Skip to main content

tv   Euromaxx  Deutsche Welle  November 3, 2019 6:30pm-7:01pm CET

6:30 pm
many. tried to 60 minutes on d w. only it's interesting the famous naturalist and explorer. to celebrate clicks on the from the books from 250 a. morning on the floor of the discovery. expedition board on. the 1st. our report ahead with a commanding has been out of work oh you know to the max again the find out why he
6:31 pm
traveled back in time to the middle ages later in the show and with that it's a warm welcome to another edition of your old max let's see what else we have lined up for you today. a new book by german photographer must she of all those people of all ages and. find out how a personal train of churches fall into the school field for tony. our 1st report takes us to southern italy that can be eaten simply like nuts but you can also use them and lots of different recipes and also for baking but do you know how does that shows grow and where they come from you can find out in the small italian town of north east in sicily every year on 2 weekends the local stage a big festival to celebrate the harvest which made the town so famous. to
6:32 pm
start shows our cult in bronte every autumn thousands of fans converged on the sicilian town for the start of festival. here they cost $20.00 euros a kilo that's cheaper than elsewhere and many considered if you stuck it if it wanted to be the best in the world. cloudy luca is one of the region's biggest the structure produces he uses them to make delicious pesto cream and candy. the braun to the starter is characterized by its particularly intense shade of green. for both you know. they have a resinous and oily aroma. and they're around taste combines well with many other ingredients. dante lies at an altitude of around $800.00 metres at the foot of mount etna europe's largest active volcano. carts
6:33 pm
like these ones carry the harvest down from the mountain no they just for show. here you can sample the delicacies many are pretty is local. like this to start show brutal a classic. there are both sweet and savory products for starters conflated bread and cheese all sicilian salami. board. no only. for pancakes and ice cream. but. i can taste service now so all you know is we me it's not really sweet but it's between me and it's fresh so you really want to enjoy everything with the statue here. this does use a rich native in the middle east iran is still the biggest producer of world wine along with the u.s. but on to contributes less than one percent of the global harvest the volcanic soil
6:34 pm
here is rich in minerals that give the structures they special taste. they can only be harvested once every 2 years. now do you look at groceries to start chosen fields that were once abandoned. what special here on earth are the differences in temperature but it's very hot during the day and cold at night and we have a lot of snow in winter. frost kills pests so we don't need to use pesticides. back in there on tape during the festival the pepper and also restaurant serves a special menu it begins with biscuits and. then there's pits with the structure is similar enough finishing with this step up to full for dessert.
6:35 pm
but it's the past to stand outside that draws the crowds the fresh pastor made from durham wheat and peace touch a flower is produced around the clock. yes same but if you do each time there are more and more people always breaking the previous record time we harvested this year in the pistachios a fresh people know this so they come here to shop to stop. this can also be found in bronte it's a sweep of that state in a bronze pumps on charcoal. and of course it's served with stature cream and lots of chopped to start chose. best enjoyed with friends all the whole family . british farmer tom camp is used to carrying around heavy things like sex of grain
6:36 pm
or spare parts for his machinery but that was not enough physical exercise for him camp is a fitness factor who likes to work out even after a long day's work it didn't take long and the new business idea was born camp set up a spot studio on his parents' farm and it seems a lot of people enjoy working out in the fresh country people from nearby long flock here relaxing holiday this certainly isn't. on this farm everyone works hard. it might be healthy but they all keep going until they drop. have very. little bit now because. the keep it farm is the brainchild of 26 year old fitness coach and farmer tom camp
6:37 pm
. and it's just fun to be out here training within your team and. been stuck in and the gym when you ride. his training grounds or the fields of his parents' farm north of london. tom kemp was born and raised here. he's always trained outdoors with whatever you happen to find on the farm. so i used to con a plan walkouts news in. whatever i could fly not whether it's a white this. machine or a or since as. i used to get a little coutts and i hate assessable for you know here every day people. for example all the bodies muscles are needed to lift a 300 kilo tractor tire. carrying
6:38 pm
a sack of grain with arms outstretched is also a good way to keep it. tom camp incorporated exercises like these into a full body workout in 2016 he founded his open air farm fitness studio a successful business idea and international fitness magazine has named one of the world's best. most of his clients come from london alia dervish works for a bank she books an individual to. session here at least once a week this is a welcome change to her air conditioned office and business look i'm happy. yeah i'm much pal i don't know in so they say you know i work in or i'm out on the floor and being comfortable i want to be out some companies are not you know i get bruised i'll get you know hives from the house. i really don't want to go you can exercise here at any time of the year come rain or shine and really give it your
6:39 pm
all. so here in the background we've got a great example of kind of functional training and it's all over all the sledge you're working your grip strength or strength and your strength as well it's going to return on the sled and it's a fun way to train as well because you're out. several times a year tom camp holds competitions this time a total of $75.00 men and women are facing off in groups the contest combines muscle and insurance training. it's the 1st time on the farm for dan thomas and mr li botha from london. i have thought of putting them recently just because it's not new but different so it's kind of cross fit and strong and fitness but i find so it's not just to do something different i'm going to people it's not possible colas and doing things that we don't usually do and across the thames that are pretty good. for 6 hours straight the teams work out using bales of hay and other heavy objects from the farm.
