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Six months since October 7th, Dental care plan woes, Menus of the World

Six months since October 7th, Dental care plan woes, Menus of the World

Released Sunday, 7th April 2024
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Six months since October 7th, Dental care plan woes, Menus of the World

Six months since October 7th, Dental care plan woes, Menus of the World

Six months since October 7th, Dental care plan woes, Menus of the World

Six months since October 7th, Dental care plan woes, Menus of the World

Sunday, 7th April 2024
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0:00

Hey, I'm sure how to Wagstaff! And

0:02

hi there I'm Rohit Joseph. And were

0:04

asking for ten minutes of your day

0:06

to go through. the ten things at

0:08

the Un recommends we can all do

0:10

when it comes to climate change. Please

0:12

don't leave. No and hawthorne it's aren't

0:15

new. We just wired to not do

0:17

them. We promise you to help you

0:19

figure out your brains and you and

0:21

your people can make better choices to

0:24

combat climate change. Ten Minutes to

0:26

Save the Planet is available now on

0:28

Cbc listen and everywhere you get your

0:30

podcasts. This

0:32

is a Cbc podcast. It's

0:41

been really hard for I've been a

0:43

one hundred and eighty four days where

0:45

the lot of hope. That. It not a

0:48

the. A grim milestone. It

0:50

is six months since the October

0:52

Seventh Hamas attacks that started the

0:54

war with Israel, and peace still

0:56

seems a long way off. Welcome

0:59

to World Tonight this Sunday, April

1:01

Seventh. I'm Stephanie Scan Eris also

1:03

on the podcast. This federal program.

1:05

Is asking the dentist to sign

1:08

a contract that's like seven pages

1:10

strong with a lot of unknown

1:12

factors and unnecessary terms and conditions.

1:14

Teething problems With the new National

1:17

Dental Care Plan some seniors say

1:19

they'll be left out unless they

1:21

ditch their dentist and a taste

1:23

of history. The new exhibit of

1:26

menus from around the world that

1:28

show how food has fueled some

1:30

defining moments. In.

1:44

Jerusalem. Thousands of Israelis stand together

1:47

calling for the release of hostages'

1:49

being held in Gaza. many holding

1:51

placards with the faces of they're

1:53

missing loved ones. It was six

1:55

months ago today that Hamas lead

1:58

fighters launched a surprise Us. assault

2:00

on Israel, killing 1,200 people

2:02

and dragging more than 250 others back into Gaza. For

2:07

Israelis like this woman, October 7 represents

2:09

a turning point for her country. I

2:11

don't think that Israel will ever be

2:13

the same. I think that you

2:15

walk down the streets and you have to

2:18

continue with life, but you feel the sorrow.

2:21

Israel's military retaliation against Hamas continues

2:23

to this day, and Gaza's health

2:25

ministry says more than 33,000 people

2:27

have been killed. Ceasefire

2:30

talks appear at an impasse, and

2:32

today the IDF said its troops

2:34

are regrouping for the next stage

2:37

of the war. Sarah Levitt has

2:39

our lead story tonight. In

2:42

Jerusalem, a man bends down to

2:44

light a candle, beside it a

2:46

photo of a hostage yet to

2:48

be released by Hamas. Thousands gathered

2:50

to mark six months since Hamas

2:52

attacked Israel, and the war

2:54

began. In Tel Aviv, we need to

2:56

bring them back home today,

2:59

not tomorrow, not in a month.

3:01

With hands painted blood red, Yifat

3:04

Khaldurun is calling for the hostages

3:06

to be released, including her cousin,

3:08

Afar. Please do everything. Pay the

3:12

price, whatever the price

3:14

is, the higher price. About 130

3:17

hostages are still being held in

3:19

captivity. Ziv Abboud survived the

3:21

attack at the Nova Music Festival, but

3:23

her boyfriend, Elia Cohen, remains

3:26

a hostage. I feel terrible, she

3:28

says, six months into the war

3:30

and I'm doing everything I can

3:32

to get my boyfriend back. The

3:35

repercussions of the October 7th

3:37

attack are felt worldwide. In

3:39

Montreal, members

3:43

of the Jewish community also gathered.

