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Venezuela’s teachers march for better pay amid soaring inflation

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Venezuela’s teachers march for better pay amid soaring inflation

Whilst Venezuela’s inflation reached an estimated 305 % final 12 months, gov’t didn’t alter worker salaries.

Lecturers, retirees and employees’ unions have marched in not less than six Venezuelan cities to demand higher salaries as the federal government of President Nicolas Maduro faces renewed challenges in its try and battle inflation.

Venezuela’s inflation is estimated to have reached 305 % final 12 months, in response to a nongovernmental group of economists who calculate indicators within the absence of official knowledge.

The federal government has not adjusted the salaries of public-sector staff since March final 12 months, a part of efforts to cut back spending and enhance taxes which allowed Venezuela to emerge from hyperinflation.

However within the second half of final 12 months, demand for overseas forex outstripped the weekly provide of {dollars} made accessible by the central financial institution and the Venezuelan bolivar depreciated additional.

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The minimal month-to-month wage for a public faculty trainer is about $10, whereas college professors earn between $60 and $80.

“Our salaries are peanuts. I earn 460 bolivars a month [about $23],” stated Odalis Aguilar, a 50-year-old trainer who marched within the metropolis of Maracay on Monday. “We want a residing wage.”

Within the central state of Carabobo, lecturers and public sector staff additionally held demonstrations, saying salaries don’t cowl the price of meals and drugs.

“Our meals is carbohydrates, no protein, few greens, it is vitally primary,” stated Reina Sequera, a professor on the College of Carabobo and the primary breadwinner in her household of three. “We are able to’t even afford acetaminophen.”

Financial strife is attributable to sanctions imposed on the federal government by the US, ruling get together Vice President Diosdado Cabello stated in feedback aired on state tv.

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Lecturers additionally marched within the western states of Zulia and Lara.

Over the weekend, the federal government paid public staff a bonus equal to $29.80.

Dozens of lecturers additionally marched in San Cristobal, the capital of border state Tachira.

The bonus “doesn’t attain $30. Is that what Maduro lives on? You’re throwing us crumbs,” stated Gladys Chacon, president of the Tachira School of Lecturers.

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Series Mania, Beta Group Open Up Seriesmakers to Directors of Box Office Hits, Lesser Known Filmmakers (EXCLUSIVE) 

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Series Mania, Beta Group Open Up Seriesmakers to Directors of Box Office Hits, Lesser Known Filmmakers (EXCLUSIVE) 

Seriesmakers, twinning Series Mania, Europe’s biggest TV fest, and European film-TV powerhouse Beta Group, is opening up its selection criteria to embrace directors of box office smashes or hits at festivals beyond “A” list events.

Launching 2022 as a project-based mentorship program for film directors aiming to become TV series creators, Seriesmakers has fast consolidated as one of Europe’s top-notch training facilities.

“Game of Thrones” producer-director Frank Doelger, “Babylon Berlin” producer Stefan Arndt, Ron Leshem (“Euphoria,” “No Man’s Land”) and “Narcos” creator Chris Brancato featured as speakers at its 2023-24 edition. 

Led by Cannes Grand Prix winner Juho Kuosmanen (“Compartment No. 6”), seven of the 10 TV projects showcased at its first 2022-23 edition were from directors who had been selected for the Cannes Film Festival.

Now, as it prepares its third edition whose call for applications closes June 20, Seriesmakers is aiming for a larger inclusivity.

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For its first and second editions, being chosen in official selections of a “A” list festival was required for a director to even be considered for Seriesmakers, Koby Gal-Raday, Beta Group chief content officer, told Variety

“Series Mania and the Beta Group has had near daily discussions about how Seriesmakers could better support the industry, opening up and expanding without losing its very high-level program,” he added.

“More and more filmmakers are interested in making TV shows. Creativity is not defined totally by “A” list festival selection which focuses often on up-and-coming talents and highly established “A-list” icons. That leaves out a whole middle section of directors and we have a lot of talented people who apply to other festivals, not “A” list events,”  said Laurence Herszberg, Series Mania general director. 

Local box office hits may not even go to festivals, Gal-Raday observed. “Their creators, however, are still cinema directors who don’t understand – or as yet don’t know how to play by – the rules of TV,” he continued.

While opening up to a broader range of directors, Seriesmakers will maintain its structure of two intense online workshops and mentors who coach director-producer or director-writer teams. Between workshops, two mentors maintain a weekly contact with the creative teams of each project. Teams will not be allowed to be larger and Seriesmakers will not grow its umber of selected projects from the current 10.

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“We believe very much in the intimate, very human process between two mentors and creative duos. Anything larger and it becomes a group session, which has a differ dynamic,” said Gal-Raday.

Second edition mentors were German producer Janine Jackowski (“Toni Erdmann,” “Spencer”); Israeli writer-script doctor Ronit Weiss-Berkowitz (“The Girl From Oslo”); Isabelle Lindberg Pechou (“Trom”); and Brazilian producer-writer Felipe Braga (“Sintonia”). 

“I’m very honoured, surprised and humbled that most of them are quite happy to join again,” said Gal Raday. 

