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Editors blog

Just some stories of the people behind the scenes

This blog gives us the freedom of speech!!!! If you are wondering who we are, what we love, what we hate, where we are and what our dirtiest fantasies are...READ THIS COUSCOUS GLOBAL BLOG NOW!!!!!

  • News

    Pressrelease: MySpace is losing it

    June 4th, 2009, posted by: Tarik

    PRESS RELEASE Amsterdam, June 2009

    MySpace banns LYPO application due to “spreading of hate and discrimination”

    Developers Couscous Global and Driebit are astonished.

    MySpace has banned the new application LYPO (Love Your Perfect Opposite) from it’s social network. Developers Couscous Global and Driebit are astonished by this decision. MySpace states that this application instigates “hate spreading and discrimination”

    Couscous Global is an organization that addresses urgent social and societal topics in a confronting, yet, constructive manner through debate. Subjects that live among young people worldwide. Subjects that are their own and not the ones of journalists.

    Couscous Global developed the LYPO application in cooperation with web development company Driebit; they will add it to several social networks later this week. LYPO stands for Love Your Perfect Opposite and it reverses a well known pri...

  • News

    A website that spatializes your head.

    April 28th, 2009, posted by: Tarik

    Couscousglobal.com. the Internet sequal to BNN’s discussion program ‘Couscous & Cola’ is becoming an international succes. But the the person who took this initiative, maartje Nevejan, is already looking forward. The website is ‘up for adoption.’

    By Liedewij Loorbach

    We received all these comments of educated Iranians when a video of an Iranian female rapper appeared on the website of an American magazine. They told us that Couscousglobal.com would be better of if it would ask the opinions of the educated youth. “But we already hear the voice of this elite often enough,” says initiative taker Maartje Nevejan.

    Couscousglobal.com is a sequel to ‘Couscous & Cola’ (broadcast by BNN) a show in which foreign high school students from...

  • News

    This station is...

    April 24th, 2009, posted by: Tarik

    Tarik -

    Oh dear! He's using metaphors again. Although it's a pretty obvious one. Since you've already figured out that the word 'station' is referring to us, this website. Almost a year has passed and we've seen and heard many things that we don't hear everyday. From music, to sex, to the use of the Internet and back. Time to recapitulate, to take a peek into the past.

    I can still clearly remember the moment when the first footage arrived, it was shot in Kenya. It was a debate which was held outdoors and the wind ruined the sound from time to time but still the debate itself was very good and exciting. The participants debated with fire and fought hard to get the upper hand. A good start. Their contemporaries from Tanzania had a completely differe...

  • News

    Iran-USA

    March 25th, 2009, posted by: maartje nevejan

    maartje nevejan -

    25 march 2009

    Amsterdam

    Everyday there is news about Iran and the USA in the papers. It seems the whole world is waiting to see what will happen in the future, nobody is believing anything. Not words anyway. Iran had its new year and we hope to het a small movie from our reporter Pantea there soon. She just returned to Iran to live there a while. She is 18, finished highschool and wants to live in the country she left when she was 2,5.
    In the meantime you vcan read some observations, i wrote f...

  • News

    Eating stomach

    February 27th, 2009, posted by:

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    07:15
    I just called the cameraman Paul to ask him and his friend Sam what time we will meet each other and where. It’s in South Africa not a problem to call someone on such an early time like this, because everybody gets up early here. A couple of days ago we talked about a visit to a school of arts in Johannesburg and to have a conversation with students over there.
    10:00
    The taxi drove me to ‘Newtown’, a nice part of Johannesburg. Originally this place was known as Brickfields, but in 1904 the district burned to the ground and it was renamed
    Newtown. In one of the restaurants I’m sitting with Paul and Sam. In a minute we will go to Cityvarsity, a school of media and creative arts.
    12:00
    We’re sitting with a couple of students in the backyard of the school and I just filmed a debate between them. It was nice; we talked about racism and being an artist in South Africa.
    13:00
    We’re walking under a bridge decorated with a lot of beautiful graffiti. They’re so realistic that it sometimes looks like a picture.
    13:30
    In South Africa they use everything of the cow, so that’s why I’m eating a stomach at the moment. Before I will leave to Amsterdam, I have to eat this traditional meal from Johannesburg. It is the idea of eating a stomach of a cow, which I do not like, but the taste is not bad. In a minute my stomach will meet this stomach of a unknown cow, strange..very strange!

