Worldfocus
By Worldfocus
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Podcast Description
Watch the daily Worldfocus Signature Story, exploring news and current affairs from around the world. By partnering with international news organizations, Worldfocus fills the void in international news coverage and informs American viewers about the relevance of international events.
| Name | Description | Released | Price | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | VideoMoroccan hip-hop group fuses traditional music with rap | During a reporting trip to Morocco last year, Worldfocus' Hoda Osman, Rebecca Haggerty and Megan Thompson met the members of hip-hop group H-Kayne. In this brief interview, the rap trio discuss their musical influences, including Moroccan traditional music such as Aissawa and Gnawa. | 4/1/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 2 | VideoMigrants stranded en route to Europe | Last year, during a trip to Morocco, Worldfocus correspondent Hoda Osman, producer Rebecca Haggerty, and cameraperson Megan Thompson visited the autonomous city of Melilla. There they met migrants desperate to get to Europe but stranded in limbo. | 4/1/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 3 | VideoAt home with Moroccan champions | The El Gaara sisters, who live in Rabat, Morocco, are athletic champions who compete in Paralympics against other athletes with dwarfism. Their story came to the attention of Moroccan filmmaker Reda Fakhar, who used it as a window to explore the life of short people in his country. | 4/1/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 4 | VideoTonga grapples with forces of man and nature | Tonga, a remote chain of 176 lush islands spread over 500 miles of the Pacific Ocean, faces potentially devastating effects from climate change. As part of her series on small islands and climate change, Worldfocus producer Megan Thompson visited Tonga and documented the government's campaign to get the word out about the issue -- both at home and abroad. | 3/24/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 5 | VideoEthiopian marathon runner fueled by homeland | Long-distance running is not only Ethiopia's national sport; it is a source of pride for Ethiopians all over the world. Worldfocus contributing blogger Tesfaye Negussie went to Ethiopia and interviewed Derartu Tulu, who won the New York City Marathon in 2009, about what it takes to be one of the best runners in the world. | 3/24/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 6 | VideoSouth Yemeni separatists continue agitating for secession | In southern Yemen, opposition to the central government is growing. Some fear that the rebellion may be turning more violent and that increasing instability in the fragile nation could create room for Al-Qaeda to grow. Supported by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, freelance reporter Paul Stephens reports on the latest developments from Sana'a, Yemen. | 3/24/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 7 | VideoCreeping seas threaten tiny island chain of Maldives | In this Worldfocus signature story, we take another look at the drastic consequences of climate change. The Maldives, an island chain off the southwest coast of India, find themselves being consumed by rising sea levels. For a look at how the Maldives are trying to deal with the problem, Worldfocus producer Megan Thompson traveled there recently. | 3/11/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 8 | VideoMaldivian leader sees peril and promise in country's future | Mohammed Waheed Hassan was elected vice president in the Maldives' first democratic elections in 30 years. In this extended interview, he talks about why he believes his country faces grave danger from climate change -- and how the Maldives hopes to set a positive example by becoming the world's first carbon-neutral country. | 3/11/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 9 | VideoWeek in Review: Middle East peace process | Israel today tightened security in Jerusalem and sealed off the West Bank for 48 hours to prevent a repeat of last Friday's clashes between Israelis and Palestinians, but there were nonetheless more scuffles. To discuss the tension in the region, Daljit Dhaliwal speaks with James Rubin and Ian Bremmer in our weekly roundtable. | 3/11/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 10 | VideoJordanian advocate fights against puppy mills | In a Worldfocus signature story, we turn to the issue of animal rights. While such protections are well-established in the U.S., in many parts of the world, they are all but nonexistent. Special correspondent Kristen Gillespie looks at an unusual effort in Jordan, where an unlikely champion of animal rights is trying to end widespread abuse and help her canine friends. | 3/8/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 11 | VideoWeek in Review: Iraq prepares for Sunday's elections | Worldfocus looks at this Sunday's Iraqi parliamentary elections, which could exacerbate sectarian divisions. We also examine what has changed in the seven years since the Iraq invasion. Daljit Dhaliwal interviews Gideon Rose, managing editor of Foreign Affairs, and Rashid Khalidi, Edward Said Professor of Modern Arab Studies at Columbia University. | 3/4/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 12 | VideoChile squirrels away copper fortunes and spends prudently | Correspondent Edie Magnus reports on how the Chilean government has prudently managed its windfall copper profits. Chile is now financing public works projects, creating jobs and doling out cash stipends to the poor. | 2/28/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 13 | VideoWeek in Review: Dubai assassination, Afghanistan offensive | In our weekly wrap-up of the week's top stories, James Rubin, an adjunct professor at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs, joins Martin Savidge to discuss the implications of the killing in Dubai and the NATO offensive in Afghanistan. | 2/25/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 14 | VideoRising Islamist movements challenge secularism in Turkey | Correspondent Gizem Yarbil and producer Bryan Myers report on how traditional religion and modern democracy are trying to coexist in Turkey, where growing religious groups are championing Islam's ethical and moral values. Secular critics are branding these religious groups as fundamentalist. | 2/23/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 15 | VideoIn Canada's Arctic, finding hope with the help of a circus | In the tiny Canadian Arctic town of Igloolik, where there are barely 1,500 inhabitants, around 5 young adults commit suicide every year. Filmmaker Linda Matchan, in association with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, is documenting the efforts of a circus troupe there called Artcirq, formed to offer young people hope. | 2/22/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 16 | VideoWeek in Review: Afghanistan and Pakistan | There was a major blow to the Taliban with the arrests of three senior leaders in Pakistan, including the number-two Afghan Taliban official. While this was a victory for U.S. and Pakistani intelligence, it was also a reminder of how the Taliban have used Pakistan as a base. Joining Daljit Dhaliwal to talk about the Marjah offensive and more are Gideon Rose and Susan Chira. | 2/18/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 17 | VideoBrazil emerges as an oil giant | Worldfocus explores the P-51 offshore oil platform near Angra dos Reis, which for many represents not only the future of oil exploration but also the future of Brazil. | 2/17/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 18 | VideoU.S. misses out on flourishing Cuban business | Cuba is doing business worldwide, but the United States is hardly in the game. A long U.S. government boycott of the island means most American businessmen are losing out to Europeans and others when it comes to everything from agriculture to medicine to oil. | 2/14/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 19 | VideoWeek in Review: Debt crisis in Greece and Iran's nukes | In this week's roundtable discussion, we focus on Europe's economic challenges, including the debt crisis in Greece that has many Europeans worried. We also focus on Iran and what the regime is trying to achieve by moving to a higher level of uranium enrichment. Carla Robbins and Garrick Utley join Daljit Dhaliwal to discuss these issues. | 2/11/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 20 | VideoIranian authorities can't stop flood of Western culture | Pop culture is thriving in Iran, from music and movies to poetry and books. Iranian authorities do all they can to control what Iranian citizens see and hear. But technology is making that virtually impossible. | 2/10/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 21 | VideoIraqi refugee family struggles to earn livelihood in Syria | More than 4 million Iraqis have fled their homes since 2003. An estimated 1.2 million have taken refuge in Syria. Multimedia journalist Charity Tooze reports on a family of Iraqi refugees struggling to survive in Syria, where they have no legal right to work. | 2/10/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 22 | VideoWomen in Iran race ahead, but still face gender block | Correspondent Bigan Saliani and producer Richard O'Regan travel to Iran to explore the tensions between the expectations of many highly educated young Iranian women and the realities of their lives. | 2/9/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 23 | VideoIsraeli company builds infrastructure for world's electric cars | One Israeli company is not just promoting the use of electric cars but designing an entire system to service them, with battery charging stations. Many countries are expressing great interest. | 2/8/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 24 | VideoWeek in Review: China and the United States | David Andelman, editor of the World Policy Journal, and Ian Bremmer, president of the Eurasia Group, join us for our weekly roundtable to talk about relations between the United States and China. The two countries have been at odds over trade, Tibet, and Taiwan in recent days. | 2/4/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 25 | Video'Bootleg' electric cars thrive in China's second-tier cities | In China, we meet a modern-day Thomas Edison who helped give birth to the country's "knockoff" electric car industry. Chinese consumers in second-tier cities can't get enough of these small, cheap electric cars that require 6 hours