6:40 pm
bill goes keep it going it's going. to working out of the open air is less predictable than in the gym. you want to know what you did things that you sort of watched on this. kind of sense of achievement of the benefits. you are all carrot have you way working out with your team members as well as you know. your mental health. and there are plenty of things on a farm to give you that uplifting feeling. we often take a critical look in the mirror in the morning after all vanity doesn't diminish as we grow older but it is something we all have to come to terms with as the years go
6:41 pm
by but in a base photographer told must feel like decided to document people of all ages in his book called 100 years of life it shows how over they use life beliefs it mocks on all facial expressions. wide eyed and vulnerable children are open to what life will offer them. 30 or 40 years later they become individual characters with distinctive faces. another 30 or 40 years and life has left its mark. 53 year old photographer thomas usually works for ad agencies companies and magazines. but his photo album 100 years of life is a project all his own. is going to do. what i'd like to show with this book is actually the beauty of every human and at every age. if we look closely
6:42 pm
we can already see wisdom in young people and the curiosity that lives on in the elderly. but ultimately what i see in their eyes is the magic with me and in my view. the photos show men and women from different cultures age between one and 100 . the photographer son. at the age of 8. at the book released in berlin he was 3 years older he looks back. i changed a lot on the outside. i've grown older i'm taller my hair is cut shorter. and i've changed quite a bit on the inside to. become more grown up and more serious. and. a photo of 24 year old. the snapshot is thought provoking for her. to make you realize how many
6:43 pm
differences there and how you change through the. and that's in your early to mid twenty's you still really young and just starting out even if sometimes if you're much older and more grown up in his berlin studio. sets up his portraits against a black background. this subject is a veterinarian born 86 years ago in india. except his age with grace and poise. so i've lived my life by the are your vet approach. my practice of yoga and meditation. and i grew old with it. i think the best way to live is naturally. you shouldn't show off but rather keep your feet on the ground.
6:44 pm
thomas has got to know a lot of the people quite well. he found special value in the experiences of the older people. as a god as it is not even 100 to leave i found the years between 80 and 100 especially exciting because i didn't know very many people of that age and i've seen how much is possible in terms of changes in life experience or even a new beginning. an 84 year old started taking tennis lessons and i met a very lively 99 year old. i was surprised and happy to see how much joy and lust for life this still possible at that age. back to the book release. people of every age of calm. thomas secure iraq study of human change touches upon a theme that affects us all. in this i think i think it's inspiring because you can see yourself in context you see what's yet to come what really moved me about these photos was not so much how faces and appearances are
6:45 pm
marked by age i think that they gaze is. you think of the evil side the common or the positive sides tend to come to the fore when you're older. you focus more on the good side of life. and not only what was good but what's still good. is the book captures the beauty strength and vulnerability of every stage in life let anything the lymph in adult or all life itself is change and when we look back we see what we've already experienced and sense what lies ahead alternately we have no choice so acceptance of change is a basic law of living a happy life. from child to teenager from adult to senior sweeping optical changes occur during a lifetime. but on the inside everyone develops in their own way.
6:46 pm
a city tour on all fours. gappy hard even. the new hobby cadillac. harvey grumbling funny can. leaseholder together their pulse squad berlin series with berlin or bite. on facebook dot com slash d.w. gen x. . back in the middle ages the huge costs were both without any of the advantages of modern machinery so how did people actually build these mighty fortress where did the materials come from what tools did they use your max report ahead like the mailing wanted to find out he visits record breaking locations around the continent serious europe to the max and this time he took
6:47 pm
a trip back in time when he had that's to a very high usual birding site in france. certainly never thought i'd end up in the query for europe to the max. but here dozens of craftsmen and workers of building a cost of the middle ages. get along is now europe's biggest medieval castle building project. it's located about 200 kilometers south of paris near the village of teenie in the burgundy your region the idea is to reproduce a slice of life in the 13th century. a casa never actually existed here before this is a modern day medieval started building on
6:48 pm
a 70000 square meters site. the plan took shape in the mid 1990 s. historians and medieval enthusiasts came together to find out what building a car in the middle ages involved. today some 40 craftsmen are employed here not only in montana has directed the project since the start in 1997. don't think it's . a bit like an orchestra with many different instruments of every craftsman is important everyone is needed every day to build this concert today as you walk by commemorating for 2 more and anyone can lend a hand every year 600 volunteers come along to help out and today i'm one of them i can't show up dressed like this of course. that's better now i'm ready for my 1st assignment and the quarry. you can just hammer away at any of the rocks here. you have to split them carefully it
6:49 pm
is presenting work. consulates were built near a quarry so the heavy stones could be transported as short a distance as possible. as a stonemason it's my job to get the chunks of rock in shape. gives me instructions . or force now we can mark the stone. it's done i mean. i mark every staying with my own symbols on what my mason is monk is proof of my work in the middle ages we pay for every single stone and appear. i mark my stone with a w. of course. all the materials and tools are produced some site. conferences. boskone
6:50 pm
weavers a workshop for making pigments. and smitty. some of $300000.00 people visit they get alongside annually their entry fees finance the project. i've got to get back to work the stones have to be hoisted up on to the tower and i have to get into the truck we'll. get along team has a revive many long forgotten low tech solutions the work benefits both science and the craftsman. but i came a building here just by chance i was a graphic artist in paris for 20 years after watching a film about the project i said to myself that's what i have to do and here i am helping to finish the castle for fear of what i'm doing here for eternity so i must go up when it's on to. an end to the construction work is nowhere in sight.