  • News

    Quaqua

    February 27th, 2009, posted by:

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    16:00
    I started a journey from Johannesburg to a small village called ‘Quaqua’. Three and a half hour we (Wayne and I) have driven through nothing more than hills, cows and two gas stations. No we’re here at the centre of Quaqua, I notice that I’m the only white person in town. It feels a bit strange the way people are staring at me, but that’s the way it goes: when you are different than the rest you get attention. I have to admit that being ‘the other’, gives me also a positive mood. Like the attention I got during my high school period, when I tried to be funny against the teachers. But in those days (I sound like a eighty years old man) I put a lot of effort in getting this attention and now I’m doing nothing particular (only being white)
    16:30
    From the centre of Quaqua, again, I am sitting in the car and we’re driving. I thought we already arrived at our destination, but apparently we’re still not there. I don’t mind because the view is really beautiful: hills, hills and hills.
    16:45
    We’re at the theatre and more than twenty kids are sitting in a circle. This time I will film the debate by myself. I’m curious about the possible differences between these village kids and the kids from Soweto. Do they love their life in Quaqua or do they want to go to the big city? What about the opportunities here? The following answer of one of them is really interesting: “yes there are more opportunities in Johannesburg, but here in Quaqua we can start our own opportunities, we can do this by our selves.”
    17:30
    We just finished our debate. It is beautiful to see that there are no differences at all between them and the kids from Johannesburg. They seem to be as open minded like the city kids. I noticed also the (sometimes) difficult relationships between them and their parents who grew up during the Apartheid. But the cause of this clash between them and their parents is not always the experience of Apartheid. Like in Holland or any other country, I think kids from this age often have the need to be different than their parents and to be someone else, an individual.
    19:30
    It’s really dark and we are driving on the road. I have to admit that I’m a little bit scared, because I know how desolate this area is. If something will happen with us here, they will find us maybe after a couple of years. We put some music on (South African trip hop, really good!!) and we give our opinions on the motions we discussed. During this journey back to Johannesburg, sometimes we’re quiet, have a personal conversation about our lives or we’re singing funny songs. When you’re sitting hours in a car next to each other, it gives a band.
    23:00
    I have arrived safely and I am drinking a glass of white wine. Not only the name ‘Quaqua’ is special, but also this entire day. It felt like a beautiful week.

  • News

    The community centre debate in Soweto

    February 24th, 2009, posted by:

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    Again I’m in Soweto for a debate between several kids from a community centre. This place is full of creative activities like theatre, dancing, music and writing. It supposed to be a save place where young people get inspired and motivated to do and to make something beautiful of their lives. Before we started with our debate I had a conversation with one of the organisers of this community centre, Sizwe. He grew up in the middle of crime and as a teenager, stealing and other activities became part of his daily routine. The turning point in his life was the dead of his best friend who got killed after stealing some money of a taxi driver. Siswe saw his friend murdered on the street and realised that he should change his way of life fundamentally. From that moment he decided to help other young people in the townships through facilitating creative activities, like here at the community centre. I couldn’t imagine that this very kind, intelligent and friendly man once, an aggressive criminal was. Apparently, an environment full of criminality and poverty could change the kindest person on earth into a beast. It’s very admirable the way that Sizwe transformed his life in a positive way.
    After this interesting conversation, we started our debate about sex and relationships. Before I went to Johannesburg I had this idea of a society where Apartheid still in a way exist, a country where black and white people do not like each other. But what I noticed today (and yesterday) is that the young people nowadays, this new generation, do not think that way. They ‘re curious and interested in the other. The motion “I would never date a white boy or girl” surprisingly wasn’t answered with ‘yes’. Instead of that, they think it should be normal because Johannesburg is a city full of different cultural identities. But, even that the black people since 1994 have more rights and opportunities, you still see that black people are living with black people and white people with white people. I think that curiosity of the youth and the fact that Johannesburg is indeed a city of different cultural identities is not enough to solve this kind of distance between blacks and whites. The huge poverty and crime in Johannesburg is in my opinion the main reason why there is still a gab between blacks and whites. But people like Sizwe prove that it is possible to escape from this environment through individual motivation, power and guts.

