BBC World Service
How instant noodles took over the world! 🍝 - BBC World Service #shorts
- Title
- How instant noodles took over the world! 🍝 - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 1:04
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Pasta, ramen and all things noodles... Here's everything you didn't know about the instant noodle's journey, its inventor and how it took the world by storm.
What's your favourite way to enjoy noodles? 🍝
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
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#BBCWorldService #WorldService #noodles #food #globalcuisine #cooking
- Title
- Could Bali become waste-free in just two years? - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 10:23
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- When you picture Bali, you might think of sandy beaches, laid-back surfers, ancient temples and lush green rice paddies.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
As a tourist hotspot, single-use plastic is common and it has a problem with disposing of plastic waste. A study from 2021 ranked Indonesia as the fifth biggest contributor of marine waste in the world.
Now, Bali’s governor has set an ambitious goal: to make the island waste-free by 2027. But how realistic is that? And what would it actually take to make it happen? Hanna Samosir, a reporter for the BBC in Jakarta, takes us through the story.
Instagram: @bbcwhatintheworld
Email: whatintheworld@bbc.co.uk
WhatsApp: +44 0330 12 33 22 6
Presenter: Hannah Gelbart
Producers: Emily Horler and Adam Chowdhury
Video Journalist: Baldeep Chahal
Editor: Verity Wilde
----------------
This is the official ...
- Title
- Can Bali really go waste-free by 2027? - What in the World podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 10:42
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- When you picture Bali, you might think of sandy beaches, laid-back surfers, ancient temples and lush green rice paddies.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
As a tourist hotspot, single-use plastic is common and it has a problem with disposing of plastic waste. A study from 2021 ranked Indonesia as the fifth-biggest contributor of marine waste in the world.
Now, Bali’s governor has set an ambitious goal: to make the island waste-free by 2027. But how realistic is that? And what would it actually take to make it happen? Hanna Samosir, a reporter for the BBC in Jakarta, takes us through the story.
00:00 Intro
0:57 How bad is the waste problem?
1:23 Why landfills are full
2:50 How the Balinese dispose of waste
3:38 How tourism increases waste
4:29 Bali’s 2027 waste-free target
5:05 The plan to reduce waste
7:00 How businesses are expected to change
...
- Title
- The rare disease in a town where 'everyone's a cousin' - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 3:00
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- The story of a small town in Brazil where family ties led to a medical discovery of a mysterious disease that paralysed residents.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Silvana Santos still knows by heart the house and the name of each of the residents of Serrinha dos Pintos, Brazil, who lost the ability to walk in childhood. It was in this city of less than 5,000 inhabitants that the biologist and doctor in genetics discovered, studied and named a rare genetic disease previously unknown in the world: the SPOAN Syndrome.
----------------
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- Title
- Why shea butter production could dry up - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 8:58
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Shea butter, a rich silky fat loved for its versatility, is under threat. It’s a key ingredient in everything from moisturisers to pharmaceuticals, and it has a huge global market. The shea trees where it’s extracted from grow from West to East Africa in a vast strip known as the "shea belt".
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
BBC Africa’s Anne Okumu has been to visit the Mount Kei Central Forest Reserve in Uganda, an area which used to be lush with wild shea trees, but has now been turned into a near-barren expanse dotted with stumps. She tells us why people have been cutting them down, and what this has to do with climate change. We also hear about what is being done to protect shea trees.
Instagram: @bbcwhatintheworld
Email: whatintheworld@bbc.co.uk
WhatsApp: +44 0330 12 33 22 6
Presenter: Iqra Farooq
Producers: Mora Morrison, Adam Chowdhury and Benita Barden
Editor: Verit...
- Title
- Diddy’s 'swinger' defence, plus jury selection begins - Diddy on Trial podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 18:20
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Lawyers for Sean "Diddy" Combs preview his legal defence in his sex trafficking case, arguing that the rapper led the "lifestyle" of a "swinger" and was not a criminal.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Potential jurors are sent questionnaires, with questions including whether wealthy people get away with things that less wealthy people do not, and also asking people if they watch crime shows.
Anoushka Mutanda-Dougherty goes through all the latest pre-trial news with criminal defence attorney Shaun Kent and Rolling Stone’s senior investigative reporter Cheyenne Roundtree.
00:00 Intro
00:52 Diddy's defence: 'He's a swinger'
14:03 Prospective questionnaires
17:58 Outro
Watch more episodes of Diddy on Trial here 👉🏽 https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz_B0PFGIn4dP8PQoiH-X5FAYSgacE2b4&si=vtoRf-h1BxbOpV0_
The Diddy on Trial podcast is here to investigat...
