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00:05Good matters, Mr. Michael
00:07Nu issues
00:09What is this mess you've made of yourself?
00:13Ah, this is the new pants we just invented.
00:15It's called jeans.
00:17jeans?
00:18What kind of respectable man wears such a ridiculous outfit?
00:21Do you remember yourself in university?
00:23That's very chic, ma'am.
00:24This will become a trend next.
00:26Fashion is here, from the Magrahmble watch, voted
00:29And the phone, and we were very disappointed.
00:31Mr. Michael, he's very patient and tolerant.
00:34Yes, my brother
00:35What does it start with? Pants
00:37And all of this happened in a few days when I found her working until seven at night and riding the steam train for me.
00:41I actually came to work today and I took the train
00:43Tansi destination
00:44loss
00:45What a loss!
00:46It's not how you keep raising your voice.
00:49And you listen to Beethoven like a sly person
00:51No, please.
00:52I won't allow you
00:52Beethoven, this is the ruling.
00:54What is Freemasonry? It wants you to dress and speak like this.
00:57Believe me
00:58This is very comfortable
00:59Until I see him
01:00Hey, hey, hey, son, what are you doing?
01:02no
01:03And I'm saying, what kind of pants are you wearing?
01:05Get dressed, my son
01:06That's nonsense.
01:07What's wrong? I mean, look at the material.
01:09Walk, teacher
01:10Go change your clothes
01:11Next time I'll see you in uniform
01:13Dlash, we're down
01:14What would he do if he saw the sweet bands?
01:16Arrogance and rudeness
01:18Something disgusting remained
01:24Jalzbala
01:27What is the source of this love?
01:31Hey guys, what's up at the mine gate?
01:33I've said it a hundred times, it's cold.
01:43Haza walks Elias on pictures of Kato. Welcome to a new episode of Barmej Al-Dahiyya.
01:46In his book, Blue Jeans: The Art of the Ordinary
01:48Anthropologist Daniel Miller shared his work experience when he visited several countries.
01:53Some countries like America, India, Brazil, and the Philippines
01:57My dear friend, he didn't leave a single continent unvisited.
02:00Everywhere he goes, he starts to observe the first hundred people he sees.
02:03So that he would be surprised, my dear, by 68% of his random sample.
02:07Men or women wearing gender-appropriate clothing
02:09With the exception of some rural areas in southern China and Asia
02:12There is no country in the world where gender isn't fundamental.
02:14This, my dear, is something that Ezz predicted in a study she conducted previously in 2007.
02:18The sex industry will continue to this day until the entire world is wearing sex clothes.
02:22Come on, my dear, if you look at the size of the global denim jeans market
02:26You'll find that it has exceeded seventy-seven billion dollars.
02:28You remain like Bush, created, my dear Abu
02:29Don't give up sex, Anteesh
02:30You breathe
02:31This is a friend in times of crisis.
02:32It gets washed once a year and then you're done for the rest of the year.
02:34Casual or classic?
02:36If you are twenty or fifty years old
02:38He doesn't say no
02:39Even if she measured the amount of oil she used, nobody would know.
02:41All of these things, my dear, are very useful to you as a consumer.
02:44But at the same time, it's a mystery and a disaster for the entire fashion industry.
02:48Why, my dear?
02:49Because its name is this sentence
02:50Fashion Design is About Cland Obsession
02:53Planned obsolescence
02:54Meaning, from the moment a product is released to the market
02:56Designers know when a trend will end and offer something new.
02:59And they'll keep preparing for the next fashion trend.
03:01Something like an iPhone grip
03:02This is what Dania talked about in his study
03:04Jeans are considered a challenge as a commodity for capitalism.
03:07A product you buy and keep for years without changing it
03:10Many hours, my dear, you won't need to go out and buy clothes.
03:14Stop buying other brands
03:15And this, my dear, goes against the principle of overconsumption.
03:17That's why fashion expert Diane Feirstein-Bern will describe
03:20These jeans are Mysterious and Timeless
03:23Clothing that transcends place, time, and age
03:26His clothes are over a hundred years old
03:28And to this day, I'm still using his basic formula.