3:45

Raquel Look was there. Her son,

3:47

Ediksand, was killed during the attack on

3:49

the music festival. Pain is still

3:51

just as sharp and feels in some

3:54

ways the time is stood still. In

3:56

Gaza, there's

3:59

also more Learning Reputable an

4:01

artificial sweeteners restaurant. For. Six

4:04

months we've come to this hospital

4:06

to pray for the martyrs. says

4:08

Islam abu his i eat as

4:11

he leads the prayers, Families cry

4:13

bent over body bags, gases. Health

4:16

Ministry says more than thirty three

4:18

thousand people, mostly civilian women and

4:20

children have been killed. Israel's response

4:23

to October Seventh vast, devastating, and

4:25

increasingly criticized the United Nations says

4:27

Israel's bombardments and ground offensive has

4:30

meant hundreds of thousands of Palestinians

4:32

in Northern Gaza. Are starving?

4:35

Prime. Minister Justin Trudeau says Canada

4:37

is watching closely. The humanitarian

4:39

costs of this crisis or

4:42

abominable are horrific. The her

4:44

own families is tremendous. We

4:46

need to see a ceasefire

4:48

in which from asked lays

4:51

down it's arms and releases

4:53

the hostages. But. Today, Israeli

4:55

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

4:58

reiterated. Provoking a few Love the news.

5:00

A cease fire will not happen

5:02

until Hamas releases the hostages. She

5:04

said. Most of them of

5:07

money. It's a song that the

5:09

reaction of a resident of Khan

5:11

Yunis and Southern Gaza returning home

5:13

to a city of rubble today

5:16

Israel pulled some troops out of

5:18

Southern Gaza. Israel Defense Forces says

5:20

it's temporary as it prepares for

5:23

future operations in a war that

5:25

appears to be nowhere near as

5:27

sent. Several. Of it's Cbc

5:30

News. And true. Prime. Minister

5:32

Justin Trudeau has unveiled a multi

5:34

billion dollar plan to help bolster

5:36

Canada's A I sector. He was

5:38

in Montreal today, making this latest

5:40

spending promise ahead of the April

5:43

sixteenth budget and once again provoking

5:45

criticism from Conservative leader Pierre Paul.

5:47

Yes State Mckenna breaks down the

5:49

backlash. Conservative leader Pierre Paul. he

5:51

as is calling on the Prime Minister to

5:53

put the brakes on Sunday. It's like. He's

5:56

a. He's. Bringing billions

5:59

of dollars, There's out of a

6:01

fire hose. But. It's

6:03

more like spraying gasoline. On.

6:06

The fire. He sent a letter

6:08

to Justin Trudeau outlining his request for

6:10

the budget is calling on the Liberals

6:12

to help pass a bill to give

6:14

more carbon tax covered to farmers to

6:16

require cities to permit more home every

6:18

year as part of a condition for

6:20

receiving federal infrastructure money, and he kept

6:23

sending by finding a dollar in savings

6:25

for every new dollar of spending. For.

6:27

Trudeau has another visit his criss

6:29

crossing the country, making near daily

6:31

pre budget announcements. This week he

6:34

announced billions and funding for housing

6:36

and today in Montreal he announced

6:38

two point four billion dollars to

6:40

build capacity in artificial intelligence. We

6:42

need to make strategic investments that

6:44

will create jobs. Most of the

6:47

money would help give access to computing

6:49

capabilities and technical infrastructure to researchers in

6:51

industry. It's also money to boost a

6:54

I start ups and support workers who

6:56

may be impacted by a I. Trudeau

6:58

defended the proposed new spending, saying it's

7:01

responsible and will spur economic growth. But

7:03

once again, pure polio. Is.

7:06

Wrong. Is. Not

7:08

listening to experts and economists

7:11

and he's willing to hurt

7:13

the things that Canadians rely

7:15

on to get through these

7:18

difficult times. But pressure is building.