- Title
- Moose cam: Why millions watch a livestream of Sweden's forests 🫎 🇸🇪 - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 0:54
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Every spring for the past six years, millions of people have tuned in to a round-the-clock livestream of moose - or elk as they're known in Europe - on the move in northern Sweden as they swim across the Angerman River and make their annual journey towards greener, summer pastures. 🫎🫎🫎
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
----------------
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Thanks for watching and subscribing!
#BBCWorldService #WorldService #sweden #moosetape #moose #elk #animals #migration
- Title
- Should Korean beauty embrace darker skin tones? - The Fifth Floor podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 11:05
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- The Korean skincare industry is booming around the world, but some brands have faced a backlash because of the lack of products for people with darker skin tones.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Korean journalist Soo Min Kim has been looking into how companies have responded, and has spoken to the influencers driving this change.
00:00 Intro
00:51 Soo Min Kim’s personal experience with Korean beauty products
02:18 How big is the skincare industry in South Korea and abroad?
03:29 What’s driving this growth?
04:27 Why did some Korean brands face a backlash?
04:55 How a viral video kickstarted change
06:19 The clients in Kenya and Nigeria who are embracing K-beauty products
07:53 How Korean manufacturers changed their research
09:29 How Soo Min Kim’s experience as Miss South Korea influenced her investigation
Producers: Alice Gioia, Caroli...
- Title
- Who is India's new cricket wonder kid, Vaibhav Suryavanshi? - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 0:33
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Stumped's Charu Sharma tells us about 14-year-old Vaibhav Suryavanshi's historic innings for Rajasthan Royals.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Suryavanshi is the youngest player to hit a T20 century after scoring 100 whilst playing in the Indian Premier League (IPL).
----------------
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If you like what we do, you can also find us here:
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#BBCWorldService #WorldService #Cricket #IPL #Suryavanshi #Rajasthan #Royals
- Title
- Uncertainties for Kurds after the PKK announcement - The Global Jigsaw podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 30:20
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- After having explored the Kurdish struggles of the past, in this final part of the series we look to the future and the many unknowns paving the way to the next chapter in Kurdish history.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
00:00 Introduction
04:24 Ocalan’s call and Turkey
08:49 Ocalan’s call and Syria
19:12 Syrian media after Assad
21:52 The PKK in Iraq, a war in the mountains
25:48 The PKK in Iran
26:54 What next?
Producers: Kriszta Satori & Krassi Ivanova Twigg
Presenter: Krassi Ivanova Twigg
Contributors: Jiyar Gol, Dilay Yalcin, Sarbas Nazari, Florence Dixon and Mohammed Al-Jumaily
Editor: Judy King
Video producer: Suniti Singh
Broadcast on 1 May 2025
Watch more episodes of The Global Jigsaw podcast here 👉🏽 https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz_B0PFGIn4fK2XXqsOE-zcX_7R7gOklU
Find the w...
- Title
- 'They aimed to kill' - #BBCAfricaEye identifies security forces who shot Kenya anti-tax protesters
- Runtime
- 1:58
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- 🇰🇪 In 2024, a protest at Kenya’s legislature was ended by the gunfire of security forces.
To this day, those shooters’ faces have remained hidden.
But now, #BBCAfricaEye can expose the men who spilled blood on the grounds of Kenya’s parliament.
📽️ Watch the full documentary, "Blood Parliament" here: https://youtu.be/qz0f1yyf_eA
Nothing stays hidden forever.
***
Subscribe: http://bit.ly/subscribetoafrica
Website: https://www.bbc.com/africa
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bbcnewsafrica/
Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/bbcafrica/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bbcafrica/
#BBCWorldService #Shorts #Kenya #Documentary #FinanceBill2024 #BBCEye #BBCAfrica
- Title
- Axolotls: How the endangered amphibian is making a comeback - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 11:09
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Axolotls are only found in the wild in one place in the world: an area of wetland just outside Mexico City.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
They are one of the world’s most endangered, and arguably most adorable, amphibians. Not just meme-worthy, they are also scientifically fascinating - they don’t really age and they can regrow body parts, including their brains.
Very few are left in the wild, but now scientists have released captive-bred axolotls back into the wetlands and found that they not only survived, but even put on a bit of weight.
BBC science correspondent Victoria Gill talks us through the study and explains what scientists can learn from these amazing creatures.
And Assistant Professor Prayag Murawala from the MDI Biological Laboratory in the US, describes what we know about how axolotls regenerate their own body parts.
Instagram: @bbcwhatinthew...
- Title
- Exploring Luigi Mangione conspiracies - The Mangione Trial podcast, BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 1:30
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Can we really know the identity of a suspect from the length of their eyebrows? Does Luigi Mangione’s favourite Pokemon send us a message about his alleged motivations?
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Over three million posts went up on social media the week after the shooting of healthcare CEO Brian Thompson and the arrest of suspect Luigi Mangione.
