tv Euromaxx Deutsche Welle January 18, 2020 10:30am-11:00am CET
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we speak different languages we fight for different things that's fun but we all stick up for freedom freedom of speech and freedom of press. giving freedom of choice global news that matters to w. made for mines. you. know young girls suddenly turns old wyoming marilyn monroe transforms into albert einstein how do flip images work in painting stay tuned and find out and with that very well welcome to a new edition of your i'm max today we have the following topics in store for you.
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the latest food trends in 2020 like this next you can see and. remagen leave chips for a perfect weekend in the downward slope celebs. his office is dio ssion drummer marine biologist only is not only a diver he's also a nature photographer and has been exploring the on the water world for over 20 years he dives into caves swims with orcas and keeps his calm as sharks fly past we tagged along on his latest expedition to norway to watch as he gets close to massive back whales. underwater photography const dives bryce into deep water is getting close to sea life and
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swimming through ice caves. the marine biologist and research diver is known internationally through his photos early cons has little trouble with extreme temperatures in fact he prefers icy waters. it's been him go also fair for i'm a big fan of cold bodies of water because it's always surprising what you can find . as i told you dive in the water seems gray or black all around. but in many places you'll find creatures you won't see anywhere else on earth little worms snails many kinds of jellyfish and polyps. if she didn't. and if you're lucky you might find yourself in the midst of a vast school of herring and humpback whales and orcas plunge right in fill their bellies. it's fascinating to find such a wealth of creatures in these cold waters and give evidence of it i see the future if. it's not always certain whether or not feeling counted them sometimes on his expeditions has to wait for hours in the cold here in northern norway winter
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temperatures can drop to minus 25 degrees celsius but the water can stay at about plus 4 degrees it's physically demanding. for a kid to live a dry suit like the one i'm wearing now protect me against the cold at the foot of mine couple that keeps the water from touching my body underneath is a thick fleece so i can last a while in the water. i wear near preen gloves and a near preen hurt but after 30 to 45 minutes in the water i still get called. out some kind of. sometimes the photographer goes for days without encountering any animals but then when the whales reach the cold and the way suffer. it's an adrenaline rush well it only has seconds to react if he's lucky they might post a feat that gives them an opportunity to get up close. in the winter
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months the chances of spotting whales are good that's when they swim into the and feel out from the northern atlantic involved parts chasing after herring. back on land he goes through the photos. and. if it turns out well a good underwater image always tells a story. for example where does the creature live what behavior does it show is it at home in extreme habitats that are at hospitable to us the fence it has been unfettered safaris in no way 4 times the one from the 1st my loved $120.00 q. is around to be prepared for anything. now i take along much less. you don't need
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incredibly sophisticated equipment you just have to be quick and at the right place at the right time so fortunately i don't need all the stuff that i did 4 years ago . but i couldn't suppose that travels light when he goes looking for the northern lights another natural phenomenon in the high north. when they have here in the sky long exposure times can produce mythical images. not if it's a photograph you're photographing the northern lights has something extremely relaxing about it all you find a spot in beautiful surroundings with a good view and then you need lots of time to do patients and like look then you can make something of it. the photographer from hamburg gives talks to audiences of every 8 around the world it's important to him to give as many people as he can an understanding of nature syllable a bit doesn't many of my images are static i enjoy taking beautiful pictures but to
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depict reality and raise consciousness i have to take photos of images that aren't always pretty and show overfishing pollution and damage to the ocean so people see what's happening out there. working in cold water regions is exhausting but the fascination with it. you must mention beyond not many people would expect norwegian fjords to harbor so much life in winter i want to show that to my photos and presentations with their teeming with life in its purest form and i feel so lucky that i can experience this all of this with the support of. another year and of a trend what colors hot which clothes are cool what holiday spots are but there is also more to know what out of food trends in 2028 have you heard of eating art and
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nec if you cation know well once a year photo trend research ahead you let's let puts it all down in her annual food report so let's find out what we are munching on this year. helpings of food enough on the plate for 2 meals that is definitely out says jaime ritz lairs food report small portions quick but healthy beds in the austrian food trends researcher is checking out the whole new restaurant in vienna. this is the dish that may well be trending in 2020 the poke a bowl is a staple of hawaiian cuisine it's usually made with fish but can also be made with tofu chicken out or vegetables combined with the various dressings. soup if you come in and see the counter and then you pick what grabs you start with