of charging to go 75 miles -- at a maximum of 35 mph. Video journalist Jimmy Wang reported and produced the video for TIME. | 2/2/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 26 | VideoViolence and venom force gay Jamaicans to hide | In Jamaica, anti-s****y laws are still punishable for up to 12 years in prison. And society is not ready to tolerate openly gay lifestyles. Correspondent Lisa Biagiotti, producer Micah Fink and director of photography Gabrielle Weiss report on the dark side of Jamaica's anti-gay violence and attitudes and explore the ideological beliefs that perpetuate a culture of homophobia. | 2/1/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 27 | VideoVietnam on a bumpy road to economic power | In the U.S., Vietnam has been largely out of public view in the three decades since the war. But during that time, Vietnam has gone through remarkable changes, and is now on the road to becoming an economic powerhouse. | 1/31/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 28 | VideoWeek in Review: Negotiating with the Taliban | The idea of a negotiated settlement to the Afghan war gained new currency this week. In our weekly roundtable, James Rubin, a former assistant secretary of state in the Clinton administration, and Gideon Rose of Foreign Affairs magazine, join Daljit Dhaliwal to discuss the pitfalls and possibilities of negotiating with the Taliban. | 1/28/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 29 | VideoOne woman fights for members of India's lowest caste | As a consequence of India's caste system, the country's lowest class has been forced to work in the sewers. Hema Konsotia is a member of the lower-caste Dalit community, known by some as the untouchables. She is also a college graduate and union activist who works with Dalits, teaching skills and urging political involvement. | 1/27/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 30 | VideoObama and the World: China | In the final installment of our two-week-long series, "Obama and the World," we focus on China. Adam Segal, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and John Delury, associate director of the Center for U.S.-China Relations at the Asia Society, join Daljit Dhaliwal to discuss Sino-American relations and whether China will assume global supremacy. | 1/27/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 31 | VideoObama and the World: Relations between the U.S. and Russia | Vladimir Lensky of Russia's Channel One and former Soviet foreign ministry official Sergey Shestakov join Daljit Dhaliwal to discuss Obama's progress in resetting American-Russian relations, Russia's cooperation in war effort in Afghanistan, relations with Iran and Russia's own economic downturn. | 1/26/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 32 | VideoObama and the World: The Global Economy | Marcus Mabry, international business editor of The New York Times, and John Authers, the investment editor for the Financial Times, join Daljit Dhaliwal to discuss the impact of U.S. economic policies overseas, the risk of inflation in China, the fate of Japan's economy and recovery efforts across Europe. | 1/25/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 33 | VideoObama and the World: Afghanistan and Pakistan | Ahmad Kamal, Pakistan's former Ambassador to the United Nations, and Hassan Abbas, a former Pakistani government official who is now with the Asia Society, join Edie Magnus for a roundtable on AfPak. They discuss power-sharing with the Taliban, drone strikes along the Afghan border in northwest Pakistan and American foreign policy challenges in the region. | 1/24/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 34 | VideoAfghan immigrants find refuge in oil-rich Iran | As the world's second largest oil producer, Iran has become a model of stability in the region. It is estimated that approximately 3 million Afghan immigrants in Iran are doing low-skill labor. Richard O'Regan reports from Tehran. | 1/24/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 35 | VideoWeek in Review: Obama's First Year in Office | Carol Giacomo, a member of The New York Times' editorial board, and David Andelman, editor of the World Policy Journal and former foreign correspondent for The New York Times and CBS News, join Martin Savidge for our weekly roundtable. They review the successes and failures of the Obama administration's foreign policy on its first anniversary. | 1/21/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 36 | VideoObama and the World: Middle East Peace Process | It's been a year since President Obama took office, and although he named former Senator George Mitchell as special envoy to the region, little progress has been made between Israel and the Palestinians. To analyze the situation, Martin Savidge speaks with Daniel Levy and Amjad Atallah, the co-directors of the Middle East Task Force at the New America Foundation. | 1/20/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 37 | VideoBolivia eyes lithium with hopes to transform economy | Bolivia controls nearly half of the world's reserves of lithium, a metal crucial for electric cars and other alternative energy technologies. But who will benefit from this discovery is creating controversy. | 1/19/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 38 | VideoObama and the World: Latin America | Christopher Sabatini, the senior director of policy for the Council of the Americas, and Shannon O'Neil, a fellow in Latin American studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, join Martin Savidge to discuss U.S. foreign policy in Latin America. They discuss natural resources, relations with Cuba, Venezuela and the war on drugs. | 1/19/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 39 | VideoObama and the World: Africa | For part 2 of our "Obama and the World" series on the first year of Obama's foreign policy, we turn to Africa. Martin Savidge is joined by Sarjoh Bah, a senior fellow at New York University's Center on International Cooperation, and Emira Woods, co-director of the Foreign Policy in Focus program at the Institute of Policy Studies, to discuss American foreign policy and Africa. | 1/18/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 40 | VideoObama and the World: Iran | Iran -- and the stalemate over its nuclear program -- will be one of the top foreign policy stories in 2010, according to many analysts. Martin Savidge is joined by Ervand Abrahamian of the City University of New York and Arang Keshavarzian of New York University. | 1/17/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 41 | VideoWeek in Review: Haiti | This week, our Friday roundtable focuses on Haiti. We look not just at the present struggle but also at the future of the beleaguered country that has experienced so much hardship for so long. Daljit Dhaliwal discusses the events in Haiti with Nicholas Kristof, Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist at the New York Times and Garrick Utley, president of the Levin Institute. | 1/14/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 42 | VideoHaitians destroy environment in struggle to survive | Haiti is a small island country in the Caribbean and the poorest in the Western hemisphere. In their struggle to survive, Haitians are destroying the very elements of their environment that sustain them. | 1/13/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 43 | VideoIn Greece, technology offers new hope for the blind | For the second part of our series on disability around the world, Worldfocus producer Megan Thompson reports on a university in Greece using new technology to help blind people negotiate their surroundings. | 1/11/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 44 | VideoDisabled Greeks face daily challenges getting around | It's been 20 years since Congress passed the Americans with Disabilities Act, guaranteeing disabled Americans protection under the law. That is not always the case in other countries. During a trip to Greece last summer, producer Megan Thompson met a young woman who showed her how challenging Athens life is in a wheelchair. | 1/10/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 45 | VideoWeek in Review: Yemen | In our weekly roundtable, James Rubin, a former assistant secretary of state in the Clinton administration, and Garrick Utley, president of the Levin Institute of the State University of New York, join Daljit Dhaliwal to discuss Yemen and the fight against terrorism. | 1/7/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 46 | VideoEmpty stores, offices tell tale of Latvia's economic fall | Until the global recession, the former Soviet republic of Latvia was experiencing the kind of growth that some described as a miracle. Now, it has all tumbled down, with unemployment over 22 percent. | 1/7/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 47 | VideoEthnicity still divides Bosnia, threatening its fragile peace | An estimated 100,000 people were killed and another 2 million displaced during Bosnia's civil war 14 years ago. Special correspondent Kira Kay and producer Jason Maloney of the Bureau for International Reporting recently traveled to central Bosnia to report on how one ethnically-partitioned school mirrors the country's struggles with identity today. | 1/5/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 48 | VideoHaiti, Dominican Rep. combine efforts to eradicate malaria | The island of Hispaniola is the last place in the Caribbean where malaria still exists. Producer Gary Strieker reports on how a new cooperative effort between the Dominican Republic, Haiti and former U.S. President Jimmy Carter is trying to eradicate the disease. | 1/4/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 49 | VideoBuilding a better future for Pakistan's children | In a country consumed by poverty and vulnerable to radical influences, the future of Pakistan's children is bleak. Amna Nawaz of NBC News traveled to Pakistan to report on one charity that has built 600 schools and enrolled over 80,000 Pakistani students. | 1/3/10 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 50 | VideoAssessing the watershed events of 2009 on the eve of 2010 | With the New Year's holiday at hand, we've convened our panel for the last Worldfocus roundtable of 2009. We depart from our usual pattern. Instead we look at a broad issue that was the subtext for much news in 2009 -- what Fareed Zakaria terms the "rise of the rest." To discuss America's changing role, Martin Savidge is joined by Garrick Utley and Rana Foroohar. | 12/30/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 51 | VideoCanadians