6:51 pm
for the workers and get along the journey is its own reward my final task is to work on the roof of the chapel tower i don't know why anyone would choose not to use modern technology but it really impressed by the people of good will with their passion and enthusiasm for this project. and you can catch up with all of hendrix adventures and lots more your max reports on our you tube channel now art is not only always there just to be looked at from a distance in a museum and you can touch it and sometimes you can't even sleep in it for example in one of 3 giant artworks in the grounds of the very big a foundation in belgium so what is it like to spend the night in a work of art your own max reports. the
6:52 pm
walls and roughened wipes the interior minimal nevertheless this is popular as a honeymoon suite you might think you've seen it on when it comes to original have tell concepts but you haven't. thinks artistic reproduction of a human clone on the fan base have foundation in found him. they can even spend the night unsigned int the evans family from england but don't give it a try wow. i can touch my stomach. this bed and breakfast is called rather fittingly cuss anus so why did the evans family decide to say hey. we've got to stay in places that are more fun make it part of the holiday make it more of an experience. belgian articulate to have a cow has a taste for unusual art concepts the 10 metre long fiberglass polyester cast saneness takes pride of place in his collection it's the work of dutch artist
6:53 pm
filled families helped. you sleep in the museum normally in each museum or joke that you can sleep in or. aside from its 3 sleeping exhibits the fair baker foundation houses over 5000 other artworks. the museum near has expanded to $20000.00 square metres of covered space and a 12 hooked us sculpture park. it's one of the biggest private collections of contemporary art in europe. patron head to head baker used to lead a very different life as a company owner. of a transport company in the past one day i saw a pretty big installation the owner said that he could not trust but this. is a school chris and i so i will do it for you. he still acquiring new
6:54 pm
pieces like the blog v b 3 space and. belgian couple karren and as we'll be spending the night in this exciting creation. i think it's a very special history. it's a nick so a lot of animals. studio 1st moments of their life in a make so may be makes you think about their. guests don't mind just the basics they can even spend the night up to 12 meters high inside an installation designed by kevin van but. when night falls in the museum piece descends and all you can hear other frogs in the nearby pond. the next morning. i really enjoyed it it was nice being that's the nature
6:55 pm
is kind of thinking ok i'm lying inside a wreck term listening to the bugs are like the fact that all around us who wore white it was the more you definitely know it's a work of art it feels like it and how did the neighbors like spending the night inside the annex. it was a bit like in the sleeping in a tent it was different from the house really. a nice inside an art costs up to 120 euro is including breakfast at the museum cafe harry's going to remember his 9th best day for a long time how many people can say they've slept inside an intestate. and that brings us to the end of another edition of europe don't forget to follow us on social media and as always you can find all the details on how to end our
6:56 pm
exciting draw on our website until we meet again from all of us here thanks for watching by.
6:57 pm
slate. dot. com m.l. keep learning merged realises wait a 2nd we want the whole picture our facts instead of make ideas shift deliver us. from other reality to cryptocurrency your topics for live in an ever changing
6:58 pm
digital world let's start with digitalisation clear shift. d.w. . idiosyncratic faux frankenstein rock out the oak on top of its popular crossover s.u.v.s. time emissions from the push of each to our way and a good eco friendly supermini. drive . 30 minutes on t.w. . or. in our way discover the bauhaus school. world towards number 40 on w. 2 fronts dear antone oh dear cecilia
6:59 pm
because it's opposite us i'm sitting on the terrace in twilight it's peaceful my 3 grandchildren straight one trouble as our dad died when i was 8 transitions of germany was split in 2 and remain divided for a decade and. given once when your mother was born in 1969 the wall was already 8 years ago and you know my grandchildren who were born after the war felt born in a green unified germany a wonderful time a time of great joy. 3 generations of one family on a journey through recent german history. because. darkness has fallen and it's still peaceful and they have remained so for your sakes my grandchildren off. the berlin wall our family
7:00 pm
costs start cylinder $60.00 on t.w. . this is the w.'s line from opponents and supporters of lebanon's president. stage mass rallies here we see thousands of anti-government protesters converging on martyrs square in the capital beirut calling for the removal of the country's elite and for and to corruption placing step instructions come just 5 minutes to step down also on the program. for 2 rescue ships to dock
7:01 pm
a number of european countries are ready to take in more than 200 people on board rescued from the mediterranean.

51 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on