7:20

Six Premier's are demanding a meeting to

7:22

talk about their opposition to a carbon

7:24

tax including New Brunswick Premier plane hit.

7:27

By that but I would I would.

7:29

Old is a real frank discussion on

7:31

on the reality of what is being

7:33

proposed. I'm in the possibilities of do

7:35

exists within our country. Trudeau. Hasn't

7:38

accepted that invitation. Reiterating that most

7:40

families get more money back and

7:42

rebates than they pay. For

7:44

right now all we see

7:46

is Premier's misinforming Canadians. And.

7:50

wanting to take a waste the can have

7:52

a carbon rebate checks that are making a

7:54

huge difference in people's lives he of justin

7:56

trudeau is so sure of his plan the

7:59

core drupal that carbon tax to 61

8:01

cents a litre. He

8:03

should have the courage to sit down with our

8:05

premiers and explain that to them.

8:08

Trudeau is set to make more

8:10

pre-budget spending announcements this week before

8:12

the budget is actually tabled later

8:14

this month. Expect to see more

8:16

measures aimed at Millennials and Gen

8:18

Z, two demographics struggling with one

8:20

of the biggest political issues in

8:22

Canada, affordability. Kate McKenna, CBC

8:24

News, Ottawa. In less

8:26

than a month, some seniors will start

8:29

being covered under Canada's dental care plan.

8:31

The national plan is intended to fill

8:33

the gaps for Canadians without private coverage

8:35

but as Marina von Stackelberg reports, many

8:38

eligible seniors are finding out their dentists

8:40

don't want to take part in the

8:42

program. In

8:47

just weeks, denturist Adam Lima will start

8:49

seeing patients at his Ottawa clinic who

8:51

for the first time have dental insurance.

8:54

I personally think it's a great idea to

8:56

have some subsidy for seniors because we do

8:58

see a lot of people that

9:00

have financial issues. The Canadian dental

9:02

care plan will eventually cover one

9:04

quarter of Canadians. Ottawa

9:07

is rolling out eligibility starting with

9:09

seniors first. So far, 1.6 million

9:12

of them have enrolled. We're happy to

9:14

be part of it especially if it works the way

9:16

it's supposed to. But getting enough oral

9:18

health care providers on board might be

9:21

like pulling teeth. Health Canada

9:23

will only say thousands of them

9:25

have registered so far for the

9:27

voluntary program. Dental associations

9:29

warn sign-up is low. Case

9:31

in point, their presidents, working

9:33

dentists themselves, tell CBC News

9:35

they won't run the program

9:37

in their own practices. Dr.

9:40

Jenny Dirksen, head of the Alberta

9:42

Dental Association, says that's because they

9:44

don't know what they're signing up

9:46

for. Unlike other dental Plans, This

9:48

federal program is asking the dentist

9:50

to sign a contract that's like

9:52

seven pages long with a lot

9:55

of unknown factors and unnecessary terms

9:57

and conditions. Engine

10:01

and. Dentists also say clinics

10:03

are thin on office staff so

10:05

they won't be able to handle

10:08

the paperwork Auto requires to process

10:10

claims. Doctor Rob Lonski is President

10:12

of the Bc Dental Association. Myself

10:14

have told me and no uncertain terms they don't

10:16

want to do the program because the Be just

10:19

cannot handle the extra burden that comes with it.

10:21

I. Was annoyed I was really close.

10:23

Some seniors like current trimming ham have

10:25

found out there dentists won't participate. The

10:27

eighty two year old Some Yarmouth, Nova

10:29

Scotia doesn't want to have to travel

10:31

to another dentist. It does what it

10:33

mean to me. It's. Just going to continue

10:36

pay. I just said the minimal amounts of

10:38

things. That. I mean

10:40

I'm self funding is. To replace that I

10:42

love the couple of months ago

10:44

and to just over the Gap

10:46

senior Joanne Kibo says her dentist

10:48

in Victoria isn't taking part either.

