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The greatness of small things | Julio Chang | TEDxAmazonia

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    Good morning.
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    Listenberg, the great German scientist,
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    said that man has 62 different ways
    of supporting the head.
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    I wonder why the skull is so heavy?
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    Why do we always relate
    the act of thinking,
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    to the image of Rodin's "Thinker,"
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    this bronze sculpture
    of a man in deep meditation?
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    That's why I ask myself,
    why do we believe
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    that the act of thinking
    is a sad and dismal action?
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    Can't it be a lighter
    and a more joyful one?
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    This is my first question.
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    Einstein had a somehow
    comforting and ironic quote,
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    on how he had only two original ideas
    all his life.
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    Facebook posed
    a similar question last year,
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    "What are you doing?"
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    sort of an action-oriented question,
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    but at the end of the same year
    they decided on a more philosophical one,
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    "What's on your mind?"
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    The answers are right there;
    posted on your walls.
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    We are almost always thinking
    about silly things,
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    something unworthy to be shared.
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    So, my next question is,
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    aren't we thinking in a very staid
    and uncreative way
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    about Amazon's serious problems?
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    Haven't we dedicated too much time
    to finding a way
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    to remind people what's important to us?
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    That's what editors and writers do,
    create memory.
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    What I and a worldwide group
    are trying to do
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    using "The Black Label" magazine
    and the articles I write
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    is to create a memory,
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    so that what matters to me
    can concern others too.
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    That's what I aim at.
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    How can I make people
    uninterested in Amazon
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    care about it?
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    How can I make residents
    of Vila Madalena
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    care about the Amazon?
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    To make this happen,
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    what I do is write,
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    and look for people
    who can tell stories.
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    Here are some of them.
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    "The woman who arrived
    the following day"
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    is a Zoe Koplowitz's story.
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    We sent the journalist Sergio Vilela
    to cover the New York Marathon,
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    but we didn't want something
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    about the repeated victories
    of Ethiopians and Kenyans.
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    We'd wait for the last runner instead,
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    who turned out to be Zoe Koplowitz.
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    Besides the fact that Zoe
    won none of the marathons
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    she participated in,
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    she also succeeded in always being
    the last one
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    to get at the finish line.
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    She turned the word "last"
    into an issue of pride,
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    she was almost proud
    to be the last one to get there.
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    Amidst all this
    driving popular winning culture
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    her view was focused
    on avoiding the tedium of winning.
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    She simply reinvented
    the meaning of the word "lose."
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    She added charisma to it.
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    Sergio Vilela has been already waiting
    for 7 hours at the finish line,
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    when he sees a man in a turban,
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    looking like a centenarian,
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    but happy because he made it.
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    Vilela asked
    an Associated press photographer
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    near him if that was the last participant.
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    He answered no,
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    the last one would finish tomorrow.
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    And 29 hours later
    she crossed the finish line.
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    Zoe Koplowitz has been running
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    since she was saved
    by a vitamin C tablet.
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    She almost died
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    of multiple sclerosis complications
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    but saved only by taking
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    a vitamin C tablet.
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    She promised herself she'd do something
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    beyond her capability
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    and since then, with the help of crutches,
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    she attends every marathon in New York.
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    That's one of our stories.
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    The other one is about Messi,
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    the top scorer who fires us up
    and then goes to sleep.
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    What else is left to say
    about an overexposed person
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    who we think
    we already know everything about?
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    And how to make people read this story,
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    especially if they aren't soccer fans?
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    The obvious answer is
    by searching for small details.
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    Thus, Leonardo Faccio arranged
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    a 15-minute interview with Messi,
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    after 9 months of waiting.
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    15 minutes indeed
    after 9 months of waiting.
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    During the interview,
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    Leonardo found out in that interview
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    that Messi, when he is not playing ball
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    he likes to take a nap best.
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    And it's not a regular 30-minute nap,
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    but a longer, two, three-hour one.
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    If we do the math, it turns out
    that besides playing brilliantly,
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    he spends a great deal
    of the afternoon sleeping.
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    There must be a reason,
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    and I believe it's because nobody
    gets bored while sleeping.
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    This is a hard fact.
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    No one wakes up all of a sudden
    and says,
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    "What a boring dream!"
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    So, he feels great when he's playing ball
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    but whe he isn't, he doesn't know