debate their commitment to war in Afghanistan | The Canadian contribution to Afghanistan has generally received little attention, even though there are 2,500 Canadian troops in Afghanistan, mostly in the dangerous southern areas. The latest casualties are likely to increase the debate in Canada over their commitment to the war. In a Worldfocus Signature story, Martin Himel takes a look at Canada's war role. | 12/30/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 52 | VideoIranian authorities can't stop flood of Western culture | Pop culture is thriving in Iran, from music and movies to poetry and books. Iranian authorities do all they can to control what Iranian citizens see and hear. But technology is making that virtually impossible. | 12/29/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 53 | VideoWeek in Review: Mounting pressure on Iran's government | In Iran, protests erupted again this week as the U.S. deadline for imposing sanctions looms. Carol Giacomo, a member of The New York Times editorial board, and Irshad Manji, a professor at New York University and the author of "The Trouble With Islam Today," join Daljit Dhaliwal to discuss the mounting pressures on Iran, both internal and external. | 12/23/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 54 | Video"Biblioburro" - a donkey library - visits Colombian children | In rural Colombia, a man is bringing knowledge to hundreds of farm children on the back of a burro. A librarian, he travels far and wide to hand out books. | 12/22/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 55 | VideoFilipino children driven to the streets by crushing poverty | UNICEF estimates that one billion children live in poverty -- almost every second child in the world. The Philippines can be seen as a microcosm of the problem, with children driven to the streets. One man -- a former child of the streets himself -- is trying to help. | 12/22/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 56 | VideoMoroccan single moms cope with hostility, shame | Young Muslim women who become pregnant out of wedlock face intense pressures, and are often shunned, scorned and shamed. Worldfocus correspondent Hoda Osman and producers Rebecca Haggerty, Megan Thompson and Reda Fakhar traveled to Morocco to explore how these mothers are coping. | 12/22/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 57 | VideoIda's story: Reversing the stigma of HIV in Jamaica | Correspondent Lisa Biagiotti, producer Micah Fink and director of photography Gabrielle Weiss report on how Jamaica's government is targeting community leaders like Ida Northover to educate people on HIV and change the stigma surrounding the disease. | 12/22/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 58 | VideoRising food prices punish rich and poor in India | The Indian government says food prices have increased almost 20 percent over last year, reaching a 10-year high. That is adversely affecting most of India's 1.1 billion people. Worldfocus producers Mary Lockhart and Ara Ayer and correspondent Daljit Dhaliwal report on the food crisis from the slums to high-rise buildings of Delhi. | 12/20/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 59 | VideoWeek in Review: Deteriorating U.S.-Pakistan relations? | Pakistan remains mired in violence after another attack followed Friday prayers at a mosque. Ian Bremmer of the Eurasia Group and David Andelman of the World Policy Journal join Daljit Dhaliwal to discuss whether Pakistan's once-close relationship with America is deteriorating. | 12/17/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 60 | VideoTurkey's Kurds seek justice for unsolved murders | Correspondent Gizem Yarbil and producer Bryan Myers recently traveled to the Kurdish enclave of Diyarbakir in eastern Turkey for a closer look at the allegations that the Turkish government had engaged in a so-called "dirty war" against the Kurds. | 12/14/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 61 | VideoWeek in Review: Iraq, Obama's Nobel and climate change | Gideon Rose of Foreign Affairs magazine and Carla Robbins of The New York Times editorial board join Edie Magnus to discuss: continuing security problems in Iraq, President Barack Obama's acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize and the prospects of a climate agreement in Copenhagen. | 12/10/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 62 | VideoChile's privatized social security may risk bankruptcy | Chile has gone further than any other country in privatizing social security, embracing private pension accounts in 1981. But the fund will soon be paying out more than it takes in and is projected to be exhausted by 2036. Worldfocus special correspondent Edie Magnus reports on the health of private social security and new regulation from the Chilean government. | 12/9/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 63 | VideoThe legacy of the 'Chicago Boys' lives on in Chile | Chile is among Latin America's most prosperous nations. Some credit that -- in part -- to a group of economists from Chicago. Worldfocus special correspondent Edie Magnus traveled to Chile earlier this year to explore the ongoing legacy of the "Chicago Boys." | 12/8/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 64 | VideoBangladesh reels from the impact of climate change | Addressing the effects of rising seas, a Bangladeshi man created "school boats" to bring school to children. Producer Steve Sapienza of the Pulitzer Center reports on how social entrepreneurs, NGOs and governments in poorer countries are trying to deal with climate change today. | 12/7/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 65 | VideoIsland in Denmark produces more energy than it consumes | John Larson travels to Denmark's Samso Island to report on its efforts to eliminate fossil fuel use. In 1998, Samso, population 4,000, devised a bold plan to completely switch to renewable energy. Today, the island is 100% carbon-neutral. | 12/7/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 66 | VideoWeek in Review: U.S. troop surge, Afghanistan exit strategy | Nicholas Kristof, a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times, and Garrick Utley, president of the Levin Institute of the State University of New York, join Daljit Dhaliwal to discuss the impending U.S. troop surge and proposed exit strategy in Afghanistan. | 12/3/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 67 | Video25 years after Bhopal tragedy, pain and uncertainty linger | This week is the 25th anniversary of the world's worst industrial accident in Bhopal, India. Last year, Daljit Dhaliwal visited Bhopal while reporting in India. She toured the site of the tragedy and saw how the people of the area still live with the aftermath. | 12/3/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 68 | VideoChilean law fast-tracks treatment for common illnesses | Worldfocus special correspondent Edie Magnus traveled to Chile, a country with universal health care coverage. However, treatment actually depends on what disease you have and how likely you are to be cured. | 12/1/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 69 | VideoHousing developments in Denmark slash energy use | Worldfocus' John Larson has been reporting on Denmark's forward-thinking energy policy in the weeks leading up to the Copenhagen summit. Here, he visits a housing development outside of of Copenhagen where residents use astonishingly little energy. | 11/29/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 70 | VideoGreeks struggle to reclaim traditional Mediterranean diet | While traditional Mediterranean fare is among the healthiest on the planet, Greece now struggles with an obesity epidemic. Worldfocus correspondent Lynn Sherr and producer Megan Thompson report on Greek efforts to reclaim their heritage of "slow food." | 11/24/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 71 | VideoEfficient Danes use hydrogen cells to maximize wind power | Last week, we showed you how everyday Danes profit from pioneering wind power. But there's a challenge -- how to store that power when the wind isn't blowing. Denmark is searching for answers, including building Europe's first "hydrogen neighborhood" -- homes that are powered and heated with the help of hydrogen fuel cells. John Larson reports from Denmark. | 11/23/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 72 | VideoGermany to require immigrants to sign integration contracts | Germany has a plan for an "integration contract," which lays out services and assistance available to immigrant communities and details Germany's expectations of new arrivals. Martin Seemungal reported late last year on the rising Christian-Muslim tensions in the city of Cologne. | 11/22/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 73 | VideoWeek in Review: President Obama's trip to Asia | Gideon Rose of Foreign Affairs Magazine and James Rubin of Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs join Daljit Dhaliwal to discuss President Barack Obama's trip to Asia and the focus of U.S.