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tv   Euromaxx  Deutsche Welle  March 21, 2020 5:30am-6:01am CET

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discover who. subscribe to the documentary. if you come across a polo bit on one of these. you don't have a car and i think. pretty much. hand on that no hello and welcome to another edition of your own max i'm your host meghan may well find out later on if our reporter actually came face to face with
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a polar bear but here's a look at what else we have in store. coats with ashes on us and bark me think kitchen words are dished up front he's not. and he won't let himself be pinned down the violinist is found are a big giant plays across all musicals on. 1st up as you know with the right photo editing software you can perform magic on just about any picture and that is what russian instagram artist igor the chance k. has done with album covers now he likes to incorporate himself into legendary scenes of the beatles madonna and guitarist tom petty among many others for the results are a funny take on the original cover and they're proving to be quite popular on instagram here's a closer look. baring her neck. and what is david bowie up to. the russian
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instagram a chance he gives famous album covers a new back story and gives himself a role in music history. thing for me to make people laugh and sometimes i think i managed to do that with the pursuit of common stuff people write them and sometimes people take a joke even further for the more joke about what they see and that's the best feedback i can get. for. human creativity and a willingness to improvise a key cheering photo shoot chance he's covered as. today the idea is to turn the band queen into 4 headed giant holding him in its hand. the 24 year old poses in front of the green screen that makes it easy to insert his function into the covers later university student . helps him get the idea shape chance he meets him regularly at
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a university photo studio. but it's all extremely spontaneous we usually don't even prepare props or anything and during the photo shoot we figure out that we need something a piece of clothing or an object to find something in the studio with. the 2 friends usually edit the photos together. they try to match the details to the original and to get the proportions just right they only take about an hour to work on each cover of chance he started this project almost 2 years ago now he uploads a new photo every few weeks he has nearly 27000 followers on instagram already. from hip hop to classic rock hill take on any style of music and any musician.
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everywhere he goes live chance is always listening to music his favorite genres are indie rock and hip hop he's been living in volgograd since he started university concerts by international bands a fairly rare here even though more than a 1000000 people live in this city on the volga river. nevertheless music inspires chance in all areas of his life including in his work as an advertising copywriter . if you're bored by making this album covers i try to become perth of the music scene part of the culture. i don't make music myself i'm not good at making music thanks to the covers i can somehow be closer to the musicians and i love that. if chance he is always hoping for a reaction to his album parodies most of all from the musicians themselves he takes them in his posts and has even gotten
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a few likes from the stars for him cover art isn't just something for vinyl collectors. from the age of the internet album covers are still very important because they are the face of the album is the 1st thing that a listener comes across even before they've listened to the music even if they've streamed online or. after more than edited covers chance can. is still enjoying his project just as much as when he started. the instagram already has a lot of ideas for his page he next wants to try and edges himself into music videos one thing is clear chance his creativity music remains a jumping off point. now things are about to get cold and dangerous in our new series euro max to the max we send our reporters to some of the most challenging destinations around europe and today we are visiting a small town that is home to just over 2000 people and they share that space with
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polar bears now it's not an easy place to live as our reporter nicole firth found out. it almost seems like the north pole is just over the horizon a last outpost of civilization and the frozen north you may well be wondering where on earth i am i've been long here and small part. i'm in europe northern most town and that is by far not the only record long european holds this norwegian city is a place of extremes and today i want to show them all to you. just getting here is an odyssey from berlin and i make my way to oslo from there it's another 3 hour flight i reach my destination there i am greeted by the archipelagos most famous residents of polar bears.
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sol hard lines about halfway between the northern tip of norway and the north pole longer being with a population of around $2100.00 as the largest settlement is on the $78.00 north parallel no other settlement with over a 1000. and residents lies farther north. time for a 1st look around but i'd rather go in the company of my guide frederick frederick and tess rightful polar bears could be anywhere here real ones this time. this is the best thing to have with you when you go outside this town no secret trick to scare them away you know is to have different kinds of bears in the world the. best and white bears. if it's wrong ladle if it's black fightback if it's white good night it.
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not all animals here are quite a scary longer being is home to about a 1000 huskies odin's out it takes care of a 100 of them. as of these are they now doing came here in $24.00 a team from mainland norway for about a year now he's been running the sled dock cannell even in summer when there's no snow on the ground he and his employees take the huskies out every day in any weather. it's so dramatic all the time even if you just if you look at that motor over there we can still see it but in certain situations here as well but with the snowstorms in the weather there could be a point where you called to help if something goes wrong i call that this you can make a bonfire if you get cold here you don't have firewood because there's no trees or . the lack of firewood isn't the only hardship and this former mining town.
