tv Euromaxx - Lifestyle Europe Deutsche Welle September 6, 2018 12:30am-1:01am CEST
12:30 am
the good old superhero remember is more towards smart station and legend frank recently dangerous time for w. me for my i have a dream to be going on until rinks magician. don't miss the story for john j. should johnson takes you along on a thrilling a bone chilling journey each week you can scan the new stories and looking. at each other you story on instagram. are the imax merrill and this is your m actual daily dose of european culture and lifestyle is what's coming up. treasure trove of british food prices
12:31 am
set out to save the italian custom making art. intriguing illusions and exhibition in munich focused on this really of deception. and good beats only follow just on d.j. dominic all back combines his two concerts. granma makes the best food that's a pretty widespread opinion all over the world i'm italian grannies or make the best pasta makes sense right a british log out living in italy was sad to see the tradition of pasta making dying out so she set out to film talented ladies whipping up their special creations in order to preserve the crafts for future generations of course along with flour water and oil as a healthy helping of love added into the mix. fatty . jack. but.
12:32 am
just say that you said. it. is ninety five years old she's from the island of sardinia and she's been making pasta for more than eighty years with body and soul. needing the past to do is part of her daily routine every single noodle is handmade . from the shape fingernail macaroni. the pasta grannies web page introduces italian grandmothers their traditional recipes local noodle shapes and personal stories from all around me. the intention
12:33 am
behind the project is to preserve the centuries old pasta tradition. the site was founded by british food writer vicky venice and she's been living in central italy only for the past twelve years i noticed a young women has got simply making pastor anymore is any of the older women. and i thought someone needs to make a record of that so that it's not just about learning about past that which is a universally loved food it's also. a granny the residents with grandmothers and everybody loves their own. today she's visiting a past a granny from a neighboring village vaguely a piano and turning the is eighty two vicki benison films and interviews heart while she makes past her. wonky. when did you start making this particular pastor. do you remember. if.
12:34 am
she did a woman making this pasta since i was about ten or the fact that you all know. my mother taught me and my sisters miracle a. mania rolls out the dough thinly down to two millimeters thick ness. then she cuts it into little squares. today she's making couple leti here in the market region this feels pastors especially popular on holidays. then you has nimble hands when it comes to shaping the past or. is it difficult not at all in fact it's easy for you to as folded and press the ends together and who firmly to do forty move there. it didn't take long to persuade you to take part in a project. i think it's great in this way others can learn our recipes and
12:35 am
the tradition won't die out the fact is that. vicky benison has already visited more than two hundred pastor granny and. she searches for them throughout italy but it's not that easy to find them. so i have a granny find and she could live here she lives in fire and we work together sourcing grannies and pastors we ask. you know the local man we find out about food festivals and ask the organizers it's a can also be friends of friends total strangers on trains you know we ask everybody if they have a granny. hardly any of the grannies can actually name precise measurements but years of experience have talked on how to gauge the right proportions. ok after
12:36 am
a man this is homemade pasta dough. and this is how it should look around solution as well as nice and even. to pass the grannies are on instagram as well. planned on you tube. picky benison channel has more than three hundred thousand followers. so i think it's important to celebrate all the women's experience. celebrate its and just have fun with it really because it's quite often women often a bit shy and stay in the background and it's nice to kind of push them into the center in. she hopes her project will inspire other people to visit grandmothers in the countries they live in and preserve their recipes and charms for generations to come. wonderful now we serve up today's portion of european news in our express were out
12:37 am