10:50

It really irks me. That

10:52

the Federal government came out announced a dental

10:54

plan but they didn't do their homework to

10:57

get the thing and place so that my

10:59

dentist could be part of it's A. Canada's

11:01

Health Minister Mark Holland may be looking to

11:03

sweeten the deal of. Working actively on creating

11:05

an alternative to audible allow dentist to

11:07

operatives who paid or just directly when

11:09

a patient comes in front of them

11:11

to just put in the information and

11:13

be able to put that claims. Another

11:16

sore spot for dentists and patience.

11:18

The Federal government initially pitch this

11:20

as free dental care, but it

11:22

only covers some procedures man at

11:25

a lower rate the many clinics

11:27

charts so you should still expect

11:29

the bill after visiting the dentist

11:31

chair. Maria. Von Stauffenberg. Cbc

11:33

News Ottawa. Coming

11:39

up on the podcast got Sir Eclipse glasses

11:41

ready. will set up tomorrow's big event and

11:43

take you to one of the best places

11:45

to view it Niagara Falls that still ahead

11:47

on your world's in. rwanda

11:57

is marking a somber anniversary

11:59

It's 30 years since the

12:02

1994 genocide when hundreds of

12:04

thousands of people were killed in a

12:06

massacre that spanned 100 days. Philip

12:09

Lee Shanok looks at what people are

12:11

saying today, including those who led a

12:13

Canadian peacekeeping mission there. At

12:16

a ceremony in Rwanda's capital, Kigali,

12:18

a flame of remembrances list for

12:21

the victims of a months-long rampage

12:23

in the East African country. This

12:25

flame symbolizes not only our

12:27

past, but the hope for

12:30

tomorrow. It will keep burning for the next

12:32

100 days. That's the

12:34

number of days extremists from

12:36

the country's ethnic Hutu majority

12:38

massacred ethnic Tutsis and moderate

12:40

Hutus using machetes, clubs and

12:42

guns 30 years ago. At

12:45

a ceremony attended by representatives

12:47

from dozens of countries, President

12:49

Paul Kagame paid tribute to

12:51

the international peacekeepers, including many

12:53

from Canada who attempted to

12:55

stop the genocide. Many

12:58

of the countries represented here today

13:00

also sent their

13:02

sons and daughters. Both

13:05

soldiers did not

13:07

fail Rwanda. It

13:09

was the international community which

13:12

failed all of us. The United

13:14

Nations already had a peacekeeping force

13:16

in the region, and they did

13:18

attempt to broker a ceasefire. However,

13:20

those efforts failed and the UN

13:22

withdrew most of its peacekeeping troops.

13:25

Retired Canadian Lieutenant General Romeo de

13:27

L'Air led the mission. In

13:30

places like Myanmar,

13:32

like Ukraine, like

13:34

Gaza, the world

13:37

is not in any way, shape

13:39

or form any more

13:41

effective in preventing, let alone stopping,

13:43

mass atrocities and abuse of human

13:46

rights to innocent people. Ceremonies

13:49

were also held in Montreal and

13:51

Ottawa. On Parliament Hill, survivors held

13:53

a moment of silence. Pascal Kanyamire

13:56

lost many family members in the

13:58

genocide. Many survivors,

14:00

he fears, perpetrators are here in

14:02

Canada. So can you imagine,

14:04

you have a neighbor that probably killed

14:06

20 people in Rwanda. Do you want

14:09

to have that person as a neighbor? I don't

14:11

think so. Felix Ndehenda is a researcher

14:13

at the University of Rwanda in Kigali.

14:15

He says that tension is something the

14:17

country is still struggling with. Where you

14:19

have communities of perpetrators and survivors living

14:21

side by side, but at the same

14:23

time, the demons of the past are

14:26

very much part of the present. But

14:28

he says the people of Rwanda are

14:30

resilient. It's been quite

14:32

surprising cases of people intermarring,

14:35

even in survivor and perpetrator

14:37

communities, which would shock many.

