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The death trap that separates Europe and Africa still can't stop everyone. Follow Johnny to stay up to date on Vox Borders: Instagram: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Check out the full Vox Borders experience, including a look at how we made this series, online: 🤍 Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Vox Borders Episodes: 1. Haiti and the Dominican Republic ( 🤍 2. The Arctic & Russia (🤍 3. Japan & North Korea (🤍 4. Mexico & Guatemala (🤍 5. Nepal & The Himalaya (🤍 6. Spain & Morocco (🤍 The sixth and last Vox Borders episode deals with a border between Morocco and Spain. The journey to asylum is never easy. And perhaps no one knows this better than would-be African migrants to the European Union. In North Africa, on the border of Morocco, there's a Spanish town called Melilla. It's technically Europe. So undocumented migrants and refugees, asylum seekers, wait in limbo for a chance to scale the fence and apply for asylum in Europe. It's the first of many, many hurdles. And it's a tall one. Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
The story of how a hastily-drawn line divided one people into two. This season of Borders is presented by CuriosityStream. Watch thousands of documentaries for free for 31-days: 🤍 Join the Video Lab to help us make more Vox Borders! 🤍 Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Sign up for the Borders newsletter: 🤍 With original music by Tom Fox: 🤍 The video conferencing session between the two schools was conducted between students of Gyan Mandir Public School (Delhi, India) and Adamjee Model School (Karachi, Pakistan). The session was coordinated by Ms Anju Anand and Ms Devika Mittal from Indian side and Mr Usama Palla and Ms Suraya Islam from Pakistan. We're grateful they let us drop by! The British tasked Cyril Radcliffe with the job of drawing a line to separate Punjab and Bengal provinces from India into East and West Pakistan. Muslims and Hindus weren’t the only ones being separated from each other. Sikhs and people from other faiths were affected as well. A Sikh pilgrimage was divided because of the new border, Punjabi people of all faiths were separated from each other, and a culture was ultimately divided. This Vox Borders episode looks at how the Radcliffe line changed Punjab and how communities are affected now. Watch all the episodes of Vox Borders: India here: 🤍 To learn more about the colonial history of the subcontinent, watch our explainer on the role of Great Britain in shaping the histories of India and Pakistan: 🤍 For more on the present relationship between India and Pakistan, watch our explainer on the conflict in Kashmir here: 🤍 Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. Start from the beginning. Watch all full episodes of Vox Borders on YouTube in one playlist: 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
For thousands of years, it was out of reach, remote, and desolate. How did we map it? Take back creative control with Storyblocks' unlimited royalty-free stock library and tools today: 🤍 I made a poster about maps - order now & get 15% OFF until April 4th: 🤍 My next video is live on Nebula NOW! It's about how the U.S. used coercion and paper contracts to steal the biggest thing it had set its eyes on: America. Watch here: 🤍 Check out all my sources for this video here: 🤍 Geospatial support for this work provided by the Polar Geospatial Center under NSF-OPP awards 1043681 and 1559691. Get access to behind-the-scenes vlogs, my scripts, and extended interviews over at 🤍 Custom Presets & LUTs [what we use]: 🤍 About: Johnny Harris is an Emmy-winning independent journalist and contributor to the New York Times. Based in Washington, DC, Harris reports on interesting trends and stories domestically and around the globe, publishing to his audience of over 3.5 million on Youtube. Harris produced and hosted the twice Emmy-nominated series Borders for Vox Media. His visual style blends motion graphics with cinematic videography to create content that explains complex issues in relatable ways. - press - NYTimes: 🤍 NYTimes: 🤍 Vox Borders: 🤍 NPR Planet Money: 🤍 - where to find me - Instagram: 🤍 Tiktok: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Iz's (my wife’s) channel: 🤍 - how i make my videos - Tom Fox makes my music, work with him here: 🤍 I make maps using this AE Plugin: 🤍 All the gear I use: 🤍 - my courses - Learn a language: 🤍 Visual storytelling: 🤍
The six Vox Borders documentaries are publishing every Tuesday starting October 17th, on Youtube and Facebook. To make sure you don't miss them, follow Johnny on social media or sign up for his newsletter: Facebook: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 Get Johnny's newsletter: 🤍 We sent Johnny to six different borders, to document the human impact of the lines drawn on maps. He's spent six months traveling to different borders all over the world, and and the documentaries are finally launching. Vox Borders is a new international documentary series presented by lululemon, by Emmy-nominated videojournalist Johnny Harris. For this series, Johnny is producing six 10-15 minute documentaries about different borders stories from: Haiti and the Dominican Republic Svalbard, in the Arctic Circle Mexico and Guatemala Japan's North Korean diaspora Morocco and Spain Nepal and China Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
