Suicide Room Full Movie English Subtitles Download Torrent

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Aug 21, 2024, 1:30:33 PM8/21/24
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The Vienna State Opera House is quite a spectacular building, both inside and out. It opened in May 1869, after six years of construction, although neither of the architects got to see the finished article, with Eduard van der Nll committing suicide, and August Sicard von Sicardsburg dying from tuberculosis just ten weeks later. The Opera House was partially destroyed during World War II, but was restored and restructured, eventually reopening in 1955.

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Well done Em and Mr Fletche for getting out of your comfort zone and trying something new. We have yet to do an Opera and sounds like it would be worth experiencing. May need to do some reading beforehand!

I have always wanted to attend an opera performance( Not that I would understand anything), but just for being in a room of music enthusiasts and being awestruck at the architecture of the house! ?
The Vienna State Opera House looks fantastic! Though the history behind it is so heartbreaking!
Your tips were super interesting! I always thought dressing up was a big deal and you could never understand a thing unless you were a regular! What an amusing story.. hehe. I am sure you had a good time and it was all worth it! ? Hope to do this someday!

The Opera house of Vienna is really iconic. What a grand building. Watching a show here must indeed be a great experience. At the price, this is indeed a windfall as there is no value that can be placed on such an experience.

I have never been to an Opera nor do I know much about opera but after reading your blog I am feeling like I should visit an Opera house at least once. The Vienna Opera House has a rich history and is looking stunning. It should have been a experience to just enter the building!

Hana Kimura, the 22-year-old female professional wrestler who was among the cast of the internationally popular Netflix reality show "Terrace House," is believed to have killed herself using toxic gas at her Tokyo home where she was living alone, investigative sources said Monday.

Kimura, who had been a target of cyber-bullying, was found collapsed on her bed with a plastic bag covering her head early Saturday. A container seemingly used to generate toxic gas was discovered nearby, the sources said, adding several suicide notes were also found in her room.

In Kimura's apartment, a piece of paper was attached to a door that said "Toxic gas being generated" in Japanese. One of the notes was addressed to her mother, saying "Thank you for giving birth to me," according to the sources. Her death was confirmed at a hospital.

News of her death has sparked an outpouring of messages of condolence and a public outcry against cyber-bullying, including a tweet by singer Kyary Pamyu Pamyu saying, "People say we should just ignore slanderous comments, but it's difficult. An entertainer is also a human being. Please don't forget this."

The Diet affairs chief of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, Hiroshi Moriyama, met with Jun Azumi, his counterpart in the main opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan, and agreed to start a discussion on establishing a set of rules to prevent cyber-bullying.

"It is important for the legislature to play a role to make a society where such incidents do not happen," said Moriyama. "We will aim to reach a consensus on a certain direction (for the rules) by the fall," Azumi said.

Kimura was among the six cast members of "Terrace House Tokyo 2019-2020," the latest in a series that began in 2012 and is broadcast by Fuji Television. It has also garnered a cult following overseas as it is distributed by the U.S. video streaming service Netflix with English subtitles.

The current series, which began in May 2019, features three women and three men sharing a house in Tokyo. The cast members are "looking for love while living under the same roof," and there is "no script" in the show, according to Netflix.

However, Kimura, who joined the show last September, had been the target of hateful messages on social media criticizing her remarks and behavior during the reality program, especially after an episode distributed in late March in which she lost her temper.

After one of the male cast members shrank one of her expensive wrestling costumes, after accidentally mixing it with his clothes and washing it in a washing machine, Kimura was seen yelling at him, "Be more considerate to others," before pulling a cap off his head in an angry outburst.

Fuji TV had already stopped shooting of the show due to the coronavirus spread. Following Kimura's death, the Japanese broadcaster has decided to halt broadcasting an episode on Tuesday and distributing two episodes on Netflix on Tuesday and June 2.

A research group at the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications is discussing ways to simplify procedures to identify individuals who make defamatory posts online. "We will act appropriately based on discussions (by the group)," the top government spokesman said.

MIRKO LAUER: He had corrupted almost all of the Peruvian army, almost all of the Peruvian politicians, most of his relatives, the governing party definitely, a few diplomats. This man had, as a sideline, the sale of privileged information and the peddling of political influence. This is where I would think that Newmont comes into the picture.

