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Reg-Jean Page is the new brand ambassador for Longines – Exchange4Media

Swiss watchmakerLongineshas announced that actor Reg-Jean Page has joined the brand as its newest Ambassador of Elegance and it is impossible to imagine a more fitting appointment. Page has an elegance that transcends borders and generations, and an effortless sense of style.

Reg-Jean Page's Emmy-nominated performance as the Duke of Hastings in Netflix's hugely successful Regency-period drama Bridgerton captivated audiences all over the world. His portrayal turned him into one of the world's most admired performers, garnering global praise for his role, with individual award nominations from the Emmy Awards and Screen Actors Guild Awards, among others, and a win for Outstanding Actor at the NAACP Image Awards.

The British actor has been announced as a Longines Ambassador of Elegance and theBrand's CEO, Matthias Breschan, could not be more thrilled, saying, An actor with Reg-Jeans talent, poise and presence only comes along a few times in a generation. He has already accomplished so much but it is clear that this is only the beginning of what will be a magnificent career. It's fair to say that he redefines elegance and all of us at Longines are excited to welcome him to the family.

Reg-Jean Pageis also looking forward to the partnership. Describing his enthusiasm for Longines, he says, It's simple, really. Longines makes such beautiful watches.There is something very special about being able to work with things that bring beauty to the world."

Reg-Jean Page's upcoming projects include a starring role in Paramount Pictures' blockbuster, Dungeons and Dragons, and he recently finished filming on Joe and Anthony Russo's The Gray Man for Netflix. He will next star in and executive produce a new, reimagined version of The Saint for Paramount Pictures.

Reg-Jean Page starred in Shonda Rhimes's 2018 legal drama series, For the People, and in 2016, he memorably introduced himself to a global audience in the role of Chicken George in the Emmy-nominated series, Roots. In film, he was most recently seen in the Emmy-nominated jazz-era romance Sylvies Love from Amazon Studios.

TIME honoured Reg-Jean Page by including him in its 100 Next list, the magazine's annual list of the men and women who are shaping the future in their fields and defining the next generation of leadership.

For years, Longines claim it is so much more than a motto - has been Elegance is an Attitude. Does Reg-Jean Page consider himself to be elegant? He smiles and says, That's a tough question to answer! I think I'm capable of elegance and I like to hold myself to a standard of elegance, which means carrying myself with a certain consciousness. Part of that is a generosity and living in a way that is helpful to other people. In doing that, you can bring more beauty to the world.

Longines couldn't agree more and is proud to welcome Reg-Jean Page to its family of Ambassadors of Elegance.

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Reg-Jean Page is the new brand ambassador for Longines - Exchange4Media

upGrad collaborates with Star Sports and Disney+ Hotstar for vivo IPL 2021 – Exchange4Media

EdTech platform upGrad has announced its association Star Sports and Disney+ Hotstar for Phase 2 of the 14th edition of the vivo Indian Premier League 2021.

upGrad's campaign will go Live on September 19, 2021 and will be running throughout the 2nd phase of the vivo IPL till October 15, 2021, in several Indian languages including Tamil, Telugu, Kannada alongside Hindi to connect with the regional audience.

Commenting on the association, Arjun Mohan, CEO-India, upGrad said, We are excited to associate with Star Sports and Disney+ Hotstar to represent upGrad as one of the leading Indian EdTech brands at the VIVO IPL, 2021. With the cricket frenzy setting in, we aim to launch our Campaign during the tournament to develop a deeper connection with our pan-Indian audience and narrate the significance of outcome-oriented LifeLongLearning as a means to achieve career growth and success.

We are excited to associate with upGrad for their upcoming campaign. VIVO IPL has been a high-impact platform that sees unparalleled scale across both TV and Digital screens. The reach, ratings and impressions are testimony to the power and impact that the property commands and it will be the biggest opportunity for marketers to leverage this upcoming festive season, said Nitin Bawankule, Head - Ad Sales, Star & Disney India.

