2025-01-19 00:00 DW News 00:03 DocFilm How has the ultra-right made it to the heart of American politics? By gradually occupying positions of power in politics, the judiciary and the media and steadily expanding its sphere of influence. Adherents have been bolstered by Trump's 2024 election victory. 01:00 DW News 01:15 Reporter 01:30 Euromaxx 02:00 DW News 02:15 Shift Platforms like TikTok have become a marketplace for traffickers and people smugglers. They lure people here with supposedly safe passages and seemingly lucrative jobs. How has social media changed the illegal business? 02:30 Arts Unveiled 03:00 DW News 03:15 DocFilm Microcredits for the world's poor have long been considered the ideal way to combat poverty. But this film documents a bleak scenario -- in which microcredits have destroyed entire families. Over-indebtedness has driven some recipients to suicide. 04:00 DW News 04:15 Shift Platforms like TikTok have become a marketplace for traffickers and people smugglers. They lure people here with supposedly safe passages and seemingly lucrative jobs. How has social media changed the illegal business? 04:30 The 77 Percent 05:00 DW News 05:15 Reporter 05:30 REV REV puts the new Dacia Duster to the test. Innovations are helping Kenya address air pollution from the transport sector. And oil-rich Venezuela imports low-quality fuel from Iran, and it can cause vehicles to explode. 06:00 DW News 06:15 Sports Life 06:30 The 77 Percent 07:00 DW News 07:15 Reporter 07:30 Arts Unveiled 08:00 DW News 08:15 DocFilm For thousands of years, the inhabitants of the Brazilian rainforest have been using medicinal plants. But this knowledge is in danger of disappearing. Leticia Yawanawa has an ambitious plan: she wants to preserve herbal medicine for posterity. 09:00 DW News 09:15 Shift Platforms like TikTok have become a marketplace for traffickers and people smugglers. They lure people here with supposedly safe passages and seemingly lucrative jobs. How has social media changed the illegal business? 09:30 DocFilm In Germany, five kilograms of berries are eaten per capita every year. And the trend is rising. The German harvest can‘t meet this demand and that's why many berries are imported. From places where their cultivation is bad news for both people and for nature itself. 10:00 DW News 10:15 Arts Unveiled It's both a challenge and a great opportunity for this East German city of 250,000 inhabitants. Chemnitz, named "Karl Marx City" when it was part of the GDR, was once a flourishing industrial center. But since the Berlin Wall fell, it has repeatedly made headlines because of right-wing extremist protests along with racist and xenophobic attacks. 10:30 Arts Unveiled 11:00 DW News 11:15 Reporter 11:30 Afrimaxx In this episode, host Pamela Mtanga is learning everything about organic farming at Farmhouse58 in Johannesburg. Plus, the most stylish socks in the world, the five Must-Do's in Lagos, talking jerrycans. 12:00 DW News 12:15 Sports Life 12:30 Euromaxx 13:00 DW News 13:15 Shift Platforms like TikTok have become a marketplace for traffickers and people smugglers. They lure people here with supposedly safe passages and seemingly lucrative jobs. How has social media changed the illegal business? 13:30 REV REV puts the new Dacia Duster to the test. Innovations are helping Kenya address air pollution from the transport sector. And oil-rich Venezuela imports low-quality fuel from Iran, and it can cause vehicles to explode. 14:00 DW News 14:15 DocFilm In India, Varanasi is considered a holy city. Millions of Hindus believe that people who die here, in this city on the Ganges, are lucky. Because if they are cremated here, they can break the eternal cycle of birth, death and rebirth. 15:00 DW News 15:15 Sports Life 15:30 DW News 16:00 DW News 16:15 Reporter 16:30 Tomorrow Today How a young ecologist is helping to protect one of Europe's wildest forests / Why earthworms are key allies in helping forests adapt to climate change / How beavers help boost biodiversity / Why ancient trees are superstars at storing CO2. 17:00 DW News 17:02 Euromaxx 17:30 Arts Unveiled 18:00 DW News 18:15 Reporter 18:30 REV REV puts the new Dacia Duster to the test. Innovations are helping Kenya address air pollution from the transport sector. And oil-rich Venezuela imports low-quality fuel from Iran, and it can cause vehicles to explode. 19:00 DW News 19:02 Euromaxx 19:30 Global Us 20:00 DW News 20:15 DocFilm In Germany, five kilograms of berries are eaten per capita every year. And the trend is rising. The German harvest can‘t meet this demand and that's why many berries are imported. From places where their cultivation is bad news for both people and for nature itself. 20:45 Reporter 21:00 DW News 21:02 Eco India 21:30 In Good Shape Tooth decay, diabetes, heart disease, cancer, joint pain—a scientific review of studies says a whopping 45 negative health outcomes can come from eating too much sugar! But how much is too much? And how can we wean ourselves off the sweet stuff? 22:00 DW News 22:15 Sports Life 22:30 Euromaxx 23:00 DW News 23:15 Global Us 23:45 Reporter