Thanks for the wild ride, Vox. And thank you all for the support over these years. Support me on Patreon 🤍 Thanks to Tom Fox for making so much music for Borders over the years: 🤍 - ways to support - My Patreon: 🤍 Our custom Presets & LUTs: 🤍 - where to find me - Instagram: 🤍 Tiktok: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Iz's (my wife’s) channel: 🤍 - how i make my videos - Tom Fox makes my music, work with him here: 🤍 I make maps using this AE Plugin: 🤍 All the gear I use: 🤍 - my courses - Learn a language: 🤍 Visual storytelling: 🤍 - about - Johnny Harris is a filmmaker and journalist. He currently is based in Washington, DC, reporting on interesting trends and stories domestically and around the globe. Johnny's visual style blends motion graphics with cinematic videography to create content that explains complex issues in relatable ways. He holds a BA in international relations from Brigham Young University and an MA in international peace and conflict resolution from American University. - press - NYTimes: 🤍 NYTimes: 🤍 Vox Borders: 🤍 Finding Founders: 🤍 NPR Planet Money: 🤍
How a ski lodge became trapped in a border dispute. Subscribe and turn on notifications 🔔 so you don't miss any videos: 🤍 Italy’s land border cuts through the highest altitudes of the Alps — crossing snowfields, mountain peaks, and massive glaciers. For centuries, the watershed line (which marks the divide where water flows either north or south off of the mountains) served as a natural boundary between Italy and its European neighbors. But beginning in the 1980s, geographic surveyors noticed something: The glaciers whose peaks had long marked the watershed line were retreating … and moving Italy’s border along with them. The only inhabited place nearby — an Italian ski lodge called the Rifugio Guide del Cervino — was caught right in the middle. Since then, Italy, Switzerland, and Austria have piloted a new kind of “mobile border” agreement, where boundary lines move with the changing landscape. Their solution might prove crucial as climate change reshapes water-based borders around the world. Correction: the watershed line at 00:41 was mislabeled and drawn incorrectly. We’ve fixed the error to reflect the correct watershed boundaries. Further reading: Before the book, Marco debuted an interactive installation at the Venice Biennale called “Italian Limes” — Limes is Latin for boundary — with a GPS-powered drawing machine that traced the shifting border in real time: 🤍 Read more about Marco, Elisa, and Andrea’s book here: 🤍 The historical maps we projected are from swisstopo, Switzerland's national mapping agency. They have a great interactive map tool you can check out here: 🤍 And read more from swisstopo about the border changes: 🤍 This New Yorker piece by Zoey Poll is a beautiful deep dive into the story of the Rifugio: 🤍 And so is this Wall Street Journal story by Eric Sylvers: 🤍 Lastly, hear from the owner of the Rifugio himself — and how the border line uncertainty is affecting his restaurant renovation plans: 🤍 This is the fourth of our themed videos for winter sports week at Vox. The first three videos were about ski jump, speed skating, and women's Olympic monobob. Check out the playlist here: 🤍 Make sure you never miss behind the scenes content in the Vox Video newsletter, sign up here: 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 Support Vox's reporting with a one-time or recurring contribution: 🤍 Shop the Vox merch store: 🤍 Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Follow Vox on TikTok: 🤍
Nearly 2,000 migrants have perished in the Mediterranean so far this year. Vox's Dara Lind explains why. For more at Vox.com: 🤍 Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
Mexico is doing America's immigration dirty work. Follow Johnny to stay up to date: Instagram: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 My dispatch about how US border security does its job: 🤍 Vox Borders Episodes: 1. Haiti and the Dominican Republic ( 🤍 2. The Arctic & Russia (🤍 3. Japan & North Korea (🤍 4. Mexico & Guatemala (🤍 5. Nepal & The Himalaya (🤍 6. Spain & Morocco (🤍 With original music by Rare Henderson: rarehenderson.com/audio For the first time ever in 2014, the U.S. recorded more undocumented migrants from Central America than from Mexico. In particular, 52,000 unaccompanied children were detained between October 2013 and June 2014. With what seemed to be a looming humanitarian crisis to deal with, the Obama administration enlisted the help of Mexico, and President Enrique Peña Nieto's administration. Together, they launched the Southern Border Program initiative: the U.S. provided funding, equipment, and training to Mexico in exchange for a crackdown along Mexico's southern border. After all, many would-be migrants from Central America to the U.S. must pass through Mexico first. This policy worked for a few years, but levels of undocumented migrants are on the rise again. And the mounting human costs make it increasingly difficult to call a success.