While the many posts expressed horror at a cold blooded murder, some shared theories about the case.
From professional assassins to the number 286 - a range of ideas emerged across platforms like TikTok and Reddit.
Jordan Dunbar explains how conspiracy theories develop.
Watch the full episode here 👉🏽 https://youtu.be/xhodrlNyY0g
Watch more episodes of The Mangione Trial podcast here 👉🏽 https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz_B0PFGIn4dqQA7wr_EnhoqLNVKsFBtE
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This ...
- Title
- Vaibhav Suryavanshi: 14-year-old wonder kid making IPL history - Stumped, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 12:30
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- We find out more about the youngest centurion in IPL history, 14-year-old Vaibhav Suryavanshi.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
In this episode of Stumped, we celebrate two standout India stars. Vaibhav Suryavanshi, aged 14, has become the youngest player to hit a T20 century, so we find out more about his upbringing and his future potential.
We also hear about Pratika Rawal who has become the fastest female batter to reach 500 One Day International runs.
00:00 Introductions
00:23 Vaibhav Suryavanshi youngest centurion in T20 cricket
03:00 Chat on Suryavanshi global fame
04:43 When will Suryavanshi play for India?
06:55 Influence of Jaiswal
09:30 Rise of record breaker Pratika Rawal
Check out our Stumped playlist in YouTube ⬇️ https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz_B0PFGIn4c3olbysJWYM91FOyZZzil7
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This is the official BBC...
- Title
- Everything you need to know about the Diddy trial - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 12:32
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Sean "Diddy" Combs is one of the most successful music moguls in the history of rap. He has been arrested and charged with sex trafficking and racketeering. Prosecutors allege that he “abused, threatened, and coerced women” and that he created “a criminal enterprise” involving forced labour, kidnapping and bribery. Mr. Combs denies the charges and has pleaded not guilty.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Ahead of the trial later this month, Anoushka Mutanda-Dougherty, host of the BBC podcast, Diddy on Trial, explains the charges and shares Diddy’s response.
Instagram: @bbcwhatintheworld
Email: whatintheworld@bbc.co.uk
WhatsApp: +44 0330 12 33 22 6
Presenter: Hannah Gelbart
Producer: William Lee Adams and Mora Morrison
Video Journalist: Baldeep Chahal
Editor: Verity Wilde
----------------
This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel.
- Title
- Everything you need to know about the Diddy trial - What in the World podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 12:28
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Sean "Diddy" Combs is one of the most successful music moguls in the history of rap. He has been arrested and charged with sex trafficking and racketeering.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Prosecutors allege that he “abused, threatened, and coerced women” and that he created “a criminal enterprise” involving forced labour, kidnapping and bribery. Mr Combs denies the charges and has pleaded not guilty.
Ahead of the trial later this month, Anoushka Mutanda-Dougherty, host of the BBC podcast Diddy on Trial, explains the charges and shares Diddy’s response.
00:00 Intro
03:07 What’s Diddy been accused of?
04:05 What do we know about the accusers?
05:02 ‘Freak-offs’ explained
06:04 What to expect from the trial
06:48 What had Diddy said?
08:04 What if he’s convicted?
11:30 The Diddy on Trial podcast coverage
Watch more episod...
- Title
- Meet Chuwie, the injured sloth who inspired a rescue centre - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 1:26
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Meet Chuwie, the sloth who survived electrocution and inspired the couple who rescued him to save hundreds more of the animals.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
A vet told Chuwie's rescuers, Haydée and Juan Carlos, a couple from Venezuela, that he was unlikely to survive. But Chuwie's miraculous recovery gained people's attention and soon they were receiving calls about more sloths in need of help.
----------------
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If you like what we do, you can also find us here:
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#BBCWorldService #WorldService #sloth #animalrescue
- Title
- Why does Hitler still cast a shadow over the world? - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 10:12
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- It has been 80 years since Adolf Hitler, the leader of Germany and the Nazi Party during the Second World War, killed himself in a bunker in Berlin.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
He and his policies led to the Holocaust, the worst genocide in history, and an atrocity so terrible that he is considered truly evil. Despite a concerted effort from Allied forces to eradicate Nazism, it has proved difficult to destroy an ideology. Far right politics is seeing a resurgence globally and, almost a century after his death, Hitler remains a notorious spectre in the modern consciousness.
But is history at risk of repeating itself? Or are the lessons learned from the mid-20th Century enough to keep fascism at bay?
00:00 Intro
00:37 Who was Hitler?
01:34 Hitler’s death
03:36 Neonazism in the 21st Century
05:59 History repeating itself?
08:38 Lessons from Hitler’s evil legac...