-China relations. | 11/19/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 74 | VideoIsraelis settle in occupied West Bank for economic reasons | There is no sign that the building of Israeli settlements will cease. Economic and ideological settlers continue to flock to the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Worldfocus correspondent Martin Himel visits both sides of the wall dividing an Israeli settlement and a Palestinian refugee camp. | 11/18/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 75 | VideoIsrael's Orthodox women clamor for the right to divorce | In Israel, the rabbinical courts decide when couples can marry and divorce. Worldfocus correspondent Martin Himel speaks with Orthodox Jewish women who are protesting the Jewish law that states husbands must consent to divorce. | 11/17/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 76 | VideoIsrael thrives as the Silicon Valley of the Middle East | The high-tech industry has become the backbone of Israel's economy, with 46 percent of exports coming from the industrial high-tech sector. Worldfocus correspondent Martin Himel takes a look at the businesses and entrepreneurial players of the Middle East's Silicon Valley. | 11/16/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 77 | VideoEveryday Danes profit from pioneering wind power | Long ago, Denmark pioneered wind power, which now accounts for 20 percent of its energy production. Everyday Danish citizens -- from farmers to art dealers -- invested in windmills. Worldfocus special correspondent John Larson reports on how Danish citizens are capturing windfall profits. | 11/15/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 78 | VideoAncient Greek values clash with modern treatment of gays | Homosexuality dates back thousands of years in Ancient Greece, where same-sex relationships were well-known - even among the gods. But today in Greece, gay rights are not as accepted. Special Correspondent Lynn Sherr and producer Megan Thompson examine the state of gay marriage in Greece. | 11/11/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 79 | VideoGays in Jamaica worship in underground church | Jamaica is often said to hold the world record for the most churches per square mile. There's a public place of worship for almost everyone. Unless you're gay. Correspondent Lisa Biagiotti, producer Micah Fink and director of photography Gabrielle Weiss report on the secret underground church that is welcoming gay men and women to practice their faith. | 11/10/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 80 | VideoViolence and venom force gay Jamaicans to hide | In Jamaica, anti-s****y laws are still punishable for up to 12 years in prison. And society is not ready to tolerate openly gay lifestyles. Correspondent Lisa Biagiotti, producer Micah Fink and director of photography Gabrielle Weiss report on the dark side of Jamaica's anti-gay violence and attitudes and explore the ideological beliefs that perpetuate a culture of homophobia. | 11/9/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 81 | VideoBerliners reminisce about the collapse of the wall | Twenty years later, the residents of Berlin celebrate the historic day that marked the beginning of the end of Communism. Virtually all Berliners remember where they were and what they were doing the day that the wall fell. Mike Kraus, a freelance video journalist, reports from Berlin. | 11/8/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 82 | VideoWeek in Review: Afghanistan election and Italian court ruling | Carla Robbins of The New York Times and James Rubin of Columbia University discuss Hamid Karzai's second term and the worsening security situation in Afghanistan. They also examine the fallout from a landmark case in Italy involving the alleged CIA abduction and "rendition" of a Muslim cleric. | 11/5/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 83 | VideoHigh taxes curb Danish oil use, promote energy independence | Producer John Larson reports from Copenhagen, Denmark, on how changing lifestyles, taxing energy and subsidizing alternative technologies have reduced the country's dependency on oil and created thousands of new jobs. | 11/4/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 84 | VideoAncient Palestinian craft still intact amid globalization | Worldfocus producer Mohammad Al-Kassim reports from the West Bank city of Hebron about its vanishing glassmaking industry, which dates back to the Phoenician era. He visits a master craftsman whose family business has endured for generations. | 11/3/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 85 | VideoJournalists risk their lives reporting in the Philippines | Correspondent Mark Litke and producer Ara Ayer report from the Philippines where there are more newspapers in print, more points of view and more influence in broadcast journalism than ever before. But since People Power in 1986, more than 70 journalists have been murdered. | 11/2/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 86 | VideoLove-hate feelings complicate U.S.-Philippines relationship | From 50 years of American colonial rule to the emigration of Filipino nurses and love for basketball, Correspondent Mark Litke and Producer Ara Ayer report from Manila on the unique historical relationship between the U.S. and the Philippines. | 11/1/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 87 | VideoWeek in review: Afghanistan and Pakistan | David Andelman, editor of the World Policy Journal and a former foreign correspondent, and Chrystia Freeland, U.S. managing editor of Britain's Financial Times, join David Brancaccio to review the week's events in Pakistan and Afghanistan. They discuss troop levels in Afghanistan and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's controversial remarks in Pakistan. | 10/29/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 88 | VideoAntibiotics for eye disease are saving Ethiopia's children | Producer Gary Strieker reports from Ethiopia's Amhara region where 60 percent of children suffer from Trachoma, a bacterial eye infection that is the world's leading preventable cause of blindness. A new study finds that antibiotics administered for Trachoma are actually treating other ailments and reducing Ethiopia's high rate of child mortality. | 10/28/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 89 | VideoIn birthplace of coffee, Ethiopian farmers plant other crops | Because Ethiopian farmers are fragmented and disorganized, they cannot leverage for higher coffee prices. Worldfocus correspondent Martin Seemungal reports on why farmers are deciding to plant corn and khat, a leafy drug that is chewed with stimulating effects somewhere between caffeine and cocaine. | 10/27/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 90 | VideoModernity creeps into rural village in northern Ethiopia | Worldfocus correspondent Martin Seemungal travels to a remote village in the highlands of Ethiopia. He observes a traditional way of life that is virtually cut off from the rest of the world. | 10/26/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 91 | VideoFamine eclipses Ethiopia's beauty and rich history | Twenty-five years after famine devastated Ethiopia, poverty still mars the country's image. Worldfocus correspondent Martin Seemungal explores another side of Ethiopia. He reports on Ethiopia's people, religion, beauty and explores the relics that dot the landscape in the northern part of the country. | 10/25/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 92 | VideoWeek in review: Afghanistan and Iran | Gideon Rose of Foreign Affairs Magazine and Carol Giacomo of The New York Times editorial board join Daljit Dhaliwal to discuss whether Iran appears to be pulling back from a deal to ship enriched uranium overseas. They also discuss fair elections in Afghanistan and NATO's decision to support a wider war counter-strategy. | 10/22/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 93 | VideoReligious minority clamors for legal rights in Indonesia | Correspondent and producer Jamilla Trindle reports from Indonesia, where fundamentalists are posing new challenges to the democratically-elected government and to members of minority religious groups. | 10/21/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 94 | VideoRising Islamist movements challenge secularism in Turkey | Correspondent Gizem Yarbil and producer Bryan Myers report on how traditional religion and modern democracy are trying to coexist in Turkey, where growing religious groups are championing Islam's ethical and moral values. Secular critics are branding these religious groups as fundamentalist. | 10/20/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 95 | VideoAn unusual weapon in the war against extremism | Worldfocus correspondent Hoda Osman and producer Rebecca Haggerty visited the North African kingdom of Morocco to report on how many Moroccans - including those in the government - are turning to Sufism as a moderating influence to combat religious extremism. | 10/19/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 96 | VideoAfghan immigrants find refuge in oil-rich Iran | As the world's second largest oil producer, Iran has become a model of stability in the region. It is estimated that approximately 3 million Afghan immigrants in Iran are doing low-skill labor. Richard O'Regan reports from Tehran. | 10/18/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 97 | VideoWeek in Review: Afghanistan, Pakistan, China and Russia | Gideon Rose of Foreign Affairs magazine and David Andelman of the World Policy Journal discuss corruption in Afghanistan, strategic opportunities in Pakistan, Iran's relationship with Russia and China and the threat of nuclear weapons. | 10/15/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 98 | VideoCanada avoids bank bailout, but feels U.S. financial woes | The prudent stewardship of Canadian banks in avoiding risky loans meant that they never required a government bailout. But the U.S.'s economic woes are spilling across the border and affecting Canadian big business. Canadians are blaming their own government and clamoring for help. | 10/13/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 99 | VideoChile squirrels away copper fortunes and spends prudently | Correspondent Edie Magnus reports on how the Chilean government has prudently managed its windfall copper profits. Chile is now financing public works projects, creating jobs and doling out cash stipends to the poor. | 10/12/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 100 | VideoThe bowler hat: Born in Britain, perfected by Bolivia | Worldfocus producer and correspondent Ivette Feliciano explores a fascinating fashion trend in Bolivia -- the bowler hat -- which has roots in Europe. | 10/8/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 101 | VideoWeek in review: Afghanistan, Pakistan and Obama's Nobel | Garrick Utley of the State University of New York and Chrystia Freeland of Britain's Financial Times discuss the week's top stories: The impact of U.S. President Barack Obama winning the Nobel Peace Prize, and his biggest foreign policy challenge -- Afghanistan and Pakistan. | 10/8/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 102 | VideoGuatemala's children languish from malnutrition | Nearly half of the children in Guatemala are malnourished. Most suffer from chronic malnutrition, which means that while they are getting enough calories, their food is severely lacking in vitamins and protein. This poor nutrition affects not only their bodies, but their future. | 10/7/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 103 | VideoYoung garbage pickers eke out meager living in Pakistan | An estimated 10,000 children in Quetta, Pakistan, perform back-breaking labor -- garbage picking. They are often as young as five years old and earn less than $1 per day. International organizations have begun to call attention to the plight of these young workers, many of whom are the children of Afghan refugees who cannot legally work in Pakistan. | 10/6/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 104 | VideoFilipino children driven to the streets