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upGrad collaborates with Star Sports and Disney+ Hotstar for vivo IPL 2021 - Exchange4Media

Sanfe signs on Radhika Apte as brand ambassador – Exchange4Media

Feminine hygiene brand Sanfe has signed on actor Radhika Apte as their brand ambassador.

Being unapologetically vocal for the right issues and causes as well as her bold outlook makes Radhika Apte a perfect fit for being the face and voice for Sanfe. Since its evolution, Sanfe as a brand strives to encourage women to own their feminine form with pride and take good care of it inside and out. An encouraging voice like Radhikas will help women choose Sanfe for their various silent and unnoticed, often unserved concerns, the company said.

This collaboration will allow Sanfe to relate and connect to women as their all-time companion for their different body needs without hesitation. The true purpose is to love yourself and take good care of your body without compromise and lack of choice, it added.

Speaking on the association, Radhika Apte said, Women today are openly acknowledging body positivity and confidence. This change is further fuelled by Sanfe which offers the choice of quality products and solutions across a womens body cycle. I applaud the insight and resulting range of products Sanfe has to offer which provide solutions to what we all needed but never thought to demand.

Excited about bringing Radhika on board, Sanfe co-founder Harry Sehrawat said, Having Radhika Apte on board gives us a sense of great confidence that we are on the right path towards being that solution to several silent needs of women. We visualise a modern world where women can openly choose to take care of their needs themselves and Radhika embodies that woman who our community of women can take inspiration from.

With Radhika, Sanfe will be focusing on raising awareness on the importance of feminine intimate skincare, health, and sexual hygiene; empowering millions of women to break barriers and fiercely share their voice and find an array of choices for their intimate health, menstrual hygiene & care while breaking away from any taboos.

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Sanfe signs on Radhika Apte as brand ambassador - Exchange4Media

Missing Migrant Crisis Haunts South Texas’ Brooks County – The Texas Observer

In the first few minutes of the new documentary Missing in Brooks County, Eddie Canales idles his truck along a long stretch of trees, brush, and barbed wire. A few steps away a plastic barrel marked Agua sits under a tattered Red Cross flag where Canales retrieves a few empty water jugs and replaces them with full ones. Here in Brooks County, a rural Texas community located near the U.S.-Mexico border, summertime temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees. A person could easily die of thirst out here, and as Canales drives his truck down the road he halts when he sees buzzards nearby. Whoa, he says, watching the birds as they circle. Theyre here.

A grizzled, aging man, Canales gingerly climbs over barbed wire and hacks through tall grass to discover what the buzzards have already found. A migrant is lying on the ground, dead. The man faces the sky, his arms outstretched, his chest swollen.

Hundreds die traversing this sweltering landscape every summer to evade the states largest border patrol checkpoint in nearby Falfurrias. There is no infrastructure to help them: Canales is the one-man engine behind the tiny South Texas Human Rights Center, providing humanitarian help where it can in Brooks County. Yet this unnamed soul is one of thousands of missing migrants whose families will never know what happened to them.

Missing in Brooks County, a documentary by Connecticut-based filmmakers Lisa Molomot and Jeff Bemiss screening periodically across Texas and currently streaming on Laemmle Virtual Cinema, zooms in on this immense issue in one particularly dangerous area: Brooks County, population 7,100, where more than 2,000 migrants are presumed to have died since 2008. An estimated four in five of them will never be found. Texas leads all U.S. states in migrant deaths, having now surpassed Arizona for the dubious distinction. This film follows the helpers, who have been clouded by controversies in other parts of the Southwest: In 2019, humanitarian volunteers outside Tucson were charged with felonies for providing water and shelter to two young men walking through the Sonoran Desert. Here, volunteers have avoided legal harassment, but are instead entirely invisible.

The film takes shape as a portrait of the few human beings who carry countless spirits on their shoulders, who take the dead under their wing. Canales is one of them, and when family members come to his humble office to ask for help, he sifts through binders of crime scene photographs. It is traumatizing, thankless work, but he keeps on, often sleeping on a cot in the office.

