and prompt Professor Shukri to ask: "why are we paying the price for this smoke which comes from the oil companies?” |
08/06 | 14h00>14h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 14h15>14h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
08/06 | 14h30>15h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Euromaxx | Lifestyle Europe | eng | What makes Berlin’s Olympic Stadium so famous? Plus: how falling down can be choreographed esthetically. And: what goes onto a British sandwich? |
08/06 | 15h00>15h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 15h15>16h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Deep Sea Greed | Exploiting the Ocean Floor - Part 1 | eng | Deep down in the ocean, valuable raw materials are stored en masse: manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper. Many of these materials are currently in great demand. Technically, it is possible to harvest manganese nodules, for example, in the deep sea. But should we do it? Even among the researchers aboard the "Island Pride," opinions differ. They are part of a deep-sea expedition to research the possible effects of harvesting raw materials on the ocean floor. What will be the consequences if humans exploit these valuable deposits? Will it destroy the fragile underwater environment? Reporter Michael Stocks and his cameraman spent weeks aboard the ship, on which scientists are monitoring the deployment of a giant underwater harvesting machine on the ocean floor. Humans are dredging the sand from beaches, overfishing fish stocks worldwide - is the seabed now to be industrially exploited as well? |
08/06 | 16h00>16h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 16h15>16h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
08/06 | 16h30>17h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The 77 Percent | Street Debate: What is driving young Nigerian professionals to "japa"? | eng | Nigeria is losing a significant number of its most talented professionals, who are leaving the country in search of better opportunities abroad. This mass migration of Nigerians is commonly referred to as 'japa.' In this week’s show, Edith Kimani asks young Nigerians what is driving them to leave the country. |
08/06 | 17h00>17h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 17h15>17h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The other Berlin | eng | ||
08/06 | 17h30>18h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Euromaxx | Lifestyle Europe | eng | What makes Berlin’s Olympic Stadium so famous? Plus: how falling down can be choreographed esthetically. And: what goes onto a British sandwich? |
08/06 | 18h00>18h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 18h15>18h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Sports Life | From Addiction and Homelessness to the Stage | eng | This week on Sports Life we meet Jacobus Claassen. In his teenage years the South African hit rock bottom. He was homeless and addicted to substances such as Mandrax and crystal meth. With the help of an outreach-program Jacobus joined Zip Zap Circus School in Cape Town. This was the turning point in his life. Through his acrobatic talent he became a star in the circus arena. |
08/06 | 18h30>19h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | Africa | eng | |
08/06 | 19h00>19h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 19h15>19h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
08/06 | 19h30>20h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The 77 Percent | Street Debate: What is driving young Nigerian professionals to "japa"? | eng | Nigeria is losing a significant number of its most talented professionals, who are leaving the country in search of better opportunities abroad. This mass migration of Nigerians is commonly referred to as 'japa.' In this week’s show, Edith Kimani asks young Nigerians what is driving them to leave the country. |
08/06 | 20h00>20h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 20h15>20h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
08/06 | 20h30>21h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | Africa | eng | |
08/06 | 21h00>21h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 21h15>22h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | D-Day and the Tremendous Cost of Victory | The Story of Operation Overlord | eng | "Operation Overlord” is often retrospectively regarded as a heroic achievement: the biggest combined sea, air and land operation in the history of World War II. But was the military action really so successful? As early as 1943, the Allies had already agreed to conduct a gigantic offensive in western Europe aimed at crushing the enemy once and for all. Despite a tight schedule and many obstacles, the Normandy landings were given the green light. But due to differences of opinion over planning, a lack of boats and soldiers, inadequate preparation and bad weather, the military operation had to be postponed several times. Eventually, Allied troops stormed the beaches of Normandy in the early hours of 6 June 1944 - a day recorded in the history books as D-Day. Taken by surprise, the Germans were overwhelmed. But although the first phase of the operation passed off without major Allied losses, the Omaha Beach landings soon turned into a disaster. Despite leadership errors and fewer men, the German army displayed unexpected combative spirit. Logistics were also hampered by the poor weather conditions and the arrival of reinforcements was delayed. Despite their material and numerical superiority, the Allies suffered heavy losses and it took them more than two months to break through the German defense. Hopes that "Operation Overlord” would deal the enemy a fatal blow were not realized and the war dragged on. But in the end, all the operation’s failings were forgotten in the triumphant liberation of Paris. A film that uncovers the historical context and background of "Operation Overlord”. |
08/06 | 22h00>22h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 22h15>22h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
08/06 | 22h30>23h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Afrimaxx | Modern African Lifestyle | eng | In this episode, host Itumeleng KgosiGadi ya ga Banda is at the Sikelela Festival. Plus, depicting life's struggles, the musician who goes one step further than Burna Boy, and skateboarding as female empowerment. |
08/06 | 23h00>23h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 23h15>23h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
08/06 | 23h30>00h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Conflict Zone | Guests: Vera Jourova and Manfred Weber | eng | Tim Sebastian interviews Vera Jourova, Vice President of the European Commission for Values and Transparency and Manfred Weber, President of the European People's Party. |
08/06 | 00h00>00h03 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 00h03>01h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Under Poisoned Skies | Iraq’s Toxic Oil Fields | eng | Gas flaring, the harmful practice of burning excess natural gas during oil production, contributes to global warming through carbon dioxide and methane emissions. That’s why all the top oil companies and many countries have pledged to end routine flaring by 2030. But in 2021, Iraq was the world's second-worst gas flaring country and is warming twice as fast as the global average. "Under Poisoned Skies” reveals how some of the world’s biggest oil companies have managed to avoid declaring a substantial amount of flaring emissions, giving the impression to investors and the public that they are on track to hit these targets. Filmed in southern Iraq, home to some of the world’s biggest oil fields, the documentary also follows Professor Shukri, a professor of environmental pollution, as he tries to find out why people living near gas flares say that for them, "cancer is like the flu”. People like 20-year-old cancer survivor Ali, who lives in the middle of an oil field that he and his friends describe as "the cemetery”. With the support of global pollution experts specializing in environmental pollution, Professor Shukri conducts tests to measure pollution levels near oil fields. It’s the first time public data on pollution levels has been recorded in these communities. The results are concerning, and prompt Professor Shukri to ask: "why are we paying the price for this smoke which comes from the oil companies?” |
08/06 | 01h00>01h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
08/06 | 01h15>01h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Sports Life | From Addiction and Homelessness to the Stage | eng | This week on Sports Life we meet Jacobus Claassen. In his teenage years the South African hit rock bottom. He was homeless and addicted to substances such as Mandrax and crystal meth. With the help of an outreach-program Jacobus joined Zip Zap Circus School in Cape Town. This was the turning point in his life. Through his acrobatic talent he became a star in the circus arena. |
08/06 | 01h30>02h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Tomorrow Today | The Science Magazine | eng | Our cities are growing, becoming more crowded and hotter. Mini-forests and green facades can help to cool them down. And fewer sealed surfaces cuts the risk of flooding through heavy rainfall or rising sea levels. |
09/06 | 02h00>02h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 02h02>02h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Nomads of Benin | Driven Away by Drought | eng | In the hills of central Benin, the dry season is getting tougher every year. The Fulani herders living there have to travel further and further, in ever-larger groups in order to be able to provide for their cattle herds. Boubé, a young man in his 30s who comes from a long line of Fulani herders accustomed to migratory herding, knows that with each season that passes, tensions between local farmers and nomadic herders run increasingly high. After all, water shortages caused global warming are also impacting farmers. They’re reluctant to share their water sources with the Fulani herdsmen. But this year, Boubé doesn't want to stand idly by and aims to mediate between the parties. He’s well aware that the conflict between herders and farmers over the division of land and water could escalate. |
09/06 | 02h30>03h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | In Good Shape | Keep your hair, teeth and skin fit | eng | Excessive skincare and hair styling is ineffective and potentially counterproductive - leaving lackluster hair and pimples. Over-brushing can also be a source of harm. In Good Shape with top tips to ensure you stay looking good. |
09/06 | 03h00>03h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 03h15>03h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
09/06 | 03h30>04h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Euromaxx | Lifestyle Europe | eng | What makes Berlin’s Olympic Stadium so famous? Plus: how falling down can be choreographed esthetically. And: what goes onto a British sandwich? |
09/06 | 04h00>04h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 04h02>04h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | Sports Life | From Addiction and Homelessness to the Stage | eng | This week on Sports Life we meet Jacobus Claassen. In his teenage years the South African hit rock bottom. He was homeless and addicted to substances such as Mandrax and crystal meth. With the help of an outreach-program Jacobus joined Zip Zap Circus School in Cape Town. This was the turning point in his life. Through his acrobatic talent he became a star in the circus arena. |
09/06 | 04h15>05h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | D-Day and the Tremendous Cost of Victory | The Story of Operation Overlord | eng | "Operation Overlord” is often retrospectively regarded as a heroic achievement: the biggest combined sea, air and land operation in the history of World War II. But was the military action really so successful? As early as 1943, the Allies had already agreed to conduct a gigantic offensive in western Europe aimed at crushing the enemy once and for all. Despite a tight schedule and many obstacles, the Normandy landings were given the green light. But due to differences of opinion over planning, a lack of boats and soldiers, inadequate preparation and bad weather, the military operation had to be postponed several times. Eventually, Allied troops stormed the beaches of Normandy in the early hours of 6 June 1944 - a day recorded in the history books as D-Day. Taken by surprise, the Germans were overwhelmed. But although the first phase of the operation passed off without major Allied losses, the Omaha Beach landings soon turned into a disaster. Despite leadership errors and fewer men, the German army displayed unexpected combative spirit. Logistics were also hampered by the poor weather conditions and the arrival of reinforcements was delayed. Despite their material and numerical superiority, the Allies suffered heavy losses and it took them more than two months to break through the German defense. Hopes that "Operation Overlord” would deal the enemy a fatal blow were not realized and the war dragged on. But in the end, all the operation’s failings were forgotten in the triumphant liberation of Paris. A film that uncovers the historical context and background of "Operation Overlord”. |
