tv Euromaxx - Lifestyle Europe Deutsche Welle February 22, 2018 1:30am-2:01am CET
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i talk to really connect with. them at work. and i discuss what you can do to improve your head. stay tuned and let's all try to stay in good shape. w. . hi everyone and welcome to the show today when we had one of denmark's most extraordinary chefs out and these topics are no menu as well. cosmos a dutch retrospective shows the work of german paint on the overall. living space this was an architect designed a pretty picture of the home for himself and his family. on music makes annual
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sawmill of seven top musicians combines classical music with pop. he's a real rabble at the still we're talking about mr kahn stuff even though the danish have made a name for himself on the scene he prefers to cook in contains company cover terry as are not known for their fine food but cost side wants to prove that you don't need much money or time for the licious and healthy dishes he also likes to cook in unusual places for example here. this is middle class types favorite way to cook outdoors over an open fire. today he's using fresh mussels from the danish baltic sea then he adds some fennel apples and garlic. to make a cost simple and authentic and it's made him famous throughout. let's.
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agree to speak for itself i learned a lot on the season i'm watch and she's right now and then try to use that because when it's in season it's both cheap and easy to get and it's. to teach them to take a picture in it it's just perfect. looks rugged coastal landscape is a source of inspiration for me. as a child he loved to spend his free time by the ocean he still comes to most every day. going. to freeze some. peace and quiet you have pretty strong a lot of during the week but if i can just have more trip or intro to nature cooking or. just walking in there were three. yeah some peace in mind my my here. for years he worked for copenhagen.
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the world famous no restaurant. decided to switch to places where people can enjoy his food company cafeterias. in twenty twelve he took over the kitchen of the small office back then it served up a lot of meat and gravy. today the menu reflects his signature style. which changed everything. some of the first things i did was just. a lot of things out there was a lot of. prepared food. convenience. we want to do everything from to picking the. cost that says that healthy cafeteria food needn't be expensive for him the biggest challenge was changing the employees' eating habits many were very skeptical at the stance it took him four months to win them over when your child people why you're doing things and explaining it's
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a lot easier for people to understand why you're doing it and so i was standing out here every lunch just talking to people telling them this is this this we're doing it this way because they meet with these breaks the ball really well. and when the overheated today lines form at the buffet on the dot of twelve. this cafeteria has gone from being one of denmark's was to be one of its best well i love our food it's a very healthy and we just get to the things that we don't know. i have been here for. fifteen years i started with. a girl called opening here with fish believe it or strike a little paste and it was just put on chain and it was a big progress. is happy that his concept has been so well received he's currently helping seniors home at the hospital with their new concepts while maintaining his
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reputation as one of denmark's top chefs he wins awards and also publishes cookbooks his most recent evergreen provides recipes for terri. knows how great pictures can entice people to eat good food so he posts a new dish each day on instagram. he also gives insights into his private life. is a father of full who spends as much time with his children as possible. balancing family life with his profession as a top chef was a huge challenge. eventually he gave up working in michelin starred restaurants to be able to sit down to dinner with his own family in the evenings. i need some new challenges. all the time but i think most important it was a good thing for us as a family. i'm very happy that mikel decided to do this he wanted to have
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a big family and that's not so easy again. in the with lots of refreshing ideas both personal and professional. her wardrobe is legendary queen elizabeth's outfits are always color coordinated her family has always made her dresses well that's how we know her so it seems as of the queen loves fashion and that she enjoyed visiting london fashion week recently on the express. london fashion week was honored with a visit from her majesty queen elizabeth the second she joined the winter or the us editor in chief of vogue for richard quinn's fashion show the afterwards she
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presented the designer with the queen elizabeth the second award for british design the queen's first ever visit to london fashion week. art objects from the private collection of american billionaires david and peggy rockefeller are now on display at christie's auction house in london among them our works by picasso. what's really important to remember there is that they actually lived but really different with these things they used. the paintings were hundreds of the rooms. great gallery they want pictures on. which. the exhibits are to go on an option later this year christie's anticipates record proceeds of more than half a billion euros. on tuesday spanish actor happy about them arrived at the berlin international film festival in a property. he went on to present the first images from
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a documentary produced titled sanctuary about to greenpeace research expedition the academy award winner spent three weeks in antarctica with two german marine researchers. out of the room gori of spain directed the film it was something that i will never forget it's like i these thought came to my mind i guess in the pretty story times these would be what the world around a sister were witnessing the silence and the animals speaking. as a greenpeace supporter bought them advocates the establishment of the world's biggest ocean sanctuary in antarctica is where build sea. firms are not only in the spotlight at the berlin film festival but also in our draw of the week we want to know from you what kind of movie you like to watch act some bollywood or maybe something else you'll find a selection on a website sues one and when you do your name will be entered automatically into our
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prize drawing for this exclusive your max watch so good luck maybe your favorite movie stars actor brad pitt besides several awards the hollywood star collects art and also owns a painting by german painter knew how he is one of europe's most successful contemporary artists his words fascinated with the realism of the moment at an exhibition in the novel ends where we talks to the normally media shy artiste. celebrated german painter neil howell is in the netherlands the museum different that's about an hour's drive from the dutch german border is holding a major retrospective of this rather enigmatic artiste. the figure is haunting his canvases give the impression of originating in a mad dream. them in encountering them again
