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Eduardo Gomes is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Fluminense Federal University, in Niterói, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He hold a Ph. D. in Political Science from the University of Chicago, with a dissertation on a failed project of turning Brazil into an exporter of manufactured products before the neoliberal reforms. He has been a Visiting Professor in a couple of colleges in the United States, including as a Fulbright Scholar in Residence. He was awarded the “Amos Chair of Eminent Professor of Latin American Studies” at Columbus University, Georgia. His fields of interests are Interest Politics, Political Economy, and Comparative Politics. He has conducted research on business politics, small business, corporate social responsibility, and comparative political economy of development, having published a number of articles and book chapters on these topics in Brazil and abroad. Currently, he is working on state capacities of emergent countries, focusing on advising councils and new arenas of public-private negotiations of the BRICS, as well as on tripartism in Latin America.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil. Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Rubens Glezer is a professor of Constitutional Law at the Getúlio Vargas Foundation Law School in São Paulo. He holds a PhD in Legal Theory from USP, a Master's in Law and Development from the Getúlio Vargas Law School and is a visiting researcher at NYU (New York University). Glezer is a specialist in Brazil's Supreme Court and is the author of several research and scientific works, as well as a frequent commentator in the media about the country's higher court. He is the author of the book "Resiliência e Deslealdade Constitucional" (Resilience and Constitutional Disloyalty), nominated for the prestigious book award Jabuti Prize in 2024.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil. Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Heloisa Galvão is a co-founder of the Brazilian Women's Group and its Executive-Director. She is the recipient of several awards, including the Decoration “Ordem do Rio Branco” awarded by the President of Brazil to Brazilians living overseas who are recognized by outstanding services to Brazil and Brazilian immigrants (September 2002). She holds Master degrees in Print Journalism and in Broadcast Journalism from Boston University. Her latest publications are “A Ditadura como eu lembro” (The dictatorship how I remember it) in Caminhando e Contando. Memória da ditadura brasileira (Walking and Telling. Memories of the Brazilian dictatorship), printing EDUFBA – Federal University of Bahia, 2015, and “An Oral History of Brazilian Women Immigrants in the Boston Area”, in Passing Lines, Sexuality and immigration (Edited by Brad Epps, keja Valens, and Bill Johnson Gonzalez, Harvard University, The David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies, 2005.)Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
João Carlos Jarochinski Silva is Professor at Universidade Federal de Roraima (UFRR) in a joint appointment at the Faculty of International Relations and the Sociedade e Fronteiras (Society and Borders) Postgraduate Programme. He was a Post-Doctoral Fellow at the Núcleo de Estudos de População Elza Berquó (NEPO/Unicamp), and holds a PhD in Social Sciences (International Relations) from Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo (PUC/SP), and a Masters in International Law from Universidade Católica de Santos (UniSantos). He was a visiting researcher at The Center for Latin American & Latino Studies (CLALS) of American University in Washington, D.C. He has worked with migration and refuge issues since his Master's degree and is actively involved in the assistance and research of the Venezuelans in Boa Vista, Roraima, Brazil.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Marianna Poyares is a Fritz Fellow at Georgetown's Center on Privacy and Technology. She is a critical theorist working on the ethics of new technologies of migration and border enforcement. Trained as a philosopher and with a background in human rights policy and advocacy, Marianna has worked, among others, with the Brazilian National Truth Commission, the United Nations Development Program, the International Rescue Committee, and the Zolberg Institute on Migration and Mobility. She has taught at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, The New School, and CUNY. She holds an M.A. in Philosophy and in International Relations, and a Ph.D. in Philosophy.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil. Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Qual a trilha da liberdade? No 127º episódio do 451 MHz, a jornalista e curadora Erika Palomino e o DJ e jornalista musical Camilo Rocha conversam com Amauri Arrais, editor da Quatro Cinco Um, sobre os espaços de resistência e criação surgidos nas pistas de dança e no jornalismo cultural do final do século 20 em São Paulo, cidade que completa 471 anos em 25 de janeiro de 2025. A cena clubber está no foco dos livros de Palomino, Babado Forte, relançado pela Ubu, e de Rocha, Bate-Estaca, publicado pela Veneta, registros importantes da história da cultura nos anos 1990 e 2000. O episódio foi realizado com apoio da Lei de Incentivo à Cultura. Apoie o 451 MHz: https://bit.ly/Assine451
Camila Rocha is the Scientific Director of CCI/Cebrap. A PhD in Political Science from the University of São Paulo, she won the USP Thesis Award and the best doctoral thesis award from the Brazilian Political Science Association. A finalist for the 64th Jabuti Prize with the book Less Marx, More Mises: Liberalism and the New Right in Brazil, she also serves as Global Advisor for Our Common Home (Geneva), is a member of the board of the Instituto Democracia em Xeque (Democracy in Check Institute – São Paulo), and a columnist for the daily newspaper Folha de São Paulo.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil. Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Vera Paiva is a Full Professor in the Department of Social Psychology at the Institute of Psychology at the University of São Paulo, where she has taught since 1987. She is dedicated to psychosocial approaches to inequality and sexuality and to the innovation of health practices (prevention and care) based on human rights, with an emphasis on STIs/AIDS and covid-19. She has extensive collaboration with AIDS Programs (national, state and municipal) and Covid-19 response networks. She is a researcher at the Institute of Advanced Studies, University of São Paulo. She is the eldest daughter of Rubens Paiva, a Brazilian engineer and politician tortured and murdered by Brazil's military dictatorship in 1971. Her family's life is the subject of feature film I'm Still Here, a current box office hit in Brazil, nominated twice to the 2025 Golden Globe Awards and shortlisted in the 2025 Academy Awards International Film category.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Camila Rocha is the Scientific Director of CCI/Cebrap. A PhD in Political Science from the University of São Paulo, she won the USP Thesis Award and the best doctoral thesis award from the Brazilian Political Science Association. A finalist for the 64th Jabuti Prize with the book Less Marx, More Mises: Liberalism and the New Right in Brazil, she also serves as Global Advisor for Our Common Home (Geneva), is a member of the board of the Instituto Democracia em Xeque (Democracy in Check Institute – São Paulo), and a columnist for the daily newspaper Folha de São Paulo.