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a mango tempi with its warm yellow color or a green cucumber salmon is definitely a topic for salmon and avocado are in fact a longstanding favorites. more and more patrons are taking their lunches away to eat at work the day used to be divided into working hours and meal times no more. nowadays our work determines our meal times we eat when we have time or when we feel like it or when our work allows. slow calls this is not the case mealtimes become shorter but more frequent. food report part 2 eating art designer teresa bear guy has created a set of tableware that provides every course with its very own stage. what we see and feel influences what we taste. and more angular shapes are associated with better or salty food well rounded line
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shapes evokes. with sort of a point. served on these plates a dessert requires less sugar but doesn't taste any less sweet. and the smoked red beads see more flavorful if the smoke is still visible. to reset baerga is not simply trying to amaze her audience eating more consciously means eating and consuming less. of time i think it's important we preserve our feeling for nutrition but in fact we're losing it and i think the climate change dilemma is responsible for that. that's why i wanted to focus on that aspect with a series. of. this same basic idea backs up urban food the challenge is to find ways to feed over 9000000000 people within 30 years is one
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answer simply to grow more crops within the cities. this occupy nick farm is actually in vienna. vegetable farming with fish production this is a farm for african catfish excretions service fertiliser for the tomatoes cucumbers and bell peppers not one drop of water goes to waste. the. fish water comes through the drip or here where it's in rich put nitrogen and the fish extremist. groups go in here it's got enough water oxygen and nutrients to grow strong. businesses going strong to the farms own store sells fish and other products but most of the produce goes to the restaurant and when we think of food production we think of farmers out in the field but we'd also like to have fresh produce close to the city with shorter transport distances many people
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don't realize just how much can be done right here. one example is vertical farming the lettuce grows higher and higher that same base and yields bigger harve this smaller areas. the concept is not at all new. top in vienna in 1974 the plants are put on a kind of dumb waiter to give them more light but the system never really took hold . starting in the 1960 s. grocery prices plummeted to such an extent a certain product simply became unprofitable and i'm economic. now perhaps the time is right the tower will soon be turning green again. this year the food report is looking at how resources can be used economically and made sustainable. but there's certainly always enough time treat.
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you remember these from your childhood flicka cuts d.m.s. changed when you took the card back and forth when spanish art. 30 she could be and as was a child she was always into certain candy just so he could get the flipper a good image card inside the bag later as a grown up he transported the idea into his paintings it took him a long time to figure out how and now he told us his secret technique. a woman. suddenly cries out as if in pain a smiling girl. becomes a frowning boy. to fully appreciate sounds the containers work the viewer has to look at them from different angles the spanish painter loves double meanings. when i was little we had these cards flip images and they gave me the idea for my technique for oil painting it's
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a bit different and always surprises the viewers of. the painting a studio is in this house in a small village near to rona in catalonia. he's a self-taught artist and is currently working on a portrait of a goal he changes into an old woman as the perspective of the feeling changes. he asks friends neighbors and family to serve as model so she could dana starts with the 1st graph to paint from it takes him about a month to complete her work. how does he create the illusion of the transformation is not i use a special painting paste to make the relief my focus. his secret tool and i sing back. i thought. my neighbor gave me this he was a pastry chef and watching him work gave me the idea to use these old fashioned
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utensils. not. the paste has to dry for 2 days. then he cleans it up with a trial. i smoothed over all the little flaws right at the start to achieve a perfect surface to work with. i need 2 surfaces to make the 2 images. one on this side one on the other side. then he makes a sketch. i create the transformation during the painting process trying is to coordinate the lines for both images and finished the old woman will have wrinkles that the younger one doesn't. but the whole area of the cheek for instance is the same for both women. as the oil paints at a constant angle of $45.00 degrees to the canvas. from here i see one
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image otherwise it's the same as painting on a flat surface. you have to get used to the lines being broken and not continuous on the canvas. this is the 1st i finish one image and then i go over and finish the other one. i think. a lot of. says you could do in as finds inspiration at the film museum into rona. there he studies the optical illusions from the 1800. i mean did to those in the past these things inspired an amazed people now it's the magic the surprise effect that i like that it's looking to from others. just words have been private collections around the world now museums have begun to purchase some of this painting marilyn monroe changes into albert einstein.