03:29Young people and teenagers
03:31What makes new generations fall in love with vintage clothing like this?
03:34The moment, my dear
03:35Fashion experts say that the type of clothing that creates this effect
03:38Not the clothes made by fashion designers or brands
03:40Functional wear is the clothing that solves the problem.
03:44For example, all t-shirts are originally military undergarments.
03:47Underwear needed by soldiers under their military uniforms
03:50The urine and everything else is actually a fitness t-shirt made for playing tennis.
03:54So that it helps protect from the sun while they play with it
03:57Now, my dear, let's look at the story of jeans.
03:59We will find it going back to the year 1567
04:01When sailors and dockworkers in Genoa, Italy needed cotton trousers
04:06Its texture remains solid
04:07The apartment construction is affordable and at the same time remains inexpensive.
04:09At that time, my dear, I was called the Blue Dogin
04:12Jeans from Genoa
04:13And because the jeans were colored faster
04:15The most famous dye available for cotton at that time was the blue dye.
04:18Indigo, which Europe used to import from India
04:21You'll find, my dear, Indigo, which is India from India, meaning
04:25The prisoners in the French city of Nîmes would really like the idea of ​​a strong, durable, and cheap fabric.
04:30They will try to make pants like his, but they will fail to imitate his style.
04:33Instead of the same old work, my dear, he'll present us with a new fabric.
04:36Which is the world, the basic fabric for making today's jeans
04:40In the late 19th century, Tarzi from the American state of Nevada was surprised
04:44His name is Jacob W. Davis
04:45Requests from loggers and miners
04:48To make them trousers that could withstand the nature of their work
04:51Pants that won't tear or fray
04:53At that moment, Jacob thinks he's using denim fabric.
04:55The raw materials were used and the carriages were stolen
04:57The man decided to make trousers from it and secure the fabric together with metal nails.
05:02Of course, my dear, the first thing the workers do when they try on Jacob's pants is bewildered.
05:06In his book Denim From Cowboys Talkat Wooks
05:08The hero of Funka says that denim was a very comfortable fabric that could withstand any circumstance.
05:12A really good guy
05:13And according to the workers, it doesn't get wet over time.
05:16Ah, the blue of the spaghetti is fading, but beautifully.
05:19It makes it look brand new or stylish, not messy.
05:22Why? Because denim doesn't absorb dye.
05:24But it prefers the outer layer of the walnut, as the cotton fades.
05:27But the dye remains a light color.
05:28And all we can think of is that we don't have nationalities.
05:30As they say, every time something is worn, it gets worn and aged.
05:33Also, the people noticed that it doesn't cause any skin irritation.
05:36Even though it doesn't get washed often
05:38One of the students, named Josh Lee, was from the University of Alberta in 2011.
05:41He decided that he would wear jeans for 15 months.
05:44And compare, my dear, the bacteria it collected from its surface with the bacteria on it after washing.
05:49She has the same percentage, my dear.
05:50Oh Abu Ahmed, I didn't know what I was doing all my life
05:52general knowledge
05:53According to him, denim fabric does not provide a suitable environment for bacterial growth.
05:58Also, my dear, the fearful ones found that jeans are fantastic insulators
06:01Determined Excellent
06:02It maintains body temperature and keeps the body cool.
06:05They suspected me, my dear, suddenly found thousands of requests
06:07And he, my dear, is a poor tailor.
06:09At that point, my dear, who will he turn to for help from his fabric supplier?
06:13Levi Strauss
06:15On the twentieth of May 1873
06:17They are jointly registering a patent
06:19Levi's jeans
06:20The most famous jeans brand to date
06:23At this moment, my dear, jeans become a cultural symbol.
06:25It tells a thousand stories, much more complicated than that.
06:27Jeans, for example, my dear, before the Second World War
06:29It becomes formal attire for all workers, farm owners, and cowboys.
06:33It will begin to appear at the beginning of the twentieth century
06:35In the American West, there are what are called French worms.