and about in germany and also visit britain twice so let's start our journey and love to. work. on tuesday british rocker eric clapton was honored with a stone on the royal albert hall as new walk of fame in london. the stones honor people and institutions who have played a vital role in the concert halls history since it opened in one thousand nine hundred eighty one. the first stone was dedicated to queen victoria who laid the foundation stone for the albert hall in one thousand sixty seven the project is part of the albert hall is one hundred fiftieth anniversary which is to be celebrated once restoration work is completed in two thousand and twenty one. prince harry and duchess meghan presented the well child awards and choose then london. the annual awards go to seriously ill and disabled children who have
12:38 am
refused to let their conditions get to them. the prince a service patron of the welsh other ward since two thousand and seven this is the first year it's been accompanied by his new wife maggie. a covered wagons have set out from book in the german state of brandenburg to one of russia's oldest cities the leaking of code on the weddings are drawn by german clydesdale horses along the headache which was once one of the key trade routes on the european continent the titans on tour commemorating the shared history of north eastern europe and serving as a gesture of friendship between its peoples. the saying goes it's all in the eye of the beholder. what kind of tricks i play on a mind how can visuals confuse the brain those are questions posed at an exhibition
12:39 am
at munich schools tell a gallery that optical illusions turn into works of art with examples ranging from classical antiquity to present day installations using virtual reality what you see isn't always what you get and what you get is not necessarily what you see see for yourself. seeing isn't always believing this image isn't in three d. at all it's an optical illusion. this hallway looks hundreds of meters long but looks can be deceiving in fact it grows so crime to after just a few steps that it's impossible to walk through. the obstacle illusion that's where it all begins to that's kind of the brain interprets the information or eyes gather the same goes for religion and we visualize something we can't see for be seeing is believing this minute it's income seen installed at first glance this reproduction of a mural from a roman monastery appears to depict
12:40 am
a landscape but look at it from an angle and you can see its true motif some francis of color hands folded in prayer. the exhibition at munich's quince talent is called thrill of deception it showcases astonishing pieces dating from ancient times through to the present this head of lettuce is a soup tureen. deed of and explains that the painters had a keen understanding of how depth perception works when they developed one point perspective touring the renascence he considers this side an absolute masterpiece. office have always enjoyed the thrill of deception befuddling the viewer speaks to their ingenuity and craftsmanship while viewers delight at having their sight fooled but not their minds it's all about the right perspective. produces illusions that we love nonetheless is exposing the illusion fun to hear oh
12:41 am
yes because that's all part of it's the if you don't understand that it's only painted that the sense of the thing is lost in those our souls in the illusion is what makes it fun we loosed inch by ourselves. after video installations of the newest type of optical illusion is very. chill reality laurie anderson chalk room lets you delve into an artwork of chalk and lessons you can explore the world created and even fly that's produces a nightly world of wonderful possibility. that's off this week that's what's amazing about virtual reality you become an active part of the work it's a truly new experience. and so each era finds a new way to astounded saudia the exhibit thrill of deception is truly
12:42 am
a kaleidoscope of illusions. now birdsong on the dance floor sounds like it wouldn't excite club goers but dominic oberg from germany has proven otherwise he lives a double life by day he's an ornithologist and expert on birds and by night he's a d.j. and music producer quite result he's found a way to combine his two passions adding nature sounds into his music mixes for him it's not just about raising good beats. a lot of people people holding trees like that is a fifteen year old tradition. his mission environmental protection his method music it's five am and dominic oil is at his turntables. five pm he's birdwatching dominic is a d.j. and an ecologist and his techno tracks with nature sounds aren't just for dancing.