09/06 | 05h00>05h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 05h15>05h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
09/06 | 05h30>06h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Nomads of Benin | Driven Away by Drought | eng | In the hills of central Benin, the dry season is getting tougher every year. The Fulani herders living there have to travel further and further, in ever-larger groups in order to be able to provide for their cattle herds. Boubé, a young man in his 30s who comes from a long line of Fulani herders accustomed to migratory herding, knows that with each season that passes, tensions between local farmers and nomadic herders run increasingly high. After all, water shortages caused global warming are also impacting farmers. They’re reluctant to share their water sources with the Fulani herdsmen. But this year, Boubé doesn't want to stand idly by and aims to mediate between the parties. He’s well aware that the conflict between herders and farmers over the division of land and water could escalate. |
09/06 | 06h00>06h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 06h15>06h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Sports Life | From Addiction and Homelessness to the Stage | eng | This week on Sports Life we meet Jacobus Claassen. In his teenage years the South African hit rock bottom. He was homeless and addicted to substances such as Mandrax and crystal meth. With the help of an outreach-program Jacobus joined Zip Zap Circus School in Cape Town. This was the turning point in his life. Through his acrobatic talent he became a star in the circus arena. |
09/06 | 06h30>07h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | REV | The Global Auto and Mobility Show | eng | The Mini has fans the world over, especially women. A British pop culture icon, it’s starred in films and won rallies. Plus: Ride with a teen who lives on trains and go for a spin with South Africa’s Queen of Smoke. |
09/06 | 07h00>07h03 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 07h03>08h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Under Poisoned Skies | Iraq’s Toxic Oil Fields | eng | Gas flaring, the harmful practice of burning excess natural gas during oil production, contributes to global warming through carbon dioxide and methane emissions. That’s why all the top oil companies and many countries have pledged to end routine flaring by 2030. But in 2021, Iraq was the world's second-worst gas flaring country and is warming twice as fast as the global average. "Under Poisoned Skies” reveals how some of the world’s biggest oil companies have managed to avoid declaring a substantial amount of flaring emissions, giving the impression to investors and the public that they are on track to hit these targets. Filmed in southern Iraq, home to some of the world’s biggest oil fields, the documentary also follows Professor Shukri, a professor of environmental pollution, as he tries to find out why people living near gas flares say that for them, "cancer is like the flu”. People like 20-year-old cancer survivor Ali, who lives in the middle of an oil field that he and his friends describe as "the cemetery”. With the support of global pollution experts specializing in environmental pollution, Professor Shukri conducts tests to measure pollution levels near oil fields. It’s the first time public data on pollution levels has been recorded in these communities. The results are concerning, and prompt Professor Shukri to ask: "why are we paying the price for this smoke which comes from the oil companies?” |
09/06 | 08h00>08h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 08h15>08h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
09/06 | 08h30>09h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Euromaxx | Lifestyle Europe | eng | What makes Berlin’s Olympic Stadium so famous? Plus: how falling down can be choreographed esthetically. And: what goes onto a British sandwich? |
09/06 | 09h00>09h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 09h15>09h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
09/06 | 09h30>10h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Arts Unveiled | The Truth Behind Two Iconic Artworks | eng | They have this in common: Fascinating stories that combine politics and art. Where is the famous Amber Room? - and why is the iconic Nefertiti bust so controversial? |
09/06 | 10h00>10h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 10h15>11h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Indian Age | It’s Youth and the Future | eng | The median age in India is just over 28 years. That’s very young in global comparison, especially with western industrialized nations. How do young Indians, who are exactly 28 years old in 2024, experience their country? A nation that’s often referred to as the world’s largest democracy, but where rising Hindu nationalism under Prime Minister Narendra Modi is resulting in repression and sometimes violence against Muslims. A nation where economic growth surpassed that of China in 2023; one with designs on becoming one of the world’s most important global players, both economically and politically. A nation of contrasts: Alongside up-and-coming startups launching groundbreaking business ideas, it’s estimated that one in every five people in India can neither read nor write. There are few countries in the world where the gap between rich and poor is so wide, where hunger and luxury are present cheek by jowl. At the same time, advancement opportunities continue to be determined by an officially obsolete system of social castes. The documentary observes 28-year-old Indians as they go about their everyday lives. Some live in poverty in rural areas, others work in one of the many startups in urban centers. Some are members of the Dalit caste, also known as the untouchables, still marginalized in India today and often only able to find jobs that no one else wants to do. The film profiles Hindus and Muslims, an illiterate woman fighting for a future for her children, a businessman with a life full of luxury. What are their dreams; what prevents them from realizing them? And as India strives to become a new superpower, will it take all its citizens along for the ride? Parliamentary elections are taking place in India from April to May 2024. Will Narendra Modi and his Hindu nationalist BJP party continue at the helm of the country? |
09/06 | 11h00>11h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 11h15>11h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
09/06 | 11h30>12h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The 77 Percent | Street Debate: What is driving young Nigerian professionals to "japa"? | eng | Nigeria is losing a significant number of its most talented professionals, who are leaving the country in search of better opportunities abroad. This mass migration of Nigerians is commonly referred to as 'japa.' In this week’s show, Edith Kimani asks young Nigerians what is driving them to leave the country. |
09/06 | 12h00>12h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 12h15>12h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
09/06 | 12h30>13h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | REV | The Global Auto and Mobility Show | eng | The Mini has fans the world over, especially women. A British pop culture icon, it’s starred in films and won rallies. Plus: Ride with a teen who lives on trains and go for a spin with South Africa’s Queen of Smoke. |
09/06 | 13h00>13h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 13h15>13h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Sports Life | From Addiction and Homelessness to the Stage | eng | This week on Sports Life we meet Jacobus Claassen. In his teenage years the South African hit rock bottom. He was homeless and addicted to substances such as Mandrax and crystal meth. With the help of an outreach-program Jacobus joined Zip Zap Circus School in Cape Town. This was the turning point in his life. Through his acrobatic talent he became a star in the circus arena. |
09/06 | 13h30>14h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The 77 Percent | Street Debate: What is driving young Nigerian professionals to "japa"? | eng | Nigeria is losing a significant number of its most talented professionals, who are leaving the country in search of better opportunities abroad. This mass migration of Nigerians is commonly referred to as 'japa.' In this week’s show, Edith Kimani asks young Nigerians what is driving them to leave the country. |
09/06 | 14h00>14h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 14h15>14h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
09/06 | 14h30>15h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Arts Unveiled | The Truth Behind Two Iconic Artworks | eng | They have this in common: Fascinating stories that combine politics and art. Where is the famous Amber Room? - and why is the iconic Nefertiti bust so controversial? |
09/06 | 15h00>15h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 15h15>16h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Endgame for Europe | The European Union at a Crossroads | eng | What consequences would a shift to the right have for the EU? This documentary accompanies Members of the European Parliament, while analyzing the political shifts that have taken place under Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. For example: EU Commission President and radical right-wing Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni profess to different political agendas. Yet, friendly embraces and amicable conversations are indeed suggestive of a world where an ability to get along with each other might prove mutually advantageous - something almost symbolic of the EU itself. "Endgame for Europe - The European Union at the Crossroads” takes a close look at the battle being waged between pro-European forces and their radical right-wing opponents over the direction the EU will take in coming years. Bones of contention include topics like migration, climate change and the distribution of power within the European Union itself. A look at von der Leyen's tenure to date (2019-2024) shows the extent to which the struggle for compromise has shifted political positions. When it comes to migration, many EU measures are now in line with the demands of the radical right. The EU’s climate policy, known as the Green Deal, is in danger of failing. But many questions remain unanswered: Will the current veto right of individual member nations be reformed in favor of a majority principle? Will the EU remain capable of action? Might the EU gain in power? Or lose? The documentary seeks answers to difficult questions. How much compromise can Europe tolerate? And where do European politicians draw the line? |
09/06 | 16h00>16h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 16h15>16h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
09/06 | 16h30>17h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Nomads of Benin | Driven Away by Drought | eng | In the hills of central Benin, the dry season is getting tougher every year. The Fulani herders living there have to travel further and further, in ever-larger groups in order to be able to provide for their cattle herds. Boubé, a young man in his 30s who comes from a long line of Fulani herders accustomed to migratory herding, knows that with each season that passes, tensions between local farmers and nomadic herders run increasingly high. After all, water shortages caused global warming are also impacting farmers. They’re reluctant to share their water sources with the Fulani herdsmen. But this year, Boubé doesn't want to stand idly by and aims to mediate between the parties. He’s well aware that the conflict between herders and farmers over the division of land and water could escalate. |
09/06 | 17h00>17h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 17h15>17h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | HER Women in Asia | eng | Although the number has fallen slightly in recent years, UNICEF warns that ongoing crises, armed conflicts, climate disaster, and the consequences of the pandemic could undo progress made so far. | |
09/06 | 17h30>18h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Arts Unveiled | The Truth Behind Two Iconic Artworks | eng | They have this in common: Fascinating stories that combine politics and art. Where is the famous Amber Room? - and why is the iconic Nefertiti bust so controversial? |
09/06 | 18h00>18h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 18h30>19h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Afrimaxx | Modern African Lifestyle | eng | In this episode, host Itumeleng KgosiGadi ya ga Banda is at the Sikelela Festival. Plus, depicting life's struggles, the musician who goes one step further than Burna Boy, and skateboarding as female empowerment. |
09/06 | 19h00>19h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 19h15>19h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Sports Life | From Addiction and Homelessness to the Stage | eng | This week on Sports Life we meet Jacobus Claassen. In his teenage years the South African hit rock bottom. He was homeless and addicted to substances such as Mandrax and crystal meth. With the help of an outreach-program Jacobus joined Zip Zap Circus School in Cape Town. This was the turning point in his life. Through his acrobatic talent he became a star in the circus arena. |