LOWELL BERGMAN: And in this, the most revealing of all the videotapes related to the case, Montesinos meets with the supreme court justice who will cast the deciding vote. He explains that Peru needs U.S. support in a border dispute with Ecuador.

PETER ROMERO: They thought that I was an activist individual that could help them, particularly as it relates to community-based programs and that sort of thing. And I worked for them as a consultant for about 18 months.

RONALD GAMARRA: [subtitles] My theory is that both sides were trying to get a favorable decision by any means necessary, but only one side got to Montesinos, and that is the side that won. Montesinos has never worked for free, not even when doing political favors. He always made money.

LOWELL BERGMAN: Gamarra says that he collected evidence that indicates that both sides corrupted the courts, but each insists that the evidence against them was either unreliable or forged. Ronald Gamarra says he was taken off the case by the Peruvian attorney general before he was able to complete his investigation.

RONALD GAMARRA: [subtitles] It did not benefit either side to investigate the matter. I am sure that in a few year, the truth will come out. It will be known for certain that crimes were committed. I am sure bribes were paid.

Near the central plaza there is a museum, a reconstruction of the room where the conquistadors held Atahualpa for ransom. To win his freedom, Atahualpa promised his captors to fill the room with gold, as high as he could reach. But the Spanish betrayed him. They kept the gold and they killed him anyway.

LOWELL BERGMAN: Trust between the campesinos and the mine really broke down here, on these perilous mountain roads. In June of 2000, a truck contracted to carry mercury from the mine accidentally spilled 330 pounds of its toxic cargo over a 25-mile stretch of road, most of it in and around this tiny village of Choropampa. The mercury, which is a toxic by-product of gold mining, was picked up by the villagers. Many thought the metal had gold in it and took it home.

YANINA: [subtitles] It was beautiful. We got some and put it in our house. No one told us it was mercury. After eight days, I started to get rashes all over my skin. I felt dizzy, nauseous, high fever, headache, all of that.

LOWELL BERGMAN: Many of the villagers ended up in hospitals. More than 1,000 people are now suing in a U.S. federal court, some alleging that they still suffer serious health problems. Afterwards, the villagers took to the streets, demanding health care and reparations.

ROQUE BENAVIDES, President, Minas Buenaventura: Nobody was dead. Nobody was dead. Mercury never got to the waters. And certainly, there have been some complaints. We had an insurance policy for the whole population for five years. This will continue for another five years. So it was not all that bad.

LOWELL BERGMAN: [voice-over] After the mercury spill, Newmont decided to investigate what was going on at the mine, and they sent Larry Kurlander back to Peru to conduct an environmental audit.

LOWELL BERGMAN: We obtained a copy of the audit that Kurlander and his team produced, an audit which found 20 high-priority problems at the mine. Many of the findings confirmed the complaints of the villagers that their water was contaminated and fish were disappearing. The audit also found that waste rock at the mine had turned acidic and was generating acid run-off.

LOWELL BERGMAN: Brant Hinze, the mine manager, says he recognizes the importance of working with and helping the community. Before we left, he took us on a tour of projects funded by the mine and to a lunch hosted by a community leader who supports the company.

Newmont provides 2,200 full-time jobs in the region, allowing many to buy a home and car for the first time. The hosts presented Hinze with a gift, a statue of Atahualpa, the Inca emperor whose gold was stolen by the Spanish.

BRANT HINZE: I would hope that we can continue to build and develop on the trust within the communities, so that as a mining company, we continue to have opportunities here to continue to expand and be a neighbor here for a very long time.

LOWELL BERGMAN: [voice-over] In their latest report to investors, Newmont revealed that its production of gold at Yanacocha is expected to dramatically decline, in part because its expansion plans are now in jeopardy. The company wanted to start digging at this mountain, called Cerro Quilish, which they believe contains more than a billion dollars worth of gold.

LOWELL BERGMAN: Last fall, thousands of Peruvians filled the town square of Cajamarca. It was the largest protest ever against the Yanacocha mine. Blocking roads, the protesters succeeded in shutting down mine operations and forced the company to stop its expansion plans.

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