14:40

And he says while it's important to

14:42

commemorate what happened, it cannot really be

14:44

expected or possible to fully heal from

14:47

deep psychological wounds. But there

14:49

is hope for a full reconciliation one

14:51

day. Phil Tishanak, CBC

14:53

News, Toronto. India's

14:56

Supreme Court has taken up

14:58

the case of a divisive

15:00

citizenship law. It allows some

15:02

migrants who escaped religious persecution

15:04

to get Indian citizenship more

15:06

quickly. The government of Prime

15:08

Minister Narendra Modi announced who is eligible under

15:10

the law last month, just as he was

15:12

gearing up for his election campaign. As

15:15

freelance reporter Murli Krishnan tells us,

15:17

there are widespread suspicions about the law

15:19

because of who it leaves out. The

15:22

implementation of the Citizenship Amendment Act

15:25

on the cusp of elections has

15:27

riled India's Muslims and opposition parties

15:29

alike. The CAA

15:31

fast-tracks citizenship for religious minorities

15:34

who migrated to India before

15:36

2014 because

15:39

of religious persecution in

15:41

Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh.

15:44

Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis

15:46

and Christians are covered by

15:49

the law. Congress Party

15:51

MP Sashita Roor says the

15:53

law goes against India's secular

15:55

identity. thereby

16:00

exclude people of only one religion.

16:02

Muslims fleeing religious persecution from countries

16:04

like Sri Lanka or Myanmar are

16:07

not being granted the same privileges.

16:10

Taroor says this is a clear

16:12

sign the intent of the law

16:14

is discriminatory. There is a pure

16:17

communal message, a dog whistle as

16:19

they say, a whistle to some

16:21

people saying your communal agenda is

16:24

what we are pursuing. The CAA

16:26

was a key promise in the

16:28

ruling Bhartijanasa Committee's 2019 election

16:31

platform. The BJP disputes

16:33

the accusations of discrimination, noting

16:36

that the law does not strip rights

16:38

away from Muslims. And

16:40

BJP spokesperson Nalim Kohli argues Muslims

16:43

do not need same protections as

16:45

other religious minorities. For a Muslim

16:47

who wants to be an immigrant

16:49

or wishes to seek citizenship here,

16:51

to say that I should be

16:53

fast-tracked when he is coming from

16:55

a Muslim-majority country and has the

16:57

option to go to 50 other

16:59

countries, which a Hindu doesn't have,

17:01

a Sikh doesn't have is discriminatory

17:04

then to their entire cause and

17:06

purpose. There are fears that enacting

17:08

the CAA could be a forerunner

17:10

to a National Register of Citizens

17:12

or NRC. The

17:15

NRC is a register meant

17:17

to identify and deport all

17:19

undocumented immigrants even if

17:21

their families have lived in India

17:23

for generations. Only the

17:25

North Eastern state of Assam has such a

17:27

registry, but the BJP has

17:30

signaled its intent to implement

17:32

the NRC nationwide. This

17:34

NRC or CAA law, it

17:37

is meant to relegate Muslims

17:39

to second-class citizenship. Former

17:41

Chairperson of the Delhi Minorities

17:44

Commission, Zafarul Islam Khan,

17:46

says the NRC is

17:48

part of the BJP's Hindu first

17:50

agenda. They say that we do

17:52

not consider people who believe in

17:54

religions which came from outside India

17:56

like Islam or Christianity. These are

17:58

not at par. with Indian

18:01

religions. More than 200 petitions have

18:03

been filed in India's Supreme Court

18:06

against the citizenship law. The

18:08

petitioners argue the law is

18:11

unconstitutional. In late March,

18:13

the Supreme Court refused to issue

18:15

a stay on CAA and

18:17

gave the government until April 8 to

18:19

respond to the petitions. Murali

18:22

Krishnan for CBC News, New

18:24

Delhi. SUTHERAN,

18:39

ONTARIO, HAS ECLIPSE FEVER. A ONCE

18:42

IN A LIFETIME. SOLAR ECLIPSE WILL

18:44

PASS OVER NORTH AMERICA ON MONDAY.

18:46

The area around Niagara Falls will

18:49

have some of the best views.