And why that’s a big deal. Subscribe and turn on notifications 🔔 so you don't miss any videos: 🤍 For the first time in six decades, China’s population is shrinking, and it’s predicted it could create a demographic crisis. That’s because China isn’t just shrinking, it’s also aging. And the majority of Chinese couples are not considering having more than one child. Because of this, China is predicted to lose nearly 50 percent of its population by 2100. China’s population decline can be traced back to the restrictive family-planning policies launched in the 1970s and an impressive economic boom fueled by China’s huge labor force. China’s modernization brought rapid urbanization, rising income levels, and better education to large parts of China. Combined, these policies and growth have given China one of the lowest birth rates in the world. Today, China is trying to reverse its population decline. Not just because an aging population is hard to sustain economically, but because China’s impressive economic growth, until now, has relied on its people. As China’s population challenges deepen over time, it might have to rethink how to grow its economy and care for its citizens. You can explore China’s birth and death rate data via the United Nations Population portal, here: 🤍 🤍 As well as the country’s total population and predictions here: 🤍 Here are some key facts about China’s declining population from Pew Research: 🤍 You can read some surprising details about China’s family planning policies — for example, the One-Child Policy was actually less impactful than the Later, Longer, Fewer campaign — here: 🤍 Here’s an overview of China’s economic development from the World Bank: 🤍 And a report on China’s income gap: 🤍 For an in-depth look at the cruelty and human cost of China’s One-Child policy, I recommend the documentary One Child Nation by Nanfu Wang: 🤍 You can explore population pyramids from across the world on the US Census Bureau’s website: 🤍 Finally, our expert, Professor Wang Feng, believes China’s population growth can be framed in a positive light. To understand how, read this piece he wrote for the New York Times: 🤍 Make sure you never miss behind the scenes content in the Vox Video newsletter, sign up here: 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 Support Vox's reporting with a one-time or recurring contribution: 🤍 Shop the Vox merch store: 🤍 Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Follow Vox on TikTok: 🤍
How China and Nepal are taming the Himalaya mountains. Follow Johnny to stay up to date on Vox Borders: Instagram: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Read more about the concept of non-state spaces: 🤍 Vox Borders Episodes: 1. Haiti and the Dominican Republic ( 🤍 2. The Arctic & Russia (🤍 3. Japan & North Korea (🤍 4. Mexico & Guatemala (🤍 5. Nepal & The Himalaya (🤍 6. Spain & Morocco (🤍 For thousands of years, humans have drawn lines on the earth, dividing the planet into nations. But there are some parts of the world that no empire, nation or state has been able to tame. In this episode of Borders, Johnny heads deep into the Himalaya mountains to learn about how people have lived away from the concept of borders. China and Nepal are acting fast to develop this remote region and it's having major effects on the local population. Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
Hong Kong has British DNA. Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Sign up for the Vox Borders newsletter: 🤍 Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Even though Britain gave Hong Kong back to China 21 years ago, today when you walk around the city you can see British fingerprints everywhere. From statues of Queen Victoria to double decker buses, British culture and lifestyle is baked into the culture at every turn. Both the history and the current-day British influence are visually fascinating stories and in this episode I show it all exploring Britain’s imperial history, which includes opioid trade, discrimination and a divided city, and then showing the effects of that history, resulting in a city that is unlike any I’ve visited. Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
Why Russia wants to own the North Pole. Follow Johnny to stay up to date: Instagram: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Vox Borders Episodes: 1. Haiti and the Dominican Republic ( 🤍 2. The Arctic & Russia (🤍 3. Japan & North Korea (🤍 4. Mexico & Guatemala (🤍 5. Nepal & The Himalaya (🤍 6. Spain & Morocco (🤍 The ice in the Arctic is disappearing. Melting Arctic ice means new economic opportunities: trade routes in the Arctic ocean, and access to natural resources. Because of this, the Arctic nations are now moving to expand their border claims. Russia has shown that it’s the most ambitious, using a potent combination of soft power and military buildup to advance its agenda. They’ve said the Arctic is rightfully theirs. Check out more arctic maps from IBRU, Durham University, UK: 🤍 / Vox Borders is a new international documentary series presented by Emmy-nominated videojournalist Johnny Harris. For this series, Johnny is producing six 10-15 minute documentaries about different borders stories from around the world.