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Erika Robb Larkins is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at the Behner Stiefel Chair of Brazilian Studies and the Director of the Behner Stiefel Center for Brazilian Studies at California State University, San Diego. Her first book, The Spectacular Favela: Violence in Modern Brazil (University of California Press, 2015), explores the political economy of spectacular violence in one of Rio's most famous favelas. Her second book, The Sensation of Security: Private Guards and the Social Order in Brazil, is forthcoming from Cornell University Press. She has also published on issues of race, gender, and politics in Brazil, with recent articles appearing in American Ethnologist, City and Society, and the Journal for Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology, and in public outlets including El País and O Estado de São Paulo. In addition to all of her activities, Erika is the President of the Brazilian Studies Association (BRASA) and a member of the Board of Directors of the Washington Brazil Office.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Tainah Santos Pereira is a PhD student of International Political Economy at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ). Tainha has a MA in Political Science from the Federal State University of Rio de Janeiro (Unirio) and a BA in International Relations from Universidade Estácio de Sá. She was a Fellow of the Draper Hills Summer Program on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law in 2022 at Stanford University. She is interested in the topics of financing for development, reform of the international financial and monetary systems, multilateral development banks and the BRICS process. She is currently political coordinator for Mulheres Negras Decidem (Black Women Decide), a social movement dedicated to promoting Black women participation in institutional politics.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Isabel Figueiredo is an ecologist and coordinator of the Cerrado and Caatinga Program at the Institute of Society, Population and Nature (ISPN). With a Master's degree in Ecology from the University of Brasilia, she has worked for eighteen years on the conservation of the Cerrado with indigenous peoples and communities to promote sustainable uses of biodiversity. She coordinated the Small Grants Program in Brazil (PPP-ECOS) for 17 years, supporting community initiatives that generate socio-environmental benefits.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Andre Pagliarini is an assistant professor of history and international studies at Louisiana State University, a faculty fellow at the Washington Brazil Office and a non-resident expert at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft. He has written widely on Brazil for scholarly and academic audiences in outlets like Latin American Research Review, Latin American Perspectives, New York Times, and The Guardian as well as Folha de S. Paulo and Piauí in Brazil. He is a 2022 and 2023 faculty fellow at the Washington Brazil Office, where he co-edits the weekly newsletter, as well as a non-resident expert at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft. A 2022-23 Fulbright scholar, he is currently working on three book manuscripts on nationalism in Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and mass politics across post-independence Latin America. Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil. Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
A história de São Paulo é entremeada com a história da cena de música eletrônica da cidade. Camilo Rocha defende a ideia em "Bate-estaca", livro que registra as transformações da noite e da própria São Paulo desde o fim dos anos 1980, quando DJs deixaram de ser figuras quase desconhecidas, gêneros como house e techno tomaram as pistas e o movimento clubber ganhou força na cidade. O autor é, ao mesmo tempo, observador e participante da história que narra: DJ e jornalista, Rocha acompanhou as mudanças dos sons e dos comportamentos na noite paulistana, as marcas da desigualdade de São Paulo nesse universo cultural e a explosão das raves nas proximidades da capital. Também assistiu à hiperfragmentação e a elitização da música eletrônica que levaram à decadência da cena em São Paulo na metade dos anos 2000. Na entrevista, Rocha fala sobre os clubes underground que ajudaram a projetar drag queens ao mainstream da cultura brasileira e a oferecer espaços de socialização a pessoas LGBTQIA+ e das fricções entre utopias filiadas à contracultura e o impulso de sucesso comercial que permeiam essa história. Produção e apresentação: Eduardo Sombini Edição de som: Raphael Concli Este episódio inclui a faixa "Gimme Fantasy", do DJ Mr. Gil See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Debora Diniz is a Brazilian university professor, human rights activist, documentarist, and public intellectual. Diniz served as a professor at University of Brasília for almost 20 years. She is the founder of Anis – Instituto de Bioética, an organization that specializes in the use of video and research for evidence-based advocacy, policy change, and strategic litigation on health and rights. Diniz served as Deputy Chief Executive Officer at Fòs Feminista (2018-2023), an international alliance for reproductive justice comprising over 220 organizations in more than 44 countries. Her 2016 book, "Zika: From Brazilian Backlands to Global Threat," was awarded the Jabuti Prize Book and has since been translated into English and Japanese. As a video creator, her films have received over 80 awards and have been exhibited at festivals, prisons, universities, schools, hospitals, laboratories, courts, and churches in over 35 countries. She was nominated as one of Foreign Policy Magazine's "100 Global Thinkers." And In 2020, she was the recipient of the esteemed Dan David Prize, and in 2024 the honorary degree at the University of Ottawa.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
A member of the Democratic Party, Congresswoman Sydney Kamlager-Dove represents California's vibrant, diverse 37th Congressional District in Los Angeles County. She is a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and serves as Vice Ranking Member of the House Natural Resources Committee. She is the Co-Chair of the Congressional Brazil Caucus, and a Whip and Outreach Co-Chair of the Democratic Women's Caucus. Congresswoman Kamlager-Dove is also a fierce advocate for the African diaspora both in California's 37th District and around the world. She leveraged her role on the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa to help establish the Congressional Black Caucus Institute's Global African Diaspora Initiative (GADI) and secure its special consultative status within the United Nations Economic & Social Council. Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Juliana de Moraes Pinheiro is the co-founder of WBO and was the organization's first executive director. With a Master's degree in Public Policy from the Erasmus Mundus program, Juliana specialized in International Political Economy and Governance at the International Institute of Social Studies at Erasmus University Rotterdam in The Hague and the Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals at Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona. Juliana has a Bachelor's degree in International Relations & Development from the American University in Washington. With over twelve years of experience, Juliana has worked at the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights of the Organization of American States (OAS), and has collaborated with the Global Alliance for the Green New Deal in Paris, and various NGOs in Washington, D.C. Currently, she coordinates the Socio-Environmental Program at the WBO, and the Liaison & Outreach Strategy for the Parliamentary Observatory on Climate Change and Just Transition at the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (UN-ECLAC). Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Marcos Arruda is an economist, professor and author. He is an associate and co-founder of the PACS Institute – Alternative Policies for the Southern Cone, Rio de Janeiro since 1986 and an associate of the Transnational Institute, in Amsterdam, since 1975. Arruda is the co-founder and former director of IBASE – Brazilian Institute of Social and Economic Analysis, Rio de Janeiro, a former member of the Institute of Cultural Action, in Geneva and a consultant in youth and adult education and development for the Ministries of Education of Guine Bissau and Nicarágua. He is also a former professor of Philosophy of Popular Education at IESAE – Institute of Advanced Studies in Education, Getúlio Vargas Foundation, Rio de Janeiro (1983-1992), as well as a professor and lecturer at universities in Brazil and abroad. Arruda is a member and collaborator of several organizations linked to human rights and environmental issues. He is the author and co-author of more than 10 books and hundreds of articules, published in Brazil and abroad, including A Mother's Cry: A Memoir of Politics, Prison, and Torture under the Brazilian Military Dictatorship.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Peter Kornbluh is a Senior Analyst who was has worked at the National Security Archive since April 1986. He currently directs the Archive's Cuba and Chile Documentation Projects. He was co-director of the Iran-Contra documentation project and director of the Archive's project on U.S. policy toward Nicaragua. From 1990-1999, he taught at Columbia University as an adjunct assistant professor of international and public affairs. He is the author of Back Channel to Cuba: The Hidden History of Negotiations between Washington and Havana (UNC Press, 2014), a Foreign Affairs Best Book of the Year, and The Pinochet File: A Declassified Dossier on Atrocity and Accountability, which the Los Angeles Times selected as a "best book" of the year. His articles have been published in Foreign Policy, The Nation, The New York Review of Books, the New Yorker, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Los Angeles Times. He has also worked on, and appeared in, numerous documentary films, including the Oscar-winning "Panama Deception," the History Channel's "Bay of Pigs Declassified," "The Trials of Henry Kissinger," and most recently the Netflix documentary, “Crack: Cocaine, Corruption, Conspiracy."https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Rafael Alcadipani is full professor of management at the Sao Paulo Management School from the Getulio Vargas Foundation in Brazil. He got his PhD in management from the University of Manchester, UK. He does research on police and crime in Brazil. He has published widely in top scientific journals in his academic field. Prof. Alcadipani also writes for non-academic outlets in Brazil and has been called by Brazilian and international media outlets to discuss issues associated with police and crime in Brazil, including Reuters, BBC, Al Jazeera, and the Wall Street Journal, to mention but a few. He was a visiting scholar at Boston College, Gothenburg University, and Paris Dauphine University.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.razil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
In the last program of 2023, James Naylor Green switches roles and becomes the interviewee. The Brazil Unfiltered host, who is a professor of Brazilian history and culture at Brown University and the national co-coordinator for the US Network for Democracy in Brazil, answers questions by André Pagliarini, a 2022 and 2023 faculty fellow at the Washington Brazil Office and co-editor of the organization's weekly newsletter. Pagliarini is also assistant professor of history and fellow in the Wilson Center for Leadership in the Public Interest at Hampden-Sydney College in central Virginia. *He has written widely on Brazil for scholarly and academic audiences* in outlets like Latin American Research Review, Latin American Perspectives, New York Times, and The Guardian as well as Folha de S. Paulo and Piauí in Brazil. In the program, Green looks back at the WBO's activities and Brazil's political scenario in 2023. Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Raísa Cetra is co-executive director at Article 19 Brazil and South America and PhD student in Global Health at USP. She has a bachelor's degree in International Relations at the same university. She has worked widely on international human rights law within civil society organizations, mostly in Brazil and Argentina and in regional and global foruns, such as the United Nations, the Inter-American Human Rights System and Mercosur. Nationally, Raísa has extensive experience with the development of public policies that internalize human rights standards on topics such as migration, democracy and freedom of expression.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.razil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Athayde Motta holds a master's degree in Anthropology and a master's degree in Public Affairs (both from the University of Texas at Austin). He has a long career in the areas of international development, management of civil society organizations (CSOs) and program and project development. He worked for Oxfam GB and the Ford Foundation and was the Executive Director at IBASE and the Baobá Fund for Racial Equity. He's been a member of the Executive Committees of both the Brazilian Association of NGOs (ABONG) and Forus International. He is a Synergos fellow and member of Publish What You Pay's Board of Trustees.razil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Nesta edição, Cleber Facchi (@cleberfacchi), Isadora Almeida (@almeidadora), Renan Guerra (@_renanguerra), Nik Silva (@niksilva) e Camilo Rocha (@camilorocha) voltam quatro décadas no tempo para relembrar os melhores discos de 1983. Apoie nosso podcast: https://bit.ly/3ohnUckPlaylist Seleção VFSM: https://bit.ly/3ETG7oE Não Paro De Ouvir ➜ Gabrre https://bit.ly/3sMXZOW➜ Don L https://bit.ly/45UtMMc➜ Marika Hackman https://bit.ly/3ZcvbeE➜ Tinashe https://bit.ly/3LdjNtj➜ Yussef Dayes https://bit.ly/3Ew8AQU➜ NoPorn https://bit.ly/44Ndqnm➜ Evian Christ https://bit.ly/3LgycFb➜ LA&RR https://bit.ly/3RbdpGO➜ Sophia Chablau https://bit.ly/3LesIe7➜ Alzira E https://bit.ly/3LldW5g➜ Romy https://bit.ly/3qY8VJ1➜ Tirzah https://bit.ly/466WZU9➜ SeeYouSpaceCowboy https://bit.ly/3Z6MVbt➜ Tássia Reis https://bit.ly/489IUqW➜ Sparklehorse https://bit.ly/3Ptk79U➜ Anjimile https://bit.ly/3r1JV3x➜ The Chemical Brothers https://bit.ly/3LdLlia➜ James Blake https://bit.ly/3Lh7aNL➜ Olivia Rodrigo https://bit.ly/3Rfl72M Você Precisa Ouvir Isso ➜ Chic Show (Globoplay)➜ A Biblioteca da Meia-Noite – Matt Haig➜ Take Shelter (VOD)➜ Collor Vs. Collor (Rádio Novelo) Contato: sobremusicavamosfalar@gmail.com
Mila Burns is an Associate Professor at the Department of Latin American & Latino Studies at Lehman College, CUNY. She is the Associate Director at the Center for Latin American, Caribbean, and Latino Studies at The Graduate Center, CUNY. Burns is the author of Dona Ivone Lara's Sorriso Negro (Bloomsbury Academic, 2019; Editora Cobogó, 2021) and Nasci para Sonhar e Cantar: Dona Ivone Lara, a Mulher no Samba (Editora Record, 2009). Mila has an interdisciplinary profile, with an emphasis on media, anthropology, and history. For over two decades, she has worked as a journalist in Brazil and New York, currently as a political commentator at ICL Notícias. She has served as editor-in-chief and anchor to shows dedicated to the Latino community broadcast at TV Globo International, and has worked at TV Globo, The Economist, O Globo, and others. Her current book manuscript investigates the Brazilian influence on the military coup d'état in Chile, in 1973. Her articles have been published in several newspapers, magazines, and academic publications.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil. Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.