09/06 | 19h30>20h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Euromaxx | Lifestyle Europe | eng | What makes Berlin’s Olympic Stadium so famous? Plus: how falling down can be choreographed esthetically. And: what goes onto a British sandwich? |
09/06 | 20h00>21h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 21h15>22h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Deep Sea Greed | Exploiting the Ocean Floor - Part 1 | eng | Deep down in the ocean, valuable raw materials are stored en masse: manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper. Many of these materials are currently in great demand. Technically, it is possible to harvest manganese nodules, for example, in the deep sea. But should we do it? Even among the researchers aboard the "Island Pride," opinions differ. They are part of a deep-sea expedition to research the possible effects of harvesting raw materials on the ocean floor. What will be the consequences if humans exploit these valuable deposits? Will it destroy the fragile underwater environment? Reporter Michael Stocks and his cameraman spent weeks aboard the ship, on which scientists are monitoring the deployment of a giant underwater harvesting machine on the ocean floor. Humans are dredging the sand from beaches, overfishing fish stocks worldwide - is the seabed now to be industrially exploited as well? |
09/06 | 22h00>22h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 22h15>22h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Sports Life | From Addiction and Homelessness to the Stage | eng | This week on Sports Life we meet Jacobus Claassen. In his teenage years the South African hit rock bottom. He was homeless and addicted to substances such as Mandrax and crystal meth. With the help of an outreach-program Jacobus joined Zip Zap Circus School in Cape Town. This was the turning point in his life. Through his acrobatic talent he became a star in the circus arena. |
09/06 | 22h30>23h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | Africa | eng | |
09/06 | 23h00>23h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 23h30>00h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Tomorrow Today | The Science Magazine | eng | Our cities are growing, becoming more crowded and hotter. Mini-forests and green facades can help to cool them down. And fewer sealed surfaces cuts the risk of flooding through heavy rainfall or rising sea levels. |
09/06 | 00h00>00h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 00h02>00h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Euromaxx | Lifestyle Europe | eng | What makes Berlin’s Olympic Stadium so famous? Plus: how falling down can be choreographed esthetically. And: what goes onto a British sandwich? |
09/06 | 00h30>01h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Arts Unveiled | The Truth Behind Two Iconic Artworks | eng | They have this in common: Fascinating stories that combine politics and art. Where is the famous Amber Room? - and why is the iconic Nefertiti bust so controversial? |
09/06 | 01h00>01h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
09/06 | 01h15>01h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
09/06 | 01h30>02h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | REV | The Global Auto and Mobility Show | eng | The Mini has fans the world over, especially women. A British pop culture icon, it’s starred in films and won rallies. Plus: Ride with a teen who lives on trains and go for a spin with South Africa’s Queen of Smoke. |
10/06 | 02h00>02h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 02h02>02h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Euromaxx | Lifestyle Europe | eng | What makes Berlin’s Olympic Stadium so famous? Plus: how falling down can be choreographed esthetically. And: what goes onto a British sandwich? |
10/06 | 02h30>03h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Global Us | More Climate Protection, More Democracy? Let's go for it! | eng | Ship breaking in Bangladesh: toxic for people and nature. Germany's young people and their commitment to democracy. Is importing caregivers the answer to the current shortfall? And hugging trees to curb deforestation in Uganda. |
10/06 | 03h00>03h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 03h15>03h45 | (0x00) ? | eng | Nomads of Benin | Driven Away by Drought | eng | In the hills of central Benin, the dry season is getting tougher every year. The Fulani herders living there have to travel further and further, in ever-larger groups in order to be able to provide for their cattle herds. Boubé, a young man in his 30s who comes from a long line of Fulani herders accustomed to migratory herding, knows that with each season that passes, tensions between local farmers and nomadic herders run increasingly high. After all, water shortages caused global warming are also impacting farmers. They’re reluctant to share their water sources with the Fulani herdsmen. But this year, Boubé doesn't want to stand idly by and aims to mediate between the parties. He’s well aware that the conflict between herders and farmers over the division of land and water could escalate. |
10/06 | 03h45>04h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
10/06 | 04h00>04h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 04h02>04h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco India | Invasive species: A big problem that's hard to fix | eng | Introduced on purpose, by mistake or as a result of climate change, invasive species destroy ecosystems and are often expensive to eradicate. We explore solutions, from turning pests into useful products, to serving them up as culinary delicacies. |
10/06 | 04h30>05h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | In Good Shape | Keep your hair, teeth and skin fit | eng | Excessive skincare and hair styling is ineffective and potentially counterproductive - leaving lackluster hair and pimples. Over-brushing can also be a source of harm. In Good Shape with top tips to ensure you stay looking good. |
10/06 | 05h00>05h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 05h15>05h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Sports Life | From Addiction and Homelessness to the Stage | eng | This week on Sports Life we meet Jacobus Claassen. In his teenage years the South African hit rock bottom. He was homeless and addicted to substances such as Mandrax and crystal meth. With the help of an outreach-program Jacobus joined Zip Zap Circus School in Cape Town. This was the turning point in his life. Through his acrobatic talent he became a star in the circus arena. |
10/06 | 05h30>06h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Euromaxx | Lifestyle Europe | eng | What makes Berlin’s Olympic Stadium so famous? Plus: how falling down can be choreographed esthetically. And: what goes onto a British sandwich? |
10/06 | 06h00>06h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 06h15>06h45 | (0x00) ? | eng | Global Us | More Climate Protection, More Democracy? Let's go for it! | eng | Ship breaking in Bangladesh: toxic for people and nature. Germany's young people and their commitment to democracy. Is importing caregivers the answer to the current shortfall? And hugging trees to curb deforestation in Uganda. |
10/06 | 06h45>07h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
10/06 | 07h00>07h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 07h02>07h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Nomads of Benin | Driven Away by Drought | eng | In the hills of central Benin, the dry season is getting tougher every year. The Fulani herders living there have to travel further and further, in ever-larger groups in order to be able to provide for their cattle herds. Boubé, a young man in his 30s who comes from a long line of Fulani herders accustomed to migratory herding, knows that with each season that passes, tensions between local farmers and nomadic herders run increasingly high. After all, water shortages caused global warming are also impacting farmers. They’re reluctant to share their water sources with the Fulani herdsmen. But this year, Boubé doesn't want to stand idly by and aims to mediate between the parties. He’s well aware that the conflict between herders and farmers over the division of land and water could escalate. |
10/06 | 07h30>08h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Tomorrow Today | The Science Magazine | eng | Our cities are growing, becoming more crowded and hotter. Mini-forests and green facades can help to cool them down. And fewer sealed surfaces cuts the risk of flooding through heavy rainfall or rising sea levels. |
10/06 | 08h00>08h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 08h15>08h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
10/06 | 08h30>09h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco Africa | The Environment Magazine | eng | From Ghana's huge floating solar panels to India's revival of ancient rainwater harvesting, Cameroon’s organic fertilizer from waste, and the protection of Berlin's ice-age sand dunes, we focus on positive eco-change around the world. |
10/06 | 09h00>09h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 09h30>10h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The 77 Percent | Street Debate: What is driving young Nigerian professionals to "japa"? | eng | Nigeria is losing a significant number of its most talented professionals, who are leaving the country in search of better opportunities abroad. This mass migration of Nigerians is commonly referred to as 'japa.' In this week’s show, Edith Kimani asks young Nigerians what is driving them to leave the country. |
10/06 | 10h00>10h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 10h30>10h45 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
10/06 | 10h45>11h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
10/06 | 11h00>11h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 11h15>12h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Deep Sea Greed | Exploiting the Ocean Floor - Part 1 | eng | Deep down in the ocean, valuable raw materials are stored en masse: manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper. Many of these materials are currently in great demand. Technically, it is possible to harvest manganese nodules, for example, in the deep sea. But should we do it? Even among the researchers aboard the "Island Pride," opinions differ. They are part of a deep-sea expedition to research the possible effects of harvesting raw materials on the ocean floor. What will be the consequences if humans exploit these valuable deposits? Will it destroy the fragile underwater environment? Reporter Michael Stocks and his cameraman spent weeks aboard the ship, on which scientists are monitoring the deployment of a giant underwater harvesting machine on the ocean floor. Humans are dredging the sand from beaches, overfishing fish stocks worldwide - is the seabed now to be industrially exploited as well? |
10/06 | 12h00>12h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 12h30>13h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco Africa | The Environment Magazine | eng | From Ghana's huge floating solar panels to India's revival of ancient rainwater harvesting, Cameroon’s organic fertilizer from waste, and the protection of Berlin's ice-age sand dunes, we focus on positive eco-change around the world. |
10/06 | 13h00>13h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 13h30>14h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Global Us | More Climate Protection, More Democracy? Let's go for it! | eng | Ship breaking in Bangladesh: toxic for people and nature. Germany's young people and their commitment to democracy. Is importing caregivers the answer to the current shortfall? And hugging trees to curb deforestation in Uganda. |
10/06 | 14h00>14h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 14h15>15h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | D-Day and the Tremendous Cost of Victory | The Story of Operation Overlord | eng | "Operation Overlord” is often retrospectively regarded as a heroic achievement: the biggest combined sea, air and land operation in the history of World War II. But was the military action really so successful? As early as 1943, the Allies had already agreed to conduct a gigantic offensive in western Europe aimed at crushing the enemy once and for all. Despite a tight schedule and many obstacles, the Normandy landings were given the green light. But due to differences of opinion over planning, a lack of boats and soldiers, inadequate preparation and bad weather, the military operation had to be postponed several times. Eventually, Allied troops stormed the beaches of Normandy in the early hours of 6 June 1944 - a day recorded in the history books as D-Day. Taken by surprise, the Germans were overwhelmed. But although the first phase of the operation passed off without major Allied losses, the Omaha Beach landings soon turned into a disaster. Despite leadership errors and fewer men, the German army displayed unexpected combative spirit. Logistics were also hampered by the poor weather conditions and the arrival of reinforcements was delayed. Despite their material and numerical superiority, the Allies suffered heavy losses and it took them more than two months to break through the German defense. Hopes that "Operation Overlord” would deal the enemy a fatal blow were not realized and the war dragged on. But in the end, all the operation’s failings were forgotten in the triumphant liberation of Paris. A film that uncovers the historical context and background of "Operation Overlord”. |