06:38This, my dear farmer, is hosting a song from American lust.
06:47My dear, I feel that these songs are actually cowboy songs, not all of that stuff.
06:51But they were both wearing jeans
06:53This, my dear, is a story Hollywood will pick up.
06:54And the wave of wild lion movies will begin.
06:57With heroes like Gary Cooper and John Wayne in the 1920s and 1930s
07:00And in these movies, the hero is always the jeans-wearing guy.
07:02The one who, my dear, transformed from wearing the symbolic garb of manhood
07:05The hero who takes risks and fights the villains
07:08The first thing that happens when you say World War II is that the cowboy leaves America to fight the Germans.
07:12The US Navy requires jeans to be part of the military uniform.
07:16Oh Reso, that's Mohamed El-Asaker, he was wearing the nationalities so you wouldn't get wet
07:19It's dangerous, my dear, to remain a soldier and have them turn you into a statue, and to remain a soldier and a statue.
07:22According to historian Lynne Dunne?
07:24When thousands of young soldiers returned from World War II
07:26Instead, my dear, they settle down, start families, and achieve the American dream.
07:30They began to rebel against everything: customs, traditions, and family.
07:33And suddenly jeans, which were a symbol of the cowboy and the war soldier
07:36It became a symbol of rebellion against America itself.
07:39We see someone like Marwa Lenbrano in a movie like Walt and One
07:41His gangs are motorcycles and rebels
07:44And most importantly, the pants hit the sex
07:46James Dean also made a film whose title sums up the situation.
07:49Rebel and Dhut Akuz
07:50I want to take pictures, the reason doesn't matter.
07:52Because suddenly, my dear readers, headlines appear
07:5490% of American youth wear jeans
07:57except in bed and in church
07:5990% of Americans wear cross-dressing outfits in bed
08:02And in the church that no one sells, go
08:04All my dear friends want to be James Dean or Brando
08:07And all the girls love Elvis Presley
08:09The singer who is wearing jeans
08:11In Donny's words
08:13The people who design clothes in Hollywood
08:16It makes all the bad boys wear genders
08:19Of course, girls
08:19If this is the fashion, then wear it, Nice Guys
08:23Come on, my dear, this will terrify all American institutions and schools.
08:26In fact, sometimes the law will even prohibit wearing jeans.
08:29This is the best thing they could do for jeans.
08:30Want something to spread? Stop it.
08:32And when you come to look at the numbers, my dear, the solution
08:34You'll find that in the fifties Levi's Jeans
08:36She alone sells 95 million pairs of jeans.
08:40Oh Abu Hamad, all this without Al-Shazli?
08:41The picture in front of you, my dear, is of Martin Noethering King in 1963.
08:45Martin Noether King, the most prominent activist for Black rights
08:48Jeans touched while he needed to be in Alaba against the laws of racial segregation
08:51Jeans will transform, according to historian Caroline Jones.
08:54The symbol they wore in the 1960s was a way for them to express their rejection of white racism.
08:59Enough, Abu Hamad, jeans have transformed, according to your story, from a symbol of war to a symbol against war.
09:04What does racism have to do with this? According to Al-Masawi, the two most important raw materials for making jeans are cotton and indigo dye.
09:10If you think cotton plantations are the main reason Americans brought slaves from Africa
09:15While the need for dye was the carnsi for the slave trade
09:19According to Martin Nuther King Jr., African Americans have not received their rights.
09:23And jeans still symbolize the state of slavery in which the white man imprisons them.
09:27Now, my dear, let's move on to the seventies and eighties.
09:29We find that the bronzers will start to darken with jeans
09:32But that's not how it is, Abu Hamad. Didn't you tell me that the jeans are so good that I don't need to buy any more?
09:36What advantage will they have in selling it? Why do they want to jeopardize their livelihood?
09:39My dear, brands will decide to add, alongside the cultural symbolism of jeans, a moral value for the average person, meaning
09:45A beautiful girl will reach her if she's wearing our brand's jeans.
09:49The brand logo on the pants will tell her and society that you are rich as long as you can afford them.