There's more to the border than just a wall. Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 and Facebook: 🤍 Subscribe to the Vox Borders newsletter for weekly updates: 🤍 This dispatch is from the Rio Grande River, on the Texas side of the U.S. border with Mexico. I embedded with border patrol, to learn about the technology, techniques, and challenges of monitoring a section of the border with over 300 miles of river. Vox Borders is a new international series focused on telling the human stories that emerge from lines on the map. I've traveled to five of six border locations to produce a final set of documentaries. While I travel I'm releasing video dispatches on YouTube and Facebook, documenting my experiences in a vlog that's independent from the final Vox Borders documentaries. Learn more: 🤍 Sources for this story: 🤍 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
The border of unity. Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Sign up for the Borders newsletter: 🤍 Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 With original music by Tom Fox: 🤍 Colombia is currently dealing with a massive wave of refugees coming from Venezuela. Venezuelans are fleeing their home because of a severe economic crisis under President Nicolas Maduro. There are high inflation rates and there isn’t enough food available for people within Venezuela to even eat. Thousands of Venezuelans cross the Simon Bolivar bridge located at Cúcuta every day and Colombia doesn’t seem to be turning anyone way. This borders episode looks at why Colombia doesn’t turn away these refugees, the shared history of the two nations and how there may be a limit to Colombia’s acceptance of incoming Venezuelans. Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Watch the full season of Vox Borders: Colombia Episode 1: 🤍 Episode 2: 🤍 Episode 3: 🤍 Episode 4: 🤍 Bonus episode: 🤍 Become a member of the Vox Video Lab for more Borders behind-the-scenes content: 🤍 Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
One island, two worlds. Follow Johnny on social media to stay up to date: Instagram: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 The six Vox Borders documentaries, presented by lululemon, are publishing weekly on Tuesdays. Thanks to our sponsor, lululemon. Link for lululemon's Mens Pants: 🤍 Haiti and the Dominican Republic share a border, and an island. But the two countries are very different today: the Dominican Republic enjoys higher quality of life for many factors than Haiti. I went to this island and visited both countries, to try and understand when and how their paths diverged. And I began to learn how those differences are playing out in the present. Vox Borders is a new international documentary series presented by lululemon, by Emmy-nominated videojournalist Johnny Harris. For this series, Johnny is producing six 10-15 minute documentaries about different borders stories from around the world. Vox Borders Episodes: 1. Haiti and the Dominican Republic ( 🤍 2. The Arctic & Russia (🤍 3. Japan & North Korea (🤍 4. Mexico & Guatemala (🤍 5. Nepal & The Himalaya (🤍 6. Spain & Morocco (🤍 Credits: Video by Johnny Harris Producer: Christina Thornell Story Editor: Joss Fong Animation: Sam Ellis Assistant Editing: Mwita Chacha Fixer and Translator: Pascal Antoine Executive Producer: Joe Posner Managing Producer: Valerie Lapinski Art Director: Dion Lee Engagement Editor: Blair Hickman Senior Engagement Manager: Lauren Katz Audience Development Manager: Agnes Mazur Engagement Video Producer: Tian Wang
There’s a reason why Colombia can’t beat cocaine. Become a member of the Vox Video Lab! 🤍 Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Sign up for the Borders newsletter: 🤍 Become a member of the Vox Video Lab for more Borders behind-the-scenes content: 🤍 With original music by Tom Fox: 🤍 Colombia is the world’s largest producer of cocaine and the US is the largest consumer of the drug. Cocaine comes from the leaf of the coca plant which is harvested and processed in Colombia. Despite the Colombian government’s effort to eradicate the plant, coca cultivation is at an all time high. In this episode we go deep into the cocaine economy and discover why this problem is so hard to solve. Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Watch the full season of Vox Borders: Colombia Episode 1: 🤍 Episode 2: 🤍 Episode 3: 🤍 Episode 4: 🤍 Bonus episode: 🤍 Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
China is snatching up the key ingredient for EV batteries. Follow this link to get an exclusive deal with NordVPN: 🤍 Car batteries are the new blood diamonds, but it doesn’t have to be this way. Check out Cleo's new channel: 🤍 Big thanks to excellent reporting by the New York Times who did a deep dive into the human tragedy and exploitation in the DRC: 🤍 Thank you to Guillaume Debrier and the International Peace Information Service (IPIS) - ways to support - My Patreon: 🤍 Our custom Presets & LUTs: 🤍 - where to find me - Instagram: 🤍 Tiktok: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Iz's (my wife’s) channel: 🤍 - how i make my videos - Tom Fox makes my music, work with him here: 🤍 I make maps using this AE Plugin: 🤍 All the gear I use: 🤍 - my courses - Learn a language: 🤍 Visual storytelling: 🤍 - about - Johnny Harris is a filmmaker and journalist. He currently is based in Washington, DC, reporting on interesting trends and stories domestically and around the globe. Johnny's visual style blends motion graphics with cinematic videography to create content that explains complex issues in relatable ways. He holds a BA in international relations from Brigham Young University and an MA in international peace and conflict resolution from American University. - press - NYTimes: 🤍 NYTimes: 🤍 Vox Borders: 🤍 Finding Founders: 🤍 NPR Planet Money: 🤍