by crushing poverty | UNICEF estimates that one billion children live in poverty -- almost every second child in the world. The Philippines can be seen as a microcosm of the problem, with children driven to the streets. One man -- a former child of the streets himself -- is trying to help. | 10/5/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 105 | VideoSudan wages war on Guinea worms | Guinea worm is a painful disease that still infects thousands of people in Africa. Despite progress, the worms continue to spread through contaminated drinking water, and this is where Sudan is now fighting to eradicate the disease. | 10/4/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 106 | VideoOne island, two Jamaicas and a 'whole heap' of difference | A public debate erupted earlier this year when graphic Dancehall music lyrics and images were banned from Jamaica's airwaves. The public responses reveal the legacy of two Jamaicas dating back to the country's slave history, as correspondent Lisa Biagiotti reports. | 9/30/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 107 | VideoIranian authorities can't stop flood of Western culture | Pop culture is thriving in Iran, from music and movies to poetry and books. Iranian authorities do all they can to control what Iranian citizens see and hear. But technology is making that virtually impossible. | 9/30/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 108 | VideoIsraeli films explore realities of warfare, faith | Israel's robust film industry is funded primarily with state grants, even though the themes can be highly critical of the government and at odds with conventional Israeli values. Many films explore issues from recent Israeli military history. | 9/28/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 109 | VideoFormer U.S. bases in the Philippines transform and thrive | The American troops presence in the Philippines is tiny compared to what it was before two major U.S. military bases closed down almost two decades ago. In the years since, a stunning transformation has taken place, turning those bases from the ash heap of history into thriving economic enterprises. | 9/27/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 110 | VideoWeek in review: The Afghanistan debate and the G-20 | Gideon Rose of Foreign Affairs Magazine and Rana Foroohar of Newsweek discuss the week's top stories: The debate over next steps in the war in Afghanistan and the global economic summit in Pittsburgh. | 9/24/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 111 | VideoIda's story: Reversing the stigma of HIV in Jamaica | Correspondent Lisa Biagiotti, producer Micah Fink and director of photography Gabrielle Weiss report on how Jamaica's government is targeting community leaders like Ida Northover to educate people on HIV and change the stigma surrounding the disease. | 9/22/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 112 | VideoJamaica's battle against AIDS fought in the shadows | Jamaica may be on the very of losing its battle against the AIDS epidemic because of deeply entrenched anti-gay attitudes and laws. Worldfocus reports from the front lines of Jamaica's fight against HIV and AIDS. | 9/21/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 113 | VideoPakistanis celebrate Eid al-Fitr with street fairs | Muslims have been celebrating the festival of Eid al-Fitr, which marks the end of the holy month of fasting known as Ramadan. In Pakistan, in cities like Lahore, Eid means neon-lit and food-fueled street fairs long into the night. | 9/20/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 114 | VideoWeek in review: War crimes in Gaza and missile defense | Carla Robbins of The New York Times and David Andelman of the World Policy Journal discuss the week's top stories: Obama's reversal on a missile defense plan for Europe, the battle against Islamic militants and this week's United Nations report on the war in Gaza. | 9/17/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 115 | VideoRome tunnels through ancient relics to build a subway | Rome is building a brand new subway line and coming across remnants of the ancient past. | 9/16/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 116 | VideoPreserving Roman antiquities comes at a high cost | Rome is a city defined by its antiquities -- places like the Coliseum, the Forum and the Pantheon. But the costs of maintaining it all has some Romans worried it could break the bank. | 9/15/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 117 | VideoGreeks lobby for return of Parthenon marbles to Athens | The opening of the Acropolis Museum in Greece this summer has reignited a controversy over some of the sculptures that adorned the Parthenon, the most famous monument of ancient Greece. | 9/14/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 118 | Video"Biblioburro" - a donkey library - visits Colombian children | In rural Colombia, a man is bringing knowledge to hundreds of farm children on the back of a burro. A librarian, he travels far and wide to hand out books. | 9/13/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 119 | VideoWeek in review: Iran's nuclear program and Afghanistan | Garrick Utley of the State University of New York and Charles Sennott of GlobalPost discuss the major foreign policy challenges facing U.S. President Barack Obama: Iran's nuclear ambitions and troop numbers in Afghanistan. | 9/10/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 120 | VideoFemale soccer players shoot down Turkish taboos | In much of Turkey, playing soccer is something girls simply don't do. But despite religious and cultural resistance, some women players are challenging the norm and taking to the field. | 9/9/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 121 | VideoWomen in Iran race ahead, but still face gender block | Correspondent Bigan Saliani and producer Richard O'Regan travel to Iran to explore the tensions between the expectations of many highly educated young Iranian women and the realities of their lives. | 9/8/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 122 | VideoWeek in review: Afghanistan and Japan | Carol Giacomo of The New York Times and Joel Rosenthal of the Carnegie Council discuss the new allegations of widespread fraud in the Afghan presidential election and the implications of the recent change of power in Japan. | 9/8/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 123 | VideoMumbai confronts drug-resistant tuberculosis strain | Mumbai, India's largest city, is confronting an epidemic of drug-resistant tuberculosis. Independent producer Lauren Rudser brings Worldfocus this signature story on an often overlooked global health issue. | 9/8/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 124 | VideoMoroccan single moms cope with hostility, shame | Young Muslim women who become pregnant out of wedlock face intense pressures, and are often shunned, scorned and shamed. | 9/8/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 125 | VideoWeek in review: Afghan elections, Iraq and Scottish justice | Charles Sennott of GlobalPost and Dagmar Aalund of the Wall Street Journal discuss the week's top stories: The presidential election in Afghanistan, the ongoing security nightmare in Iraq and a controversial decision in Scotland. | 8/20/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 126 | VideoWeek in review: Afghanistan, Iraq and the Clintons | Gideon Rose of Foreign Affairs magazine and Carla Robbins of The New York Times discuss the week's top stories: A major U.S. offensive as national elections approach in Afghanistan, a surge in suicide bombings in Iraq and Hillary Clinton's trip to Africa. | 8/13/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 127 | VideoWeek in review: Hillary Clinton in Africa, Bill in North Korea | Nikhil Deogun of The Wall Street Journal and David Andelman of the World Policy Journal discuss the week's top stories: Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's tour of Africa and her husband's mission to North Korea to secure the release of two American journalists. | 8/6/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 128 | VideoWeek in review: Israel, China and turbulence in Iran | Susan Chira of The New York Times and Gideon Rose of Foreign Affairs Magazine discuss the week's top stories: Continuing turbulence in Iran and this week's U.S. talks with both Israel and China. | 7/30/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 129 | VideoWeek in review: Clinton in Asia, Afghanistan and Biden | Dan Rather of "Dan Rather Reports" and Ian Bremmer of Eurasia Group discuss the week's top stories: U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's trip to Asia, the escalating war in Afghanistan and Vice President Joe Biden's trip to Ukraine and Georgia. | 7/23/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 130 | VideoWeek in review: Afghanistan, human rights and Clinton | Gideon Rose of Foreign Affairs magazine and Carla Robbins of The New York Times discuss the week's top stories: The escalating war -- and increasing casualties -- in Afghanistan, the U.S. commitment to human rights abroad and Hillary Clinton's role in U.S. foreign policy. | 7/16/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 131 | VideoCambodia fears growing resistance to malaria drugs | One of the biggest challenges in fighting malaria, which kills more than one million people each year, is drug resistance. In Cambodia, health officials are seeing new evidence of resistance as they try to treat the most deadly kind of malaria. | 7/15/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 132 | VideoWeek in review: U.S. relationship with Russia evolves | James Hoge of Foreign Affairs magazine and Nina Khrushcheva of The New School discuss the U.S. relationship with Russia. | 7/15/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 133 | VideoThousands line up in Kenya for HIV testing | In urging Congress to spend $60 billion over the next six years on health aid to other nations, U.S. President Barack Obama called for an integrated approach -- fight AIDS, but at the same time, combat other preventable disease that kill millions of people each year. In Kenya, a health project is taking that very approach. | 7/7/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 134 | VideoWeek in review: Iraq pullback and unrest in Honduras | Garrick Utley of the State University of New York and Ian Bremmer of the Eurasia Group discuss the week's top stories: The U.S. offensive in Afghanistan, the American pullback in Iraq and unrest in Honduras. | 7/2/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 