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it's as if i were attending a family reunion. it's a family reunion with figures created at his lights studio this is where he paints often alone with only his wife rose annoy as his most trusted advisor. the contestant but you could give her pearl earrings for example that would go well with us round weighing spots like see. if he's a success in germany he's a superstar in the united states where his paintings fetch enormous sums often before he's even painted them shiny or how generally paints without any kind of plan simply following his intuition the results are images that are mysterious and apocalyptic. doesn't the trance the finest moments are when an image comes upon me and then through me. it's driven to become a reality so it is at zero the table. sixty five
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paintings created over the past twenty five years are on show and swallow any attempt at deciphering banned are doomed to failure every viewer has his or her own perspective on the fantasy narratives of me all. these are visions. and they include dreams and nightmares. good and evil. they include fortune and misfortune life and death it's all that. death is a theme that has long followed the artist his young parents were killed in a. train accident when he was just four weeks old he deals with the trauma in his compositions as here in the painting father. it's important to him to maintain a balance between fear and confidence and good and evil. ambivalence
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is the magic word everything has to be included the angel and the devil otherwise it's good for nothing so the propaganda which. an enigmatic comic figure he raises questions but gives no answers. as we all know necessity is the mother of invention and this also applies to the following story the plot of which this architect was if you wanted to build his house was actually too small for what he had in mind so he had to be creative the footprint had to be tiny and yet offer enough room for the family the design that he came up with so i knew as well that he had problems getting a building permit but at the end of the day everything worked out he has already won several prizes with this let's take a closer look in today's episode of our series.
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like a giant crystal this house reaches into the sky fifty eight windows make up the outer wall. swiss architect. built his family home on the outskirts of pyrrhic on the slopes of a form of the new. welcome to the troubador in zurich. germany for great as he was designing his house drew inspiration from the surroundings of the. property used to be a vineyard there is still loads of great vines behind the house for instance the windows are attached to the supporting structure like grapes to assist. the platforms out of the main middle wall just like the trunk of
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a vine. there was no space for one continuous stairwell and the rooms are not arranged into typical floors instead they are joined by individual staircases and platforms. to get a building permit you have to be creative when plotting the floor plan. the city. was staying within the property line with just two hundred ninety one square metres the property is small to begin with subtract the border limit clarence and you're left with five times nine metres. picture designing a house just five steps wide and nine steps long it's impossible. in the end he managed to create roughly one hundred thirty square metres of living space inside it's back to basics walls and ceilings are made of fair faced concrete wall
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furniture at splashes of color the glass facade makes the rooms appear larger and the concrete core provide structure. in my experience when you have a lot of us it's important to have a strong back to provide a sense of security if you have glass on both sides it's like you're lost in a sort of limbo here you have a backyard and then you have a fantastic view this lens the room a feeling of peace and car. each pack for office morrison's two children little havens for retreat none of the living spaces is larger than fifty square meters every centimeter is put to good use. that with a building concept like this its greatest strength is also its greatest weakness
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that means the way the concrete has been pulled from the way it has set and is carrying the structure can no longer be altered you can't take anything out anymore if you did the whole house would collapse. architectural office three one multiple awards for this design it took construction period of two and a half years to reach. history home. in this time so everything is radically and fundamentally reduce to the back concrete structure that's what i like the most all those other things you do with the house i'm not necessary here. you can read your self of all of that really doesn't take much in please. there are no stones to be thrown in this glass house with his great friend design. has not only created a unique home for his family he's also placed it on
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a property that was once considered impossible to build a. cheerier design at its best check out our you tube channel d.w. interior design stunning design ideas spectacular buildings and d.i.y. tutorials on home decoration we'll take you inside the most beautiful european homes show you the latest in furniture fabrics next sensory subscribe and don't miss out see you on you tube. we continue with some extraordinary music but the award winning all song is a group of seven musicians and they mix classical music with jest jewish folk latin and pop not only the music is an interesting mix but the band members are just as varied they have from germany and austria some of them even playful for the want to
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destroy us now they have released their debut album and was soon hit the road we met up with a lively bunch. between vienna and today stefan concert is waiting for christopher talks to iran along with five other world class musicians they founded philharmonic's. we don't have a private. supporter large enough to be eligible for our own route. was born in vienna and has been playing for the renowned berlin philharmonic since twenty ten. years of tops and pop not only music it's an interesting mix but the band members are just as varied they have from germany and austria some of them even play for orchestras now they have released their debut album and was soon hit the road we met up with a lively bunch. flies between vienna and billion today
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cellist stefan cons is waiting for christopher touch that to ride along with five other world class musicians they founded philharmonic's. we don't have a private jet yet but we support airlines enough to be eligible for our own route to strike at the fair because. stephan khan's was born in vienna and has been playing china for the renowned pullin for la monica since twenty ten. because of touch that is the piano satirist and lives in vienna. seven men seven instruments zero protocol they play the music they like the way they like it this is no ordinary orchestra repertoire.