09:54And the brands came in, each one presenting its version of jeans.
09:58So that we, my dear, can appear as a carrier like the famous Kelvin Clyme carrier
10:03Nothing can distract me from my Kelvin.
10:05We're starting to see big brands like Armani, Bersace and Dior
10:08Suddenly, my dear, we have types of jeans that exceed two hundred dollars.
10:12Jeans have become a brand worn by the rich.
10:15Layers of her age, she's almost worn them like that.
10:17To the point, my dear, that politicians like Tony Blair and Carter, and members of royal families like Kate Middleton
10:22They started wearing it as an expensive yet popular garment.
10:25This brought them closer to the people and made them appear more popular and youthful than formal attire suggests.
10:29Historian Reesebank says that Libby Strauss, the inventor of the first jeans, was the owner of the pencil sharpener.
10:33Akshili has never worn jeans in his life.
10:35His clothes, my dear, were similar to the clothes worn by your workers.
10:37Because at Rayo, these jeans are made for ordinary people.
10:40I'm a rich man, I pass through factories, I sell things and make money, I wear workers' clothes
10:44If Strauss, my dear, were in our world today, I would be very surprised.
10:47Heads of state dressed like princes, kings, and top businessmen, like Steve Jobs
10:59The trousers made this journey possible, from workers wearing them to the needs of everyone everywhere.
11:05Jeans, my dear, have truly become widespread.
11:07Abu Hamid herself might not ask you a question
11:09My dear, please don't ask me before you ask him, just ask him right away.
11:11Come on, Abu Hamid, thank you
11:13Now, Abu Hamid, how did jeans end up on women?
11:16The truth is, my dear, the story of jeans with women is no less epic than its story with men.
11:20When the men went off to work elsewhere, may God grant us goodness, prosperity, and blessings.
11:24At that time, women were forced to take their jobs in factories in order for the economy to function.
11:29The jeans were worn by women so they could work in the harsh conditions of the factories.
11:33At that time, the women said, "This is comfortable and durable, just like my husband."
11:37It also has advantages such as being shaped like the part and maintaining its roundness and curves
11:44In short, it makes them look more beautiful.
11:47The person who came up with this idea was Marilyn Monroe when she wore it in the fifties.
11:50According to what Bahsakh Al-Nawda said, in Washington
11:53The circumstances under which women come to wear jeans
11:55Jeans will become an important symbol in women's fight for equality with men.
11:59Anyone who feels wronged now, jeans have become the symbol
12:02Especially since feminist activists like Gloria Steine ​​from the 1970s will start to appear in it.
12:07If I asked you, my dear, about the day people around the world celebrate with jeans, or what is called denim,
12:12You'll find it on the last four days of April every year.
12:14But my dear, the reason for dedicating this day is a sad story.
12:17Jeans will become a symbol of the injustice inflicted upon women.
12:21Let me tell him about the year 1992 when an 18-year-old Italian girl was raped by her driver.
12:26Despite the charges against her rapist being proven, he will be released on appeal.
12:31After he presented the argument that the victim was wearing jeans that could only be taken off with her scissors
12:36This is proof that the relationship was consensual and with her consent.
12:38The court was indeed convinced and released him.
12:41My dear, the Italian parliament will be on fire! This wave will be led by female parliamentarians in the Italian parliament.
12:45Demonstrations are beginning around the world in jeans in solidarity with this girl.
12:49This day is dedicated to victims of sexual harassment and the ideas that promote rape culture.
12:54All these stories, my dear, are the story of a piece of cloth that has become a symbol.
12:57A symbol of thousands of cases within the United States
13:00But here, my dear, comes an important question
13:01You and I aren't Americans
13:02Why are we wearing gender-neutral clothing?
13:03Why am I presenting this program wearing jeans that are considered promiscuous?
13:06Sex, my dear, will present itself to the world as an American product.
13:19Kai from beyond the seas will be considered by the Japanese as a symbol of the overwhelming power that triumphed over them.
13:24And they were barely scraping by, my dear, in the black markets.