10/06 | 15h00>15h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 15h15>15h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Planet A | eng | ||
10/06 | 15h30>16h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The 77 Percent | Street Debate: What is driving young Nigerian professionals to "japa"? | eng | Nigeria is losing a significant number of its most talented professionals, who are leaving the country in search of better opportunities abroad. This mass migration of Nigerians is commonly referred to as 'japa.' In this week’s show, Edith Kimani asks young Nigerians what is driving them to leave the country. |
10/06 | 16h00>16h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 16h30>17h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Tomorrow Today | The Science Magazine | eng | Our cities are growing, becoming more crowded and hotter. Mini-forests and green facades can help to cool them down. And fewer sealed surfaces cuts the risk of flooding through heavy rainfall or rising sea levels. |
10/06 | 17h00>17h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 17h15>18h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Deep Sea Greed | Exploiting the Ocean Floor - Part 1 | eng | Deep down in the ocean, valuable raw materials are stored en masse: manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper. Many of these materials are currently in great demand. Technically, it is possible to harvest manganese nodules, for example, in the deep sea. But should we do it? Even among the researchers aboard the "Island Pride," opinions differ. They are part of a deep-sea expedition to research the possible effects of harvesting raw materials on the ocean floor. What will be the consequences if humans exploit these valuable deposits? Will it destroy the fragile underwater environment? Reporter Michael Stocks and his cameraman spent weeks aboard the ship, on which scientists are monitoring the deployment of a giant underwater harvesting machine on the ocean floor. Humans are dredging the sand from beaches, overfishing fish stocks worldwide - is the seabed now to be industrially exploited as well? |
10/06 | 18h00>18h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 18h30>19h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Global Us | More Climate Protection, More Democracy? Let's go for it! | eng | Ship breaking in Bangladesh: toxic for people and nature. Germany's young people and their commitment to democracy. Is importing caregivers the answer to the current shortfall? And hugging trees to curb deforestation in Uganda. |
10/06 | 19h00>19h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 19h30>20h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Arts Unveiled | The Truth Behind Two Iconic Artworks | eng | They have this in common: Fascinating stories that combine politics and art. Where is the famous Amber Room? - and why is the iconic Nefertiti bust so controversial? |
10/06 | 20h00>20h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 20h15>20h45 | (0x00) ? | eng | Close up | Dangerous Diving Child gold miners in the Philippines | eng | All over the country, families are digging for gold in thousands of small-scale mines without supervision or controls: men, women and children, all hoping for a few nuggets that they can sell for a handful of pesos. In the swamps in the center of the country, 13-year-old Hato spends hours every day diving for gold in deep water-filled holes. He breathes through a thin plastic tube connected to an air compressor on his father's dugout canoe. One small puncture would mean certain death for the boy. 800 kilometers away, on the island of Leyte, 14-year-old Dennis Junior dives 20 meters deep into the warm, clear waters of the Bohol Sea, using the same improvised breathing equipment. Together with his father, he digs for gold on the seabed, filling sacks with sand and bringing them to the surface. We follow Hato and Dennis Junior in the Philippines as they go about their dangerous work. According to the NGO Human Rights Watch, thousands of children across the country are helping their parents search for gold. |
10/06 | 20h45>21h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
10/06 | 21h00>21h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 21h15>21h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Planet A | eng | ||
10/06 | 21h30>22h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Global Us | More Climate Protection, More Democracy? Let's go for it! | eng | Ship breaking in Bangladesh: toxic for people and nature. Germany's young people and their commitment to democracy. Is importing caregivers the answer to the current shortfall? And hugging trees to curb deforestation in Uganda. |
10/06 | 22h00>22h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 22h30>23h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
10/06 | 23h00>23h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 23h15>00h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Deep Sea Greed | Exploiting the Ocean Floor - Part 1 | eng | Deep down in the ocean, valuable raw materials are stored en masse: manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper. Many of these materials are currently in great demand. Technically, it is possible to harvest manganese nodules, for example, in the deep sea. But should we do it? Even among the researchers aboard the "Island Pride," opinions differ. They are part of a deep-sea expedition to research the possible effects of harvesting raw materials on the ocean floor. What will be the consequences if humans exploit these valuable deposits? Will it destroy the fragile underwater environment? Reporter Michael Stocks and his cameraman spent weeks aboard the ship, on which scientists are monitoring the deployment of a giant underwater harvesting machine on the ocean floor. Humans are dredging the sand from beaches, overfishing fish stocks worldwide - is the seabed now to be industrially exploited as well? |
10/06 | 00h00>00h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 00h02>00h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
10/06 | 00h30>01h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Nomads of Benin | Driven Away by Drought | eng | In the hills of central Benin, the dry season is getting tougher every year. The Fulani herders living there have to travel further and further, in ever-larger groups in order to be able to provide for their cattle herds. Boubé, a young man in his 30s who comes from a long line of Fulani herders accustomed to migratory herding, knows that with each season that passes, tensions between local farmers and nomadic herders run increasingly high. After all, water shortages caused global warming are also impacting farmers. They’re reluctant to share their water sources with the Fulani herdsmen. But this year, Boubé doesn't want to stand idly by and aims to mediate between the parties. He’s well aware that the conflict between herders and farmers over the division of land and water could escalate. |
10/06 | 01h00>01h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
10/06 | 01h15>01h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Planet A | eng | ||
10/06 | 01h30>02h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Close up | Dangerous Diving Child gold miners in the Philippines | eng | All over the country, families are digging for gold in thousands of small-scale mines without supervision or controls: men, women and children, all hoping for a few nuggets that they can sell for a handful of pesos. In the swamps in the center of the country, 13-year-old Hato spends hours every day diving for gold in deep water-filled holes. He breathes through a thin plastic tube connected to an air compressor on his father's dugout canoe. One small puncture would mean certain death for the boy. 800 kilometers away, on the island of Leyte, 14-year-old Dennis Junior dives 20 meters deep into the warm, clear waters of the Bohol Sea, using the same improvised breathing equipment. Together with his father, he digs for gold on the seabed, filling sacks with sand and bringing them to the surface. We follow Hato and Dennis Junior in the Philippines as they go about their dangerous work. According to the NGO Human Rights Watch, thousands of children across the country are helping their parents search for gold. |
11/06 | 02h00>02h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 02h02>02h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
11/06 | 02h30>03h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco Africa | The Environment Magazine | eng | From Ghana's huge floating solar panels to India's revival of ancient rainwater harvesting, Cameroon’s organic fertilizer from waste, and the protection of Berlin's ice-age sand dunes, we focus on positive eco-change around the world. |
11/06 | 03h00>03h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 03h15>04h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Pathan Sisters | Growing up in the Shadow of Trauma in India | eng | Sofia’s and Suzain’s family experienced a devastating trauma: More than two decades ago they only just managed to escape the deadly anti-Muslim pogroms of 2002 in the state of Gujarat in western India. The massacre was triggered by an arson attack on a train that left 58 Hindu pilgrims dead. Blame was swiftly assigned to Muslims, despite the lack of evidence for this claim. Radical Hindus then called for bloody revenge. More than 1,000 people were killed in the ensuing pogroms, most of them Muslims. Women were raped, homes destroyed and families displaced. As teenagers, Sofia and Suzain refuse to allow the shadows of the past to prevent them living their lives to the full. But as they grow older, reality catches up with them. As the years pass, deadly religious tensions resurface across the country. |
11/06 | 04h00>04h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 04h02>04h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
11/06 | 04h30>05h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | REV | The Global Auto and Mobility Show | eng | The Mini has fans the world over, especially women. A British pop culture icon, it’s starred in films and won rallies. Plus: Ride with a teen who lives on trains and go for a spin with South Africa’s Queen of Smoke. |
11/06 | 05h00>05h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 05h15>05h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Planet A | eng | ||
11/06 | 05h30>06h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Close up | Dangerous Diving Child gold miners in the Philippines | eng | All over the country, families are digging for gold in thousands of small-scale mines without supervision or controls: men, women and children, all hoping for a few nuggets that they can sell for a handful of pesos. In the swamps in the center of the country, 13-year-old Hato spends hours every day diving for gold in deep water-filled holes. He breathes through a thin plastic tube connected to an air compressor on his father's dugout canoe. One small puncture would mean certain death for the boy. 800 kilometers away, on the island of Leyte, 14-year-old Dennis Junior dives 20 meters deep into the warm, clear waters of the Bohol Sea, using the same improvised breathing equipment. Together with his father, he digs for gold on the seabed, filling sacks with sand and bringing them to the surface. We follow Hato and Dennis Junior in the Philippines as they go about their dangerous work. According to the NGO Human Rights Watch, thousands of children across the country are helping their parents search for gold. |
11/06 | 06h00>06h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 06h15>07h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Pathan Sisters | Growing up in the Shadow of Trauma in India | eng | Sofia’s and Suzain’s family experienced a devastating trauma: More than two decades ago they only just managed to escape the deadly anti-Muslim pogroms of 2002 in the state of Gujarat in western India. The massacre was triggered by an arson attack on a train that left 58 Hindu pilgrims dead. Blame was swiftly assigned to Muslims, despite the lack of evidence for this claim. Radical Hindus then called for bloody revenge. More than 1,000 people were killed in the ensuing pogroms, most of them Muslims. Women were raped, homes destroyed and families displaced. As teenagers, Sofia and Suzain refuse to allow the shadows of the past to prevent them living their lives to the full. But as they grow older, reality catches up with them. As the years pass, deadly religious tensions resurface across the country. |
11/06 | 07h00>07h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 07h02>07h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