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is a project that's close to their hearts. it's like a breath of fresh air from all the stuffy classical music business i've discussed. between. they collaborate much more freely than any typical ensemble would. sooner or later every classical musician reaches a point where they don't only want to reproduce what has already been written but great something of their own something. from them or let's combine all kinds of genres whether it's pop jazz or honky reinfect music each musician contributes his own style and favorite songs. some of them have known each other from childhood days.
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ok let's grab a bite to eat. even in bed then that could mean a puppy to us today. that's the small schnitzel i thank you sound check the sound check is always important but what about the music. that when you take the subway to vienna in the evening you will be three people on the way to a play an opera or a concert. you're right it's different in berlin though in terms of numbers i think the city has the same to offer you've got seven major orchestras in three years but i think classical music has a different cultural significance here yes of the. cinematic seemed to bring vienna and berlin together in perfect harmony. day for de stefano to prove it. now we're taking a very special train for
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a ride to the mountains let's head over to the hot small it's the highest mountain range in the middle of germany at more than one thousand one hundred forty need us the block is its highest peak to get up there we take a narrow railway these special trains are some of the last few steam locomotives were white which is still in service they are a great attraction for tourists for this experience some have to sit well have to sweat so all of our mistake to pay. this train is hard to miss the broken railway in the hearts mountains when you see thick plumes of smoke rising you can be sure it's on its way for the past one hundred years it has snaked through the same fantastic landscape every day and scaled the highest peak in northern germany the broken. inside the engine room it's
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hot and its fuel with coal that needs to be shoveled into the one thousand five hundred degree furnace it's no easy job but me have gessner loves his work he's been working as a stoker for the narrow gauge railway since last august. september are you i heard on the radio that they were looking for stokers so i decided to apply and was lucky enough to get picked up for. the train might be from the nine hundred fifty s. but it runs on a modern timetable and several times a day it climbs up the broken mountain to the peak at an altitude of around eleven hundred meters in the winter the peak is often covered in snow. this makes it a special treat for passengers even if they are sometimes greeted by a snow storm at the top they just have to make sure to bundle up.
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stop the krooman regularly carry out inspections whatever the weather. the worst part is the wind and when the snow freezes it feels like needles pricking your face and when you get off the train you almost get blown over. fifteen minutes later the train trundles back towards the valley the next stop is bendigo to order . lives. a colorful town in the hearts foothills has plenty of curiosities to see might the crooked house that tilts even further than the leaning tower of pisa although. that's not even three metres wide. the old child hold is also worth a visit originally established as a sheer house it was the town's venue for dances performances and celebrations also
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spend some winters here invented. the charming abbey weighs in hidden courtyards are a joy to explore talks between countless tiny stores you'll find the glass bearing workshop where guessing cuts created designs into the glass she says there's one important thing to remember with glass. too much pressure break the glass. but it'll keep at it long enough you get the hang of it this year is our twenty fifth anniversary so i've had plenty of time to practice. the craft of manufacturing intricate glass objects is a longstanding tradition here but the city center is not all there is to see the old castle rising above the hills is another must see in the nineteenth century it was home to cow. all told all of baghdad today it's been turned into
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a museum. bob me here guess not has no time for back now he's already on his way back up the broken into the snow. we're running out of time now until next time thanks for watching tomorrow by. timeline you know max. is an institution in germany the varian puppet theater has been entertaining children and adults for seventy years with imaginative characters and lots of skill to this day the family run business cards all of its wooden marionettes by hand the world on a string next time on your own max.
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list of some serious olympic athletes has just about everything. and plenty of it. people discuss her. influence to an aging story. implode plenty of them in fifteen minutes. how to cover more than just one reality. where i come from we have a transatlantic way of looking at things that's because my father is from germany my mother is from the united states of america and so i realized fairly early that it makes sense to explain different realities. and now here at the heart of the
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european union in brussels we have twenty eight different realities and so i think people are really looking for any journalist they can trust for them to make sense of those. items myself and i work at the w. . and y. . and. eventually of canada. the trip by airplane seventeen thousand kilometers in six weeks breathtaking landscapes live frank it looks. touch. through capital starting february twenty seventh. some people don't care about me. because they don't see light beauty. some
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u.n. secretary general antonio go terrorists has called for an immediate suspension of our war activities in the rebel held damascus suburb of eastern ghouta he said four hundred thousand people are living hell on earth the briton base syrian observatory for human rights says at least three hundred ten people have been killed there since sunday. billy graham the man described as the most widely heard christian evangelist in history has died aged ninety nine.
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