2025-01-20 00:00 DW News 00:02 DocFilm In Germany, five kilograms of berries are eaten per capita every year. And the trend is rising. The German harvest can‘t meet this demand and that's why many berries are imported. From places where their cultivation is bad news for both people and for nature itself. 00:30 Tomorrow Today How a young ecologist is helping to protect one of Europe's wildest forests / Why earthworms are key allies in helping forests adapt to climate change / How beavers help boost biodiversity / Why ancient trees are superstars at storing CO2. 01:00 DW News 01:15 Shift Platforms like TikTok have become a marketplace for traffickers and people smugglers. They lure people here with supposedly safe passages and seemingly lucrative jobs. How has social media changed the illegal business? 01:30 Eco Africa 02:00 DW News 02:30 The 77 Percent 03:00 DW News 03:30 Shift Platforms like TikTok have become a marketplace for traffickers and people smugglers. They lure people here with supposedly safe passages and seemingly lucrative jobs. How has social media changed the illegal business? 03:45 Reporter 04:00 DW News 04:15 DocFilm In India, Varanasi is considered a holy city. Millions of Hindus believe that people who die here, in this city on the Ganges, are lucky. Because if they are cremated here, they can break the eternal cycle of birth, death and rebirth. 05:00 DW News 05:30 Eco Africa 06:00 DW News 06:30 Global Us 07:00 DW News 07:15 DocFilm ‘Never again' was the motto in Germany after 1945. This film shows how this commitment became a pillar of society. What measures are needed today to defend humanist values and preserve democratic achievements? 08:00 DW News 08:15 Best of DW-online Content 08:30 The 77 Percent 09:00 DW News 09:30 Tomorrow Today How a young ecologist is helping to protect one of Europe's wildest forests / Why earthworms are key allies in helping forests adapt to climate change / How beavers help boost biodiversity / Why ancient trees are superstars at storing CO2. 10:00 DW News 10:30 Global Us 11:00 DW News 11:15 DocFilm In India, Varanasi is considered a holy city. Millions of Hindus believe that people who die here, in this city on the Ganges, are lucky. Because if they are cremated here, they can break the eternal cycle of birth, death and rebirth. 12:00 DW News 12:15 Best of DW-online Content 12:30 Arts Unveiled 13:00 DW News 13:30 Close up The weekly half-hour program delivers in-depth reporting on topical political issues and newsworthy events. Revealing the story behind the stories, "Close up" is informative, gripping and visually powerful. 14:00 DW News 14:02 Afrimaxx In this episode, host Pamela Mtanga is learning everything about organic farming at Farmhouse58 in Johannesburg. Plus, the most stylish socks in the world, the five Must-Do's in Lagos, talking jerrycans. 14:30 Global Us 15:00 DW News 15:30 The Day 16:00 DW News 16:02 Best of DW-online Content 16:15 DocFilm In India, Varanasi is considered a holy city. Millions of Hindus believe that people who die here, in this city on the Ganges, are lucky. Because if they are cremated here, they can break the eternal cycle of birth, death and rebirth. 17:00 DW News 17:02 The Day 17:30 DocFilm In Germany, five kilograms of berries are eaten per capita every year. And the trend is rising. The German harvest can‘t meet this demand and that's why many berries are imported. From places where their cultivation is bad news for both people and for nature itself. 18:00 DW News 18:15 Best of DW-online Content 18:30 Close up The weekly half-hour program delivers in-depth reporting on topical political issues and newsworthy events. Revealing the story behind the stories, "Close up" is informative, gripping and visually powerful. 19:00 DW News 19:02 The Day 19:30 Eco Africa 20:00 DW News 20:15 DocFilm Burns, strangulation, broken bones. The list of signs of torture is long and can be seen on some 27,000 photos showing dead Syrian civilians. The man who smuggled the photos out of the country calls himself "Caesar”. 21:00 DW News 21:02 The Day 21:30 REV REV puts the new Dacia Duster to the test. Innovations are helping Kenya address air pollution from the transport sector. And oil-rich Venezuela imports low-quality fuel from Iran, and it can cause vehicles to explode. 22:00 DW News 22:15 Best of DW-online Content 22:30 Close up The weekly half-hour program delivers in-depth reporting on topical political issues and newsworthy events. Revealing the story behind the stories, "Close up" is informative, gripping and visually powerful. 23:00 DW News 23:15 DocFilm Burns, strangulation, broken bones. The list of signs of torture is long and can be seen on some 27,000 photos showing dead Syrian civilians. The man who smuggled the photos out of the country calls himself "Caesar”.
2025-01-21 00:00 DW News 00:02 The Day 00:30 Eco India 01:00 DW News 01:15 Best of DW-online Content 01:30 Arts Unveiled 02:00 DW News 02:30 DocFilm In Germany, five kilograms of berries are eaten per capita every year. And the trend is rising. The German harvest can‘t meet this demand and that's why many berries are imported. From places where their cultivation is bad news for both people and for nature itself. 03:00 DW News 03:30 Eco Africa 04:00 DW News 04:15 Close up The weekly half-hour program delivers in-depth reporting on topical political issues and newsworthy events. Revealing the story behind the stories, "Close up" is informative, gripping and visually powerful. 04:45 Reporter 05:00 DW News 05:30 Tomorrow Today How a young ecologist is helping to protect one of Europe's wildest forests / Why earthworms are key allies in helping forests adapt to climate change / How beavers help boost biodiversity / Why ancient trees are superstars at storing CO2. 06:00 DW News 06:30 In Good Shape Tooth decay, diabetes, heart disease, cancer, joint pain—a scientific review of studies says a whopping 45 negative health outcomes can come from eating too much sugar! But how much is too much? And how can we wean ourselves off the sweet stuff? 07:00 DW News 07:15 Close up The weekly half-hour program delivers in-depth reporting on topical political issues and newsworthy events. Revealing the story behind the stories, "Close up" is informative, gripping and visually powerful. 07:45 Shift Platforms like TikTok have become a marketplace for traffickers and people smugglers. They lure people here with supposedly safe passages and seemingly lucrative jobs. How has social media changed the illegal business? 08:00 DW News 08:15 Best of DW-online Content 08:30 Eco India 09:00 DW News 09:30 Global Us 10:00 DW News