Natalia de Campos is a performance and theater artists, producer, writer, educator, translator and activist born in São Paulo, Brazil. She has lives in New York for the last 25 years, where she founded the multidisciplinary arts collaborative Syncretic Pleasures, to produce performance and arts events with different collaborators. She has taught English and Portuguese about different social movements in Brazil to non-native speakers for many decades while also producing and performing works by Brazilian authors, including her own. In 2016, she cofounded the Defend Democracy in Brazil committee in New York with a group of Brazilian activists to fight for democracy and social justice. She has taught and lectured to independent non-profit organizations and at New York University, Columbia University, the Graduate Center of CUNY on social practices, social engagement, solo performances and New York City activism. Natalia has a bachelor's degree in history from the University of São Paulo and a masters degree in Performance and Interactive Media Arts from CUNY Brooklyn College. She currently teaches Portuguese through social movements' practice, independently and through the People's Forum in New York. To learn more about what the Defend Democracy in Brazil Committee does, visit www.defenddemicracyinbrazil.orgBrazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil. Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Fabio Sá e Silva is an associate professor of International Studies and the Wick Cary professor of Brazilian Studies at the University of Oklahoma. He is also affiliated as a fellow at the Harvard Law School Center on the Legal Profession. He studies the social organization and the political impact of law and justice in Brazil and comparatively. As an institution builder, Fabio codirects the Oklahoma University Center for Brazilian Studies, is a member of the executive committee of the Brazilian Studies Association and a trustee of the Law and Society Association - Class of 2013. In 2018, he was recognized as the outstanding faculty in his department. Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil. Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Rafael Grohmann is an Assistant Professor of Media Studies with focus on Critical Platform Studies at the University of Toronto. Leader of DigiLabour initiative. Co-director of Critical Digital Methods Institute. Researcher of Fairwork and Platform Work Inclusion Living Lab (P-WILL) projects. Founding Board Member of Labor Tech Research Network. His research interests include platform cooperativism and worker-owned platforms, work & AI, workers' organization, platform labour, communication/media and work. His research appeared in academic outlets such as New Media & Society and International Journal of Communication, and media outlets such as BBC UK, Wired, The Verge and VICE. He is currently working on a book manuscript on worker-owned platforms in Latin America.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Jonathan Watts is a British journalist serving as the global environment editor of The Guardian. Based in the Amazon town of Altamira, Pará state, he is one of the cofounders of Sumauma, an independent news agency specialized in reporting from the Amazon. He has also reported from the Antarctic, Arctic, Amazon and several COP summits for The Guardian, covering, as he says, "a lot of grim stuff I wish wasn't happening and interviewing a lot of great people trying to stop it". Between 2012 and 2017, Watts was The Guardian's Latin America correspondent, when he interviewed political figures such as Brazilian presidents Lula da Silva and Dilma Rousseff and Bolivian president Evo Morales, among other political leaders of the region. He is the author of When a Billion Chinese Jump (Faber 2010), which was translated into four languages.Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Maria Hermínia Tavares de Almeida, P.H.D. in Political Science, is senior researcher at Centro Brasileiro de Análise e Planejamento (CEBRAP), retired Professor of Political Science and former dean of the Institute of International Relations at the University of São Paulo (2009-2013). Her books include Foreign Policy Responses to the Rise of Brazil – Balancing Power in Emerging States, written with Gian Luca Gardini, and Os Anos de Ouro - Ensaios sobre a democracia no Brasil (The Gilded Years – Essays on Democracy in Brazil). She is former president of the Latin American Studies Association- LASA (2010-2012) and a member of the World Bank Chief Economist´s Council of Eminent Persons (2016-2018), as well as holding the National Order of Scientific Merit (2006). Presently, she is a member of the D. Paulo Evaristo Arns Commission for Protection of Human Rights – Arns Commission and of the Latin American Program Advisory Board at the Woodrow Wilson Center. Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Jan Rocha is a British born journalist and writer who was correspondent for the BBC World Service and The Guardian in Brazil from the 1970s to the 90s and currently writes about politics for LAB (Latin America Bureau). Her books about Brazil include Murder in the Rainforest: The Yanomami, the Gold Miners and the Amazon and Cutting the Wire (the story of the Landless Movement in Brazil) with Sue Branford, for which they won a MacArthur Foundation grant in 1999. In 2020 she published Nossa Correspondente Informa, a selection of BBC stories broadcast during the Brazilian dictatorship. Her book about the work of CLAMOR, (the Committee for the Defence of Human Rights in the countries of the Southern Cone) which she helped create in 1978, will be launched in London on April 27th under the title "CLAMOR: The search for the disappeared of the South American dictatorships". She has twice won the Vladimir Herzog Human Rights prize for journalism, in the categories of radio and books. From 2003-4 she was coordinator of an ILO project investigating the extent of slave labor in Brazil. From 2013-2014 she was a consultant to the Brazilian Truth Commission. Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil. Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Andre Pagliarini is an assistant professor of history and fellow in the Wilson Center for Leadership in the Public Interest at Hampden-Sydney College in central Virginia. He has written widely on Brazil for scholarly and academic audiences in outlets like Latin American Research Review, Latin American Perspectives, New York Times, and The Guardian as well as Folha de S. Paulo and Piauí in Brazil. He is a 2022 and 2023 faculty fellow at the Washington Brazil Office, where he co-edits the weekly newsletter, as well as a non-resident expert at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft. A 2022-23 Fulbright scholar, he is currently working on three book manuscripts on nationalism in Brazil, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and mass politics across post-independence Latin America. Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil. Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. This podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
Maurício Angelo is an award-winning international freelance investigative journalist and the founder of The Mining Observatory, a Brazilian based investigative journalism Centre established in 2015. Researcher at Sustainable Development Center at the University of Brasília (UnB). He publishes in many media outlets in Brazil and around the world and was the winner of the Excellence in Journalism Award (2019) by Inter American Press Association. Considered one of the Top 3 journalist experts in Extractive Sector in Brazil in 2022 and 2021.Alongside socio-environmental monitoring organization Smoke Signal, Angelo's Mining Observatory has just released the report “Pure Dynamite: how Bolsonaro's Government (2019-2022) Mineral Policy Set Up a Climate and Anti-Indigenous Bomb“. ( bit.ly/3nLwlPL ) Mining Observatory ( https://observatoriodamineracao.com.br/ )Brazil is going through challenging times. There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. The podcast is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha in São Paulo.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
João Roberto Martins Filho is professor emeritus of Political Science at the Federal University of São Carlos with a doctorate in Social Science from the State University of Campinas. He is the author of many classical works, including an English translation of "The Student movement and the military dictatorship" (1987), "The Palace and the Barracks"(1995; 2nd edition, 2019), "The Brazilian Navy in the Age of Battleships - 1895-1910" (2010) and "State Secrets: the British Government and Torture in Brazil" (2018; 2nd edition 2020). He was the president of the Brazilian Defense Studies Association from 2006 to 2008 and has had postdoctoral fellowships at UCLA (University of California Los Angeles) and the Centre for Brazilian Studies at the University of Oxford, among many other places. He has also held the Rio Branco chair of International Relations at King's College, London, and twice the Rui Barbosa chair in Brazilian Studies at the University of Leiden, in the Netherlands. Brazil is going through challenging times.There's never been a more important moment to understand Brazil's politics, society, and culture. To go beyond the headlines, and to ask questions that aren't easy to answer. 'Brazil Unfiltered,' does just that. This podcast is hosted by James N. Green, Professor of Brazilian History and Culture at Brown University and the National Co-Coordinator of the U.S. Network for Democracy in Brazil.Brazil Unfiltered is part of the Democracy Observatory, supported by the Washington Brazil Office. It is edited and produced by Camilo Rocha.https://www.braziloffice.org/en/observatory#activities
A conversa da vez é com Camilo Rocha. Ele pensa sua bio como um disco de vinil. No lado A, jornalista. No lado B, DJ e pesquisador musical Entre em contato por telefonemaspodcast@gmail.com Manda um PIX pra gente: https://nubank.com.br/pagar/sqpk6/obJRDmYnga Colabore também pelo https://apoia.se/telefonemas Este episódio foi possível pelo apoio de: Adriana Felix, Andrea Camurça, Dagmar Pinheiro, Dalva Abrantes, Douglas Vieira, Ismália Santos, Jessica da Mata, Lívia Rossati, Rohmanelli, Sabrina Fernandes, Gabriel Nunes, Mateus Botelho, Tatiane Araujo Russo, Pedro Henrique Duarte, Erick Marlon, Diogo Gregorio Burilio, Kleber Monte, Deyvson Matiy, Rhuan Borborema, Moara Juliana, Vitor Breda, Lucas Monteiro, Augusto Batista, Matheus Fonseca, Anna Martins, Thiago Benicchio, Marcelo Pereira, Guilherme Ruy, Kaio Teixeira, Vinicius Ramos, Lucas Gomes, Alan Neves, Paulo Galo, Renato Gomes, Jorge Luiz, Hiago Vinícius, Allyson Souza, Fernando Serboncini, Tiago Chiavegatti, Daniel Tumati, Flávia Schiochet, Felipe Braga, Luis Muchaki, Gabriel Tupinambá, Rodrigo Terra Vargas e Miguel Soares
BBJ reviews the year that was on this episode. He had his mother Mama Pam, his former co-workers from FOX Sports Radio Ben Maller and Tomm Looney, his homies from the Old Neighborhood, Mario and Camilo Rocha and Antwan "Twan" Price, one of his hip hop idols, Tony A. Da Wizard and his amazing friends Natalie and Rickie Lee from the On This Frequency Podcast and Nick Hamilton, Owner of Nitecast Media and host of TMA with Nick Hamilton on this episode as we relive some of the best moments on The Big Brother Jake Podcast from 2021.