The border has an expiration date. Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Become a Video Lab member! 🤍 Joining the Video Lab is the best way to help us make more of the videos you love, like Vox Borders. And you get access to a ton of perks too! Learn more: 🤍 With original music by Tom Fox 🤍 When Britain handed Hong Kong back to China in 1997, Chinese leaders agreed that Hong Kong would be able to keep its economic and political systems, including some of the civil freedoms denied to China’s citizens on the mainland, for the next 50 years. Although Hong Kong still has nearly 30 years of semi-autonomy left, China has started tightening its grip, and many believe it is chipping away at Hong Kong’s freedoms. In this episode, I explore how Hong Kong is dealing with the looming deadline and China’s premature moves. Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
Every Wednesday, starting 7/18/18, see a new side of Hong Kong. Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Sign up for the Vox Borders newsletter: 🤍 Hong Kong sits on one of the world’s most peculiar borders. It’s a part of China but it’s also very much an independent entity. Every Wednesday for five weeks, Vox’s Johnny Harris goes behind the scenes in Hong Kong, talking to the locals and showcasing some of the interesting culture that emerged in this nexus between East and West. Watch season 1 of Vox Borders: 🤍 Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
Why North Korea has children’s schools in Japan Follow Johnny to stay up to date on Vox Borders: Instagram: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 My dispatch about Japan's rising right-wing nationalism: 🤍 Original Music by Rare Henderson: 🤍 Vox Borders Episodes: 1. Haiti and the Dominican Republic ( 🤍 2. The Arctic & Russia (🤍 3. Japan & North Korea (🤍 4. Mexico & Guatemala (🤍 5. Nepal & The Himalaya (🤍 6. Spain & Morocco (🤍 For this episode I found myself embeded with a small community in Japan. They were born there, they speak the language. But they're not Japanese citizens, or even ethnically Japanese - they're North Korean. There's about 150,000 of them living in Japan today, and they've been there for over a century. This community has close ties with the regime in Pyongyang, which supports them financially (and vice-versa). But more importantly, Pyongyang offers them an identity, a heritage, and cultural legitimacy - things that some elements of Japanese society work to deny them. Vox Borders Episodes: 1. Haiti and the Dominican Republic ( 🤍 2. The Arctic & Russia (🤍 3. Japan & North Korea (🤍
New episodes premiere on Tuesday, November 27 Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Sign up for the Vox Borders newsletter: 🤍 Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Vox Borders is back and this time Johnny Harris went to Colombia. He covered Colombia’s border crisis with Venezuela, why Colombia is home to the only wild hippos outside Africa, the origins of Cumbia music, and what’s at the heart of Colombia’s cocaine economy. Every Tuesday, starting 11/27/28, there will be a new episode posted to YouTube and the Vox Borders Facebook Watch page.Check out the links below to stay up-to-date! Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
Hong Kong’s superstitious skyline. Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Sign up for the Vox Borders newsletter: 🤍 Watch episode 1: 🤍 Watch episode 2: 🤍 Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Hong Kong’s famous skyline is known for its colorful lights and modern buildings, but a closer look reveals some unique designs inspired by feng shui. Like the gaping holes in the middle of buildings to let dragons fly through or cannon-like structures installed to deflect bad “qi” (pronounced chi). The main belief in feng shui is that destiny is bound to the environment, so good fortune and harmony can be invited in and bad energy can be warded off by arranging objects and buildings around us. It's an ancient Chinese practice that has come to define Hong Kong's skyline. In this episode of Borders, we explore feng shui principles, explain the circumstances that allowed it to flourish in Hong Kong and take a look at the unique designs around the city. Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
It’s a hippo invasion. Become a member of the Vox Video Lab! 🤍 Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Sign up for the Borders newsletter: 🤍 Drug lord Pablo Escobar smuggled four hippos into his own personal zoo during the 1980’s. But wild hippos are usually only native to Africa and their escape after Escobar’s death has left Colombia with an unexpected problem. Due to reproduction, there are now dozens roaming around one of the country’s rivers. This episode looks at how the presence of these hippos affects Colombia’s biodiversity and how people became fond of their presence. Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Watch the full season of Vox Borders: Colombia Episode 1: 🤍 Episode 2: 🤍 Episode 3: 🤍 Episode 4: 🤍 Bonus episode: 🤍 Become a member of the Vox Video Lab for more Borders behind-the-scenes content: 🤍 Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
Our next location: Colombia! / Nuestro próximo destino: Colombia! Únete a la red local de Vox Borders para contribuir a nuestros reportajes en Colombia: 🤍 Sign up for the Vox Borders newsletter: 🤍 Vox Borders is traveling to Colombia this fall! So many of you have asked me to cover this specific border situation, and I'm so excited to start reporting on it. Colombia is a fascinating a place, full of so many stories, including an urgent migrant crisis on the border with Venezuela. I’m looking forward to going and capturing some of these stories. As always, I’m looking for help form locals. If live or have lived in Colombia, head to 🤍 to join our local network. Or, if you know someone who fits the bill, forward this email (or this specific form) their way. I’ll be following up with the locals network for advice and perspectives as I report these stories in the coming weeks. As always thanks for being a part of this journey. Can’t wait to share more as it all unfolds! - Johnny Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