  • News

    First debate in Soweto

    February 24th, 2009, posted by:

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    09:00
    I’m sitting next to Enoch, my taxi driver during this stay in Johannesburg. We’re driving to Soweto, a mostly black urban area in the southwest of Johannesburg, for our first debate in South Africa. My impression of Johannesburg is that it is not really one city, but more a cluster of townships and suburbs. In my first blog I told you there is a downtown. From a distance this downtown looks like a lively city, but once you’re really driving inside, you notice a dead city full of poverty. During the past, this place belonged to the upper class, but now abandoned buildings and crime have become a feature of this part of Johannesburg. You also see poverty on the highways of Johannesburg. Hundreds of people are standing in the middle of these roads begging for money. I see people without legs leaning on wooden crutch, children (without asking) washing cars. There is also a beggar acting blind, I can see clearly that sometimes his eyes are focus on specific cars and windows. Because of the competition between these beggars, some are trying new ways to get some the money.
    09:40
    We’re driving through Soweto. The reality is different than what I expected from this part of Johannesburg. Instead of slums along dusty roads, like I saw in Brazil and Kenya, I see a suburb (not a middle class suburb off course) with little houses along tarred roads and playgrounds. Don’t get me wrong; I do not say it is wealthier than I expected, but it all looks so structured and organised. Enoch says that these houses once, during the 30's, belonged to white families...
    13:00
    The debate between ten kids, living in townships around Johannesburg, just finished. They talked openly about their personal life and I really grateful for that. I think it’s not easy being so vulnerable in front of a camera. We talked about several subjects; how it is for them to grow up as the fist generation without Apartheid. Is there a generation clash between them and their parents? How are the relationships between black and white people nowadays? They talked about their dreams, opportunities and fears…you will understand that the last two hours talking to them I will never forget! I’m looking forward to edit this debate, then to put it on Couscousglobal / Youtube and show these unique kids to the world. Tomorrow I will have again a debate here in Soweto, but then I will talk about something else: sex and relationships.

  • My first full day in Johannesburg

    February 22th, 2009, posted by:

    06:05
    Waking up the first morning abroad, leads always to confusion in time and place. In a split second you feel lost, but after that, it becomes all clear: I’m really in South Africa! The sun is shining and the birds are singing (what a terrible beginning of a sentence, it sounds really like a cheap commercial on TV, but this is true), a big contrast comparing with my dark and cold mornings in Holland. I can’t sleep anymore, so I take a bath and put my clothes on.
    12:00
    I arrive at Eastgate, a shopping centre near by my guesthouse. Somewhere in this huge building I will meet three people for lunch, Wayne, Lindi and Judy. They helped me out organising these debates here in Johannesburg. One of the reasons for planning this lunch is to tell them how grateful I am for their effort; the other reason is less emotional, just preparing the debates (what time, when and who) After an hour we’re sitting here in a restaurant in the middle of this shopping centre. It feels like a blind date because this is actually the first time we see each other. Next to us are sitting three Chinese men, drinking wine. I ask one of them to take a picture of us, the only problem is that his legs are a little bit unstable - I think because of to much wine- so the picture is not that sharp…but anyway, it’s a good memory.
    16:15
    I’m walking through this never ending Eastgate, and notice something I would never have expected here. The last fifteen minutes I saw more women in burqa’s than I’ve ever seen in Holland.
    17:20
    I’m sitting in the taxi and the driver’s name is Enoch. When I ask him how dangerous Johannesburg really is, his answer is short, “It depends where and whit who you are.”
    But after a minute I can see that his head is still thinking about my question. He continues,
    “In the past we had Apartheid, but nowadays there is an other clash: the Africans versus the immigrants from Zimbabwe. They are very aggressive and kill you for nothing. But this aggression is the fault of our government. They promised to give people a house if they vote for the ANC. Instead of us, these people from Zimbabwe got these houses.” We are both quiet. I think this is really an interesting subject, so I will ask him tomorrow to tell more about this conflict ( and will film this) Tomorrow nine O’clock in the morning he will pick me up and bring me to Soweto…the first debate here in South Africa

  • News

    Going to South Africa

    February 21th, 2009, posted by:

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    19:00
    Ten hours flying and this plane will arrive at Johannesburg, South Africa. My hart is beating faster than it normally do. It’s the unknown Johannesburg-thing, which makes me nervous but not in negative way. It is just that I want that our CouscousGlobal-goes-to-South Africa-adventure must start…
    23:00
    Tako arrives at the main hall of the airport and he will give me a ride to his Bed and Breakfast Guesthouse, where I will stay the following days. We’re driving through the centre of Johannesburg. This is my first impression of this city. It looks like a place full of opposites: Rich and poor, clean and dirty, black people sleeping on the streets and white people (like me) sitting in a car, suburbs and downtown. The only thing that is constantly cheering up is the amount of beautiful trees. Johannesburg is the biggest man-made forest in the world. Many threes were planted at the end of the 19th century, to provide wood for the mining industry…the first thing I learned about Johannesburg.
    00:15
    I will sleep now. Tomorrow I will have a dinner with all the people I will work with this week.. AND SOME PICTURES!!!

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