13:27They were trying to bring him in through illegal means.
13:29There was a market for this called Amioko in Tokyo.
13:30During the Cold War, my dear, one of the most coveted commodities among the inhabitants of Eastern Europe was sex.
13:36Why? Because this is the clothing of capitalists, not the clothing of free people.
13:39In a letter to Levitstrauss's Russian company, she would say that she had only experienced brief moments of happiness in her life, the most important of which was...
13:48When I wore jeans
13:49She felt like she had reverted to being a carefree girl living in a free world without restrictions.
13:53That's why when a revolution takes place in Belarus, the propaganda will focus on rigging the presidential elections in Belarus.
13:58You'll call it the Jeans Revolution, my dear.
14:01If we come to the story of jeans in Egypt and the Middle East, my dear friend
14:03We find that its spread began in cinema at the hands of stars like Adel Imam, for whom jeans were an essential part of his career.
14:09The roles of Zay Hanaf Al-Qubba, Al-Ghun, Al-Harif, and Ahlam Al-Fatat Al-Ta'ir
14:13In a dialogue with the leader, Imam returned with Adim Hamad Mansi Andil
14:16He'll say he'll choose jeans because they're a material worn by all social classes; there are cheap ones and designer brands.
14:21This made him a beloved figure; when he appeared on screen, everyone would join in, regardless of their social class.
14:25Especially the marginalized people he was trying to represent
14:28In another interview, he will say that jeans are clothes he didn't choose for a government or a power structure.
14:32It's simply a need that people choose and love.
14:35Because of this, he was able to reach millions of fans without any kind of arrogance towards himself as a star.
14:40In her book, psychologist Jennifer Baum Gardner says that our choices in clothing and shopping
14:47It's not just about things that make us look better; I work much deeper to understand its roots.
14:50In our dear societies, it remains very difficult for the system to appear revolutionary to you.
14:54It reveals the status of the person next to you, their political or economic views, or their religious preferences.
14:59That's why, according to Jennifer
15:03People see clothing as the easiest way to express your status among them.
15:08What brand of clothing do you know the first thing you see?
15:10What kind of clothes are these?
15:11What is this similar to?
15:13And most importantly, it's your personal feeling about how people perceive you based on your clothing.
15:17A 2012 study by Nottinghamshire University
15:20It is divided into two groups with a white axe.
15:21The group is moving. This is a doctor's cleaver.
15:24Another group says that this is the fat man's axe.
15:26The experience revealed that those who deal with them as if they were wearing a doctor's uniform...
15:30You should handle the experiment very carefully, just like doctors do.
15:34Unlike the others who did their job more haphazardly
15:37They are artists
15:37This, my dear, is called
15:40Clothes create an effect on a person's inner psyche.
15:43Many times more than what people export
15:45Author Paul Rinka says that jeans were the perfect thing for all the stories that became their symbol.
15:50Because the more its beauty fades, the more its authenticity and charm increase.
15:53Time can't touch it
15:55Likewise, my dear jeans have become a symbol of old, long-standing, and protracted issues.
15:58But its owners are fighting so that time doesn't pass them by.
16:01The uniform of slavery, racism, and equality between men and women
16:04War and rebellion against war
16:05Or, in his more poetic words
16:12Choosing each story for jeans as a symbol for it
16:15A guaranteed choice of a material that neither ages nor dies
16:18It will not be affected by the passage of time or the wear and tear of use.
16:20This implicitly reassures us that these cases won't die.
16:23Now, my dear, it's time for the most important story about jeans.
16:26Jeans are a blessing; their symbolism changes from country to country.
16:28There are a thousand stories and tales, but the story of its creation in many countries is one story.
16:32Unfortunately, my dear, it's a sad story.
16:34This story, my dear, represents everything that jeans were supposed to fight against.
16:37Injustice, evil, racism, classism, and inequality
16:41Although the largest consumption of jeans
16:44He is in the location of his appearance in the United States of America.
16:46At a rate of 450 million pieces called annually
16:49The average American, my dear, owns about 7 pairs of jeans.