- Title
- Why would someone try to smuggle 5,000 ants? - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 12:43
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Two Belgian teenagers have plead guilty to trying to smuggle thousands of giant African harvester ants out of Kenya. The authorities said they were allegedly planning to sell the ants on the growing exotic pet market in Europe and Asia, where ant keepers put the insects in special habitats and watch them build their colonies. BBC reporter Akisa Wandera talks us through this landmark case.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
We also hear from two ant keepers, Kaden (Ender Ants) and Mauro (Bruma Ants) on why they love their pets.
And finally, a quick question for you, how many ants do you think there are for every person on Earth?
A) 10 ants
B) 67 thousand ants
C) 980 thousand ants
D) 2.5 million ants
Listen to the episode for the answer!
Instagram: @bbcwhatintheworld
Email: whatintheworld@bbc.co.uk
WhatsApp: +44 0330 12 33 22 6
Presenter: Hannah ...
- Title
- The truth behind number 286 and other conspiracies - The Mangione Trial podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 33:21
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Can we really know the identity of a shooter from the length of their eyebrows? Does Luigi Mangione’s favourite Pokemon send us a message about his alleged motivations?
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Over three million posts went up on social media the week after the shooting of healthcare CEO Brian Thompson and the arrest of suspect Luigi Mangione.
While the many posts expressed horror at a cold blooded murder, some shared theories about the case.
From professional assassins to the number 286 - a range of ideas emerged across platforms like TikTok and Reddit.
This episode will explore why this case has engrossed so many different people around the world and ask why conspiracies have become so popular in online culture.
Jordan Dunbar speaks to disinformation journalist David Gilbert of Wired magazine and clinical psychologist Dr Shauna Bowes about why this case garne...
- Title
- How can you tell the difference between real and synthetic wigs? - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 0:34
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Hair is big business - especially in India, which is the world’s biggest exporter of human hair, supplying 85% of global demand.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Priti Gupta, a journalist in Mumbai, talks us through the difference between synthetic wigs and wigs made from real hair.
----------------
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If you like what we do, you can also find us here:
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#BBCWorldService #WorldService #wigs #india #syntheticwigs
- Title
- The Forbidden Zone: Why Is Turkey building military bases inside Iraq? - BBC World Service Docs
- Runtime
- 51:01
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- #BBCEye Investigations uncovers Turkey’s growing military presence in northern Iraq and its impact on civilians.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
For decades, Turkey has waged war against the PKK, a Kurdish militant group proscribed by various governments, deep in Iraq’s Kurdistan region. This remote area, known locally as the Forbidden Zone, has become the frontline of a hidden conflict.
Now, exclusive BBC research using open source satellite imagery reveals a dramatic shift: Turkey’s war on the PKK is transforming into a military occupation. With over 130 Turkish bases and outposts mapped inside Iraq, this investigation shows how Turkey has gained de facto control of thousands of square kilometres of Iraqi land.
Travelling to these restricted areas, the BBC exposes the human cost of Turkey’s military expansion. Reports from human rights groups estimate that over 700...
- Title
- How does going into space impact the human body? - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 12:40
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Nasa astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams recently returned to Earth after a longer-than-expected nine months on the International Space Station (ISS).
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
When the astronauts emerged from their space craft they were helped on to a stretcher, which is standard practice after spending so long in a weightless environment.
The BBC’s Caroline Steel has been looking into how going into space impacts the body. She talks us through how muscles, bones and even vision are affected, and how astronauts can limit any long-term damage. Peggy Whitson holds the world record for the woman who has spent most time in space - 675 days. She explains the challenges of lifting weights while in zero gravity.
Instagram: @bbcwhatintheworld
Email: whatintheworld@bbc.co.uk
WhatsApp: +44 0330 12 33 22 6
Presenter: Hannah Gelbart
Producers: Mora Morrison and Emili...
- Title
- Extracting Scotland's largest complete dinosaur fossil - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 1:22
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- A group of palaeontologists in Scotland have extracted the most complete dinosaur fossil in the country, on the Isle of Skye.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
It dates all the way back to the Middle Jurassic – a period from which dinosaur fossils are notoriously hard to come by, especially in Scotland.
----------------
This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel.
If you like what we do, you can also find us here:
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Thanks for watching and subscribing!
#BBCWorldService #WorldService
- Title
- How does space change the human body? - What in the World podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 13:57
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Nasa astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams recently returned to Earth after a longer-than-expected nine months in space.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Their journey back from the International Space Station (ISS) took 17 hours. And when the astronauts emerged from their space craft they were helped on to a stretcher, which is standard practice after spending so long in a weightless environment.
The BBC’s Caroline Steel has been looking into how going into space impacts the body. She talks us through how muscles, bones and even vision are affected, and how astronauts can limit any long-term damage. Peggy Whitson holds the world record for the woman who has spent most time in space - 675 days. She tells us about the challenges of lifting weights while in zero gravity.