    what to do and gets bored.
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    And this is humanity's big problem.
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    What to do not to get bored?
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    We know the answer now from Messi.
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    The only way for him not to get bored
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    since he was a little child
    and injected growth hormons,
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    was to rest and allow cells to regenerate.
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    And he kept that custom
    even as an adult,
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    and that's why after he entertains us
    he goes to sleep.
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    The next story is about the Inca Empire.
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    The only two soft drinks
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    that de-throned Coca Cola
    in their own country
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    were "Guarana" and "Inca Kola".
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    We have something in common, don't we?
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    It's the story of how a urine-colored
    and gum-flavored drink
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    defeated the arrogant black queen.
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    That was our point of view.
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    Instead of covering it
    as a business story,
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    we turned it into a taste-related story
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    to explain why "Inca Kola"
    came out as a favorite
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    only in Tahuantinsuyo,
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    and couldn't be exported.
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    The reason was a simple one.
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    Peruvian food flavors are extreme,
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    and very little convincing.
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    We tell all foreigners, or they believe
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    we only know "ceviche,"
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    but it's more than that.
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    A similar story was the ketchup enigma,
    covered by Malcolm Gladwell.
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    Malcolm studies reasons
    rather than people.
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    He wondered on the reasons
    why mustard changed over time,
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    and ketchup didn't.
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    He looked into the reasons
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    why people, driven by their taste,
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    never want to change their ketchup brand.
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    "The Russian who never returned
    from Machu Picchu"
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    is a story we read from a news agency
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    about a Russian tourist who had died
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    struck by lightning in Machu Picchu.
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    It was like a tale.
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    First of all, how many
    Russian tourists are there?
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    Second, how many people
    did die struck by lightning?
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    And third,
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    how many people really die in places
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    such as the Egyptian Pyramids
    or Machu Picchu?
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    Also, who dies on vacation?
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    But this man died at Machu Pichu.
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    It's an amazing story,
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    because the press tried to make us belive,
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    and the man's relatives as well,
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    that the man was carbonized.
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    When the man's remains were returned,
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    his family didn't want
    to open up the coffin,
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    because they believed he was all burnt up,
    and didn't want to see him,
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    when in fact, he died,
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    - and this was discovered later -
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    when lightning struck the ground
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    and the expansive wave
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    threw the man against the floor
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    causing him severe blow to the head.
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    That was the real cause of death.
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    This is a story about Joe Loya.
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    Robbing banks is a sexy bussiness,
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    especially when nobody gets hurt.
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    Joe Loya robbed almost one bank
    per week during one year.
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    Then he took on a new personality,
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    of a man with a bank account,
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    who pays taxes and writes books,
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    one of which is a self-help book.
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    We sent a writer to interview Joe Loya
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    on the Hollywood's bank robbery goofs
    and bloopers.
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    As a master bank robber,
    arrested once or twice,
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    who, after serving time,
    redeemed himself,
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    told us how to rob a bank
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    and what are the film industry's
    mistakes and virtues.
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    This is what we keep doing.
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    And to end, this is a story I've written,
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    and it's titled "Garcia Marquez
    goes to the dentist."
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    Since Garcia Marquez
    never gave interviews,
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    the only way to approach
    or get to know him
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    was to try to do it indirectly.
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    While looking for a way to meet him,
    what I found instead was his dentist.
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    The incredible part was
    that I called the dentist,
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    asked him if he could see me
    and he said yes.
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    I believe he made a mistake
    in receiving me,
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    because he divulged me things
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    protected by professional secrecy;
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    nonetheless, they all were
    great compliments to Garcia Marquez.
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    It's about how Garcia Marquez
    agrees to be
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    the dentist son's godfather
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    as they had been friends for 7 years.
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    This gesture reveals the greatness
    of a Nobel prize winner
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    who doesn't like interviews.
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    This story isn't actually an anecdote,
    or a prank story,
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    but the secret story of a smile.
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    A scientist once said
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    that already during the first 10 minutes
    of a first encounter,
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    we usually tell 3 or 4 lies.
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    I hope that during my 10-minute talk
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    I didn't tell any.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The greatness of small things | Julio Chang | TEDxAmazonia
Description:

Julio Villanueva Chang, is a Peruvian journalist who decided to create a sophisticated, intelligent and independent magazine "the Black Label", which grew to be admired by writers worldwide.

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Video Language:
Spanish
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
12:04

English subtitles

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