O ex-ministro da Saúde Luiz Henrique Mandetta prestou depoimento na CPI da Covid na terça-feira (4). A senadores, ele disse que tentou alertar o presidente Jair Bolsonaro dos riscos de não seguir recomendações científicas no combate à pandemia e afirmou que o Palácio do Planalto avaliou incluir a covid-19 como indicação na bula da cloroquina, medicamento sem eficácia contra a doença causada pelo novo coronavírus. Também na terça, o ex-ministro Eduardo Pazuello pediu para adiar seu depoimento na CPI, originalmente marcado para quarta (5). O general diz que teve contato com militares contaminados pela covid e por isso precisa cumprir duas semanas de quarentena. Ele deve falar à comissão em 19 de maio. O “Durma com essa” trata do depoimento de Mandetta e da ausência de Pazuello na comissão esta semana. O programa também traz a participação dos repórteres especiais Camilo Rocha, que comenta os 10 anos do reconhecimento da união civil estável de pessoas do mesmo sexo pelo Supremo Tribunal Federal, e João Paulo Charleaux, que fala sobre os protestos que fizeram o governo colombiano recuar de uma proposta de reforma tributária.
O senador Flávio Bolsonaro (Republicanos-RJ) afirmou nesta terça-feira (2) que a recente compra de uma casa de quase R$ 6 milhões numa área nobre de Brasília foi legal e registrada. O negócio foi revelado pelo site O Antagonista e preocupa aliados do governo, num momento em que o filho mais velho do presidente Jair Bolsonaro vem obtendo vitórias na Justiça no caso das rachadinhas. O “Durma com essa” relata o que se sabe sobre a compra e resgata as transações imobiliárias de Flávio, acusado de peculato, lavagem de dinheiro e organização criminosa. O programa traz ainda o repórter especial Camilo Rocha falando sobre o aumento de incidência da covid-19 na população abaixo dos 50 anos e o repórter especial João Paulo Charleuax comentando as condenações do ex-presidente francês Nicolas Sarkozy.
O que a dupla que anunciou seu fim após 28 anos fez de especial? O G1 busca respostas com o DJ e jornalista Camilo Rocha e o produtor Boss in Drama.
O mercado brasileiro passou por turbulências nesta segunda-feira (22), primeiro dia de pregão após o anúncio de troca no comando da Petrobras. O Ibovespa e as ações da estatal fecharam o dia em queda, enquanto o dólar e o risco Brasil subiram. Foi o primeiro dia de pregão desde que o presidente Jair Bolsonaro anunciou a troca no comando da companhia, após reajustes seguidos no preço do combustível. O “Durma com essa” explica a política de preços da Petrobras e sobre as diferentes visões sobre o papel da empresa. O programa traz também do repórter especial Camilo Rocha falando sobre o quadro de calamidade no Acre e o repórter especial João Paulo Charleaux falando da definição do segundo turno da eleição no Equador.
O bitcoin atingiu nesta terça-feita (16) o valor de US$ 50 mil, um novo recorde. A criptomoeda acumula uma alta de 60% em 2021. Empresas como a Tesla, de Elon Musk, vem investindo alto no ativo. O “Durma com essa” explica o fenômeno, que vem acompanhado de alertas de uma eventual bolha. O programa traz ainda o repórter especial Camilo Rocha falando sobre o spray israelense que vem sendo testado contra a covid-19 e o também repórter especial João Paulo Charleaux comenta a vacinação no Peru, onde políticos furaram a fila de prioridades. ESTÁ ERRADO: O comentário sobre a vacinação no Peru diz incorretamente que o laboratório chinês Sinopharm trabalha com o Instituto Butantan no desenvolvimento da Coronavac. Na verdade, o laboratório chinês que tem a parceria com o órgão paulista é o Sinovac, que não tem envolvimento com a polêmica no país sul-americano.
O comércio do Amazonas reabriu nesta segunda-feira (28), dois dias após ter fechado por decreto do governador Wilson Lima (PSC). A norma, que havia sido motivada pelo repique da pandemia no estado e pela exaustão do sistema público de saúde local, foi revogada após manifestantes terem ido às ruas para protestar contra a decisão de Lima. O “Durma com essa” desta fala sobre o episódio e traz também o repórter especial Camilo Rocha falando sobre o potencial de transmissão de covid-19 em supereventos como a festa de reveillon do jogador Neymar em Mangaratiba (RJ).
O ministro da Educação, Milton Ribeiro, publicou uma portaria no “Diário Oficial” nesta quarta-feira (2) determinando a volta das aulas presenciais em universidades e institutos federais a partir de janeiro de 2021. A medida valeria também pras universidades privadas. Diante da repercussão negativa, Ribeiro voltou atrás. O “Durma com essa” conta esse vaivém e aborda as questões que envolvem o ensino durante a pandemia do novo coronavírus. O programa traz ainda o repórter especial Camilo Rocha falando sobre a decisão das Nações Unidas de tirar a maconha o status de droga perigosa.
Partidos ligados ao centrão registraram aumento no número de prefeitos eleitos em 2020 na comparação com 2016. Os destaques foram Progressistas e PSD. O “Durma com essa” explica o poder desse grupo que atua no Congresso e pode crescer em 2022 devido à capilaridade nacional. O programa traz ainda o repórter especial Camilo Rocha falando sobre o aumento da representatividade de gênero e raça nos Executivos e Legislativos municipais, além do repórter especial João Paulo Charleaux comentando a crise do Peru.