How a maritime border created a conflict in the Indian Ocean. This season of Borders is presented by CuriosityStream. Watch thousands of documentaries for free for 31-days: 🤍 Join the Video Lab to help us make more Vox Borders! 🤍 Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Sign up for the Borders newsletter: 🤍 With original music by Tom Fox: 🤍 Fishing is the economic lifeline for villages in northern Sri Lanka. But after a decades long civil war, fishermen returned to find their fish stocks depleted – and they pointed the finger squarely at neighboring India. As Indian fishermen developed methods to increase hauls, and crossed a maritime border that was more permeable during the war, they depleted the fish stock for both sides. Now, the Sri Lankan Navy is retaliating with force, only making the relationship between the two communities that rely on these waters worse. This Vox Borders episode will look at how the drawing of a maritime border and lack of access to fish caused a conflict between two communities that used to live in harmony. Watch the first episode of Vox Borders: India 🤍 Watch all the episodes of Vox Borders: India here: 🤍 Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. Start from the beginning. Watch all full episodes of Vox Borders on YouTube in one playlist: 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
Tell me what stories I should do in India: 🤍 Follow Johnny on Instagram 🤍 Follow Vox Borders on Facebook Watch: 🤍 Original Music by Tom Fox: 🤍 Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Start from the beginning. Watch all full episodes of Vox Borders on YouTube in one playlist: 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Or our podcasts: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
Keeping time was challenging for ancient civilizations, so this one built a city to do it. Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 and Facebook: 🤍 The first Vox Borders documentary is releasing on Youtube and Facebook on October 17th. The other five documentaries will release weekly after that. Subscribe to the newsletter to stay up to date on the Vox Borders documentary releases: 🤍 or follow Johnny on social media. This dispatch is from the ancient archaeological site at Teotihuacán, in Mexico. I walked around the ruins with a guide, and learned about how the people who built the site planned it in a way that helped them track time. Scholars theorize that the structures at Teotihuacán were built to align with the cosmos on certain days of the year, which let the people know when it was time to plant crops or conduct rituals. Vox Borders is a new international series focused on telling the human stories that emerge from lines on the map. I've traveled to six different border locations to produce a final set of documentaries. While I travel I'm releasing video dispatches on YouTube and Facebook, documenting my experiences in a vlog that's independent from the final Vox Borders documentaries. Learn more: 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
What vending machines can teach you about this country Subscribe to the Vox Borders newsletter for weekly updates: 🤍 Follow Johnny for more photos and videos from his travels around the globe. Facebook: 🤍 Instagram: 🤍 While in Japan I noticed vending machines everywhere. Looking into it a little deeper a discovered that there's a very interesting answer to why Japan has so many vending machines. It's an economic story but it's also a story about how Japanese society values robotics and automation. I even found a business card vending machine: 🤍 Vox Borders is a new international series focused on telling the human stories that emerge from lines on the map. Johnny will travel to six border locations to produce a final set of documentaries. While he travels he'll release dispatches on YouTube and Facebook documenting his experiences. Learn more: 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
Watch my new video on why Antarctica is the most well-mapped part of the world: 🤍 Get access to behind-the-scenes vlogs, my scripts, and extended interviews over at 🤍 I made a poster about maps - check it out: 🤍 Custom Presets & LUTs [what we use]: 🤍 About: Johnny Harris is an Emmy-winning independent journalist and contributor to the New York Times. Based in Washington, DC, Harris reports on interesting trends and stories domestically and around the globe, publishing to his audience of over 3.5 million on Youtube. Harris produced and hosted the twice Emmy-nominated series Borders for Vox Media. His visual style blends motion graphics with cinematic videography to create content that explains complex issues in relatable ways. - press - NYTimes: 🤍 NYTimes: 🤍 Vox Borders: 🤍 NPR Planet Money: 🤍 - where to find me - Instagram: 🤍 Tiktok: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Iz's (my wife’s) channel: 🤍 - how i make my videos - Tom Fox makes my music, work with him here: 🤍 I make maps using this AE Plugin: 🤍 All the gear I use: 🤍 - my courses - Learn a language: 🤍 Visual storytelling: 🤍