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due to the permafrost all of the homes here are built on stilts. it's practically impossible to raise livestock per farm still someone was brave enough to try benjamin vit martin a chef from the us. green by the way he plan. his arms and vegetables and his polar greenhouse. can live in the arctic. as i go to. benjamin 1st came back in 2007 and fell in love with the place the only problem was the lack of greens but i wasn't happy with the food situation you know you pay 50 kroner for iceberg lettuce that's a lot of money for iceberg lettuce and i'm still going home i would never even eat this i wouldn't even need if somebody gave it to me but here i'm like a hot iceberg lettuce on the no you have to eat because you don't have anything
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else and i just was so frustrated you know this is i have to do something either i leave or i have to do something. now he supplies local restaurants like the group or lager and with his arms here fine dining is served up enough former coalmining warehouse head chef philip has served the likes of the norwegian royal family. philip has lived in longer beam for 3 years as a chef year he's got to meticulously planned every meal well in advance it made to order a month for a month to hit and very often we run out of something and if you don't have a place you can go and buy. so we have this good gratian here we go the restaurants . so if i run out of some think they're going to take it from gather strength. the next morning i prepared to make an expedition.
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frederick's train back takes me to one of the nearby fjords. he wants to show me the wall of the 2 numbering tidewater glacier. every time you come to a small boat or get out and make sure that like this different and that's makes it very special because it's like seeing a new place every time you thought. i'm truly impressed with long here being the northernmost town on earth. here along your brain i've encountered far more extreme than i could have hoped for no polar bears but i did meet a bunch of extremely kind hearted people who all seem to share a deeply rooted passion for this truly extraordinary place extremely worth of its. truth.
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his friends and family know him as parents have fallen but the rest of the world knows him as d.j. bobo this western music producer made a name for himself in the 1990 s. with a string of dance hits struck me as the match to the would never cease like somebody tried to start the school. year omar sat down with d.j. bobo for an exclusive interview to talk about his life and career. d.j. for we brought some pictures for you can you show us the 1st one sure i'm curious. for you to question is that classic the job. sure the ring master that's from 2014 i like that yeah that's me. over the.
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latino's when you perform in the bit like a football game 1st you have to deliver the goods in the audience will give you something. if you don't play well the crowd will stay firmly in their seats but if you play well there on your side. in south america the audience is in charge from the very start they're louder than you are. so you have a very emotionally charged intense relationship with them and they have got another picture for you take a look. oh no that's how the way giving me a bravo auto. that was a long time ago and you can still feel stadiums what's your secret. actually been trying to figure that out ourselves for years i always say to my people for guys to stay ahead of the game and that's where we're going to. i don't mean just in terms of success but in terms of growth we're always driven to
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discover something new and put it on stage and i think a lot of people come to our show to experience that fusion of big hits and innovation at least i hope they do. and hopefully this is. what you prefer champagne. smoothies. say the sports car the city of the countryside the countryside cooking and baking. i can't do either even though i trained as a baker. baking is definitely easier. baking the mountains of the ocean the ocean. and we've got a photograph for you. lovely africa where was it taken it must have been ethiopia. and. i was visiting a school nutrition projects programs. there with the un's world food programme what
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can we learn from africa. now since day enjoy life the people there respect nature most of us here in the west are mainly concerned with things that really aren't very important tying these 2 all they have to take care of the very basic matters like making sure they get enough to eat. being part of their community since it was a group of the not all special forces what we can learn is that they're probably happier than we are because we're constantly wanting more and more standish metre meeting in najaf what's your proudest achievement. off to my 2 children to say they're the best things i've ever done. and i thank you d.j. i thank you. and you can see that interview again on our you tube channel turning now to another swiss innovator chef stefan these now when he strolls through the forest in his
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native switzerland he takes home everything he can find with him from haiti and stones to wood or action and it all ends up in his kitchen now in his search for new flavors the star chef works together with forester's perf you murs and archaeologists we join him out in the woods to find out how to cook award winning dishes with sawdust. out in the swiss mountains with his. they're looking for some tasty pieces of wood this spruce tree seems promising. with pretty much all the trees that grow in switzerland almost. as fast asleep. on spring pine. the 1st thing he does is sniff it.
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stone by. the trees will be captured in the dish he's planning. home to. these pieces of pumpkin have been lying on and. give the pumpkin an added flavor. a wonderful citric. acid they produce. better than us. for the last 25 years and his team. in the village. have been serving up swiss nature on a plate sometimes some heavyweight appliances are needed the pine bark is turned into shavings and put in a cooking pot. and fire.