A Polícia Federal deflagrou na segunda-feira (31) uma megaoperação contra integrantes da facção criminosa PCC (Primeiro Comando da Capital), familiares e outras pessoas suspeitas de envolvimento na lavagem de dinheiro do tráfico de drogas. Com mais de 600 mandados judiciais em 19 estados, no Distrito Federal e no Chile, a ação mira uma rede de pagamentos a membros do grupo, entre eles lideranças que estão na prisão. O “Durma com essa” de hoje trata da operação e das dinâmicas que marcam o funcionamento do PCC desde sua origem, em 1993. Participam também os repórteres especiais João Paulo Charleaux, que comenta a violência em protestos nos EUA, e Camilo Rocha, que fala sobre o papel da testagem para orientar a volta às aulas presenciais em cidades brasileiras. Assine o Nexo e apoie o podcast e o jornalismo independente de qualidade: https://www.nexojornal.com.br/durmacomessa
De 2008 a 2018, a taxa de homicídios de negros no Brasil cresceu 11,5%, enquanto a taxa de homicídios de não negros caiu 12,9%. Os dados são do Atlas da Violência, divulgado nesta quinta-feira (27) pelo Fórum Brasileiro de Segurança Pública e pelo Ipea (Instituto de Pesquisa Econômica Aplicada). O “Durma com essa” mostra como a dinâmica dos assassinatos dialoga com o racismo estrutural do país. O programa traz ainda o repórter especial João Paulo Charleaux comentado a ação de supremacistas brancos armados durante manifestações nos EUA e o repórter especial Camilo Rocha falando sobre os efeitos da covid-19 no sistema neurológico dos infectados. Assine o Nexo com planos exclusivos para ouvintes do “Durma com essa": https://www.nexojornal.com.br/durmacomessa
A deputada federal Flordelis (PSD-RJ) foi denunciada pelo Ministério Público do Rio de Janeiro na segunda-feira (24) como mandante do assassinato do marido, o pastor Anderson do Carmo, em junho de 2019. Ele foi morto com 30 tiros na frente de casa pelo que a polícia considera serem motivações financeiras e de poder dentro da família. Flordelis, que nega envolvimento, não foi presa porque tem imunidade parlamentar. O “Durma com essa” aborda o crime, a trajetória de Flordelis e outros casos em que deputados federais foram acusados de homicídio. Alem disso, participam os repórteres especiais João Paulo Charleaux, que comenta os aspectos geopolíticos da corrida pela vacina contra a covid-19, e Camilo Rocha, que fala sobre o tratamento experimental com plasma. Assine o Nexo com planos exclusivos para ouvintes do “Durma com essa”: https://www.nexojornal.com.br/durmacomessa
A Federação de Futebol do Estado do Rio de Janeiro anunciou nesta quarta-feira (17) o retorno do Campeonato Carioca. A bola volta a rolar na quinta (18), com Flamengo x Bangu no Maracanã. Em São Paulo, o governador João Doria anunciou que os times paulistas estão liberados para treinar a partir de 1º de julho. Portões fechados e protocolo sanitário marcam a volta do esporte em meio à pandemia do novo coronavírus no país. O “Durma com essa” fala dos meandros políticos da retomada do futebol e sobre como ela difere do que acontece na Europa. O repórter especial Camilo Rocha fala sobre as reivindicações dos entregadores vinculados a aplicativos e João Paulo Charleaux comenta o conflito entre Índia e China na região do Himalaia. www.nexojornal.com.br
A Itália, um dos países europeus que mais sofreram com o novo coronavírus, reabriu as suas fronteiras para membros da União Europeia na quarta-feira (3). O Reino Unido anunciou que viajantes que chegarem do exterior precisarão se isolar por 14 dias. E governos na Oceania e Escandinávia planejam criar 'bolhas' de viagens, que permitem a circulação de pessoas apenas entre países próximos que estão com a pandemia sob controle. As dificuldades e os temores da reabertura entre países são o tema principal do “Durma com essa” de hoje. Participam também o correspondente internacional João Paulo Charleaux, que comenta o impacto dos protestos antirracistas dos EUA na corrida eleitoral para a Presidência, e o repórter especial Camilo Rocha, que fala sobre a campanha para marcas se posicionarem a favor do movimento negro nas redes sociais.
O adolescente João Pedro Mattos Pinto, de 14 anos, foi morto durante uma operação policial no Complexo do Salgueiro, em São Gonçalo, no Rio de Janeiro, na segunda-feira (18). Depois de 17 horas em busca de informações sobre o jovem, a família localizou o seu corpo na terça (19). Em meio à pandemia do novo coronavírus, as forças de segurança do estado do Rio de Janeiro continuam a fazer ações policiais em comunidades. Na sexta-feira (15), uma operação deixou 13 mortos no Complexo do Alemão. Este é o tema principal do “Durma com essa” de hoje. O repórter especial Camilo Rocha também participa, falando sobre a evolução da pandemia em São Paulo. E o correspondente internacional João Paulo Charleaux comenta a proposta de socorro financeiro a países da União Europeia. www.nexojornal.com.br
Jair Bolsonaro nomeou nesta segunda-feira (4) Rolando Alexandre de Souza para a diretoria-geral da Polícia Federal. Até então secretário de Planejamento da Abin (Agência Brasileira de Inteligência), Souza chega ao cargo após o ministro Alexandre de Moraes, do Supremo, ter barrado o preferido de Bolsonaro, Alexandre Ramagem. O “Durma com essa” conta essa história de embate entre Poderes que envolve suspeitas de interferência indevida do presidente num órgão de investigação, ameaças públicas e movimentações de bastidores. Traz também o comentário do correspondente internacional João Paulo Charleaux sobre a relação entre Donald Trump, presidente dos EUA, e Bolsonaro em meio à pandemia do novo coronavírus. Conta ainda com a participação do repórter especial Camilo Rocha, que fala sobre a importância de Aldir Blanc, que morreu nesta segunda-feira (4), para a música popular brasileira. www.nexojornal.com.br
O ministro do Meio Ambiente, Ricardo Salles, nomeou nesta quarta-feira (15) um novo diretor de Proteção Ambiental do Ibama. Trata-se do coronel da Polícia Militar de São Paulo, Olímpio Ferreira Magalhães. O antigo ocupante do órgão, o major Olivaldi Azevedo, caiu na segunda-feira (13), um dia depois de o Fantástico levar ao ar uma reportagem sobre o combate a garimpos ilegais em três terras indígenas no Pará. O “Durma com essa” contextualiza essa mudança e fala sobre a apreensão dos fiscais ambientais em torno dela, tudo isso em meio ao aumento de invasões de terras indígenas e aumento de alertas de desmatamento na Amazônia. O repórter especial Camilo Rocha explica como as populações negras vêm apresentando vulnerabilidade maior em relação à covid-19, a doença causada pelo novo coronavírus. E o correspondente internacional João Paulo Charleaux comenta os planos de flexibilização das quarentenas na Europa. www.nexojornal.com.br
Senador por Vermont, Bernie Sanders anunciou nesta quarta-feira (8) sua desistência da corrida à Casa Branca. O pré-candidato autointitulado “socialista democrático” admitiu não ter mais chances de alcançar Joe Biden, ex-vice-presidente considerado a opção mais moderada do Partido Democrata para enfrentar em novembro o presidente Donald Trump, republicano que disputa a reeleição. O “Durma com essa” traz ainda o correspondente internacional João Paulo Charleaux comentando os ataques de Trump à Organização Mundial da Saúde em meio à pandemia do novo coronavírus. Já o repórter especial Camilo Rocha fala sobre o sucesso das lives musicais em tempos de quarentena. www.nexojornal.com.br
No dia seguinte ao pronunciamento de TV em que adotou um tom de confronto, Jair Bolsonaro reiterou nesta quarta-feira (25) os ataques a governadores que impõem medidas restritivas de circulação durante a pandemia do novo coronavírus. O presidente discutiu com João Doria em teleconferência e acusou o tucano de estar em campanha para 2022. Em Goiás, Ronaldo Caiado disse que Bolsonaro, de quem é próximo, quer “lavar as mãos e responsabilizar outras pessoas por um eventual colapso” na economia. O “Durma com essa” também traz o comentário do repórter especial Camilo Rocha sobre o “isolamento vertical” defendido pelo Palácio do Planalto. O correspondente internacional João Paulo Charleaux fala sobre as ações da Índia, um dos países mais populosos do mundo, para combater contaminações. nexojornal.com.br