If a migrant is walking through the brush in Brooks County, they have already made it across the border in McAllen. Coyotes bring people north and, upon reaching the Brooks County seat of Falfurrias 70 miles from the border, face the largest border patrol checkpoint in Texas. The only way to circumvent the checkpoint is to hike 40 miles around it. The filmmakers excoriate both federal and state officials for the humanitarian crisis that has resulted. It is clear to the filmmakers that federal policies of deterrence, dating back to 1994 under the Clinton Administration, are to blame for the forging of these dangerous paths and the subsequent surge in deaths. Yet they also indict Texas systems, or lack thereof, for failing to keep track of migrant deaths in any meaningful way.

Another of the movies main characters is anthropologist Kate Spradley, who leads a Texas State University project to exhume unmarked graves, conduct DNA testing, and reconnect the mourning families of missing migrants to their loved ones remains. We watch how Canales stays calm and keeps his head down in the work to cope, but Spradleys response is one of building anger. She calls him about yet another funeral home that told her that, inundated with bodies, they just started burying people everywhere with no records. These are people, these arent receipts you lose track of, she vents.

The filmmakers do an expert job of humanizing Spradley and Canales, but they could have spent more time with the migrants grieving families. They follow the families of Homero Romn Gmez and Juan Maceda Salazar, shedding light on their stories, but they dont get quite as much screen time or exploration. Even so, Missing in Brooks County lingers with a quiet care on human moments. Four years of footage has been distilled into a thrumming, tense hour and twenty minutes, a collection of scenes that illuminate fleeting traces of pain and memory. Often, these scenes are mundane: we see Romn Gmezs brother and sister sit in a plain hotel room, waiting on the phone, transferred again and again to county offices that will lead them nowhere; we watch research students gently and silently handle the bones of migrants dug from unmarked graves. We learn that grave diggers and the folks who mow the cemetery lawn are frequently the only people who remember where the unidentifieds were buried. In one striking shot, Spradley shows us a room filled with small, cardboard boxes, so many that the cameras frame cant capture them all. There is a person inside every one of these boxes. Everybody in here has a family that wonders what happened to them.

Viewers also see local residents and officials who appear to view migrants as less than human. A Border Patrol agent says he doesnt call the migrants people anymore; he calls them bodies. Ranchers, some of whom staunchly refuse Canales requests to set out water on their land, say shocking things on camera. Ive got my suspicions about Eddie Canales, says one. Were just waiting to try to catch him loading some [people] up and sneaking them around the checkpoint. He laughs at a Border Patrol photo in which three migrants hide in a tree from guard dogs. Another rancher, a veterinarian by day, eventually invites the filmmakers on a vigilante stakeout that he organizes with other elderly white men who are concerned about immigrants bringing sleeper cells and cartel soldiers to overtake us internally. He sits through the dead of night, wearing night vision goggles and full camo hunting gear, hoping to apprehend people he considers to be dangerous criminals.

Even in these bizarre, hostility-tinged moments, the films tone remains solemn. The ranches of Brooks County are haunted. By the movies conclusion, however, theres still hope to be found. Kind people of faith in Falfurrias often pull over to wish the searching families well. Crosses and angel statues stand among flowers in the cemeteries. God bless you is a common refrain, the charm of small town Texas. At one point, a friendly couple delivers food for graduate students conducting an exhumation. We call this working for the Lord, the woman says. No one sends us, we just go around town looking for things to do, see where God sends us, and he led us to the cemetery tonight. Despite these acts of care, the film still ends on a quiet, despairing note, in Canales office. In the last shot, the Red Cross flag waves under a big moon, ripped apart by the wind, hanging on.

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Missing Migrant Crisis Haunts South Texas' Brooks County - The Texas Observer

Europe must be more active to prevent Afghan migrant crisis: Turkey | Daily Sabah – Daily Sabah

The wall that Turkey has built on the Iranian border cannot solve the refugee crisis on its own, the spokesperson of Turkey's Parliamentary Human Rights Investigation Commission said Thursday, calling on European countries to play a more active role in Afghanistan to resolve the international crisis and "act more conscientiously."