12:43 am
and i guess every artist is also a sort of teacher. someone who shows people new worlds new feelings new sounds like. you're a natural surroundings he finds inner peace a stark contrast to his nights in noisy clubs this. year than making music and composing requires a lot of introversion. into over to. my mouth really have to dig deep and make something from your core i'm prepared for with my hong. kong. then suddenly it's friday no need to be super extraverted an extra extra in the song. on mondays is switching back and forth is the big challenge with the current stop by. audiences appreciate what he does dominic very has released five albums his facebook profile has three hundred seventy thousand fans and he performs
12:44 am
internationally. his music is intended to expand people's awareness of nature for two main reasons. nature for me is the simplest healthiest and cheapest key to happiness on be running out of time we really need to act now and i've met a lot of people who didn't know these things. for you a lot of business i finish this of sheesh but his fans are listening to. quite a bit it's cool seeing people walk around with these trees it's really unique and it really makes you feel like you're in nature you just want to be free and listen to his music. the sounds of dominic oil baron a d.j. on an ecological mission. now we're heading to russia st petersburg was built around three hundred years ago by
12:45 am
a certain end. broke old surprise surprise peta the great this russian city is known for its eighteenth and nineteenth century ornate facades which grace the front of many buildings and apartment complexes and for today's euro max the luck segment we go behind the facade to see a fantastic place owned by a couple who added the personal touch to the historic interior design. it was an offense key prospect is right in the historical center of st petersburg in the admin tasty district a stone's throw from famous sites such as st isaac's could be drug and the church of our savior and spilled blood on the street number thirty one is a typical st petersburg tenement block from the nineteenth century its neo renaissance architecture was inspired by french and spanish apartment buildings designer jamie kind of as lives on the third floor looking please come in.
12:46 am
and they're all hallway connects all four rooms of the apartment which has one hundred fifty six square metres of floor space the building has protected status. the living room is directly connected to the bedroom. across the hall is her daughter's room. while he this is the apartment i live in my home my family it doesn't feel like a museum here we love being surrounded by all these elements that have been registered to heritage conservation and. the crown yet they are a part of our every day life because the new mini boot. the stucco work on the three and a half metre high ceilings is part of that architectural heritage historical thought a grass refused to restore the rooms including these plaster small and. the fireplace in the bedroom is also an original it's not just for decoration in the
12:47 am
winter the owners use it to heat the apartment for. runs a design company living in a listed building is a joy. imagine coming across a space and finding something unusual there something old an inheritance of sorts that's what happened in my apartment so of course it's an inspiration and used. the bathrooms decoration echoes the historical stucco elements. but the fixtures here. in the kitchen. this original brick wall has been given a special finish. have combined elements in their home with attention to detail a love for patterns and for the history of this place are manifest throughout the apartment. on display in the living room.
12:48 am
of this chair which was already in the apartment. a fragment of the old wall has remained here to a time when newspapers were used as a cheap alternative to. a communal apartment such as this one several families would share the kitchen and bathroom as is still the case with almost. half the structures in the. architect. of the apartment and haven't done any large scale reconstruction. working with. everything. just time. elements selected to underscore the historical feeling of. these chinese cabinets.
12:49 am
is an ongoing project. she painted some of the fabrics in the apartment herself before demand for interior design in the one nine hundred ninety s. . this apartment is not the product of a design assignment that i worked on for someone else that would have obliged us to stick to a certain song this is simply the apartment that reflects me personally me and my family. my you seem you will. design and architecture for. a labor of love and their home is the perfect place for them to find new inspiration. well if you enjoy that report you can find plenty more like
12:50 am
it on our youtube page of a look at what we've got in store for us at scrivens. interior design at its best check out our you tube channel detail interior design stunning ideas spectacular buildings and d.i.y. tutorials on home to correction we'll take you inside the most beautiful european homes show you the latest in furniture fabrics and accessories subscribed and don't miss out. on you tube. now we're off to the german north sea coast to experience a fascinating phenomenon a warden's see every day the tide turns twice and when it recedes at least behind large stretches of tidal flats and wetlands for a few hours we traveled up to the north to the german city of cooks. that many
12:51 am