18:51

Hotels have been sold out across

18:53

the region for months, and businesses

18:55

and police are bracing for a

18:58

massive influx of sky-gazers. Katie Nicholson

19:00

is there. They're

19:02

vegan, gluten-free. Thea Davidson

19:05

swirls cosmic purple frosting over

19:07

chocolate donuts in her Grimsby

19:09

cafe. What are these? These

19:11

are yours. There are eclipse

19:13

donuts. Galaxy eclipse donuts.

19:16

It's still a day away, but she

19:18

says her business is already seeing an

19:20

eclipse bump. Like I said, yesterday was

19:23

extremely busy. Lots of people coming in for

19:25

the donuts. So, yeah, I

19:27

think it's just going to be crazy. In

19:30

Niagara on the lake, Treadwell, a

19:32

fine dining restaurant, also going full

19:34

throttle. Unusual for April,

19:36

says founder James Treadwell, who remembers

19:39

the last time there was this much buzz in the

19:41

area, a Mumford & Sons concert

19:43

that flooded the tiny community. We,

19:46

as a town, ran out of money in

19:48

our ATMs. So there

19:50

were huge lines outside various

19:52

business. We were incredibly busy all day long.

19:54

Down a few stretches of Country Road, Greg

19:57

Virtus Vineyard is hopping with a

19:59

eclipse. He's curated a

20:01

wine tasting for each stage of

20:03

the eclipse. So we're actually going

20:05

to be sampling four very, very different wines, almost

20:08

like an eclipse where you start with something light

20:10

and bright. You work your way through

20:12

the darker red wines that we have here and then

20:14

you might finish again with the sun coming out. The

20:16

only thing that could ruin his plans? Bad

20:19

weather. So have you looked at your

20:21

app yet for some more? Nope. I

20:23

am trying to after watching it. So we're just

20:25

hoping that we're going to get good good glimpse

20:27

at it. Estimates of crowd size

20:30

in Niagara Falls and surrounding communities have

20:32

varied from a million to several hundred

20:34

thousand. Emergency services providers and

20:36

police have been making safety plans for

20:39

more than a year. And

20:41

tomorrow, Niagara Regional Police still don't

20:43

know what to expect, says Constable

20:45

Phil Gavin. There's a lot of people

20:47

saying big deal, it's just an eclipse. But we

20:49

have to plan. We can't just hope for the

20:51

best and not do anything. For many, it will

20:53

be a game day decision that many

20:56

others are already in place. Jason

20:59

and Jeanette Brown and their dog

21:01

Cookie drove eight hours from Woodbury,

21:03

New Jersey to experience this celestial

21:05

event here. We didn't

21:07

see the complete eclipse in 2017 and

21:10

at that time it was

21:12

put on my bucket list. And

21:15

20 years, who knows where we'll be

21:17

in 20 years. So live for

21:19

today. Question Monday morning, how

21:21

many others will decide to do just

21:24

that and join them? Katie

21:26

Nicholson, CBC News, Niagara Falls. Most

21:30

of us don't give much thought to

21:32

menus. We order our food and drinks

21:35

and then probably forget about them. But

21:37

they can give us a glimpse into the

21:39

past. A newly opened exhibit in

21:42

Rome has put some 400 menus

21:44

on display showing what people were

21:46

eating during some of the most

21:49

consequential moments in modern history. Megan

21:51

Williams takes us on this tasty trip

21:54

through time. that

22:00

menus both the object, the paper,

22:02

prints and design, and the list

22:04

of dishes on them for centuries

22:06

were at the center of world

22:08

politics. Now

22:11

laid out in the World of Menus

22:13

exhibit at the small Garam Museum of

22:15

Gastronomic History here in Rome are hundreds

22:17

of menus that span more than 200

22:19

years. They provide fascinating

22:22

glimpses into defining moments

22:24

of diplomatic aspiration. Shows

22:27

of wealth and power, creative

22:29

acts of defiance, and calm

22:31

before catastrophe. It's a very

22:33

simple menu with Italian dishes but not