135 | VideoWeek in review: Winding down in Iran and violence in Iraq | Susan Chira of The New York Times and Gideon Rose of Foreign Affairs Magazine discuss the week's top stories: As the post-election protests wind down in Iran, the authorities seem to be getting their way, while in Iraq, a new round of violence is sweeping the country as American troops pull back. | 6/25/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 136 | VideoVietnamese embrace the U.S. decades after the war | In the years since the Vietnam War, Vietnam has undergone radical changes, as have attitudes among many of its 86 million people toward the United States. | 6/23/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 137 | VideoAgent Orange devastates generations of Vietnamese | During the Vietnam War, the U.S. dropped more than 10 million gallons of Agent Orange, a toxic defoliant, on Vietnam. Generations of civilians have suffered the consequences. | 6/21/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 138 | VideoWeek in review: Iran in tumult | Garrick Utley of the State University of New York and Ervand Abharamian of the City University of New York discuss the top story of the week: Iran. They discuss Ayatollah Khamenei's speech, the massive protests and where the crisis may be headed. | 6/18/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 139 | VideoSingapore's health system saves money and lives | According to the World Health Organization, Singapore has one of the best health care systems in the world. The U.S. spends nearly 17 percent of its GDP on health care, while Singapore spends about 4 percent. | 6/16/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 140 | VideoOprah brings taboo topics to Middle East | The Middle East's MBC-4 began airing The Oprah Winfrey Show more than four years ago, and the program now reaches about 6 million viewers in the Arab world each day. | 6/7/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 141 | VideoImmigrants stream across Mexico's southern border | For years now, immigration into the United States from Mexico has been a huge issue in American politics. But Mexico is facing similar problems on its southern border, as Central Americans in search of higher-paying work pour into the country. | 6/3/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 142 | VideoYears later, roots of French riots remain | Worldfocus travels to the site of the French immigration riots three years ago. Tensions between the Arab and French populations still simmer. | 6/2/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 143 | VideoDirt poor Haitians eat cookies made of mud | The small island nation of Haiti relies heavily on food imports, but with prices soaring, some Haitians are resorting to eating mud. | 5/26/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 144 | VideoIndia's untouchables trudge through sewers | For all the progress seen in India's transformation into a modern global economy, the country remains strongly tied to the traditions of its caste system, which largely governs where Indians work and in what jobs. Worldfocus reports on the lowest form of work, for members of India's lowest class. | 5/24/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 145 | VideoBolivia eyes lithium with hopes to transform economy | Bolivia controls nearly half of the world's reserves of lithium, a metal crucial for electric cars and other alternative energy technologies. But who will benefit from this discovery is creating controversy. | 5/12/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 146 | VideoBolivian land reform comes under fire from landowners | The Bolivian government is implementing land reform designed to help the poor, under which the government can seize and redistribute land to indigenous farmers. It's a proposal that has left many landowners unhappy. | 5/11/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 147 | VideoPalestinian economy helped and harmed by globalization | After the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993, for the first time, Palestinians began to take control of their own economic destiny. Foreign money soon began pouring into the West Bank. | 5/5/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 148 | VideoDivided Northern Ireland works to integrate schools | Despite its official peace agreements, Northern Ireland remains a largely divided land, with Catholics and Protestants still living apart. Yet there are attempts to bring the people of Northern Ireland together, including an innovating program to integrate schools. | 5/4/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 149 | VideoWounds still left open from Northern Ireland's conflict | Worldfocus visits Northern Ireland 11 years after its peace agreement to find the unsettled remainders of a troubled past. | 5/3/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 150 | VideoFrom streets to clubs, sexual attitudes shift in Lebanon | From the Arab world's first gay rights demonstration to wild parties to a new graphic magazine, sexual attitudes are changing in Beirut. | 4/29/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 151 | VideoWinemakers thrive in the hills of eastern Lebanon | The mountainous region of eastern Lebanon has a rich history spanning thousands of years -- and equally rich land that makes it a fertile location for some of the country's top vineyards. | 4/28/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 152 | VideoBeirut's American University preaches tolerance, democracy | The American University of Beirut is an oasis in the Middle East, a place where diversity of opinion and freedom of thought is not only tolerated, but encouraged. | 4/27/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 153 | VideoHezbollah heads into mainstream Lebanese life and politics | Some call it a state within a state; a movement that is all too willing to fill any gaps it perceives left open by the government. Hezbollah, with its close ties to Iran, has become very influential in Lebanon -- and though the U.S. government considers them terrorists, they are heroes to their many followers. | 4/26/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 154 | VideoFormer child soldiers, sex slaves recover from Liberia's war | Some of the biggest victims of Liberia's 14-year civil war were young women who were taken prisoner and forced to fight, or made into sex slaves. Many of them are now struggling to recover and struggling to forget. | 4/25/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 155 | VideoArab world is transfixed by Turkish soap operas | For more than six centuries, the Ottoman Empire controlled Arab lands, leaving its imprint on art, language and food. Today, Turkey is wielding influence once again in the Arab world -- not militarily, but through its soap operas. | 4/21/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 156 | VideoEmpty stores, offices tell tale of Latvia's economic fall | Until the global recession, the former Soviet republic of Latvia was experiencing the kind of growth that some described as a miracle. Now, it has all tumbled down, with unemployment at 14.5 percent. | 4/19/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 157 | VideoLiberian women occupy front lines of war on sexual violence | Liberia's recovery after years of civil war has been led by women, who for years were among the biggest victims of the rampant violence in that country. Women are now on the front lines of what's become a war on sexual violence. | 4/14/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 158 | VideoWomen's movement transforms post-war Liberia | For a 14-year period ending in 2003, Liberia struggled with a brutal civil war, a crippled economy and not much hope. That was until a women's movement started to take hold -- a movement that helped to drive a dictator from power and gave women the kind of opportunities they could never have dreamed of. | 4/13/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 159 | VideoLiberia, "America's stepchild," searches for own identity | Liberia, a small country in West Africa, has long and deep ties to the United States. The country became infamous in recent years for a bloody civil war that all but destroyed it. Liberia was settled by freed American slaves, and now, as Worldfocus special correspondent Lynn Sherr and producer Megan Thompson report, Liberia is trying to shape an identity it can call its own. | 4/12/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 160 | VideoSplintered bats fly and feisty tongues flap on Cuban streets | In Cuba, baseball is a beloved year-round sport, played in stadiums and in streets. While it may look the same, it is a far cry from the money game it has become in the U.S. | 4/8/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 161 | VideoLithuanians cling to their language to protect culture | During 50 years of Soviet occupation, Lithuanians hung on to their language as a not-so-quiet form of rebellion. Today, they want to protect it -- not from an occupying force, but from other languages. | 4/7/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 162 | VideoEstonia becomes E-stonia with digital revolution | A digital revolution is turning the tiny European nation of Estonia into a nation of Internet innovators. Estonians have put their digital identities onto their national identification cards, and much more. | 4/6/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 163 | VideoEstonia emerges from Soviet rule to fight in Afghanistan | After NATO backed President Obama's new approach to the war in Afghanistan at a summit this weekend, Worldfocus reports on the commitment of one NATO ally -- the small eastern European nation of Estonia, population 1.3 million. | 4/5/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 164 | VideoAfrica's first elected female president lifts Liberia | President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf is leading Liberia's efforts to rebuild after its 14-year civil war. | 3/31/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 165 | VideoOne woman fights for members of India's lowest caste | As a consequence of India's caste system, the country's lowest class has been forced to work in the sewers. Hema Konsotia is a member of the lower-caste Dalit community, known by some as the untouchables. She is also a college graduate and union activist who works with Dalits, teaching skills and urging political involvement. | 3/30/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 166 | VideoPascal and Vestine are alive in Congo, but still not home | Correspondent Michael