Plus, space suit engineer Charlotte Pouwels shares how space suits work, and how they keep astronauts safe and comfortab...
- Title
- Why is plastic surgery so popular in China? - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 13:14
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- China’s cosmetic surgery industry has exploded over the past decade and in turn, put even more pressure on young women to conform to unrealistic beauty standards.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
On Chinese social media there are hundreds of filtered faces, extreme weight-loss hacks, and even apps that scan your face and let you book cosmetic surgery as easily as ordering a taxi.
BBC reporter Natalia Zuo, takes us through the culture in China and what she found out when working on a documentary for the BBC about the boom.
You can watch the documentary on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GaYSEWlHrGw
Instagram: @bbcwhatintheworld
Email: whatintheworld@bbc.co.uk
WhatsApp: +44 0330 12 33 22 6
Presenter: Hannah Gelbart
Producers: Emily Horler and Benita Barden
Editor: Harriet Oliver
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This is the official BBC World...
- Title
- What motivates some men to get a hair transplant? - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 1:00
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Turkey is becoming one of the most popular destinations to get a hair transplant.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Turkish officials estimate the hair transplant market was worth $1billion in 2024. Christopher Mizzoni, 22, travelled to Turkey in 2024 to get the first of two planned hair transplants.
----------------
This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel.
If you like what we do, you can also find us here:
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#BBCWorldService #WorldService #turkeyhairtransplant #hairtransplant #turkey
- Title
- Diddy told by judge trial will go ahead in May - Diddy on Trial, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 23:33
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- The judge has told Diddy’s team his trial will go ahead as planned, with opening statements set for 12 May. That’s despite his lawyers asking for a delay.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Judge Subramanian did agree to some of the requests from Diddy’s team, allowing access to outtakes from a documentary and old drafts of an alleged victim’s memoir.
Meanwhile, Tony Buzbee, the attorney representing many alleged victims bringing civil claims against Diddy, is now also acting for an anonymous woman who claims to have been raped by former NFL star Shannon Sharpe. He denies all the allegations.
Plus, could Trump pardon Diddy?
Criminal defence attorney Shaun Kent speaks to Anoushka Mutanda-Dougherty about all the latest pre-trial news.
00:00 Intro
00:50 Diddy appears in court
05:52 Elsewhere in the Diddyverse
10:00 Diddy’s new lawyer
21:24 Li...
- Title
- How Scotland’s largest dinosaur fossil was extracted - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 6:25
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- A group of palaeontologists in Scotland have extracted the most complete dinosaur fossil in the country, on the Isle of Skye.
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It dates all the way back to the Middle Jurassic – a period from which dinosaur fossils are notoriously hard to come by, especially in Scotland.
The team's led by Dr Elsa Panciroli, who says: “It’s really exciting and significant just to find a dinosaur that isn’t just one single bone or even just some footprints, but it’s multiple bones from one animal!”
Previously the title of “the first dinosaur fossil discovered in Scotland” was thought to belong to a bone found in 1992, but it all changed after Elsa found a diary of a palaeontologist who spotted and sketched down the fossil in 1973, but didn’t collect it.
And here’s how this treasure hunt happened!
Video journalist and presenter: Mykyta Osad...
- Title
- Why are Korean beauty products becoming popular around the world? - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 0:57
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Korean beauty products are increasing in popularity around the world, and some are looking at their shade ranges and making them more inclusive.
Soo Min Kim, a BBC reporter, talks about the K-beauty industry and explains why Korean products are becoming increasingly popular globally.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
----------------
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#BBCWorldService #WorldService #kbeauty #koreanbeauty #korea #beauty #makeup
- Title
- The rare disease discovered in a town where 'everyone's a cousin' - BBC 100 Women, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 11:39
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- The small town in Brazil where family ties led to a medical discovery of a mysterious disease that paralysed residents.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Silvana Santos still knows by heart the house and the name of each of the residents of Serrinha dos Pintos, Brazil, who lost the ability to walk in childhood. It was in this city of less than 5,000 inhabitants that the biologist and doctor in genetics discovered, studied and named a rare genetic disease previously unknown in the world: the Spoan Syndrome.
Caused by a genetic mutation that can be traced back to the first settlers to explore this region of Brazil, the syndrome affects the nervous system and causes progressive stiffening and weakening of the legs and arms. In this video, reporters Vitor Tavares, Giulia Granchi and Mariana Castiñeiras talk to Silvana and residents of Serrinha dos Pintos, who explain how their lives changed after the disease was ...
- Title
- Inside the world of India's 'godwoman' Radhe Maa - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 2:15
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- This is Radhe Maa, one of the few women within India's controversial "godmen" phenomenon - where individuals carry out blessings, claim miracles and command large followings and donations.