11/06 | 07h30>08h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco India | Invasive species: A big problem that's hard to fix | eng | Introduced on purpose, by mistake or as a result of climate change, invasive species destroy ecosystems and are often expensive to eradicate. We explore solutions, from turning pests into useful products, to serving them up as culinary delicacies. |
11/06 | 08h00>08h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 08h15>08h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Planet A | eng | ||
11/06 | 08h30>09h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Arts Unveiled | The Truth Behind Two Iconic Artworks | eng | They have this in common: Fascinating stories that combine politics and art. Where is the famous Amber Room? - and why is the iconic Nefertiti bust so controversial? |
11/06 | 09h00>09h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 09h30>10h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Nomads of Benin | Driven Away by Drought | eng | In the hills of central Benin, the dry season is getting tougher every year. The Fulani herders living there have to travel further and further, in ever-larger groups in order to be able to provide for their cattle herds. Boubé, a young man in his 30s who comes from a long line of Fulani herders accustomed to migratory herding, knows that with each season that passes, tensions between local farmers and nomadic herders run increasingly high. After all, water shortages caused global warming are also impacting farmers. They’re reluctant to share their water sources with the Fulani herdsmen. But this year, Boubé doesn't want to stand idly by and aims to mediate between the parties. He’s well aware that the conflict between herders and farmers over the division of land and water could escalate. |
11/06 | 10h00>10h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 10h30>11h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco Africa | The Environment Magazine | eng | From Ghana's huge floating solar panels to India's revival of ancient rainwater harvesting, Cameroon’s organic fertilizer from waste, and the protection of Berlin's ice-age sand dunes, we focus on positive eco-change around the world. |
11/06 | 11h00>11h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 11h15>11h45 | (0x00) ? | eng | Close up | Dangerous Diving Child gold miners in the Philippines | eng | All over the country, families are digging for gold in thousands of small-scale mines without supervision or controls: men, women and children, all hoping for a few nuggets that they can sell for a handful of pesos. In the swamps in the center of the country, 13-year-old Hato spends hours every day diving for gold in deep water-filled holes. He breathes through a thin plastic tube connected to an air compressor on his father's dugout canoe. One small puncture would mean certain death for the boy. 800 kilometers away, on the island of Leyte, 14-year-old Dennis Junior dives 20 meters deep into the warm, clear waters of the Bohol Sea, using the same improvised breathing equipment. Together with his father, he digs for gold on the seabed, filling sacks with sand and bringing them to the surface. We follow Hato and Dennis Junior in the Philippines as they go about their dangerous work. According to the NGO Human Rights Watch, thousands of children across the country are helping their parents search for gold. |
11/06 | 11h45>12h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
11/06 | 12h00>12h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 12h30>13h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Tomorrow Today | The Science Magazine | eng | Our cities are growing, becoming more crowded and hotter. Mini-forests and green facades can help to cool them down. And fewer sealed surfaces cuts the risk of flooding through heavy rainfall or rising sea levels. |
11/06 | 13h00>13h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 13h30>14h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | In Good Shape | Keep your hair, teeth and skin fit | eng | Excessive skincare and hair styling is ineffective and potentially counterproductive - leaving lackluster hair and pimples. Over-brushing can also be a source of harm. In Good Shape with top tips to ensure you stay looking good. |
11/06 | 14h00>14h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 14h15>14h45 | (0x00) ? | eng | Close up | Dangerous Diving Child gold miners in the Philippines | eng | All over the country, families are digging for gold in thousands of small-scale mines without supervision or controls: men, women and children, all hoping for a few nuggets that they can sell for a handful of pesos. In the swamps in the center of the country, 13-year-old Hato spends hours every day diving for gold in deep water-filled holes. He breathes through a thin plastic tube connected to an air compressor on his father's dugout canoe. One small puncture would mean certain death for the boy. 800 kilometers away, on the island of Leyte, 14-year-old Dennis Junior dives 20 meters deep into the warm, clear waters of the Bohol Sea, using the same improvised breathing equipment. Together with his father, he digs for gold on the seabed, filling sacks with sand and bringing them to the surface. We follow Hato and Dennis Junior in the Philippines as they go about their dangerous work. According to the NGO Human Rights Watch, thousands of children across the country are helping their parents search for gold. |
11/06 | 14h45>15h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
11/06 | 15h00>15h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 15h15>15h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The other Berlin! | eng | ||
11/06 | 15h30>16h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco India | Invasive species: A big problem that's hard to fix | eng | Introduced on purpose, by mistake or as a result of climate change, invasive species destroy ecosystems and are often expensive to eradicate. We explore solutions, from turning pests into useful products, to serving them up as culinary delicacies. |
11/06 | 16h00>16h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 16h30>17h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Global Us | More Climate Protection, More Democracy? Let's go for it! | eng | Ship breaking in Bangladesh: toxic for people and nature. Germany's young people and their commitment to democracy. Is importing caregivers the answer to the current shortfall? And hugging trees to curb deforestation in Uganda. |
11/06 | 17h00>17h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 17h15>17h45 | (0x00) ? | eng | Close up | Dangerous Diving Child gold miners in the Philippines | eng | All over the country, families are digging for gold in thousands of small-scale mines without supervision or controls: men, women and children, all hoping for a few nuggets that they can sell for a handful of pesos. In the swamps in the center of the country, 13-year-old Hato spends hours every day diving for gold in deep water-filled holes. He breathes through a thin plastic tube connected to an air compressor on his father's dugout canoe. One small puncture would mean certain death for the boy. 800 kilometers away, on the island of Leyte, 14-year-old Dennis Junior dives 20 meters deep into the warm, clear waters of the Bohol Sea, using the same improvised breathing equipment. Together with his father, he digs for gold on the seabed, filling sacks with sand and bringing them to the surface. We follow Hato and Dennis Junior in the Philippines as they go about their dangerous work. According to the NGO Human Rights Watch, thousands of children across the country are helping their parents search for gold. |
11/06 | 17h45>18h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Reporter | On Location | eng | Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated. |
11/06 | 18h00>18h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 18h30>19h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco Africa | The Environment Magazine | eng | From Ghana's huge floating solar panels to India's revival of ancient rainwater harvesting, Cameroon’s organic fertilizer from waste, and the protection of Berlin's ice-age sand dunes, we focus on positive eco-change around the world. |
11/06 | 19h00>19h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 19h30>20h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | REV | The Global Auto and Mobility Show | eng | The Mini has fans the world over, especially women. A British pop culture icon, it’s starred in films and won rallies. Plus: Ride with a teen who lives on trains and go for a spin with South Africa’s Queen of Smoke. |
11/06 | 20h00>20h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 20h15>21h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Pathan Sisters | Growing up in the Shadow of Trauma in India | eng | Sofia’s and Suzain’s family experienced a devastating trauma: More than two decades ago they only just managed to escape the deadly anti-Muslim pogroms of 2002 in the state of Gujarat in western India. The massacre was triggered by an arson attack on a train that left 58 Hindu pilgrims dead. Blame was swiftly assigned to Muslims, despite the lack of evidence for this claim. Radical Hindus then called for bloody revenge. More than 1,000 people were killed in the ensuing pogroms, most of them Muslims. Women were raped, homes destroyed and families displaced. As teenagers, Sofia and Suzain refuse to allow the shadows of the past to prevent them living their lives to the full. But as they grow older, reality catches up with them. As the years pass, deadly religious tensions resurface across the country. |
11/06 | 21h00>21h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 21h15>21h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The other Berlin! | eng | ||
11/06 | 21h30>22h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Tomorrow Today | The Science Magazine | eng | Our cities are growing, becoming more crowded and hotter. Mini-forests and green facades can help to cool them down. And fewer sealed surfaces cuts the risk of flooding through heavy rainfall or rising sea levels. |
11/06 | 22h00>22h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 22h30>23h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
11/06 | 23h00>23h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 23h15>23h45 | (0x00) ? | eng | Close up | Dangerous Diving Child gold miners in the Philippines | eng | All over the country, families are digging for gold in thousands of small-scale mines without supervision or controls: men, women and children, all hoping for a few nuggets that they can sell for a handful of pesos. In the swamps in the center of the country, 13-year-old Hato spends hours every day diving for gold in deep water-filled holes. He breathes through a thin plastic tube connected to an air compressor on his father's dugout canoe. One small puncture would mean certain death for the boy. 800 kilometers away, on the island of Leyte, 14-year-old Dennis Junior dives 20 meters deep into the warm, clear waters of the Bohol Sea, using the same improvised breathing equipment. Together with his father, he digs for gold on the seabed, filling sacks with sand and bringing them to the surface. We follow Hato and Dennis Junior in the Philippines as they go about their dangerous work. According to the NGO Human Rights Watch, thousands of children across the country are helping their parents search for gold. |
11/06 | 23h45>00h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Shift | What is the future of smart mobility? | eng | Flying cars, underground transport systems and artificial intelligence that finds the best route: the future of mobility is supposed to be digitally networked and powered by green electricity. But when will we get there? |
11/06 | 00h00>00h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 00h02>00h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
11/06 | 00h30>01h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The 77 Percent | Street Debate: What is driving young Nigerian professionals to "japa"? | eng | Nigeria is losing a significant number of its most talented professionals, who are leaving the country in search of better opportunities abroad. This mass migration of Nigerians is commonly referred to as 'japa.' In this week’s show, Edith Kimani asks young Nigerians what is driving them to leave the country. |
11/06 | 01h00>01h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
11/06 | 01h15>01h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The other Berlin! | eng | ||
11/06 | 01h30>02h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Global Us | More Climate Protection, More Democracy? Let's go for it! | eng | Ship breaking in Bangladesh: toxic for people and nature. Germany's young people and their commitment to democracy. Is importing caregivers the answer to the current shortfall? And hugging trees to curb deforestation in Uganda. |
12/06 | 02h00>02h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 02h02>02h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
12/06 | 02h30>03h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Made in Germany | Transformation pays | eng | Will Opel succeed in transforming itself into an EV manufacturer? Is Saudi Arabia really turning away from oil? How is India fighting the consequences of climate change? And how is a young Indian blogger faring on Instagram? |
