Argentina adopts ‘Muchachos’ as World Cup anthem



(17 Dec 2022)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Doha, Qatar – 21 November 2022
1. Fan singing the intro verse to ‘Muchachos’ during Argentina fans parade
2. Wide of fans singing second verse to Muchachos during Argentina fans parade

ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Doha, Qatar – 26 November 2022
3. Fans singing third verse outside of Lusail Stadium before Argentina vs Mexico match ++NIGHT SHOTS++
4. Fans singing fourth verse on metro station escalator going to Mexico vs Argentina match in Lusail Stadium
5. Fans singing fifth verse outside of Lusail Stadium ++NIGHT SHOT++

ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Doha, Qatar – 21 November, 2022
6. Fans singing verse before chorus
7. Wide of fans singing the chorus during Argentina fans parade

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 26 November 2022
8. Fans singing outside of Lusail Stadium ++NIGHT SHOT++

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 9 December 2022 0022
9. Fans walking and singing in metro station

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 21 November 2022
10. Wide of fans in parade

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 26 November 2022
11. fans singing in metro station

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 21 November 2022
12. wide of fans singing end of song

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 15 December 2022
13. Flag of Maradona
14. Daniel Mases, Argentina fan in Souq Waqif
15. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Daniel Mases, Argentina fan:
«A fan in a playoff game, a common fan, wrote the lyrics and sang it on television and everyone liked it. In fact, all the songs in the stadiums are done just like that, on the spot, changing the lyrics (of other songs). And they liked it a lot and people took it as their own and it’s like the song of the World Cup for Argentina.»

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 21 November 2022
16. Fans singing in the street

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Buenos Aires -, Argentina 15 December 2022
17. Fernando Romero, writer of the song, arriving at the interview next to a mural of soccer legend Diego Armando Maradona
18. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Fernando Romero, writer of the song ‘Muchachos’ (Boys, now we are hopeful again):
«I think this is something that I will treasure in my heart for a lifetime. It is a moment that won’t happen again, and that makes me very happy. It makes me feel like I’m floating, like at one point I’m not living something human when the greatest in the world (Lionel Messi) is talking about what I once felt.»

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 15 December 2022
19. Fan singing Muchachos to camera

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 12 December, 2022
20. Fan singing second verse

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 15 December 2022
21. Fans singing third verse
22. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Aljenadro Rubio, Argentina fan:
“We are a country that is used to suffering, but when it suffers it brings out the best. So, in this World Cup, after a long time, we are going to bring out the best of ourselves. It will be a great World Cup.”

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 26 November 2022
23. Fans singing verse ++NIGHT SHOT++

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 15 December 2022
24. Fans singing verse ++NIGHT SHOT++

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 9 December 2022
25. Fan showing flag and singing verse ++NIGHT SHOT++

ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Doha, Qatar – 21 November 2022
26. Fans walking and singing

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Doha, Qatar – 15 December 2022
++NIGHT SHOT++
27. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Flavio Broianigo, Argentina fan:
«Messi said in an interview: ‘I think that my favorite (song) is that one, the ‘boys one’ and that’s the one I sing, the one Messi wants. That’s law.»
28. Fans singing chorus in Souq Waqif

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Farmers stage protest in Argentina