16:53However, more than 50% of jeans factories are located in [country name missing].
16:57In Asia, in countries like China, Bangladesh, and India
16:59In African countries
17:00This, my dear, is the home of what are called sweet shops.
17:03Factories that are affiliated with major brands
17:05But industrial sites in developing countries
17:08Because of low salaries
17:09Low taxes
17:10Working conditions that are not governed by labor laws
17:12And this makes a lot of money for the brands.
17:15For example, a place like Lesotho in Africa
17:17My dear, it exports 90 million pieces of clothing annually.
17:20Bangladesh alone exports 10 billion pieces of clothing.
17:23In a 2020 Guardian investigation titled
17:30It reveals a policy of sexual blackmail.
17:32More than 120 women working in sex factories in Soto were subjected to it.
17:36Those Stans, my dear, were being sexually blackmailed by their supervisors.
17:39Or they decide that they will be fired from the job that provides them with $60 a month
17:44This, my dear, doesn't even cost the price of one pair of Levi's trousers.
17:46It seems, my dear, that it's a horrible, scary, terrifying job, involving sexual extortion. What kind of customs are we living in?
17:51But unfortunately, my dear, this industry represents 20% of the GDP of Suetah.
17:57Eighty percent of the working women support large families.
18:02So this isn't a $60 coupon, huh? And what's up with that? Is there anything else?
18:06This scandal, my dear, has put a lot of pressure on me until I reach an agreement that covers the damages.
18:11The bottom line, my dear, is that this incident report is not exceptional.
18:13Eighty percent, my dear, of the general factory workers in Bangladesh have seen similar things.
18:17And we see this, my dear, in many other countries: India, China, Türkiye, all of them.
18:22Not only that, my dear, but the industry is extremely polluting.
18:25According to a United Nations report, the fashion industry is the number 2 polluting industry.
18:30After what? After the fuel industry
18:31To make one pair of jeans, you need approximately 3700 liters of water.
18:35That means 93 billion cubic meters annually
18:39Also, my dear, at the level of emissaries
18:41Fox Vane says that the emissions from jeans manufacturing are equivalent to flying a polluting plane around the Earth 2,372 times.
18:50time
18:51More to come, my friend. In 2018, the production of denim jeans exceeded 4 billion and 6 out of ten pairs.
18:57The world's population at that time was 7.6 billion, and millions of them already had Guinness.
19:01I mean, my dear, behind all the features of jeans that made them such a sensation in the fashion world
19:05However, the industry itself was able to exploit the denim that was so cheap as a comfortable, sustainable, and inexpensive option.
19:11A symbol against injustice, racism, and deprivation
19:14And my dear, it has become a point of reference everywhere, an environmentally destructive industry producing in abundance many times what humans need.
19:21Come on, my dear, despite this sad situation, the picture isn't radiant, or as I'm saying it.
19:26Many brands have started turning to organic cotton and natural dyes that reduce tarnishing during the manufacturing process.
19:31And there are also brands like Sastina and Jeans.
19:34And with two dear ones, we draw a longer story for the jeans.
19:36The first as a symbol of the vulnerable group
19:38Then as a symbol of the wealthy class
19:40Afterwards, as a symbol of the revolution
19:41Then as a symbol of consumption and environmental destruction
19:44Today, this industry is trying to change this story.
19:48Kaz Azizi, our clothes express the feelings we have.
19:51Heroes we strive to be, meanings we belong to.
19:53But, my dear, the terrifying thing is that we need what little remains of our clothing.
19:58It could make us faster for a complete manufacturing process.
20:00You exploit this need
20:01And these trousers transformed from stories about war and struggle
20:04Nightmare
20:05It stands against all the values ​​we belong to.
20:07That's all, my dear
20:08Finally, but not last
20:09You won't see the accident that happened last time.
20:09See the next accident
20:10But look for sources; if we're on YouTube, subscribe to the channel.
20:12My dear, I'm creating a series for you that will last a lifetime.
20:14I'll give her to your brother, the bracelet, at your leisure.
20:15Tailored to your size, your size, your size

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