Nesta terça-feira (24), o Comitê Olímpico Internacional e o governo do Japão entraram em acordo e adiaram para 2021 a realização da Olimpíada de Tóquio, que ocorreria a partir de junho. A decisão foi tomada em meio à forte pressão de comitês nacionais e atletas, devido à escalada da pandemia do novo coronavírus. O “Durma com essa” de hoje fala sobre os impactos do cancelamento e da forma como governo japonês vem combatendo a Covid-19. Traz também o repórter especial Camilo Rocha, que fala sobre os perigos de tomar remédios sem supervisão para combater a doença, como é o caso da recentemente popularizada hidroxicloriquina. Também participa o correspondente internacional João Paulo Charleaux comentando a guinada da política de saúde britânica à medida que o coronavírus se alastra no Reino Unido. Link para o texto citado por Camilo Rocha: Coronavírus: os perigos de usar remédios sem supervisão https://www.nexojornal.com.br/expresso/2020/03/24/Coronav%C3%ADrus-os-perigos-de-usar-rem%C3%A9dios-sem-supervis%C3%A3o
Os resultados das prévias do Partido Democrata em seis estados americanos, divulgados na quarta-feira (11), ampliaram a vantagem de Joe Biden sobre Bernie Sanders, fazendo o ex-vice-presidente do governo de Barack Obama despontar como favorito para concorrer com Donald Trump na eleição presidencial de novembro. Este episódio de “Durma com essa” relembra como a corrida democrata se deu até agora e apresenta o perfil dos dois principais pré-candidatos que ainda estão no páreo. O repórter especial Camilo Rocha conversa sobre os efeitos da decisão da OMS (Organização Mundial da Saúde) de definir o coronavírus como pandemia, e o correspondente João Paulo Charleaux mostra quais os planos de Vladimir Putin para se manter no poder na Rússia pelas próximas décadas. Link para o material citado: O estado de pandemia do coronavírus. E as ações no Brasil https://www.nexojornal.com.br/expresso/2020/03/11/O-estado-de-pandemia-do-coronav%C3%ADrus.-E-as-a%C3%A7%C3%B5es-no-Brasil
Nesta quinta-feira (5), um dia depois de o presidente Jair Bolsonaro chegar a um acordo com o Congresso na disputa por parte do Orçamento, movimentos bolsonaristas continuam convocando apoiadores para manifestações contra os parlamentares. O “Durma com essa” fala sobre a relação do presidente com a sua base eleitoral e a pauta dos protestos. Traz ainda o repórter especial Camilo Rocha falando sobre os ataques recentes de Bolsonaro a jornalistas na porta do Palácio da Alvorada. Já o correspondente internacional João Paulo Charleaux comenta a interminável crise institucional no Haiti.
Chuvas atingiram cidades da Baixada Santista, em São Paulo, na madrugada de terça-feira (3), causando pelo menos 16 mortos e deixando dezenas de desaparecidos após o deslizamento de encostas. Desde sábado (29), a região metropolitana do Rio de Janeiro também vem enfrentando tempestades, que já mataram ao menos 5 pessoas. Muitos dos afetados pela tragédia moram em áreas de risco. O “Durma com essa” de hoje conta essa história e fala com a professora Kátia Canil, da Universidade Federal do ABC, sobre os problemas estruturais que levam a esse quadro. O repórter especial Camilo Rocha fala ainda sobre a possibilidade de a Olimpíada de Tóquio ser cancelada por causa da epidemia de coronavírus, e o correspondente internacional João Paulo Charleaux comenta o impasse na eleição de Israel.
O ministro do Gabinete de Segurança Institucional, general Augusto Heleno, afirmou em um áudio divulgado na quarta-feira (19) que o governo federal não deve ceder a chantagens do Congresso e usou um palavrão para se referir ao Parlamento. O presidente da Câmara de Deputados, Rodrigo Maia, rebateu chamando o militar de “radical contra a democracia”. O pano de fundo das declarações é o Orçamento impositivo, objeto de disputa entre Executivo e Legislativo e tema principal do “Durma com essa” de hoje. Este episódio conta ainda com a participação do correspondente em Paris, João Paulo Charleaux, que fala sobre a entrada do bilionário Michael Bloomberg na corrida pela candidatura presidencial do Partido Democrata nos EUA, e do repórter especial Camilo Rocha, que explica por que casas noturnas de Berlim estão pedindo ajuda do Parlamento para se tornar patrimônio cultural. Na nova temporada do “Durma com essa”, assinantes do Nexo podem enviar perguntas para o podcast sobre temas do debate público, que podem ser selecionadas e respondidas em episódios especiais. É só enviar as dúvidas pelo grupo de assinantes do jornal no Facebook ou o email durmacomessa@nexojornal.com.br. Participe! www.nexojornal.com.br
O lucro líquido dos quatro maiores bancos do Brasil com ações na Bolsa bateu R$ 81,5 bilhões em 2019. O valor, que não considera a inflação, foi divulgado nesta quinta-feira (13) na plataforma Economática, que compila as informações financeiras dessas instituições. Os lucros de Itaú, Bradesco, Banco do Brasil e Santander crescem progressivamente num cenário de recuperação lenta da economia. E eram altos mesmo durante a recessão que atingiu o Brasil entre 2014 e 2017. O “Durma com essa” explica por que os bancos lucram tanto no Brasil. Aproveitando o gancho da economia, o repórter especial Camilo Rocha comenta a fala do ministro Paulo Guedes sobre empregadas domésticas, dólar barato e Disneylândia. E o correspondente João Paulo Charleaux fala sobre a intersecção entre política e saúde na epidemia do coronavírus na China. Na nova temporada do “Durma com essa”, assinantes do Nexo podem enviar perguntas para o podcast sobre temas do debate público, que podem ser selecionadas e respondidas em episódios especiais. É só enviar as dúvidas pelo grupo de assinantes do jornal no Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/groups/AssinantesDoNexo/) ou o email durmacomessa@nexojornal.com.br. Participe! Link para o material citado: Por que os lucros dos bancos são tão altos no Brasil https://www.nexojornal.com.br/expresso/2019/10/21/Por-que-os-lucros-dos-bancos-s%C3%A3o-t%C3%A3o-altos-no-Brasil
Jair Bolsonaro voltou a atacar ambientalistas nesta quinta-feira (6), pelo segundo dia seguindo. O presidente está em campanha pelo projeto de lei que autoriza a exploração de mineradoras em terras indígenas. A investida ocorre na mesma semana em que pesquisadores brasileiros publicaram na revista científica Nature Ecology & Evolution um artigo-manifesto contra a política ambiental do governo, no qual apontam caminhos a serem adotados na área. Esse é o tema central do “Durma com essa”, que também traz o correspondente do Nexo em Paris, João Paulo Charleaux, falando sobre a reclamação de diplomatas brasileiros feita a políticos franceses que cobram solução para o caso Marielle Franco. Da redação em São Paulo, o repórter especial Camilo Rocha comenta a recente decisão do Superior Tribunal do Trabalho que não viu relação trabalhista entre um motorista de Uber e a empresa dona do aplicativo de transportes. Links para os materiais citados: Quais áreas indígenas as mineradoras querem explorar Link para o gráfico: https://www.nexojornal.com.br/grafico/2017/04/19/Quais-%C3%A1reas-ind%C3%ADgenas-as-mineradoras-querem-explorar Help restore Brazil’s governance of globally important ecosystem services Link para o artigo na Nature Ecology & Evolution: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-019-1093-x https://www.nexojornal.com.br/
Nesta edição, o “Politiquês” conta a história dos jingles eleitorais no Brasil, relembra alguns clássicos do gênero e discute seu papel nos novos tempos, a partir de entrevistas com Luciana Panke, professora de pós-graduação em Comunicação da Universidade Federal do Paraná, Viktor Chagas, professor e pesquisador do Programa de Pós-Graduação em Comunicação da Universidade Federal Fluminense, e Carlos Manhanelli, presidente da Associação Brasileira dos Consultores Políticos. A trilha sonora é da cantora e compositora Josyara. A dica de livro é da dupla Camilo Rocha e Guilherme Falcão, apresentadores do “Escuta”, o podcast de música aqui do Nexo.