12/06 | 03h00>03h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 03h15>04h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Greek Islands | Island Discoveries in the Aegean Sea | eng | Ikaria, in the north-eastern Aegean, is known as the island of 100-year-olds. It’s one of the world's five "Blue Zones", where people live to an exceptionally old age. Sifnos is the foodie island. Greece's most famous cook and cookbook author, Nikolaos Tselementes, was born here on this western Cyclades island and it’s no accident that it’s a place where food is important -- on Sifnos, traditional Greek cuisine is interpreted in a modern way. Kimolos is a small island that’s also home to the 95-year-old captain Augusti Galanos. He’s the archipelago’s most famous resident. Polyegos, with its wild goats, who all have names, is the largest uninhabited island in the Aegean. And Mykonos, the jet-set island that everyone knows, still holds plenty of surprises. |
12/06 | 04h00>04h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 04h02>04h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
12/06 | 04h30>05h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Global Us | More Climate Protection, More Democracy? Let's go for it! | eng | Ship breaking in Bangladesh: toxic for people and nature. Germany's young people and their commitment to democracy. Is importing caregivers the answer to the current shortfall? And hugging trees to curb deforestation in Uganda. |
12/06 | 05h00>05h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 05h15>05h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The other Berlin! | eng | ||
12/06 | 05h30>06h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco Africa | The Environment Magazine | eng | From Ghana's huge floating solar panels to India's revival of ancient rainwater harvesting, Cameroon’s organic fertilizer from waste, and the protection of Berlin's ice-age sand dunes, we focus on positive eco-change around the world. |
12/06 | 06h00>06h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 06h15>07h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Greek Islands | Island Discoveries in the Aegean Sea | eng | Ikaria, in the north-eastern Aegean, is known as the island of 100-year-olds. It’s one of the world's five "Blue Zones", where people live to an exceptionally old age. Sifnos is the foodie island. Greece's most famous cook and cookbook author, Nikolaos Tselementes, was born here on this western Cyclades island and it’s no accident that it’s a place where food is important -- on Sifnos, traditional Greek cuisine is interpreted in a modern way. Kimolos is a small island that’s also home to the 95-year-old captain Augusti Galanos. He’s the archipelago’s most famous resident. Polyegos, with its wild goats, who all have names, is the largest uninhabited island in the Aegean. And Mykonos, the jet-set island that everyone knows, still holds plenty of surprises. |
12/06 | 07h00>07h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 07h02>07h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
12/06 | 07h30>08h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Made in Germany | Transformation pays | eng | Will Opel succeed in transforming itself into an EV manufacturer? Is Saudi Arabia really turning away from oil? How is India fighting the consequences of climate change? And how is a young Indian blogger faring on Instagram? |
12/06 | 08h00>08h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 08h15>08h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The other Berlin! | eng | ||
12/06 | 08h30>09h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | In Good Shape | Keep your hair, teeth and skin fit | eng | Excessive skincare and hair styling is ineffective and potentially counterproductive - leaving lackluster hair and pimples. Over-brushing can also be a source of harm. In Good Shape with top tips to ensure you stay looking good. |
12/06 | 09h00>09h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 09h30>10h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Close up | Dangerous Diving Child gold miners in the Philippines | eng | All over the country, families are digging for gold in thousands of small-scale mines without supervision or controls: men, women and children, all hoping for a few nuggets that they can sell for a handful of pesos. In the swamps in the center of the country, 13-year-old Hato spends hours every day diving for gold in deep water-filled holes. He breathes through a thin plastic tube connected to an air compressor on his father's dugout canoe. One small puncture would mean certain death for the boy. 800 kilometers away, on the island of Leyte, 14-year-old Dennis Junior dives 20 meters deep into the warm, clear waters of the Bohol Sea, using the same improvised breathing equipment. Together with his father, he digs for gold on the seabed, filling sacks with sand and bringing them to the surface. We follow Hato and Dennis Junior in the Philippines as they go about their dangerous work. According to the NGO Human Rights Watch, thousands of children across the country are helping their parents search for gold. |
12/06 | 10h00>10h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 10h30>11h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco India | Invasive species: A big problem that's hard to fix | eng | Introduced on purpose, by mistake or as a result of climate change, invasive species destroy ecosystems and are often expensive to eradicate. We explore solutions, from turning pests into useful products, to serving them up as culinary delicacies. |
12/06 | 11h00>11h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 11h15>12h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Pathan Sisters | Growing up in the Shadow of Trauma in India | eng | Sofia’s and Suzain’s family experienced a devastating trauma: More than two decades ago they only just managed to escape the deadly anti-Muslim pogroms of 2002 in the state of Gujarat in western India. The massacre was triggered by an arson attack on a train that left 58 Hindu pilgrims dead. Blame was swiftly assigned to Muslims, despite the lack of evidence for this claim. Radical Hindus then called for bloody revenge. More than 1,000 people were killed in the ensuing pogroms, most of them Muslims. Women were raped, homes destroyed and families displaced. As teenagers, Sofia and Suzain refuse to allow the shadows of the past to prevent them living their lives to the full. But as they grow older, reality catches up with them. As the years pass, deadly religious tensions resurface across the country. |
12/06 | 12h00>12h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 12h30>13h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Close up | Dangerous Diving Child gold miners in the Philippines | eng | All over the country, families are digging for gold in thousands of small-scale mines without supervision or controls: men, women and children, all hoping for a few nuggets that they can sell for a handful of pesos. In the swamps in the center of the country, 13-year-old Hato spends hours every day diving for gold in deep water-filled holes. He breathes through a thin plastic tube connected to an air compressor on his father's dugout canoe. One small puncture would mean certain death for the boy. 800 kilometers away, on the island of Leyte, 14-year-old Dennis Junior dives 20 meters deep into the warm, clear waters of the Bohol Sea, using the same improvised breathing equipment. Together with his father, he digs for gold on the seabed, filling sacks with sand and bringing them to the surface. We follow Hato and Dennis Junior in the Philippines as they go about their dangerous work. According to the NGO Human Rights Watch, thousands of children across the country are helping their parents search for gold. |
12/06 | 13h00>13h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 13h30>14h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Made in Germany | Transformation pays | eng | Will Opel succeed in transforming itself into an EV manufacturer? Is Saudi Arabia really turning away from oil? How is India fighting the consequences of climate change? And how is a young Indian blogger faring on Instagram? |
12/06 | 14h00>14h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 14h15>15h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Deep Sea Greed | Exploiting the Ocean Floor - Part 1 | eng | Deep down in the ocean, valuable raw materials are stored en masse: manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper. Many of these materials are currently in great demand. Technically, it is possible to harvest manganese nodules, for example, in the deep sea. But should we do it? Even among the researchers aboard the "Island Pride," opinions differ. They are part of a deep-sea expedition to research the possible effects of harvesting raw materials on the ocean floor. What will be the consequences if humans exploit these valuable deposits? Will it destroy the fragile underwater environment? Reporter Michael Stocks and his cameraman spent weeks aboard the ship, on which scientists are monitoring the deployment of a giant underwater harvesting machine on the ocean floor. Humans are dredging the sand from beaches, overfishing fish stocks worldwide - is the seabed now to be industrially exploited as well? |
12/06 | 15h00>15h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 15h15>15h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | HER Women in Asia | eng | ||
12/06 | 15h30>16h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco Africa | The Environment Magazine | eng | From Ghana's huge floating solar panels to India's revival of ancient rainwater harvesting, Cameroon’s organic fertilizer from waste, and the protection of Berlin's ice-age sand dunes, we focus on positive eco-change around the world. |
12/06 | 16h00>16h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 16h30>17h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Made in Germany | Transformation pays | eng | Will Opel succeed in transforming itself into an EV manufacturer? Is Saudi Arabia really turning away from oil? How is India fighting the consequences of climate change? And how is a young Indian blogger faring on Instagram? |
12/06 | 17h00>17h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 17h15>18h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Pathan Sisters | Growing up in the Shadow of Trauma in India | eng | Sofia’s and Suzain’s family experienced a devastating trauma: More than two decades ago they only just managed to escape the deadly anti-Muslim pogroms of 2002 in the state of Gujarat in western India. The massacre was triggered by an arson attack on a train that left 58 Hindu pilgrims dead. Blame was swiftly assigned to Muslims, despite the lack of evidence for this claim. Radical Hindus then called for bloody revenge. More than 1,000 people were killed in the ensuing pogroms, most of them Muslims. Women were raped, homes destroyed and families displaced. As teenagers, Sofia and Suzain refuse to allow the shadows of the past to prevent them living their lives to the full. But as they grow older, reality catches up with them. As the years pass, deadly religious tensions resurface across the country. |
12/06 | 18h00>18h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 18h30>19h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco India | Invasive species: A big problem that's hard to fix | eng | Introduced on purpose, by mistake or as a result of climate change, invasive species destroy ecosystems and are often expensive to eradicate. We explore solutions, from turning pests into useful products, to serving them up as culinary delicacies. |
12/06 | 19h00>19h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 19h30>20h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Nomads of Benin | Driven Away by Drought | eng | In the hills of central Benin, the dry season is getting tougher every year. The Fulani herders living there have to travel further and further, in ever-larger groups in order to be able to provide for their cattle herds. Boubé, a young man in his 30s who comes from a long line of Fulani herders accustomed to migratory herding, knows that with each season that passes, tensions between local farmers and nomadic herders run increasingly high. After all, water shortages caused global warming are also impacting farmers. They’re reluctant to share their water sources with the Fulani herdsmen. But this year, Boubé doesn't want to stand idly by and aims to mediate between the parties. He’s well aware that the conflict between herders and farmers over the division of land and water could escalate. |
12/06 | 20h00>20h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 20h15>21h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Greek Islands | Island Discoveries in the Aegean Sea | eng | Ikaria, in the north-eastern Aegean, is known as the island of 100-year-olds. It’s one of the world's five "Blue Zones", where people live to an exceptionally old age. Sifnos is the foodie island. Greece's most famous cook and cookbook author, Nikolaos Tselementes, was born here on this western Cyclades island and it’s no accident that it’s a place where food is important -- on Sifnos, traditional Greek cuisine is interpreted in a modern way. Kimolos is a small island that’s also home to the 95-year-old captain Augusti Galanos. He’s the archipelago’s most famous resident. Polyegos, with its wild goats, who all have names, is the largest uninhabited island in the Aegean. And Mykonos, the jet-set island that everyone knows, still holds plenty of surprises. |