J. Kavanagh returned to the refugee camps of eastern Congo last month and found Pascal and Vestine. Here is his update on the Bumbari family. | 3/25/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 167 | VideoOnce a magnet for immigrants, Spain's jobs are vanishing | For years, as Spain's economy soared, immigrants poured into the country from Africa, Eastern Europe and even South America. It was a land of opportunity -- but no longer, with jobs vanishing and antagonism growing. | 3/24/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 168 | VideoSpain's olive growers face trouble with economy in the pits | In Spain, where the unemployment rate is the highest in Europe, almost no one is immune from the global recession -- not even the many olive growers there. | 3/23/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 169 | VideoHousing collapse spells doom for Spain's tile makers | Spain has an unemployment rate of 14.8 percent, the highest in Western Europe. In the town of Vila Real in eastern Spain, many people make their living making tiles. But suddenly, after the housing bubble burst, no one wants or needs what they make. | 3/22/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 170 | VideoEgyptian women choose the veil | Though some in the Western world view the veil as a symbol of oppression, for women in Egypt the hijab takes on different meanings. | 3/17/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 171 | VideoCoffee producers lead fight against cancer in Nicaragua | Cervical cancer is the number one killer of women in Latin America, but Nicaraguan women are finding hope with the help of the country's top export -- coffee. | 3/16/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 172 | VideoFood prices punish rich and poor in India | India's rich and poor feel the effects of rising food costs, spiking inflation and lackluster harvests. | 3/15/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 173 | VideoHong Kong's mass transit system rides to prosperity | New mass transit systems in mainland China, India and the United Kingdom have at least one thing in common: They all came to Hong Kong to study its example. Worldfocus reports on how Hong Kong has combined good business with public service with its mass transit rail system (MTR). | 3/11/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 174 | VideoFrom pop culture to Obama, how Cubans see the U.S. | Despite years of ill will between the U.S. and Cuban governments, many Cubans still have fond feelings for America -- and look forward to changing relations under U.S. President Barack Obama. | 3/10/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 175 | VideoU.S. misses out on flourishing Cuban business | Cuba is doing business worldwide, but the United States is hardly in the game. A long U.S. government boycott of the island means most American businessmen are losing out to Europeans and others when it comes to everything from agriculture to medicine to oil. | 3/9/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 176 | VideoSocial, economic change is in the air in post-Fidel Cuba | With Raul Castro now in charge, change is in the air and being talked about openly on Cuba's streets, from young people testing the limits of protest to the government forging new economic partnerships around the globe. | 3/8/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 177 | VideoTijuana sees tourism plunge as fear of drug cartels spreads | In Tijuana, a once-thriving city just across the border from San Diego, the increasingly deadly drug war has touched almost every part of life -- from health care to tourism. | 3/4/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 178 | VideoMexico's narco culture sings praises of drug violence | While many Mexicans are revolted by the drug-related murders, kidnappings and rapes that plague the country, there is also a popular subculture that celebrates this widespread violence. | 3/3/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 179 | VideoMore Mexicans vanish as drug war escalates | In Tijuana, it is common for people simply to vanish. Known as the "disappeared," Mexico's kidnapping victims are often never heard from again -- 97 percent of the country's kidnapping cases go unsolved by police. | 3/2/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 180 | VideoGangsters spill blood and spread fear in Tijuana, Mexico | Over the last year, more than 6,000 people have been murdered in Mexico's drug wars, more than 700 of them in Tijuana alone. "El Teo" is a major player in Tijuana's drug war, a larger-than-life figure who has escaped the law and left gruesome corpses in his wake. | 3/1/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 181 | VideoPoor white South Africans blame reverse discrimination | To some extent, the economic playing field has been leveled since the end of apartheid 15 years ago. But that has had another impact -- white poverty has doubled since 1994. | 2/25/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 182 | VideoImmigrants in South Africa deal with hostility, xenophobia | Last year, waves of attacks on immigrants swept through South Africa. Now those same immigrants are caught between violence in a country that wants them to leave, and the danger of returning to home countries that don't want them back. | 2/24/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 183 | VideoSouth Africa confronts world's worst AIDS epidemic | While South Africa has made strides toward racial and economic equality in the last 15 years, there is one issue in which South Africa has actually lost ground over the years - HIV/AIDS. | 2/23/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 184 | VideoPoverty preserves racial lines in post-apartheid South Africa | In South Africa, the system of apartheid ended 15 years ago, and since then, many of the racial barriers have broken down. But though they may be equal on paper, many black South Africans still feel unequal due to continuing poverty. | 2/22/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 185 | VideoHaitians destroy environment in struggle to survive | Haiti is a tiny island country in the Caribbean and the poorest in the Western hemisphere. In their struggle to survive, Haitians are destroying the very elements of their environment that sustain them. | 2/17/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 186 | VideoRussian real estate goes from boom to bust | Once alive and well, Russia's real estate industry has been hit hard by the financial crisis. | 2/16/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 187 | VideoStalin makes a comeback with Russia's youth | Though he is vilified in the U.S. as one of the 20th century's most brutal dictators, and despite the countless deaths his purges caused, Josef Stalin is once again being hailed in Russia. | 2/15/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 188 | VideoIndigenous languages revive and thrive in Mexico | About half the estimated 7,000 languages spoken in the world today may disappear by the end of this century, many of them from indigenous cultures. Mexico is attempting to preserve the past by speaking ancient languages in the present tense. | 2/10/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 189 | VideoIsraeli company builds infrastructure for world's electric cars | One Israeli company is not just promoting the use of electric cars but designing an entire system to service them, with battery charging stations. Many countries are expressing great interest. | 2/8/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 190 | VideoOne in five Israeli citizens is Arab | The history of conflict between Israel and its Arab neighbors is well-documented. A story told not nearly as often is the relationship between Arabs and Jews within Israel, as approximately one in five Israelis is Arab. | 2/4/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 191 | VideoImmigrants and religions redefine Israeli society | The wave of immigration over the past few decades has changed the face of Israel. Also, some 20 percent of Israelis are Muslims, Christians and other minorities. | 2/3/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 192 | VideoAnti-Americanism fades and business booms in Nicaragua | Some Americans might not associate business with Nicaragua at all, as Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega first came to power a generation ago with a militant anti-American message. But times change, and Nicaragua is now promoting itself as a business-friendly country, and more Americans are traveling -- or even moving -- to the country. | 2/2/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 193 | VideoChina and Taiwan cope with decades of tension | Last May, Ma Ying-jeou was sworn in as Taiwan's new president and promised to improve relations with mainland China after decades of tension. Worldfocus explores Taiwan's progressing relations with mainland China. | 2/1/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 194 | VideoCanada's free health care comes with long lines | Though Canada's universal health care model has effectively cut administrative costs, the system comes with flaws -- long lines have sent some Canadians to private clinics. | 1/28/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 195 | VideoCanada's hospitals cut the paperwork, emphasize care | Canada has worked to cut administrative costs attached to medical care. Now, basic health care is universal and, in most parts of the country, free -- and remarkably little paperwork is involved. | 1/27/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 196 | VideoThe highs and lows of universal health care in Brazil | In Brazil, health care is free. By law, everyone has a right to treatment, and as a result, infant mortality is down and life expectancy is up. But there are drawbacks -- offering so much has put a strain on the health system. | 1/25/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 197 | VideoWomen in Jordan head to work as economy sours | In the conservative Muslim region of southern Jordan, more and more women are leaving the home for the first time and going to work -- largely out of economic necessity. The number of women in the workforce has more than doubled over the past five years. | 1/20/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 198 | VideoHow Nicaraguans see the U.S. | Worldfocus special correspondent Lynn Sherr travels to Nicaragua to discuss baseball, U.S. relations and Barack Obama. | 1/18/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 199 | VideoUnexploded bombs leave a deadly legacy in