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We've been given rare and exclusive access inside this "godwoman's" palace, to understand this world of faith and fear, where followers are told donations bring miracles and disobedience could lead them to harm.
This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel.
If you like what we do, you can also find us here:
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BBC World Service website 👉🏽 https://www.bbc.co.uk/worldserviceradio
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#BBCWorldService #WorldService #india #godwoman #ra...
- Title
- Luigi Mangione pleads not guilty - The Mangione Trial podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 16:21
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Luigi Mangione enters his pleas to all federal charges over the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Mr Thompson, a father of two, was shot dead outside a Manhattan hotel in December 2024. Mr Mangione faces four federal charges - murder, using a weapon with a silencer, and two counts of stalking. Prosecutors are seeking a death penalty.
Jordan Dunbar hears from the BBC’s New York Correspondent Nada Tawfik, who was in the packed Manhattan courtroom to hear Mr Mangione enter his plea.
She takes us through the important developments in the hearing and describes the scenes as Mr Mangione's supporters gather outside.
00:00 Welcome to The Mangione Trial podcast
01:12 Luigi Mangione walks into court
02:10 How did he plea?
05:15 Prosecutors request federal trial first
06:14 Tense moments in court
08:00 What happe...
- Title
- Are your fashion choices a ‘recession indicator’? - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 12:13
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Many economists have warned that the world is poised for an economic downturn. The warnings come after President Trump's recent changes to America’s tariff policies.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Changes in consumer spending — including their fashion choices — are one potential “recession indicator.”
Erin Delmore, the BBC’s North America business correspondent, explains what a recession is and discusses how people’s purchasing decisions — regarding everything from clothes to salon visits — offer clues to what’s going on with the economy.
We also hear from Caroline Stevenson from the London College of Fashion. She explains how trends come about and unpacks recent trends like the “clean girl” look and the “office siren”.
Plus content creator Leah Holme discusses how she makes mindful purchasing decisions based on the long-term.
Instagram: ...
- Title
- Wisden's top five and what next for West Indies women? - Stumped, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 13:46
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- The Wisden Almanack is released and West Indies miss out on the Women's ODI World Cup.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
The Women’s World Cup qualifiers have reached their conclusion with Pakistan and Bangladesh making it through to the ODI World Cup later this year. Alison Mitchell, Jim Maxwell and Charu Sharma reflect on the West Indies team who have missed out on the Women's World Cup for the first time in 25 years.
Plus, we are joined by Lawrence Booth, the editor of the 162nd edition of the Wisden Cricketers' Almanack who shares his strong opinions on the global game and reveals the names of the five Wisden cricketers of the year.
00:00 - Introductions
00:45 - West Indies miss out on Women's ODI World Cup
02:40 - Pakistan unbeaten in World Cup qualifiers
04:30 - India prospects at World Cup
06:24 - Wisden Cricketer's Almanack editor Lawrence Booth
09:02 - Dan...
- Title
- Diddy on Trial: How did we get here? - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 1:28
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- In May, Sean 'Diddy' Combs will stand trial. Here's what you need to know before the Diddy trial begins.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Watch episodes of Diddy on Trial here 👉🏽 https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz_B0PFGIn4dP8PQoiH-X5FAYSgacE2b4&si=vtoRf-h1BxbOpV0_
----------------
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#BBCWorldService #WorldService #diddy #diddyontrial
- Title
- How inclusive is Korean make-up? - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 14:51
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Finding the right shade of makeup can be a struggle, especially if you have really fair or dark skin. But things are changing. Some brands, including Korean ones are looking at their shade ranges and making them more inclusive.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Soo Min Kim, a BBC reporter, takes us through the K-beauty industry and what’s changing.
We also hear from two beauty influencers - May Akhtar and Oceanne Comtois. Have they seen much change and could K-beauty be what the market needs?
Gloria Achieng is a BBC reporter in Kenya - how popular are products there?
And Adam Triantis from Dcypher walks us through why brands having a huge shade range can be hard logistically and whether AI could help.
Instagram: @bbcwhatintheworld
Email: whatintheworld@bbc.co.uk
WhatsApp: +44 0330 12 33 22 6
Presenter: Hannah Gelbart
Producers: Emily Horler and ...
- Title
- What does the future hold for Kurdish people? - The Global Jigsaw podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 28:57
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- The Kurds are one of the largest stateless groups in the world, scattered across four countries.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Their quest for self-determination has been marked by bloody crackdowns, betrayal and internal rivalry. In part two of this series, we explore their limited success at autonomy, which is more precarious than ever.
