More than $20bn is spent on chewing gum around the world each year. A lot of that gum will end up stuck to the streets. That's why gum is the second most common kind of street litter after cigarette materials. In the UK councils spend around £50m each year cleaning up the mess.
But British designer Anna Bullus had an idea - what if the sticky stuff could actually be recycled and turned into useful objects?
Presenter: Harriet Noble
Reporter: Dougal ShawPhoto caption: Shoe sole made of chewing gum
Photo credit: BBC
NachrichtenGesundheit, Wellness & Beauty
People Fixing the World Folgen
Brilliant solutions to the world’s problems. We meet people with ideas to make the world a better place and investigate whether they work.
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Folge vom 06.03.2018Recycling Chewing Gum Litter to Clean Our Streets
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Folge vom 27.02.2018How to Talk to Potential ExtremistsSocial media and messaging apps play a role in the extremist “radicalisation” of individuals. Tech companies have tried to get better at identifying extremist content and taking it down, but some specialists advocate an alternative approach – to use these platforms to engage with extremists one-to-one, to confront them and talk them round.Last year, the Institute for Strategic Dialogue in London organised hundreds of conversations on Facebook messenger between activists and those expressing extreme Islamist and far-right sympathies. World Hacks has been given exclusive access to their report.This experiment raises many moral and practical questions. Do those posting extreme views online still have a right to privacy? At what point do we judge someone as suitable for this kind of intervention? And what exactly is the best way to start a conversation with an extremist?Presenter: Elizabeth Davies Producer: William KremerPhoto credit: Colin Bidwell (BBC)CORRECTION: In this programme, we say that counter-conversations were part of Facebook’s Online Civil Courage Initiative (OCCI). It was in fact a separate project, also funded by Facebook.
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Folge vom 20.02.2018Putting Forgotten Pills Back to WorkAn app in Greece is helping people donate their leftover drugs to people who can't afford to buy them. So far the system has helped to recover and redistribute 13,000 boxes of medicine. Donors use the software to scan a unique code on the side of their boxes of unwanted drugs. The app automatically uploads details of the medication to a central database. They're then taken in by the country's network of social pharmacies where they're then given out to unemployed and homeless people.Reporter: Nick Holland Presenter: Harriet Noble
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Folge vom 13.02.2018Improvising Your Way Out of AnxietyYou’re standing on a stage, blinded by a spotlight trained on your face, knees weak, hands sweaty. Someone from the audience calls out a random word and you have to immediately react and come up with an amusing sketch or skit. This is improv, the unscripted theatre form that seems like it would cause rather than cure anxiety. But across North America people with the mental health condition are signing up for special “Improv for Anxiety” courses where the techniques and practices of the stage art are used to boost confidence. Producer: Harriet Noble Presenter: Tom Colls Photo Credit: BBC