Vietnam | All across Vietnam, thousands of unexploded bombs and grenades are still buried in the ground. At least 38,000 people have been killed by leftover explosives since the Vietnam War ended in 1975. | 1/13/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 200 | VideoVietnam on a bumpy road to economic power | In the U.S., Vietnam has been largely out of public view in the three decades since the war. But during that time, Vietnam has gone through remarkable changes, and is now on the road to becoming an economic powerhouse. | 1/12/09 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 201 | VideoThailand's Mr. Condom battles AIDS | In Thailand, AIDS remains a leading cause of death despite significant successes against the disease. | 12/17/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 202 | VideoContaminated drug imports threaten Americans | The majority of drugs in the U.S. contain ingredients that are produced overseas, often with no oversight by the Food and Drug Administration. | 12/16/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 203 | VideoRehabilitating rape victims and families in Congo | Michael J. Kavanagh and Taylor Krauss reported on the crisis in eastern Congo for Worldfocus and highlight efforts to rehabilitate rape victims and their families in eastern Congo, presenting a short video about the ventures of one counseling organization. | 12/15/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 204 | VideoBlack flies blind river villagers in Tanzania | Onchocerciasis, or river blindness, affects almost 40 million people -- most of them in Africa. | 12/14/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 205 | VideoRwanda aims for one laptop per child | Once a site of Rwanda's 1994 genocide, the town of Rwamagana is now going online thanks to the One Laptop Per Child program. | 12/10/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 206 | VideoFree healthcare but long lines in Uganda | Uganda suffers from an extreme shortage of health workers, particularly in more remote rural areas. | 12/9/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 207 | VideoMountain gorillas rustle through Uganda's forest | Uganda's Bwindi Forest is home to almost half of the world's remaining mountain gorillas, an endangered species. Correspondent Martin Seemungal treks through the wilderness to observe some of the rare creatures in their natural habitat. | 12/8/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 208 | VideoRwanda women dominate government | Rwanda's parliament is 56 percent female, the first in the world in which women hold a majority (45 out of 80) of seats. | 12/7/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 209 | VideoMuslim insurgency simmers in southern Thailand | Beyond the recent turmoil in Bangkok, a violent Muslim insurgency has emerged in Thailand's south. | 12/3/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 210 | VideoWar in DR Congo: The story of Pascal and Vestine | In the last year alone, over a million people have fled the fighting in eastern Congo. Worldforcus correspondent Michael Kavanagh tells one family's story. | 12/2/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 211 | VideoBirth is deadly for Guatemalan women | Every minute, a woman dies of complications related to pregnancy and childbirth, and Guatemala has one of the highest rates of maternal mortality in Latin America. | 12/1/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 212 | VideoBrazil emerges as an oil giant | Worldfocus explores the P-51 offshore oil platform near Angra dos Reis, which for many represents not only the future of oil exploration but also the future of Brazil. | 11/24/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 213 | VideoIndia's outsourcers look to outsource | In the last 10 years, India has become a global center for foreign companies. But worldwide economic strife may lead to shifts in the outsourcing industry. | 11/23/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 214 | VideoMexico city divided over legalized abortion | Over a year after Mexico City's legalization of abortion, Martin Savidge heads south to explore the ongoing abortion debate. | 11/19/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 215 | VideoItaly's immigration debate intensifies | In the northern city of Treviso, Italy, a gunslingling mayor cracks down on illegal immigration, even as accusations of racism linger. | 11/18/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 216 | VideoTurkish immigrants cement Islam in Germany | As the immigration debate heats up in Germany, mosques are popping up and Turkish immigrants are rising up through the political system. | 11/16/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 217 | VideoSoviet style hampers a democratic Ukraine | Political progress has come slowly in Ukraine, where new businesses are finding it difficult to escape the Soviet ways. | 11/12/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 218 | VideoPolish citizens build on anti-Soviet camaraderie | Nearly two decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the anti-Soviet Polish Solidarity movement has reinvented itself in a democratic and economically strong Poland. | 11/11/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 219 | VideoCzech youth unaware of Soviet past | Today, the younger generation of Czech citizens know little about the Russian invasion and subsequent demonstrations of 1968. | 11/10/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 220 | VideoRevolution of 1956 haunts Hungarians | Last month, Hungary marked the anniversary of the 1956 revolution, when approximately 200,000 Hungarians gathered in front of the country's Parliament to demand an end to Soviet rule. | 11/9/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 221 | VideoCatholic Brazilians convert to the Pentecostal church | From the favelas of Rio de Janeiro to television screens across the nation, the Pentecostal church is growing in numbers and influence, and has more than doubled between 1980 and 2000. | 11/5/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 222 | VideoMore tolls, but better roads in Brazil | Brazil has experienced explosive economic growth the past several years, but its infrastructure has not kept up. Now Brazil has embarked on a multi-billion dollar plan to correct the lack, a plan that has enormous implications for the country. | 11/3/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 223 | VideoBrazil pioneers energy independence with ethanol | Brazil is the second largest producer of ethanol after the U.S., which uses corn rather than sugarcane. | 11/2/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 224 | VideoCzechs wary of U.S. government, but not tourists | Ernesto Londono of The Washington Post discusses a new high-tech dragnet on the border of Iraq and Iran. | 10/29/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 225 | VideoAfricans reveal mixed opinions of the U.S. | Worldfocus reports on the U.S.'s image in Kenya and Tanzania -- from Kenya's growing bond to Tanzania's lingering tension. | 10/27/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 226 | VideoSingapore curbs traffic with automatic tolls | Singapore's innovative electronic toll system manages traffic in the densely populated country -- at a cost. | 10/26/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 227 | VideoEgypt's journalists fight for free speech | Worldfocus takes a look at the world of journalism. Freedom to express our views and even report the news is far different from what Egyptian writers, bloggers, and reporters find when they try to tell their stories. | 10/22/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 228 | VideoEgyptians express views on America | Egypt has one of the longest running political and military U.S. alliances in the Middle East, but the U.S.- Egypt relationship continues to evolve. | 10/20/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 229 | VideoU.S. money to Mexico slows | Money flowing from the U.S. to Mexico has dropped to its lowest level in 13 years, impacting local economies. | 10/19/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 230 | VideoAmerica looms large in India | Worldfocus correspondent Daljit Dhaliwal reports from New Delhi on how Indians perceive the U.S. | 10/15/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 231 | VideoTech advances rev up in Africa | Africa has the fastest-growing mobile market in the world. Africans are making technological advances and actively blogging. | 10/14/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 232 | VideoMiddle class sprawls in Nairobi, Kenya | Within a couple of years, China is expected to surpass the U.S. as Africa's primary trading partner, with a projected trading relationship worth $100 billion a year. | 10/13/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 233 | VideoChina strengthens trading ties in Africa | Within a couple of years, China is expected to surpass the U.S. as Africa's primary trading partner -- projecting a trading relationship of $100 billion a year. | 10/12/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 234 | VideoCowboys swing lassos in annual Brazilian rodeo | The annual rodeo in Barretos creates a Wild Wild West with a Brazilian twist for international cowboys. | 10/9/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 235 | VideoUkraine's black soil tilled for private investment | The current food crisis in Ukraine -- known as the breadbasket of Europe -- presents challenges and opportunities for the country. | 10/8/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 236 | VideoFarmers, drought and taxes cripple Argentina | Argentina -- known as "grocer to the world" -- finds itself trapped by food inflation, a slumping economy and one of the worst droughts in almost 50 years. | 10/7/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 237 | VideoFood crisis rages through Kenya | At least five of the 38 million Kenyans live in urban slums and food insecurity rages through the country, resulting in public outcry and economic upheaval. | 10/5/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| 238 | VideoInto the Czech woods for the mushroom hunt | In the Czech Republic, mushroom hunting is a long-standing cultural pastime. David Marash documents the autumnal tradition of plucking fungi from the forest. | 10/5/08 | Free | View In iTunes |
| Total: 238 Episodes |
Customer Reviews
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Thorough and Responsible International News Coverage
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