00:00 Introduction
01:43 Iraqi Kurdistan
10:40 The Arab Spring and Rojava revolution in Syria
24:48 Mahsa Amini protests in Iran
Producers: Kriszta Satori and Krassi Ivanova Twigg
Presenter: Krassi Ivanova Twigg
Editor: Judy King
Video producer: Suniti Singh
Broadcast on 24 April 2025
Watch more episodes of The Global Jigsaw podcast here 👉🏽 https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLz_B0PFGIn4fK2XXqsOE-zcX_7R7gOklU
Find the whole back catalogue of The Global Jigsaw podcast here ...
- Title
- The story behind World Book Day 📚 - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 1:06
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- You may have dressed up as your favourite book character in school but the idea came from a long-established Spanish celebration called The Day of Books and Roses.
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Pere Vicens, a book publisher from Barcelona in Spain, is one of the creators of World Book Day.
"Books have to continue to have a place in our culture. Books are essential for our civilisation," says Pere.
----------------
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If you like what we do, you can also find us here:
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#BBCWorldService #WorldService #worldbookday...
- Title
- How inclusive is Korean make-up? What in the World podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 14:56
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Finding the right shade of make-up can be a struggle, especially if you have really fair or dark skin.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
But things are changing. Some brands, including Korean ones, are looking at their shade ranges and making them more inclusive.
Soo Min Kim, a BBC reporter, takes us through the K-beauty industry and what’s changing.
We also hear from two beauty influencers - May Akhtar (@maytahmi) and Oceanne Comtois (@oceannec_). Have they seen much change and could K-beauty be what the market needs?
Gloria Achieng is a BBC reporter in Kenya - how popular are products there?
And Adam Triantis from Dcypher walks us through why brands having a huge shade range can be hard logistically and whether AI could help.
00:00 Intro
00:45 Undertones and overtones
01:30 How does colour matching work?
02:09 Oceanne Comtois
02:...
- Title
- How Ed Sheeran’s song ‘Azizam’ started a conversation on women’s rights in Iran - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 12:40
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- The title of Ed Sheeran’s new single ‘Azizam’ means ‘my love’ in the Persian language. The track and accompanying music video includes references to Persian culture and features famous Iranian pop star Googoosh. She’s been banned from singing in Iran since the 1970s.
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The song has received an outpouring of support from Iranian communities worldwide for its positive and heartfelt representation of Iran. But Googoosh’s featuring role has also shed light on the restrictions that women face in Iran, including a ban on singing in public places. We speak to Ghoncheh Habibiazad from BBC Persian about what inspired the song and what it tells us about music culture in Iran.
Instagram: @bbcwhatintheworld
Email: whatintheworld@bbc.co.uk
WhatsApp: +44 0330 12 33 22 6
Presenter: Hannah Gelbart
Producers: William Lee Adams and Benita Barden
Editor: ...
- Title
- Tell Your Papa: Why Nigeria banned this Afrobeats track - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 0:59
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Tell Your Papa by Eedris Abdulkareem is an Afrobeats song that criticises Nigeria’s president, Bola Tinubu, and calls on his son, Seyi Tinubu, to let his father know that "people are dying" due to hardship and insecurity, and that there is "hunger" in the country.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM

After its release, Nigeria’s National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) ordered broadcasters not to play the track. They classified it as "inappropriate" and "objectionable," adding that it falls short of public decency standards.
The BBC’s Makuochi Okafor gives us the reaction to the song’s ban and describes what life is like for Nigerians right now.
----------------
This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel.
If you like what we do, you can also find us here:
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Twitter 👉🏽 https://twitter.com/bbcworldse...
- Title
- Make Me Perfect: Manufacturing beauty in China - BBC World Service Documentaries
- Runtime
- 59:27
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- China’s cosmetic surgery industry is booming - but as it surges, it faces a worrying shortage of qualified practitioners. #BBCEye investigates.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
In China today, looking good is seen as key to career success. With beauty videos promoting extreme weight-loss flooding social media and beauty apps allowing surgery appointments to be booked at the click of a button, China’s cosmetic surgery industry is booming.
But the rise in demand has led to a shortage of qualified practitioners and licensed clinics. Hundreds of accidents are happening inside Chinese clinics every day.
This documentary meets the pioneers of the industry and tells the stories of victims of botched surgeries and recruitment scams.
00:00 Introduction: Manufacturing Beauty in China
02:15 Abby Wu - one of China's first cosmetic surgery influencers
02:25 'At 14, my mum took me t...
- Title
- After Pope Francis, what do young Catholics want next? - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 10:17
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Pope Francis led the Catholic church for more than a decade. He was the first Latin American pope, and the first non-European in more than a thousand years.
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Many saw him as a more liberal pope than his predecessors - he talked about things like climate change, migration and LGBTQ rights but there are also those who felt he should have been more progressive.
After his funeral, a conclave will begin and his successor will be chosen. We explain what this process involves and we hear young voices from around the world speaking about the death of Pope Francis and their hopes for the future of the Catholic Church.