12/06 | 21h00>21h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 21h15>21h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | HER Women in Asia | eng | ||
12/06 | 21h30>22h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Conflict Zone | Confronting the Powerful | eng | |
12/06 | 22h00>22h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 22h30>23h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
12/06 | 23h00>23h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 23h15>00h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Pathan Sisters | Growing up in the Shadow of Trauma in India | eng | Sofia’s and Suzain’s family experienced a devastating trauma: More than two decades ago they only just managed to escape the deadly anti-Muslim pogroms of 2002 in the state of Gujarat in western India. The massacre was triggered by an arson attack on a train that left 58 Hindu pilgrims dead. Blame was swiftly assigned to Muslims, despite the lack of evidence for this claim. Radical Hindus then called for bloody revenge. More than 1,000 people were killed in the ensuing pogroms, most of them Muslims. Women were raped, homes destroyed and families displaced. As teenagers, Sofia and Suzain refuse to allow the shadows of the past to prevent them living their lives to the full. But as they grow older, reality catches up with them. As the years pass, deadly religious tensions resurface across the country. |
12/06 | 00h00>00h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 00h02>00h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
12/06 | 00h30>01h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Made in Germany | Transformation pays | eng | Will Opel succeed in transforming itself into an EV manufacturer? Is Saudi Arabia really turning away from oil? How is India fighting the consequences of climate change? And how is a young Indian blogger faring on Instagram? |
12/06 | 01h00>01h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
12/06 | 01h15>01h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | HER Women in Asia | eng | ||
12/06 | 01h30>02h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Focus on Europe | Spotlight on People | eng | The French Olympics promises to be a big celebration, but is everyone welcome? +++ How Denmark forced minors in Greenland to use contraception. |
13/06 | 02h00>02h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 02h02>02h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
13/06 | 02h30>03h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Conflict Zone | Confronting the Powerful | eng | |
13/06 | 03h00>03h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 03h15>04h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Ali and the Sound of the Ball | eng | Born in 1993, Ali Can Pektas has a dream -- and a goal. The 2024 Paralympics in Paris. The soccer player, who was born blind, is one of the best blind players in Germany. Like soccer star Lionel Messi, he swerves around several opponents, then shoots the ball into the corner of the goal. How does he do it? Blind soccer is all about hearing. There are rattles in the ball, so Pektas can hear where it is, rolling across the pitch. Coaches call out to the players with information about where the goal is. Ali Can Pektas is such a good player he’s already won the German championship several times with his club SF BG Blista Marburg. He’s taken part in European championships and a world championship. In addition to his full-time job working at a bank, he trains six to ten times a week. Will the effort be worth it? Will Ali Can Pektas be there, on the field, with the German Blind Soccer National Team in Paris? | |
13/06 | 04h00>04h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 04h02>04h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
13/06 | 04h30>05h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Made in Germany | Transformation pays | eng | Will Opel succeed in transforming itself into an EV manufacturer? Is Saudi Arabia really turning away from oil? How is India fighting the consequences of climate change? And how is a young Indian blogger faring on Instagram? |
13/06 | 05h00>05h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 05h15>05h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | HER Women in Asia | eng | ||
13/06 | 05h30>06h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Conflict Zone | Confronting the Powerful | eng | |
13/06 | 06h00>06h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 06h15>07h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Ali and the Sound of the Ball | eng | Born in 1993, Ali Can Pektas has a dream -- and a goal. The 2024 Paralympics in Paris. The soccer player, who was born blind, is one of the best blind players in Germany. Like soccer star Lionel Messi, he swerves around several opponents, then shoots the ball into the corner of the goal. How does he do it? Blind soccer is all about hearing. There are rattles in the ball, so Pektas can hear where it is, rolling across the pitch. Coaches call out to the players with information about where the goal is. Ali Can Pektas is such a good player he’s already won the German championship several times with his club SF BG Blista Marburg. He’s taken part in European championships and a world championship. In addition to his full-time job working at a bank, he trains six to ten times a week. Will the effort be worth it? Will Ali Can Pektas be there, on the field, with the German Blind Soccer National Team in Paris? | |
13/06 | 07h00>07h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 07h02>07h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
13/06 | 07h30>08h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Focus on Europe | Spotlight on People | eng | The French Olympics promises to be a big celebration, but is everyone welcome? +++ How Denmark forced minors in Greenland to use contraception. |
13/06 | 08h00>08h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 08h15>08h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | HER Women in Asia | eng | ||
13/06 | 08h30>09h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Made in Germany | Transformation pays | eng | Will Opel succeed in transforming itself into an EV manufacturer? Is Saudi Arabia really turning away from oil? How is India fighting the consequences of climate change? And how is a young Indian blogger faring on Instagram? |
13/06 | 09h00>09h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 09h30>10h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Focus on Europe | Spotlight on People | eng | The French Olympics promises to be a big celebration, but is everyone welcome? +++ How Denmark forced minors in Greenland to use contraception. |
13/06 | 10h00>10h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 10h30>11h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Conflict Zone | Confronting the Powerful | eng | |
13/06 | 11h00>11h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 11h15>12h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Greek Islands | Island Discoveries in the Aegean Sea | eng | Ikaria, in the north-eastern Aegean, is known as the island of 100-year-olds. It’s one of the world's five "Blue Zones", where people live to an exceptionally old age. Sifnos is the foodie island. Greece's most famous cook and cookbook author, Nikolaos Tselementes, was born here on this western Cyclades island and it’s no accident that it’s a place where food is important -- on Sifnos, traditional Greek cuisine is interpreted in a modern way. Kimolos is a small island that’s also home to the 95-year-old captain Augusti Galanos. He’s the archipelago’s most famous resident. Polyegos, with its wild goats, who all have names, is the largest uninhabited island in the Aegean. And Mykonos, the jet-set island that everyone knows, still holds plenty of surprises. |
13/06 | 12h00>12h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 12h30>13h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco India | Invasive species: A big problem that's hard to fix | eng | Introduced on purpose, by mistake or as a result of climate change, invasive species destroy ecosystems and are often expensive to eradicate. We explore solutions, from turning pests into useful products, to serving them up as culinary delicacies. |
13/06 | 13h00>13h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 13h30>14h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Focus on Europe | Spotlight on People | eng | The French Olympics promises to be a big celebration, but is everyone welcome? +++ How Denmark forced minors in Greenland to use contraception. |
13/06 | 14h00>14h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 14h15>15h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Pathan Sisters | Growing up in the Shadow of Trauma in India | eng | Sofia’s and Suzain’s family experienced a devastating trauma: More than two decades ago they only just managed to escape the deadly anti-Muslim pogroms of 2002 in the state of Gujarat in western India. The massacre was triggered by an arson attack on a train that left 58 Hindu pilgrims dead. Blame was swiftly assigned to Muslims, despite the lack of evidence for this claim. Radical Hindus then called for bloody revenge. More than 1,000 people were killed in the ensuing pogroms, most of them Muslims. Women were raped, homes destroyed and families displaced. As teenagers, Sofia and Suzain refuse to allow the shadows of the past to prevent them living their lives to the full. But as they grow older, reality catches up with them. As the years pass, deadly religious tensions resurface across the country. |
13/06 | 15h00>15h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 15h15>15h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Transforming Business | eng | ||
13/06 | 15h30>16h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Conflict Zone | Confronting the Powerful | eng | |
13/06 | 16h00>16h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 16h30>17h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Focus on Europe | Spotlight on People | eng | The French Olympics promises to be a big celebration, but is everyone welcome? +++ How Denmark forced minors in Greenland to use contraception. |
13/06 | 17h00>17h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 17h15>18h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Greek Islands | Island Discoveries in the Aegean Sea | eng | Ikaria, in the north-eastern Aegean, is known as the island of 100-year-olds. It’s one of the world's five "Blue Zones", where people live to an exceptionally old age. Sifnos is the foodie island. Greece's most famous cook and cookbook author, Nikolaos Tselementes, was born here on this western Cyclades island and it’s no accident that it’s a place where food is important -- on Sifnos, traditional Greek cuisine is interpreted in a modern way. Kimolos is a small island that’s also home to the 95-year-old captain Augusti Galanos. He’s the archipelago’s most famous resident. Polyegos, with its wild goats, who all have names, is the largest uninhabited island in the Aegean. And Mykonos, the jet-set island that everyone knows, still holds plenty of surprises. |
13/06 | 18h00>18h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 18h30>19h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Conflict Zone | Confronting the Powerful | eng | |
13/06 | 19h00>19h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 19h30>20h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | Africa | eng | |
13/06 | 20h00>20h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 20h15>21h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Ali and the Sound of the Ball | eng | Born in 1993, Ali Can Pektas has a dream -- and a goal. The 2024 Paralympics in Paris. The soccer player, who was born blind, is one of the best blind players in Germany. Like soccer star Lionel Messi, he swerves around several opponents, then shoots the ball into the corner of the goal. How does he do it? Blind soccer is all about hearing. There are rattles in the ball, so Pektas can hear where it is, rolling across the pitch. Coaches call out to the players with information about where the goal is. Ali Can Pektas is such a good player he’s already won the German championship several times with his club SF BG Blista Marburg. He’s taken part in European championships and a world championship. In addition to his full-time job working at a bank, he trains six to ten times a week. Will the effort be worth it? Will Ali Can Pektas be there, on the field, with the German Blind Soccer National Team in Paris? | |
13/06 | 21h00>21h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 21h15>21h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Transforming Business | eng | ||
13/06 | 21h30>22h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | To the Point | International Debate from Berlin | eng | |
13/06 | 22h00>22h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 22h30>23h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