I visited Svalbard's Global Seed Vault, built specifically for doomsday. Follow Johnny for more photos and videos from his travels on Facebook: 🤍 and Instagram: 🤍 Subscribe to the Vox Borders newsletter for weekly updates: 🤍 In this video I visited Svalbard's Global Seed Vault, founded by the Crop Trust group in 2008. Over 135,000 genetic deposits have been stored since the vault's opening, to be used at a further date in case crop diversity is threatened due to changing global conditions. The seed vault had its first withdrawal, caused by the war in Syria in 2015, and had minor flooding in May 2017. Vox Borders is a new international series focused on telling the human stories that emerge from lines on the map. Johnny will travel to six border locations to produce a final set of documentaries. While he travels he'll release dispatches on YouTube and Facebook documenting his experiences. Learn more: 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
3 Borders that will Blow Your Mind Go to 🤍 to get a 2-year plan plus a bonus gift with a huge discount! It’s risk free with Nord’s 30 day money-back guarantee! I want to tell you about three specific border regions. Each of them are remarkably unique - but they also have a massive impact on the communities that live nearby. - ways to support - My Patreon: 🤍 Our custom Presets & LUTs: 🤍 - where to find me - Instagram: 🤍 Tiktok: 🤍 Facebook: 🤍 Iz's (my wife’s) channel: 🤍 - how i make my videos - Tom Fox makes my music, work with him here: 🤍 I make maps using this AE Plugin: 🤍 All the gear I use: 🤍 - my courses - Learn a language: 🤍 Visual storytelling: 🤍 - about - Johnny Harris is a filmmaker and journalist. He currently is based in Washington, DC, reporting on interesting trends and stories domestically and around the globe. Johnny's visual style blends motion graphics with cinematic videography to create content that explains complex issues in relatable ways. He holds a BA in international relations from Brigham Young University and an MA in international peace and conflict resolution from American University. - press - NYTimes: 🤍 NYTimes: 🤍 Vox Borders: 🤍 Finding Founders: 🤍 NPR Planet Money: 🤍
900 million eligible voters need access to polling booths. This season of Borders is presented by CuriosityStream. Watch thousands of documentaries for free for 31-days: 🤍 Join the Video Lab to help us make more Vox Borders! 🤍 Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Sign up for the Borders newsletter: 🤍 With original music by Tom Fox: 🤍 Elections in India aren’t like others. India voted to pick its central government for the next five years throughout the spring of 2019. An eighth of the world’s entire population was eligible to vote in this election. That’s 900 million people, and more than 67 percent voted. India runs the world’s biggest elections, and officials put in a lot of effort to make this democratic exercise is as accessible as possible. This means they make sure everyone, even in the most remote locations, is near a polling booth — even if it means bringing voting machines to them by elephant. This Vox Borders episode looks at how India pulls off massive elections. Watch the first episode of Vox Borders: India 🤍 Watch all the episodes of Vox Borders: India here: 🤍 Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. Start from the beginning. Watch all full episodes of Vox Borders on YouTube in one playlist: 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
The maps that explain the settlers. You can watch a more comprehensive history of the Israel-Palestine here : 🤍 Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Special thanks for B'Tselem for the use of their mapping data. Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
Vox Borders: India launches Wednesday June 26, 2019! Join the Video Lab for members-only Borders extras: 🤍 Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Sign up for the Borders newsletter: 🤍 Follow Vox Borders on Facebook: 🤍 Get ready for a new season of Vox Borders! This time, we're heading to India. We'll have a whole new spate of videos examining the human impact of the lines on a map, straight from the subcontinent. We're excited to share with you these episodes that Johnny and his team have been working so hard on. They start next week, June 26th, and new videos will publish weekly on Wednesdays. If you want to stay up to date with Johnny's travels and the Vox Borders series, check out one (or all!) of the ways to follow his work, that Johnny mentions in this video. Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Start from the beginning. Watch all full episodes of Vox Borders on YouTube in one playlist: 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
This sustainable initiative is helping to save Haiti's forests. Follow Vox Borders on Facebook: 🤍 and Instagram: 🤍 Subscribe to the Vox Borders newsletter for weekly updates: 🤍 Haiti has a significant deforestation problem, driven in part by the widespread usage of charcoal for cooking in Haitian households. This practice is doubly problematic as it also raises health concerns for Haitians who burn charcoal in their homes. One initiative, spearheaded by The Nature Conservancy, is tackling this problem through the introduction of solar ovens. These ovens cook food with reflected sunlight, reducing the burden of deforestation in a sustainable way. Vox Borders is a new international series focused on telling the human stories that emerge from lines on the map. Johnny will travel to six border locations to produce a final set of documentaries. While he travels he'll release dispatches on YouTube and Facebook documenting his experiences. Learn more: 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