Instagram: @bbcwhatintheworld
Email: whatintheworld@bbc.co.uk
WhatsApp: +44 0330 12 33 22 6
Presenter: Hannah Gelbart
Producers: Emily Horler and Maria Clara Montoya
Editor: Verity Wilde
----------------
This is...
- Title
- What’s the deal with Turkish hair transplants? - What in the World podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 14:41
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Turkey is becoming one of the most popular destinations to get a hair transplant.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
You might have seen videos on TikTok of guys with shaved heads and black sweatbands walking round Turkish airports, or sitting on planes on the way home.
Turkish officials estimate the hair transplant market was worth $1billion in 2024. People travel there from all around the world, but especially the US and Europe, because it’s so much cheaper than getting it done in their home country.
Christopher Mizzoni, 22, travelled to Turkey in 2024 to get the first of two planned hair transplants. He explains what it was like and what difference it’s made to him. Özge Özdemir from BBC Turkish explains why prices are so much lower in Turkey than other countries and sets out some concerns about the industry.
And Chris D’Souza, a hair transplant surgeon and president of th...
- Title
- What's Canada's position on nuclear deterrence? - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 1:15
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- French Canadian World Questions listener Denis from Quebec asks whether Nato would defend Canada from a possible US invasion, and the role of nuclear deterrence.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
As Canada debates its biggest issues in a Federal Election, World Questions hears from people across the country as they put the questions that matter most to a panel of politicians from the main parties.
----------------
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#BBCWorldService #WorldService #canada #nucleardeterrence #tariffs #u...
- Title
- What happens when the Pope dies? - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 4:01
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Pope Francis has died at the age of 88 after 12 years as the leader of the Roman Catholic Church. What happens when a pope dies? The rituals and conclave explained.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
When a pope dies, a centuries old ritual begins. While roughly 1.4bn Catholics all over the world might mourn their leader, a secret struggle for power begins in the Vatican City. In the following two or three weeks, 252 cardinals gather in the Sistine Chapel to debate and vote in strict secrecy for a new pope, and the future of the Catholic church.
0:00 What rituals happen when a pope dies?
0:50 The funeral and how popes are buried
1:59 The conclave, an election for a new pope
2:38 Who can become a pope?
3:09 How do we know when a decision has been made?
----------------
This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel.
If you like what we do, you can also fi...
- Title
- Are all luxury handbags really made in China? - BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 12:46
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Over the past few weeks social media has been flooded with TikTok videos of people claiming that expensive European designer goods are actually made in China, and that you can buy the same luxury handbags and clothes for a fraction of the usual price.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
Many of these videos have since been taken down, but it’s led many to wonder if any of these claims are true. Are consumers being ripped off? And does President Donald Trump’s increased tariffs on Chinese imports have anything to do with these videos?
We speak to Jake Horton, a reporter at BBC Verify, who’s been analysing these viral Chinese supplier videos. He’s reached out to both designers and copyright law experts.
Plus: we hear from Blythe Milligan, a supply chain expert and the host of the Everything is Logistics podcast, about why some products are manufactured in Asia. She also explains how supply cha...
- Title
- Quadrobic panic in Russia over walking like animals - BBC Trending podcast, BBC World Service
- Runtime
- 19:23
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- There’s a moral panic in Russia and several former Soviet states about a craze in which teenagers and children dress up as animals and walk on all fours.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
In one TikTok video, a group of youngsters are seen scampering across Moscow’s Red Square wearing fox masks and tails.
Politicians and religious leaders have warned the trend is a threat to civilised values and a cover for LGBT and western ideology. Legislation is now being considered to ban quadrobics and fine or arrest parents of enthusiasts. But quadrobics has a longer history as a form of exercise. We speak to the pioneering Japanese athlete who first set the world record for covering 100m on all fours in 2008.
00:00 Introduction
02:10 Quadrobics in Russia
04:45 Why has quadrobics provoked so much hostility?
11:53 Quadrober Kenichi Ito
Check out more episodes of BBC Trendin...
- Title
- What's happening in South Sudan? - BBC World Service #shorts
- Runtime
- 0:57
- Date posted
- 1 year ago
- Description
- Tensions in South Sudan are rising, threatening an already fragile peace deal between President Salva Kiir and his rival First Vice-President Riek Machar.
Click here to subscribe to our channel 👉🏽 https://bbc.in/3VyyriM
They signed the peace agreement in 2018 to end a five-year civil war that killed nearly 400,000 people. But now, many are worried that South Sudan could be on the brink of another civil war.
Ashley Lime, a BBC reporter in Nairobi, explains why this latest violence has escalated and outlines the relationship between these two leaders.
----------------
This is the official BBC World Service YouTube channel.
If you like what we do, you can also find us here:
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