Seriesmakers’ third edition will run four months from November 2024 through February 2025. For the third edition, there will be one main award of €50,000 ($54,500) entitled the Beta| Kirch Foundation Award.  The winning team will be announced during the 2025 Series Mania Forum in Lille, France and will develop a pilot script and a bible for the awarded project with further creative support from Beta’s Content Division

Variety chatted to Herszberg and Gal-Raday as they looked forward to a 3rd Seriesmakers: 

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One hallmark of Series Mania and Seriesmakers is the high artistic ambition of its titles. Would you be looking for that from more commercial directors?

Herszberg: Yes, that’s something we really pay attention to. That the project has something which is of value. It’s not that we ask a filmmaker to write a thesis about that, but we have to see the potential. The training sessions will help directors tease out that potential.

Looking at this year’s Series Mania, there were social-issue series such as All3Media Intl’s “Boarders” and Beta Film’s “Soviet Jeans” which had an agenda – equitable access to elitist education and freedom-pushing counter culture in 1979 Soviet Latvia – which were at the same time broadly upscale, fast-paced entertainment. Would you want that?

Herszberg: The best way to have a success, something popular, is to layer something that will make people think. Yes, of course we want that.    

Gal-Raday: I was amazed to see that at Seriesmakers’ first two editions most filmmakers coming from extreme arthouse cinema were very keen to have an audience. Commercial arthouse is not an obscene phrase. The winners at Cannes in many sections were commercial arthouse, not pure arthouse.

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So you’d welcome series which are kind of hybrids?

Gal Raday: Yes, we can find and identify singular voices, original stories, that answer the criteria of an artistic vision. But they still use some tools of mainstream television, obeying genres and then redefining them. We just get better television.   

Does opening up Seriesmakers mean opening up in geographical terms?

Gal-Raday: The “A” list festival is a very determined list. We have got a lot of interest from MENA, Asia and Latin America where there are not so many qualifying festivals. We’re responding to the industry and markets from those regions.

You’ve said you’ll maintain the system of tutors and members…

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Herszberg: We made a survey, asked participants about the mentors, and they all said they were really top notch. Their support is really appreciated because it’s not that easy when you’re trying to create another redo and you don’t ever know if you’re going the right way. It’s better to have someone supporting you and telling, yes, that’s a good direction, or not.

Any other changes?

Gal-Raday: We are looking a bit at the structure of the workshops: How many hours a day, how to structure so that they’re more operational. The fact creators are based in very different time zones around the world makes it challenging to use the same timeline. A very good project manager can handle that.

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2 pilots confirmed dead after military training plane crashes in central Turkey

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2 pilots confirmed dead after military training plane crashes in central Turkey
  • Turkey’s defense ministry has confirmed the death of two pilots after a military plane crashed during training.
  • The crash occurred after the plane took off from an Air Force base near the city of Kayseri.
  • The cause of the incident remains under investigation, according to authorities.

A military plane crashed during training on Tuesday, killing its two pilots on board, Turkey’s defense ministry announced.

The SF-260D training plane crashed into an agricultural field in central Turkey. 

The crash occurred after the plane took off from an Air Force base near the city of Kayseri.

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The defense ministry said the cause of the crash remains unknown.

A military plane crashed during training on Tuesday, killing its two pilots on board, Turkey’s defense ministry announced. (Fox News Digital)

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The state-run Anadolu Agency reported that authorities have initiated an investigation.

Television footage captured black smoke rising from the wreckage of the plane among the crops in the field.

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Europe gears up to mark 80 years since D-Day landings

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Europe gears up to mark 80 years since D-Day landings

D-Day, also known as Operation Overlord, remains the biggest amphibious operation in military history, involving around 150,000 Allied forces landing in Normandy on 6 June 1944.

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Europe is preparing to mark 80 years since D-Day with a week of commemorations and ceremonies.

On Tuesday, two French Navy landing craft arrived at Omaha Beach for an assault rehearsal involving dozens of volunteers. They were joined by US Army vintage Harley Davidson motorbikes in a large parade across the Normandy landing beaches.

On the other side of the Channel, the sea and skies around the English city of Portsmouth were buzzing with ships and planes as British veterans left the coast of the UK, heading to France.

The veterans will take part in parades, school visits and other ceremonies — including the official 6 June commemoration of the landings by soldiers from across the US, the UK, Canada and other Allied nations on five beaches.

Largest amphibious invasion in military history

On 6 June 1944, Allied forces invaded Normandy, on the northern coast of France, with an unprecedented armada of ships, troops and planes to punch a hole in Nazi leader Adolph Hitler’s defences in Western Europe.

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In France, the Allies landed over 150,000 troops, using more than 5,000 ships and landing craft.

It still remains the largest naval, air and land operation in history and significantly accelerated the fall of Nazi Germany, as its forces were already losing ground to the Soviet Union in the east and facing the earlier Allied invasion in southern Italy.

The effort mainly involved US, UK and Canadian troops but also received support from units from France, Australia, Belgium, the Czech Republic, the Netherlands, Greece, New Zealand, Norway, Poland and Rhodesia.

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