Drawn from interviews with survivors of Easy Company, as well as their journals and letters, Band of Brothers chronicles the experiences of these men from paratrooper training in Georgia through the end of the war. As an elite rifle company parachuting into Normandy early on D-Day morning, participants in the Battle of the Bulge, and witness to the horrors of war, the men of Easy knew extraordinary bravery and extraordinary fear - and became the stuff of legend. Based on Stephen E. Ambrose's acclaimed book of the same name.
Alexandra covers pop culture, books, news, and fashion! You can find her listening to Taylor Swift, going on hot girl walks, reading a good book with a cup of tea, and searching for the best sushi in the city!
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Brother, aka Brat, is without a doubt the greatest cult classic film to emerge from post-Soviet Russia. Set in the troubling 1990s, Brother pits gritty antihero, Danila, against various organized crime syndicates in lawless St. Petersburg.
Brother is available for free in Russian here on YouTube, and you can also rent Brother with English subtitles here on Prime Video. Another option with English subtitles is the version of the film here, split up into eight parts.
I have been watching Band of Brothers today and I realised a grave error with the subtitles. In the episode with Market Garden, some of the actors speak Dutch (From the Netherlands/Holland). But the subtitles says "Speaking in German". Besides this being a linguistic error, this also puts the Dutch in a bad daylight, as if they seem to speak German and collaborate with the Germans at the time.
Chaise Sanders is an Associate Editor at Cosmopolitan, where she covers anything from lifestyle and beauty to entertainment and style. Wanna upgrade your skincare game? She's got you covered with the best facial cleansing brushes. Or maybe you're in need of a new true crime show to binge? Got that covered too! Prior to joining the Cosmo team, Chaise was an editor at Country Living (also part of the Hearst fam) where she interviewed celebs like Dolly Parton, LeAnn Rimes and even Martha Stewart. Now, as one of the Big Apple's newest residents, there's a good chance that you can catch her checking out an Insta-worthy cafe or spending way to much $$$ in vintage stores.
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Apparently, housemates in the Big Brother Germany mansion have no idea about the Coronavirus outbreak. It was revealed that they will be revealing to the contestants the severity of what's happening in the world. Viewers can tune in and watch the online reveal with English subtitles. Finding legal ways to watch German TV is not easy, but there may be some options for international viewers.
The spread of the Coronavirus has essentially left the world at a standstill with many being told to self-isolate and quarantine for 14 days. The WHO upgraded the virus to a Pandemic and people have been hoarding toilet paper ever since. Several major television networks have made the hard decision to stop production on some major fan favorites such as Survivor and The Amazing Race that runs on CBS. The Bravo network has also postponed many of the Real Housewives' franchises.
Fans are wondering what a production crew does with a show like Big Brother. As reported in a previous article Big Brother Canada contestants had no idea what is going on outside their walls until just a few days ago and it looks as if Big Brother Germany is in the same boat as they are presently airing their 13th season. The Guardian recently reported that the crew of Big Brother Germany were in an information blackout that could only be disregarded for a family illness. Currently, there are 19 men and 14 women who have no idea that this virus exists. The group of housemates was last seen hanging out in their out tub in Cologne which is in the western part of Germany. The producers of the show have adamantly defended their decision to not inform the housemates of the epidemic.
Winner of the 75th Anniversary Prize at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival, the latest humanist drama from the Dardenne brothers is a heart-stopping thriller that casts an unflinching eye on the trials of the young and dispossessed.
Sharmeen: Junaid's story haunted me....
ANNOUNCER: The war with the Taliban hits home for correspondent Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy, who finds the militants now gaining influence in the country's big cities.
PACKAGING LANGUAGE
Pakistan: Children of the Taliban
Reported by Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY, Correspondent: [voice-over] This is Peshawar, a city of three million people on the edge of Pakistan's lawless tribal areas. Just a few miles from here, the Pakistani army is fighting the Pakistani Taliban, Islamic militants who share a hard-line ideology with their Afghan counterparts. The conflict has killed nearly 7,000 people in the last year alone.
[on camera] The city is on high alert. The Taliban seem to be closing in, regularly attacking police convoys, kidnapping diplomats, shooting foreigners.
