MA TU COMUNICHI O TRASMETTI? 🎙📡
#videotips#video
✅Un conto è usare una lingua, un altro un linguaggio.
Che differenza c’è?
✅Un conto è comunicare, un altro trasmettere.
Tu vuoi comunicate o trasmettere?
Ne parlo nel mini video.
@writingway
#Efemérides || 28 de mayo de 1893
#Fallece Felipe Villanueva. Nacido en Tecámac, Estado de México, fue un violinista, pianista y compositor mexicano, una de las figuras más conocidas del romanticismo musical mexicano que floreció durante el período histórico conocido en México como el Porfiriato (1876-1911).
#Video: vals de salón titulado Amor de Felipe Villanueva.
#música#pieza#ArteFuturaMX
https://artefutura.com.mx
@artefuturamx
#Bolivia#video
May 1 is a Labor Day. The holiday is celebrated in Russia and many other countries, such as Bolivia, where even children have to work. So they’re torn between helping their parents and school. See their stories in the video, and the entire documentary film Undermined: Bolivia’s child workers.
Follow: https://t.me/rtdocumentary
#video#Bolivia
Bolivia has unusual battles – women dressed in heavy, multi-layered skirts fight each other. They’re known as Cholitas, and they pride themselves on looking their best in the ring. Outside the ring, they’re regular women: wives, mothers, business owners and even schoolgirls.
But fighting is another social empowerment of indigenous women. Watch our the video to learn why women take part in such fights.
Watch more Bolivian Cholita fighting in the full film The Good, the Bad and the Loco.
Follow: https://t.me/rtdocumentary
#video#Bolivia
Salar de Uyuni is the world’s largest salt flat. It covers 11,000 square kilometres. Locals call it ‘God’s Mirror’. When salt was in great demand, it was essential. But now the situation has changed.
In the late 1980s, vast lithium reserves were found at the salt flat, some of the biggest in the world. Lithium sometimes referred to as ‘21st-century oil,’ is an essential raw material needed to manufacture batteries.
But unfortunately, lithium extraction pollutes the atmosphere and seriously disrupts the ecosystem. Still, saleros continue their work even risking their health because salt has become their whole life — they earn their living extracting it, making art pieces of it and even building salt houses.
You can watch the full documentary on @documentaryplanet
Follow: https://t.me/rtdocumentary
Bolivia’s child workers
#video#Bolivia
Nadia is a little girl from the suburbs of La Paz. She dreams of becoming a lawyer, but she hardly has time to do her homework. After classes, Nadia has to start her shift at a market. She helps her mum sell eggs and noodles.
In Bolivia, children as young as ten are allowed to work under the controversial Children’s Code. As a result, child vendors and child cleaners are a common sight. They’d love to study more to pursue their dream careers in medicine, academia or finance, but they must support their families now. Ten-year-olds can work for themselves or their families, those older than 12 can work for others.
Critics argued the law effectively legalised child labour. However, kids went out on the streets to protest their right to work when the government planned to raise the minimum working age to 14.
Check out this heartbreaking film featuring legal child workers, as well as underage miners who have to operate outside the law.
Follow: https://t.me/rtdocumentary
Hasta siempre, Comandante
#video#Bolivia
‘His bearded face resembled Jesus Christ’s!’ A woman from Vallegrande, Bolivia recalls the day she saw Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara’s body put on display in a laundry house. The Argentine-born revolutionary died a year after he began to create his guerrilla army in Bolivia.
In 1966, Che Guevara travelled to Bolivia incognito to incite a revolution. Despite early successes, he and his guerrilla force found themselves on the run from US-backed Bolivian troops. Che Guevara was wounded, caught, and eventually executed. He was buried in an unmarked grave.
His remains were dug up 30 years later and brought to Cuba, where he was buried with military honours on October 17.
Check out our documentary about the Comandante’s last days in Bolivia.
Follow: https://t.me/rtdocumentary
Why Russian Old Believers settled in Bolivia
#video#Bolivia
These Russians have preserved the traditions, clothing and even their Old Russian language… as far away as Bolivia!
They are Russian 'Old Believers', whose dissident ancestors were imprisoned and persecuted since the 17th century.
Old Believers split from the Russian Orthodox Church following reforms introduced by Patriarch Nikon. The changes included the number of fingers used to make the sign of the cross and the spelling of Jesus’ name.
Old Believers went into exile and found refuge in the Siberian taiga, Latin American villages and even Alaska. Now, scattered around the world, members of the community have kept their ancient rites, and elements of traditional clothing and lifestyle. For example, they never marry outside their community.
To find out more about the Russian Old Believers in Bolivia, check out this video - https://youtu.be/pFW6DJN62fA
Follow: https://t.me/rtdocumentary
Bolivian Wonder Women
#video#Bolivia
Bright skirts, braided hair, and bowler hats are typical for a Bolivian 'cholita'. She may look cute, but she can beat you up.
Cholitas can be seen in wrestling rings, where they throw each other over their shoulders in choreographed but bruising fights. Indigenous Quechua and Aymara women are called 'cholitas' in Bolivia.
Though society has long discriminated against them, cholitas have been reinventing their image in the 21st century. And wrestling in the ring is one way to do it.
Follow: https://t.me/rtdocumentary
Local Party
Desktop app where you can create rooms and chat while watching local video files synchronized with your friends
https://github.com/sheldor1510/local-party
#localparty#video#chat