Speaking to the Deutsche Welle (DW) Turkish, Van lawmaker Osman Nuri Glaar from the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) evaluated issues like the transition of Afghan refugees to Turkey, the latest situation in the region, the adaptation of Syrian refugees to Turkey, and Europe's expectations.

Stating that Turkey, which hosts millions of migrants, is not in a position to bear any more burden, Glaar said the number of Afghans arriving in the eastern border province of Van fell to 100 on some days but rose to 300 and 400 on others. "This migration has been an incredibly heavy burden. It is an intensity that can cause burden and tragedy, and it does not have a sustainable side."

Turkey was abandoned in its efforts to prevent irregular migration, President Recep Tayyip Erdoan said on Thursday. "Turkey has been left alone in its extraordinary struggle to prevent irregular migration originating from Syria," the president said in a video message sent to a symposium on the Aegean Sea and Turkish-Greek relations.

Saying that the 2015 refugee crisis when 1.3 million people traveled to Europe to request asylum could have been instrumental in strengthening cooperation between Turkey and Greece, Erdoan said Athens wasted this opportunity with its "uncompromising stance."

Foreign Minister Mevlt avuolu also recently highlighted the importance of taking joint action to deal with the migrant crisis, as he urged the European Union to properly implement the terms of the 2016 deal and undertake burden-sharing responsibilities.

Turkey has been a key transit point for irregular migrants who want to cross into Europe to start new lives, especially those fleeing war and persecution such as the Syrian civil war. Through its March 2016 agreement with the EU, Turkey was key in bringing down migrant numbers and alleviating the crisis.

Concerns have risen over a possible spike in migrants from Afghanistan, due to the United States' pullout from the country and the following surge of Taliban attacks. Turkey has made it clear that it will not bear the burden of the migration crises experienced as a result of the decisions of third countries.

Turkey is continuing efforts to bolster the security of its border with Iran to prevent any new migrant wave in the face of the recent developments in Afghanistan. The beefed-up border measures in Turkey, which already hosts nearly 4 million Syrian refugees and is a staging post for many migrants trying to reach Europe, began as the Taliban started advancing in Afghanistan and took over Kabul last month.

Turkey is not the only country putting up barriers. Its neighbor Greece has just completed a 40-kilometer (25-mile) fence and surveillance system to keep out migrants who still manage to enter Turkey and try to reach the EU.

Authorities say there are 182,000 registered Afghan migrants in Turkey and up to an estimated 120,000 unregistered ones. Erdoan urged European countries to take responsibility for any new influx, warning that Turkey had no intention of becoming "Europe's migrant storage unit."

Turkey hosts nearly 4 million refugees more than any country in the world. After the Syrian civil war broke out in 2011, Turkey adopted an open-door policy for people fleeing the conflict, granting them temporary protection status. Afghans are believed to be the second-largest refugee community in Turkey after Syrians. Many of the migrants arriving via Iran are heading for Istanbul to find work or passage to another coastal city from which to embark for Europe.

Calling on Europe to take reasonable and more logical steps to provide serious support to Turkey in this sense, Glaar added: "Germany is currently the leader of Europe. I would also like to emphasize that we wish Germany to develop friendly ties with Turkey. And if the refugee problem is to be resolved, then more consultation and communication is needed. We have witnessed how badly Greece treats refugees. At the point of throwing their boats back into the rivers after they pierced, or throwing them into the sea, they were faced with a treatment that no human conscience would accept. Efforts should be made for a fairer system and order in the world."

Turkey and human rights groups have repeatedly condemned Greece's illegal practice of pushing back asylum-seekers, saying the country violates humanitarian values and international law by endangering the lives of vulnerable migrants, including women and children. A recent report by Amnesty International titled "Greece: Violence, lies and pushbacks" documented "how the Greek authorities are conducting illegal pushbacks at land and sea." Pushbacks are considered contrary to international refugee protection agreements.

Explaining that it is not possible for Syrians to return to their countries in the short term, Glaar said: "Unless there is a just solution in Syria, it will not be possible for millions of Syrians to return to their homes, unfortunately, it will not be possible."

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Europe must be more active to prevent Afghan migrant crisis: Turkey | Daily Sabah - Daily Sabah