[voice-over] The fighting has driven thousands of families from their homes in the conflict areas. Many of them are now sheltering here in Peshawar. This rehabilitation center treats people caught in the crossfire between the army and the militants.
Qainat is 10. She's been living here for the past two months. A mortar meant for the Taliban landed on her house. Her mother has a spinal cord injury. Her sister and most of her extended family were killed.
MOTHER: [subtitles] Do you miss your sister?
QAINAT: [subtitles] I miss her but there is nothing we can do.
MOTHER: [subtitles] God brought it upon us; what can we do?
QAINAT: [subtitles] I think of her all the time.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: [subtitles] Who in your family was killed in that attack?
QAINAT: [subtitles] My sister, my aunt, my sister-in-law, my cousin, another aunt, my cousin's daughter, my second cousin and her sons.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: [subtitles] Have you seen the Taliban in your area?
QAINAT: [subtitles] Yes, I've seen them. They wear masks. They're scary. When we see them, we run back home. One day we were walking to our village. We saw the dead body of a policeman tied to a pole. The Taliban don't spare government people or policemen. His head had been chopped off. It was hanging between his legs. There was a note saying if anyone moved the dead body, they would share its fate.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: [voice-over] Before the Taliban took control of Qainat's village, the women in her family attended university and worked. But Qainat tells me the Taliban have now banned girls from going to school.
[subtitles] What would you like to be when you grow up?
QAINAT: [subtitles] A doctor.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: [subtitles] Why do you want to be a doctor?
QAINAT: [subtitles] So I can give injections to people. And help my mother now that she's ill.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: [subtitles] But the Taliban say you can't become a doctor. So what will happen?
QAINAT: [subtitles] It's peaceful right here. I'll become a doctor here.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: [voice-over] Her family's savings are running out. Soon Qainat will have to return to her village, where the Taliban are fighting the army. Qainat's from Swat, a 100-mile-long valley in the north of Pakistan, three hours' drive from Peshawar. Until recently, Swat was known as the Switzerland of the east and had a thriving tourist industry. But all that changed when the Pakistani Taliban arrived.
[on camera] We're about an hour outside of Swat, and even though the Taliban don't control this area, they do have influence here, so I have to cover up properly.
[www.pbs.org: An interview with the reporter]
[voice-over] Two years ago, hundreds of Taliban fighters moved into Swat from the adjoining tribal areas when their hideouts were attacked by the Pakistani army. Extremist preachers here gave them refuge.
Swati women never wore the burqa. Now the handful of women I see on the streets are all covered.
The Taliban create fear through their radio broadcasts.
TALIBAN PREACHER: [radio broadcast] [subtitles] Sharia law is our right, and we will exercise this right whatever happens. I swear to God we will shed our own blood to achieve this. We will make our sons suicide bombers! We will make ourselves suicide bombers! I swear to God, if our leader orders me, I will sacrifice myself and blow myself up in the middle of our enemies.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: I arrive in Qainat's village. The Taliban here have a new target, schools.
[on camera] The Taliban have destroyed over 200 government schools in Swat. And a few days ago, they declared that no girls were going to be allowed to go to school here.
[voice-over] Four hundred girls studied here. Most of them are too scared to talk about the Taliban, but two 9-year-olds want to tell me what happened.
ZARLASH: [subtitles] I am really angry.
RUKSAR: [subtitles] I'm really worried. Our school has been destroyed.
ZARLASH: [subtitles] It's completely unfair.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: [subtitles] Why did you like school?
RUKSAR: [subtitles] Because education is like a ray of light, and I want that light.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: [subtitles] What will happen to girls if the Taliban come to power?
ZARLASH: [subtitles] We'll stay at home. My father bought me a burqa, so I'll have to wear that.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: [subtitles] Do you like wearing a burqa?
ZARLASH: [subtitles] No. I always trip up in it.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: [voice-over] Suddenly a reminder that Swat is on the front line.
[subtitles] What was that?
ZARLASH: [subtitles] An explosion, the sound of a mortar.
SHARMEEN OBAID-CHINOY: [subtitles] A mortar? We can hear some firing.