22:36

an impressive one. Says museum

22:38

director Matteo Guirigini of the menu

22:40

from the first meeting between Italian

22:42

fascist dictator Benito Mussolini and Adolf

22:45

Hitler, who in 1934 held

22:48

up Mussolini as a model. The

22:50

menu for their meeting in Venice

22:53

was a run-of-the-mill offering of Italian

22:55

cuisine. Crabs from the Adriatic, beef

22:57

from Piedmont, and void of

22:59

any signs of trying to impress or pander

23:02

to. Mussolini didn't care about

23:04

Hitler at the time. A

23:06

little super clown he said after

23:08

the meeting. Also

23:10

annoying. Two menus

23:12

from the Franco-Prussian War of

23:14

1870 provide a gripping contrast.

23:16

The Germans had laid siege

23:18

to Paris, starving the city

23:20

into submission. They set

23:22

up their headquarters in nearby Versailles, where

23:25

they dined on puff pastries stuffed with

23:27

meat. Parisians, facing

23:29

famine, plundered the zoo, eating

23:32

elephants, donkeys, camels, and bears.

23:35

In an act of defiance, a top

23:37

Parisian chef made an intricately decorated menu

23:39

of the zoo animal meal now on

23:42

display. So Germans in

23:44

Versailles eating volouvain, and

23:47

Parisian people eating the animals in

23:49

the zoo are rats. Museum

23:55

founder and menu collector Rosano Bolscolo

23:57

shows me original copies of the

23:59

menu. menus for the final meals

24:01

onboard the Titanic, a lavish banquet

24:03

for the first class, a supper

24:05

of gruel, cabin biscuits and cheese

24:07

for those down below. The

24:11

originals exist, he says, because a menu

24:13

collector was friends with the printer. Others on

24:17

display include a meter-long menu for

24:19

the coronation of the last Tsar

24:21

of Russia before he was killed

24:23

by revolutionaries, as well as the

24:26

first and likely the last meeting

24:28

between Pope Francis and the Russian

24:30

Orthodox Church Patriarch and Putin apologist

24:32

Kirill. While menus for diplomatic

24:34

encounters continue, those for private events

24:37

have lost their importance, says Girigini,

24:39

who created menus to celebrate the

24:41

birth of his two daughters. Sad,

24:43

in my opinion, to not have

24:46

a menu. It's something

24:48

that you can preserve, read again after

24:52

years, and you can

24:54

remember a moment that's important to

24:56

remember. Megan Williams,

24:58

CBC News, Rome. If

25:02

you don't want to go, love me

25:04

like you mean it.

25:08

Pulsi Ballerini there with love me like

25:10

you mean it, the 2014 hit

25:12

that she's performing at tonight's Country Music

25:14

Television Awards. Ballerini is back as host

25:17

for the fourth and she

25:19

says final year. She's also one of

25:21

the artists leading the pack for nominations

25:24

with three, including the biggest prize, Video

25:26

of the Year. This

25:38

year's show features appearances by

25:40

icons like Tricia Yearwood, who's

25:42

receiving the inaugural June Carter

25:44

Cash Humanitarian Award. And

25:49

three tributes to Toby Keith, who died in February

25:51

of stomach cancer. This

25:58

summer, should have been a big surprise. been a cowboy,

26:00

you can cover a dry brick and gun. There's

26:12

also space for budding stars like

26:14

Dasha. The CMT's executive producer says

26:16

she was only booked to perform

26:18

about a month ago, right when

26:20

this song started blowing up on

26:22

TikTok with 6 billion

26:24

views. Despite it being called Austin,

26:26

this is the 24-year-old Californian's

26:29

first trip to the city where

26:31

this year's ceremony is being held. Meanwhile,

26:42

Jelly Roll had a bumpy trip to

26:44

Austin with his private jet having to

26:46

make an emergency landing. But he's ending

26:48

the show with this song, Half Way

26:50

to Hell. So we'll end ours with

26:52

the same. This has been Your World

26:54

Tonight, this Sunday, April 7th. I'm

26:57

Stephanie Skanderas. Thanks for listening.

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