Leticia Casca says that we can all learn to “fail mentally” when the focus of failure changes from lost to won. (Photo: Jasmine Tomic / Dead)
Goston Aguirre shares stories about the power of food to change lives. (Photo: Jasmine Tomic / Dead)
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World change begins in your kitchen. In his pioneering work in bringing Peruvian cuisine to the world, Goston Aguirre Food has discovered the power to change people’s lives. As it began to be heard in renowned restaurants around the world, Gastón began to appreciate the diversity of the gastronomy of his native Peru and began to take pride in his own culture. But food has never been used to bring good to the world. With the Industrial Revolution and the growth of consumers, “more people in the world die of obesity than of hunger,” he points out, and the lifestyles of many people are not sustainable. Gaston says that by communicating and caring about the food we eat, we, as individuals, can change our priorities and the careers that serve us. You don’t have all the answers yet on how to make this a planned move where politicians can back out, but world-renowned chefs are already bringing these ideas into their kitchens. It tells the stories of a restaurant in Peru, which supports the aborigines by obtaining ingredients from them, and the famous chef of New York City, who fights against the use of singles, an iconic restaurant in France that has banned meat in the menu. “Global chefs believe that we cannot wait for others to make changes and that we must be active,” he says. But professional chefs cannot do all of this. Gaston insists that we need the home kitchen to be the center of everything if real change is to occur.
The interaction of music and life. Musical Director Chile Paulo Portolamoli When you first hear traditional classical music, the scream closes your notion of music in your memory. Sharing his feelings, Portolamoli presents music as a metaphor for life, full of the expected and the unexpected. He believes that we listen to the same songs over and over again, because as human beings we like to enjoy life from a point of view of expectation and stability, and when we listen to a piece of music at the same time, it inspires and enlivens the music with unrecognizable people. Resilience
We reap what we sow, we sow something else. Until the mid-1980s, the average income of the main Latin American countries was equal to that of Korea. But now, in less than a generation, Koreans are earning two to three times more than their Latin American counterparts. How can it be? The difference tells the future Juan EnriquezIt is a national priority of brain power, and to better identify, educate and celebrate the mind. What if we start selecting an Olympic soccer team in Latin America for their academic ability the way we want to? If Latin American countries want to prosper in the age of technology and beyond, they must try to establish their own top universities without letting their brilliant minds thirst for nutrition, competition, and achievement; it can be found in other places, in foreign countries.
Rebecca Hwang shares her dream of a world where symbols are used to bring people together, not to alienate them. (Photo: Jasmine Tomic / Dead)
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Diversity is a superpower. Rebecca Hwang Born in Korea, raised in Argentina, and educated in the United States. As someone who has spent her entire life dealing with different identities, with a mixed, yet sometimes defiant background, Hwang can attest to the fact that she is a superpower. The venture investor shared that his fluency in many languages and cultures allows him to connect with all kinds of people around the world. As a mother of two young children, Hwang hopes to pass this perspective on to her children. He wants to embrace his unique origins, create a world where symbols are used to bring people together and teach them without alienation.
Marine ecologist Enrique Salah wants to preserve the last wildlife in the ocean. (Photo: Jasmine Tomic / Dead)
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How to save our oceans If you jump into the sea anywhere at random it says Enrique Salah |You have a 98 percent chance of diving into a dead zone – the empty landscape of big fish and other marine life. As a marine ecologist and National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence, Salah has dedicated his life to exploring the world’s oceans. He proposes a radical solution to help protect the oceans by focusing on our oceans, arguing that we need to create a balance that includes two-thirds of the world’s oceans. By protecting our high seas, Salah hopes that we will regain the environmental, economic and social benefits of the oceans, and when our grandchildren jump to any random spot in the ocean, we make sure they find a wealth of glorious marine life instead of being empty. .
Fold it In advanced rap performances with timely dancers, psychologist and dance therapist. Cesar Silvera He concludes the session with 15 of what he calls “nano-speech”. Silvera combines his talents with ideas from previous speakers at the event, including Enrique Salah’s warnings about ocean overfishing, Gastón Agüero’s Peruvian culinary revolution, and even a salute to speaker Rebecca Hwang’s grandmother, “As a Beyonc at all times ”. “
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