“Music for airports”, primeiro disco da série "Ambient", de Eno, completa 40 anos em 2018. No segundo episódio do Escuta, o podcast de música do Nexo, Camilo Rocha e Guilherme Falcão contam sobre os discos, a formação da estética e do conceito de “ambient” e como eles serviram de inspiração para muitos músicos que vieram depois.
Nesta terceira edição do podcast de música do Nexo, Guilherme Falcão e Camilo Rocha relembram o papel do músico na sonoridade inovadora de artistas como Gilberto Gil e Os Mutantes. Com participações do jornalista Alexandre Matias, do cineasta Marcelo Machado. Além disso, a cantora Letícia "Letrux" Novaes dá uma dica musical.
Back in the peak of the “disco sucks” movement, Ted Nugent-adoring redneck crowds would promote “disco demolition derbys”, where they would proceed to torch piles of disco records. They were expressing their hatred of a music that was: a) pansexual; b) of black, Latin and gay origins; c) produced by studio boffins; d) exuded cosmopolitan savoir faire. Disco was, then, also ‘dying’ in the mainstream, thanks to an onslaught of extremely cheesy tunes that clogged the airwaves. Unfortunately, to a lot of people this is the disco they know: Village People-style crap, bad karaoke fodder. Disco, of course, was so much more than that. It not only carried on breathing, thanks to a creative and thriving underground, but also became the blueprint for the next dancefloor revolution just round the corner — namely house music. To this day, it remains one of the key influences in the music many of us dance to. This podcast pays tribute to this magnificent movement by ‘demolishing’ disco in a much more positive way: mixing, editing, juxtaposing and mashing up new and old interpretations. From the galactic bliss of Orlando Riva Sound to the symphonic sass of the Salsoul Orchestra, from the synthetic homages of Lindstrom & Prins Thomas to the shiny funkiness of Le Grand David, from the leftfield proto-garage of Loose Joints to the classic italo sounds of Klein & MBO, there is a bit of everything in here. You'll also hear Chicken Lips, Giorgio Moroder, Jermaine Jackson, Donna Summer, Dinosaur, Padded Cell and, erm, The Glitter Band (funky as fuck, check it out!). Brazilians make two decisive contributions: Azymuth's anthemic Jazz Carnival and Jorge Ben's discofied samba Taj Mahal (which Rod Stewart stole for Do Ya Think I'm Sexy — Ben sued and won, you'll be pleased to know). Before you ask, this mix was done in Ableton Live, so those ever-shifting live drummer beats from the 1970s would behave and sit where they were told. Camilo Rocha, November 2007 Tracklisting: MFSB — Love is the Message (12” remix) (Philadelphia Intl', 1978) Dinosaur — Kiss Me Again (beats) (Sire, 1978) Donna Summer — Summer Fever (bits) (Casablanca, 1976) Concorde Music Club — Models are not Angels (Le Grand David remix) (Stereofiction, 2003) Salsoul Orchestra — Chicago Bus Stop (Salsoul, 1976) Mock & Toof — Black Jub (Tiny Sticks, 2007) Loose Joints — Is It All Over My Face (edit) (West End, 1980) Phreek — I'm a Big Freak (R U 1 2) (groaning) (Atlantic, 1978) Chicago — Street Player (Pseudo-Bucketheads edit) (CBS, 1979) Orlando Riva Sound — Moonboots (edit) (Salsoul, 1977) Padded Cell — Moon Menace (DC, 2007) Roxy Music — Angel Eyes (12" version) (vocals) (Polydor, 1979) Cosmic Hoffmann — Space Disco (edit) (EMI-Electrola, 1982) Alden Tyrell — Disco Lunar Module (Lindstrom & Prins Thomas remix) (Clone, 2005) The Trammps — Zing Went the Strings of My Heart (guitar) (Buddah, 1972) Giorgio Moroder — From Here to Eternity (Oasis/Casablanca, 1977) Chin Chin — Appetite (Chicken Lips Dub) (Dialect, 2007) The Spirals — Permission to Fly (Darkroom Dubs, 2007) Klein & MBO — Dirty Talk (USA Connection Instrumental) (25 West, 1982) Gaz Nevada — IC Love Affair (vocals) (ZYX, 1983) Michel Polnareff — Lipstick (Atlantic, 1976) Klein & MBO — Dirty Talk (beats) (25 West, 1982) Jermaine Jackson — Erucu (edit) (Tamla, 1976) Azymuth — Jazz Carnival (Milestone, 1979) First Choice — Let No Man Put Asunder (accappella) (Salsoul, 1983) Mekon — Boy Bitten (Padded Cell remix) (PIAS/Wall of Sound, 2006) Dinosaur — Kiss Me Again (edit) (Sire, 1978) Le Grand David — Montre-Moi Ton Experience (Stereofiction, 2007) Richard Dorfmeister & Madrid de los Austrias — Boogie No More (Reverso 68 remix) (G-Stone, 2007) Donna Summer — Summer Fever (edit) (Casablanca, 1976) Dinosaur — Kiss Me Again (beats) (Sire, 1978) Vernon Burch — Get Up (edit) (Chocolate City, 1979) Glitter Band — Makes You Blind (Bell, 1975) Jorge Ben — Taj Mahal (Philips, 1977) Camilo Rocha lives in São Paulo. He is widely credited for helping establish Brazil's dance music scene during the nineties. As a DJ he has performed throughout South America and Europe, and as a journalist he has written articles for magazines, newspapers and websites both in Brazil and the UK.