tourists gathered to witness this natural process and to explore the marine wildlife up close kilometers of land opened up for hikes when the tide is low and every year in the summertime some cuddly looking creatures assembled there to give birth to their young. a group of intrepid hikers trudge fourteen kilometers across a mix of sand clay and seaweed. to widen sea inundated twice a day by tides and every time it comes up looking different tourguide carsten punk takes his guests through the title creeks in the mud flats. welcome to the sea floor that's what we are in though. it's not at all common place to do this one sea is only found on this scale in germany partly in the netherlands and partly in denmark. mussels and worms filter toxins out of the sea bed and water hikers need a guide who knows the time it's because the tour can be dangerous if you only and
12:52 am
to me i find my way by following the title creeks markers are out there and what they call the traffic separations on which was a big ships are on the way to hungary as harbor and back outs and i have my land marks but here i have mainly the title creeks and we keep the sat nav system on when fog rolls in sometimes we only have one or two minutes to get the group together and i don't want to waste time starting the saturn line. and if that's not working we go by the compass complex cause that. most of the participants have only hiked in the mountains before walking on the seabed is a whole new experience for them when you see the dust also when i see had a water comes and goes it's just incredible it fascinates me simple as that when i realize that nobody be standing under two meters of water here i have no words for it and now we're running around here but you absolutely have to have done this and
12:53 am
seen it to have respect for it. respect to. know the group passed away through a title creek cost and make sure the water doesn't reach over there nice if it did there'd be a risk of there being swept away by the current. high and low tides that occur twice a day are what created the wotton sea. in two thousand and nine it was made a unesco world heritage site along with its sandbanks one of them is this tourist destination. good host the seal colony. in the back woods it's easy to see the ok one two three i counted sixty two i think . it's nice at midday with the sun beating down from this distance we won't disturb the they're lying all along their students become busy reading the seals
12:54 am
bear their young lemme see that exposed by the low tide which is what the sand banks are by the time the next tide comes in the newborns will have to swim beside their mothers millions of years ago what is now the widened sea was a vast forest it's traces can still be found in the seabed in the form of amber which is fossilized tree resin it takes a sharp and practiced tie to find it. so here's one little bit darker in the ground that's nice and clear over there shouldn't. dead low tide is it eight thirty pm they've got to start heading back by then was in super not doing great timing now we can comfortably walk back to the mainland we won't have any trouble with the creeks be a lot shallower but it's sixty two seals in the sun bank and it'll be a wonderful evening stroll heading back now we can relax and enjoy it. it was.
12:55 am
walking on seed that the tide will reclaim in just a few hours is a special experience. or just before the show comes to an end i'd like to remind you to take part in our competition we're giving away one euro max wrist watch to take part just send us your favorite holiday photo you can upload the picture on our website d.w. dot com slash lifestyle here are a few examples of vacation snaps we've been sent so far. for instance skiing in south korea swimming in the full. out of hours on your bike. oh posing on a bridge in france and even going to guatemala. but don't worry if you haven't sent anything yet there's still time til the end of the week that's all for today about for now.
12:56 am
next time i'm sure no matter. monkey bikes are mini motorbikes the look too small for the people riding them get their might in versatile. originally designed for children to ride at a japanese theme park monkey bikes quickly found fans among adults in germany to big boys on small wheels next time on your own next.
12:57 am
12:58 am
thirty minutes d.w. . for sarah willis. is a passion. to. join her on her journey as musical discovery. quest yes despite yes i'm here spending the whole day with is what it is this is from the prosecutor the other can say. oh nothing here i don't know how anyone gets any work done. on a dog. his creations. just brand mistake a bit come like a fish icon of the fish. but what do we really know about the man behind the torch
12:59 am
it's what motivates him how does he think and feel private moments in the life of a great fashion designer. some special. effects start september not w. i. am sixteen and i am crying and. young people held against their parents' generation. it was a constant density full of stupidity and kisha. they demanded. that i home to some of. my maelstrom of my let's. vietnam war playing that role my generation watch the vietnam war every day. our documentary takes a look a lot of times how do those who were here. for the first time had
1:00 am
a feeling of being part of something. means of those events today. the syrians the civil rights. peace movement the women's movement all planned during this period. in sixty eight. british prosecutors have charged two russian man with a nerve agent attack on former russian spy said gates crip pal and his daughter earlier this year the british government believes they are members of russia's military intelligence agency and that their operation was almost certainly approved by the kremlin voice. a growing international chorus is warning the syrian and
63 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on