(13 Jul 2022)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Gualeguaychu, Entre Rios, Argentina – 13 July 2022
1. Farmers on tractors arrive at a demonstration
2. Various of farmers listening to speeches
3. Martin Morasan reads a statement from protesting farmers UPSOUND (Spanish) «The fiscal voracity of the national government that only sees us as a cashier, where there is always something to get out of using different arguments, like now, with the war in Ukraine (government blaming inflation of fuel, fertilizer, and food on the war in Ukraine).»
4. Farmers holding flags
5. Various of people singing the Argentine national anthem
6. A dog wrapped in the Argentine flag
7. A woman singing the Argentine national anthem
8. Protesters with a giant flag
9. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Marcelo Meda, Argentine farmer:
«We have restrictions for dollars, restrictions for imports, withholdings for exports, our economy is closing more and more and we are becoming isolated from the world, when all the walls in the world have already been knocked down and what we have to do is open up. We produce everything that the world needs in Argentina. We’ve got every chance and we’re letting it go.»
10. A farmer on a tractor
11. An Argentine flag on top of a tractor
12. Ronaldo Luis Barolin, Argentine farmer
13. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Ronaldo Luis Barolin, Argentine farmer:
«To begin with, leave us alone a bit. The minute we start producing they want to get a little more out of us, a little more. They stick their hands in (our pockets) for taxes, they stick their hands in by withholding exports, and we don’t know to do anything else but produce.»
14. A gaucho preparing a «choripan,» a traditional Argentine sandwich made of Argentine chorizo and french bread
15. Sausages on a grill
STORYLINE:
The main associations of agricultural producers in Argentina carried out a 24-hour strike on Wednesday with protests across the country.
Producers complain that due to the price of the dollar that governs the agricultural sector, they receive close to 30% of the international price of soybeans in pesos -Argentina’s star crop – and although their profit margins are lower their taxes continue to soar.
The producers also question what they say is excessive government intervention in the market.
Their complaint is aimed at government mandated export quotas for cereals and meat and taxes, which include sales taxes applied to international purchases, in addition to maintaining strict restrictions on all imports as a way of curbing expenditures.
Due to the strike, the main livestock and agricultural markets worked a half day.
One of the most important protests took place near the town of Gualeguaychú, in the province of Entre Ríos north of Buenos Aires province, where the lack of diesel continues to be a problem. Producers demonstrated driving their tractors adorned with Argentine flags.
The strikers complain about the difficulties they face in achieving better productivity in a context of accelerated inflation, which has sent fuel prices skyrocketing.
Inflation for the first five months is close to 30% and economists estimate that by the end of the year it will reach 80%.
AP Video: Victor R. Caivano
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Argentina’s inflation forces families to cut back



(12 May 2023)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Buenos Aires – 10 May 2023
1. People standing in line to receive food at soup kitchen
2. Milanesas (breaded meat) before being fried
3. Susana Martínez frying milanesas
4. Gas stove burner
5. Evelyn Morales serving rice
6. Martínez and Morales prepare packages of food
7. Volunteer putting bread in a bag to give away
8. Packages with breaded meat and rice
9. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Gimena Páez, 43-year-old unemployed resident:
“We come every day, if it wasn’t for the soup kitchen… Our only food (in a day) is from this place. Sometimes I don’t eat so I can save a little bit of food for my daughter at night.”
10. Páez walking home with the food from the soup kitchen
11. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Juan Carlos Barreto, 73-year-old retiree:
“I want to eat dulce de leche (carmel sauce), some fruit or bread. How much is that? I’m spending a lot of money, with 58,000 pesos ($253 dollars as a pension payment) it is not enough and then there was no other way out than to come here »
12. Volunteers who also receive food from the soup kitchen eat breakfast before delivering hot meals

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Buenos Aires – 9 May 2023
13. Various members of social organizations marching to protest against government policies, demanding higher salaries amid high inflation
14. Various of riot police during protest outside the social welfare ministry building

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Buenos Aires – 11 May 2023
15. Various of Martínez drinking

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Buenos Aires, Argentina – 9 May 2023
16. SOUNDBITE (Spanish): Susana Martínez, 47-year-old masseuse:
“Going to the supermarket really makes me depressed and it makes you feel powerless when you have kids… because older ones can understand it, but how do you tell a little girl that I can’t buy you that dessert now… you’ll have to eat this or this week you can’t?»

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Buenos Aires – 11 May 2023
17. Martínez hugging her 11-year-old daughter Valentina
18. Valentina playing with her dog
STORYLINE:
Gimena Páez could barely pay her bills.

Then inflation in Argentina started rising even faster.

The value of the country’s currency plunged, making most goods nearly unobtainable.

Getting enough food for herself and her 11-year-old daughter became a daily struggle.

Inflation has been a problem across the world but Argentina is second in a World Bank ranking of countries with the highest food inflation.

On Friday, Argentina’s state-run INDEC statistics agency said that the inflation in food prices over the 12 months ending in April was 115%.

That has been topped only by Lebanon, with a whopping 352%.

Life was never easy for the neighbors of Nueva Pompeya, a lower-middle-class neighborhood where Páez lives at the southern end of Argentina’s capital.

These days, for many in Argentina, paying bills and getting to the end of the month have taken a backseat to a more basic problem: getting enough to eat.

Argentina’s annual inflation rate has already surpassed 100% a year.

The price of food has increased even faster, leading many to rely on soup kitchens to get at least one hearty meal a day.

Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Páez managed to make ends meet as a street vendor.

She was forced to sell everything amid strict quarantine measures, and now spends much of her time trying to figure out how to feed her daughter.

Susana Martínez, 47, who works at the soup kitchen several hours a week, is one of those questioning how much longer the current situation can last before there’s upheaval.

Annual inflation reached 108.8% in April.

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