Neon is fading. Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 With original music by Tom Fox: 🤍 Explore neon culture through this local museum project: 🤍 Master Wu started making neon signs in the ’80s and has been filling Hong Kong’s streets with bright neon signs ever since. But recently, Master Wu has seen his business slow down as brighter-burning and more energy-efficient LED signs emerge. In addition to getting fewer requests, Hong Kong’s iconic neon landscape is also losing thousands of signs per year, ushering in the end of the city’s neon era. As Hong Kong’s neon lights start to fade, I spent some time with Master Wu at his neon shop, where he showed me how he makes neon signs, and took a look at Hong Kong’s changing cityscape. Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
An alarming US border policy forced fumigations on migrants at the US-Mexico border. Help our reporting on hidden histories. Submit a story idea here: 🤍 In 1917, American health officials launched a campaign to use noxious, often toxic chemicals to delouse immigrants seeking to enter at the US-Mexico border. The same practice had caused a fire in an El Paso jail the year before and killed 27 people. 17-year-old Juárez maid Carmelita Torres refused to go through it, sparking a protest of thousands of Mexicans at the El Paso border. Although they briefly shut down the border, the campaign would continue for decades and go on to inspire Nazi scientists. For more reading, check out the links below: David Dorado Romo’s book, Ringside Seat to a Revolution: 🤍 The Bracero History Archive: 🤍 John Mckiernan-González’s book, Fevered Measures: Public Health and Race at the Texas -Mexico Border, 1848-1942: 🤍 Alexandra Minna Stern’s book, Eugenic Nation: 🤍 This is the second episode of our Missing Chapter series, where Vox producer Ranjani Chakraborty revisits underreported and often overlooked moments from the past to give context to the present. Join her as she covers the histories that are often left out of our textbooks. Our first season tackles stories of racial injustice, political conflicts, even the hidden history of US medical experimentation. Have an idea for a story that Ranjani should investigate for Missing Chapter? Send it to her via this form! 🤍 Sign up for the Missing Chapter newsletter to stay up to date with the series: 🤍 Explore the full Missing Chapter playlist, including episodes, a creator Q&A, and more! 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍
Media smugglers get Taylor Swift, Game of Thrones, and the New York Times to Cubans every week through an illegal network of runners. Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 In Cuba there is barely any internet. Anything but the state-run TV channels is prohibited. Publications are limited to the state-approved newspapers and magazines. This is the law. But, in typical Cuban fashion, the law doesn't stop a vast underground system of entertainment and news media distributors and consumers. "El Paquete Semanal" (The Weekly Package) is a weekly trove of digital content—everything from American movies to PDFs of Spanish newspapers—that is gathered, organized and transferred by a human web of runners and dealers to the entire country. It is a prodigious and profitable operation. I went behind the scenes in Havana to film how the Paquete works. Check out the video above to see how Cubans bypass censorship to access the media we take for granted. Read full post at 🤍 Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍 to get up to speed on everything from Kurdistan to the Kim Kardashian app. Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
When houses are the size of parking spaces. Follow Johnny on Instagram: 🤍 Follow the Vox Borders watch page: 🤍 Sign up for the Borders newsletter: 🤍 With original music by Tom Fox: 🤍 Hong Kong is the most expensive housing market in the world. It has been ranked as the least affordable housing market on Earth for eight years in a row, and the price per square foot seems to be only going up. The inflated prices are forcing Hongkongers to squeeze into unconventionally small spaces that can affect their quality of life. Tens of thousands of Hongkongers are living in spaces that range from 75 to 140 square feet. To put that in perspective, the average parking space in the US is about 150 square feet. And in the most extreme cases, Hongkongers have resorted to homes the size of a coffin. I spent some time exploring the living situation in Hong Kong to find out why housing has become so expensive and spaces so tight. To understand how Hong Kong’s housing market turned out this way and see how it’s affecting people’s lives, watch the final episode of Borders Hong Kong. Subscribe to our channel! 🤍 Vox Borders is an international documentary series by Emmy-nominated producer Johnny Harris exploring life at the edge of nations. For more, visit vox.com/borders. Check out our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Twitter: 🤍 Or on Facebook: 🤍
The open border has helped keep the peace for 20 years. Help us make more ambitious videos by joining the Vox Video Lab. It gets you exclusive perks, like livestream Q&As with all the Vox creators, a badge that levels up over time, and video extras bringing you closer to our work! Learn more at 🤍 Northern Ireland is part of the UK, but because of a special power-sharing agreement, it has an open border with Republic of Ireland. This was designed as a compromise that ended 30 years of conflict and violence in Northern Ireland between Nationalist and Unionist paramilitaries. Today, Brexit means that the UK needs to close its borders and the issue of the Irish border is one of the hardest things to negotiate with the EU. Closing this border could undermine the compromise that kept the peace for 20 years. To truly understand the international conflicts and trends shaping our world you need a big-picture view. Video journalist Sam Ellis uses maps to tell these stories and chart their effects on foreign policy. Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out 🤍. Watch our full video catalog: 🤍 Follow Vox on Facebook: 🤍 Or Twitter: 🤍