13/06 | 23h00>23h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 23h15>00h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Greek Islands | Island Discoveries in the Aegean Sea | eng | Ikaria, in the north-eastern Aegean, is known as the island of 100-year-olds. It’s one of the world's five "Blue Zones", where people live to an exceptionally old age. Sifnos is the foodie island. Greece's most famous cook and cookbook author, Nikolaos Tselementes, was born here on this western Cyclades island and it’s no accident that it’s a place where food is important -- on Sifnos, traditional Greek cuisine is interpreted in a modern way. Kimolos is a small island that’s also home to the 95-year-old captain Augusti Galanos. He’s the archipelago’s most famous resident. Polyegos, with its wild goats, who all have names, is the largest uninhabited island in the Aegean. And Mykonos, the jet-set island that everyone knows, still holds plenty of surprises. |
13/06 | 00h00>00h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 00h02>00h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
13/06 | 00h30>01h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | To the Point | International Debate from Berlin | eng | |
13/06 | 01h00>01h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
13/06 | 01h15>01h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Transforming Business | eng | ||
13/06 | 01h30>02h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Conflict Zone | Confronting the Powerful | eng | |
14/06 | 02h00>02h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 02h02>02h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
14/06 | 02h30>03h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | To the Point | International Debate from Berlin | eng | |
14/06 | 03h00>03h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 03h15>04h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Deep Sea Greed | Exploiting the Ocean Floor - Part 2 | eng | Deep down in the ocean, valuable raw materials are stored en masse: manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper. Many of these materials are currently in great demand. Technically, it is possible to harvest manganese nodules, for example, in the deep sea. But should we do it? Even among the researchers aboard the "Island Pride," opinions differ. They are part of a deep-sea expedition to research the possible effects of harvesting raw materials on the ocean floor. What will be the consequences if humans exploit these valuable deposits? Will it destroy the fragile underwater environment? Reporter Michael Stocks and his cameraman spent weeks aboard the ship, on which scientists are monitoring the deployment of a giant underwater harvesting machine on the ocean floor. Humans are dredging the sand from beaches, overfishing fish stocks worldwide - is the seabed now to be industrially exploited as well? |
14/06 | 04h00>04h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 04h02>04h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
14/06 | 04h30>05h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Focus on Europe | Spotlight on People | eng | The French Olympics promises to be a big celebration, but is everyone welcome? +++ How Denmark forced minors in Greenland to use contraception. |
14/06 | 05h00>05h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 05h15>05h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Transforming Business | eng | ||
14/06 | 05h30>06h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Made in Germany | Transformation pays | eng | Will Opel succeed in transforming itself into an EV manufacturer? Is Saudi Arabia really turning away from oil? How is India fighting the consequences of climate change? And how is a young Indian blogger faring on Instagram? |
14/06 | 06h00>06h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 06h15>07h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Deep Sea Greed | Exploiting the Ocean Floor - Part 2 | eng | Deep down in the ocean, valuable raw materials are stored en masse: manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper. Many of these materials are currently in great demand. Technically, it is possible to harvest manganese nodules, for example, in the deep sea. But should we do it? Even among the researchers aboard the "Island Pride," opinions differ. They are part of a deep-sea expedition to research the possible effects of harvesting raw materials on the ocean floor. What will be the consequences if humans exploit these valuable deposits? Will it destroy the fragile underwater environment? Reporter Michael Stocks and his cameraman spent weeks aboard the ship, on which scientists are monitoring the deployment of a giant underwater harvesting machine on the ocean floor. Humans are dredging the sand from beaches, overfishing fish stocks worldwide - is the seabed now to be industrially exploited as well? |
14/06 | 07h00>07h02 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 07h02>07h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
14/06 | 07h30>08h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | Africa | eng | |
14/06 | 08h00>08h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 08h15>08h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | Transforming Business | eng | ||
14/06 | 08h30>09h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Conflict Zone | Confronting the Powerful | eng | |
14/06 | 09h00>09h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 09h30>10h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | To the Point | International Debate from Berlin | eng | |
14/06 | 10h00>10h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 10h30>11h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | Africa | eng | |
14/06 | 11h00>11h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 11h15>12h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Ali and the Sound of the Ball | eng | Born in 1993, Ali Can Pektas has a dream -- and a goal. The 2024 Paralympics in Paris. The soccer player, who was born blind, is one of the best blind players in Germany. Like soccer star Lionel Messi, he swerves around several opponents, then shoots the ball into the corner of the goal. How does he do it? Blind soccer is all about hearing. There are rattles in the ball, so Pektas can hear where it is, rolling across the pitch. Coaches call out to the players with information about where the goal is. Ali Can Pektas is such a good player he’s already won the German championship several times with his club SF BG Blista Marburg. He’s taken part in European championships and a world championship. In addition to his full-time job working at a bank, he trains six to ten times a week. Will the effort be worth it? Will Ali Can Pektas be there, on the field, with the German Blind Soccer National Team in Paris? | |
14/06 | 12h00>12h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 12h30>13h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Conflict Zone | Confronting the Powerful | eng | |
14/06 | 13h00>13h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 13h30>14h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | To the Point | International Debate from Berlin | eng | |
14/06 | 14h00>14h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 14h15>15h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Greek Islands | Island Discoveries in the Aegean Sea | eng | Ikaria, in the north-eastern Aegean, is known as the island of 100-year-olds. It’s one of the world's five "Blue Zones", where people live to an exceptionally old age. Sifnos is the foodie island. Greece's most famous cook and cookbook author, Nikolaos Tselementes, was born here on this western Cyclades island and it’s no accident that it’s a place where food is important -- on Sifnos, traditional Greek cuisine is interpreted in a modern way. Kimolos is a small island that’s also home to the 95-year-old captain Augusti Galanos. He’s the archipelago’s most famous resident. Polyegos, with its wild goats, who all have names, is the largest uninhabited island in the Aegean. And Mykonos, the jet-set island that everyone knows, still holds plenty of surprises. |
14/06 | 15h00>15h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 15h15>15h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | REV | eng | ||
14/06 | 15h30>16h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | In Good Shape | Cannabis Uses: Intoxicant as medication | eng | Cannabis - a recreational drug whose dangers are often underestimated. Yet to be proven effective as a painkiller, cannabis might help with nervous disorders, multiple sclerosis, and other diseases. |
14/06 | 16h00>16h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 16h30>17h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco India | The Environment Magazine | eng | |
14/06 | 17h00>17h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 17h15>18h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Ali and the Sound of the Ball | eng | Born in 1993, Ali Can Pektas has a dream -- and a goal. The 2024 Paralympics in Paris. The soccer player, who was born blind, is one of the best blind players in Germany. Like soccer star Lionel Messi, he swerves around several opponents, then shoots the ball into the corner of the goal. How does he do it? Blind soccer is all about hearing. There are rattles in the ball, so Pektas can hear where it is, rolling across the pitch. Coaches call out to the players with information about where the goal is. Ali Can Pektas is such a good player he’s already won the German championship several times with his club SF BG Blista Marburg. He’s taken part in European championships and a world championship. In addition to his full-time job working at a bank, he trains six to ten times a week. Will the effort be worth it? Will Ali Can Pektas be there, on the field, with the German Blind Soccer National Team in Paris? | |
14/06 | 18h00>18h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 18h30>19h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | To the Point | International Debate from Berlin | eng | |
14/06 | 19h00>19h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 19h30>20h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Afrimaxx | Modern African Lifestyle | eng | |
14/06 | 20h00>20h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 20h15>21h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Deep Sea Greed | Exploiting the Ocean Floor - Part 2 | eng | Deep down in the ocean, valuable raw materials are stored en masse: manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper. Many of these materials are currently in great demand. Technically, it is possible to harvest manganese nodules, for example, in the deep sea. But should we do it? Even among the researchers aboard the "Island Pride," opinions differ. They are part of a deep-sea expedition to research the possible effects of harvesting raw materials on the ocean floor. What will be the consequences if humans exploit these valuable deposits? Will it destroy the fragile underwater environment? Reporter Michael Stocks and his cameraman spent weeks aboard the ship, on which scientists are monitoring the deployment of a giant underwater harvesting machine on the ocean floor. Humans are dredging the sand from beaches, overfishing fish stocks worldwide - is the seabed now to be industrially exploited as well? |
14/06 | 21h00>21h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 21h15>21h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | REV | eng | ||
14/06 | 21h30>22h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco Africa | The Environment Magazine | eng | |
14/06 | 22h00>22h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 22h30>23h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
14/06 | 23h00>23h15 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | News | eng | |
14/06 | 23h15>00h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Ali and the Sound of the Ball | eng | Born in 1993, Ali Can Pektas has a dream -- and a goal. The 2024 Paralympics in Paris. The soccer player, who was born blind, is one of the best blind players in Germany. Like soccer star Lionel Messi, he swerves around several opponents, then shoots the ball into the corner of the goal. How does he do it? Blind soccer is all about hearing. There are rattles in the ball, so Pektas can hear where it is, rolling across the pitch. Coaches call out to the players with information about where the goal is. Ali Can Pektas is such a good player he’s already won the German championship several times with his club SF BG Blista Marburg. He’s taken part in European championships and a world championship. In addition to his full-time job working at a bank, he trains six to ten times a week. Will the effort be worth it? Will Ali Can Pektas be there, on the field, with the German Blind Soccer National Team in Paris? | |
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14/06 | 00h02>00h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | The Day | News in Review | eng | |
14/06 | 00h30>01h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | Eco India | The Environment Magazine | eng | |
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14/06 | 01h15>01h30 | (0x00) ? | eng | REV | eng | ||
14/06 | 01h30>02h00 | (0x00) ? | eng | DW News | Africa | eng |