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session you could do you know his plans to keep painting his optical illusions in future but his latest idea is to pull painting for viewing with 3 d. glasses. one see here a small winter sports resort and switzerland becomes the focus of world interest that's when pulling titian's and business leaders meet in doubt of warst for the world economic forum right before the small town became a high security zone my colleague megha least traveled there she wanted to find out what you can experience there over one weekend this time she had a little more luggage along why because you can't go through with the lens you can't go to switzerland without going skiing. this is what it looks like in the swiss alps in winter and an altitude of 2600 meters. i am walking to my perfect weekend in davos. early in the morning i set off for the
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parson ski area together with my skiing instructor big. winter sports day back to the 1800s in this part of switzerland and the 12 kilometer downhill run is the legendary. that you got to see this every day this is an amazing landscape tell me a little bit more about what makes this so unique and special i'd be are. all here and all of the. they are the foot that away the best trade to be able to figure. and that's able to. let. me give me some tips on how to ski a bit more gracefully and of course this is my activity check for a perfect weekend skiing in person. we take a break and a mountain restaurant where they serve up
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a lunch of special teams from the region. here. what do we have here that's it. and proven our plan yes one of the famous meat smiths and the cheese. from that. they could racing here in this lake this is my color narrative for a perfect weekend in davos they really. after lunch we head to an hotel that is rebuilt every winter the motto for this season is bella italia about 2000 hours of labor went into constructing this hotel of snow and ice oh wow. look what we have a garden no less. i'm not going to spend the night here but i want to take a look at some of the rooms such as the tuscany suite with the leaning tower of pisa it's freezing cold here so
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a couple of mold wind hits the spot. today i'm leaving the skis behind and i'm going to go on a small discovery tour of. the town with a population of roughly 11000 lives mainly from tourism every winter davos host the world's political and economic elites who gather at the congress center to discuss the issues of the day as you can see both is in the midst of preparations for the world economic forum when many famous names are going to descend on this town but over 100 years ago one famous painter left his mark here. and that was german expressionist and. who came to live in davos in 1918 this museum houses an extensive collection of his work. why did he come here in the 1st
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place he was very he was depressed and he was searching for a new life in the mountains very close to the knee. and looked for houston or lived in davos for 20 years he completed many of his paintings during that time renderings of the countryside and the people the museum also has the world's largest collection of his sketch books now fully digitized. curator wasn't the only one to enjoy the benefits of davos as fresh mountain air. during the 1800s many patients with tuberculosis came here the famous shots up hotel actually started out as a sanatorium. one author in particular helped make this place famous that is thomas mann he wrote about the shots out in his book the magic mountain would you agree that he helped boost the reputation of this place think it helped
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a lot the town and of course this building and try to stay like it is and keep these 3 alive so it's just a jump back in time when you enter this place is here this is my excursion to head up to the shots out and enjoy some walnut cake. for the return to the valley i rented a sledge. and the rest of my 1st real good job. 2 and until next time is happy travels. and if you want to find out how to spend a perfect weekend at the european cities just go to our you tube channel you will find magalie tips for athens reykjavik and proc plus more as far as i'm
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concerned a chair consists of 4 legs feet and back rest but the exhibition tanith and designs to prove that the chair is not just a chair to want to use a chair design our own show with a select examples from the famous german furniture manufacturer among them classics. share designed in 836. and another one from 2018. munich's pina could take down a museum is dedicating an entire exhibition to the last 200 years of chair design. the show is entitled to own it and design one of the curators is theni a few months. one of her favorites is this chair from 859 it's sold over 50000000 times entirely new at the time it was the use of bentwood. that's us i believe
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this is an iconic piece of design after how this so-called coffee house chair also simply known as number 14 is characterized by the unity of technology and design it's a simple piece of furniture and consists of just 6 parts and 10 screws and 2 nuts that's all i want that is. the exhibition looks ahead as well as back. munich designer stephan callow created the show's concept and contributed a study of his own for a new chair and a stool. as a woman from guns this is an early prototype of a very narrow chair this here's a study on active sitting and about finding the tipping point this is our 1st chair made from wood and this our latest design from today. stephan callas studio the designer and his team have been working on this project
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since 2018 and it's still ongoing. the d n s chair as they call it is intended for volume production. they're right after all chairs are pieces of furniture that surround us constantly we sit on them for extended periods there mike. the accessories the foster. back to the exhibition it shows how furniture design radically changed in the 1920 s. through the introduction of new materials like tubular steel major designers such as massive boy of the bauhaus school developed a radical new look. in the 1950 s. styles underwent another change with curvaceous forms and bright colors designers like van up one tonne of denmark brought pop into people's homes. and start then a punt on kick started
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a new design era that turned away from the perpendicular functionalists their sick to vain. in the form of the new era was about a more emotional approach and what's in the island and what's in that if i have. even today designers such as lord norman foster are still finding innovative approaches to the chair often through new materials and production methods. many people see the chair as just a place to sit down but 200 years of sheer design proved it can be much more. and that was all for this week from europe max check us out online and take part in our viewer draw we have lots of great prizes for you for me and the whole team pinball and thank you for watching and fear again soon.
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our superheroes my mission is clear. good and to me closely should be explored in germany. they die than make everything out there's a lot going on. germany tried and tested. w. . earth home to millions of species the home or saving. the global ideas tell stories of creative people and innovative projects around the world ideas that protect the climate boost green energy solutions and reforestation . interactive content to inspire people to take action global audience
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the series of global 3000 on t.w. and online every 2 seconds a person is forced to flee their home. the consequences of been disastrous our documentary series displaced depicts dramatic humanitarian crises from around the world. for a good thing we don't have time to think i didn't go to university to kill people but act that way i mean a handful of people feared for their lives and their future so they seek refuge abroad but what will become of the terrorists who stay behind and say claim they believe my husband went to peru because of the crisis that i wonder if he hadn't gone there we would have died of hunger come running out of them. good. displaced this week gone to w. this
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is d.w. news live from berlin authorities struggle to contain a deadly virus the op branca's already killed 2 people in china experts are warning of a race against time is people there prepared to travel abroad for an annual holiday also coming up german chancellor angela merkel attempts to broker a peace deal full libya a major international conference will be held here in berlin on sunday but on the ground.
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