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distilled into a venue that has a delicate taste. these new uses the flavoring. for example it goes well with venison. the garnish is roasted. serenaded lichen and stone pine nuts a dish composed of 100 percent natural ingredients the 2nd course is the 4 make acid flavored pumpkin which is supposedly also very healthy these now wants his dishes to appeal to all the senses his signature style has earned him all sorts of nicknames that make them the guy who cooks are stories the kitchen alchemist all the sorcerer makes is just a few of the ways people have described me so it's lovely. he works his magic in an old barn and this is where business stores his ingredients are in
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a key 4th the called and this pine bark dates back to the stone age it's 14000 years old there was found in a prehistoric forest buried in loam but we use it to smoke. he also finds a use for rusty nails and for shoes and even stones the inventive chef turns them into flour made of swiss light iron ore and granite. stuntmen that mean that all the influence flour made of rock or minerals is very healthy so long as you don't eat too much of it already granted every day and it does mean a lot of good list to list for. today he's using it to make a dessert ice cream made of stone flour and served on stone if. you have a good look. at the different business might be
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a source for but he's quite a showman too. and his shows can be quite spectacular he prepares bone marrow and full view of the guests they do love it and so do the critics on the center's ancient cuisine has earned him a mission on. star and 17 talks. that. 'd stand not to forget the experience they say later they can remember every single thing they did and that's what's so special there's nothing else like us for the. number of chefs trying to copy stuff on prisoner style but they can't keep up he's always refining his technique and recipes and he's not likely to run out of ingredients any time soon. and finally we take a look at a musical prodigy violinist congar with jaya began playing the violin at the age of
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4 by the time he was 11 he'd been accepted into the college of music in berlin well now at $32.00 he's performing on stages all over the world. didn't. the many faces of these kind of jaya a musician who doesn't like to be pigeonholed either musically or personally the berliner with indonesian roots is an exceptional violinist who finds inspiration outside the world of classical music some call him a clock tick but he says the music is all that matters. to them alternately we make music to touch people to move them and to reach a point where we ourselves are so touched on stage that we can move others it doesn't work any other way a method of. indonesia is kind are we jaya visit his
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parents homeland regularly he's a major star here. appearances in commercials and t.v. shows have made him a household name in indonesia here he performs in big concert halls like last year in jakarta at this benefit gollum for tsunami victims. i tried performing this balancing act popstar in indonesia classical artist in germany are hard for but a while back i decided i only come as a package deal with him in the so even if i'm performing entails and in an asia and playing for the president i try to remain true to myself and be as authentic as possible. at a club in cologne germany. doesn't just perform classical music he plays everything from johann sebastian bach to
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a cover of chandelier from pop star. it's a she says speak to me and it doesn't matter to me which is genre they belong to that's my goal in concert to break down this compartmentalisation people who come to my concerts should know everything's on offer. as in his music we just don't like to try out different things and play with his image and not just during photo shoot. on stage i like to wear outfits that underline my interpretive approach so they can
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vary a lot from extremely simple solid black and totally minimalist to totally over the top the it that's what i like in music to assist us with michelle and i was even closer. with jaya began playing the violin when he was just 4 he was inspired by his grandfather who was a composer. after studying violin at berlin's university of the arts with jaya began collaborating with world class conductors like. 'd in berlin he met up with composer geoffrey ching who was born in the philippines and now lives in the german capital ching ri composed a piece by beethoven specially for him he's going to is the most amazing musician i admit because besides his absolute technical preparation in the most difficult and challenging contrapuntal classical works he has
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a personality of universal appeal. here his recording demos for his next album which will boast a colorful mix of styles among other things the musicians. experimenting with the piece by italian baroque composer pietro antonio look at tammy. mylan ist is kind are we jaya a musical maverick at home in many different worlds. and with that it's time to say goodbye as always thanks for joining in and we'll see you again soon.
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77 percent of the street debate from in the opium pot how does this country and indeed africa and the rest of the world define that line between freedom of expression and harmful utterances. trip is it because it's a filthy as economists make you choose. it speech that brings all these problems to the country. closer to 87 percent to. 30 minutes r d w. building the future today had our w.p.a.
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awesome university researchers and students there are working to invent screen mobility. i want to save the world my entire team wants to save the world. together they're researching tirelessly to develop the mobility of to morrow. rev. 19 and w. . each stop tells my story. of the people who planned to meet bill to be a dedicated anonymous to me. i am not a dom to call me a convenience on the secrets of my name. in the centuries
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they built me they created something true in russia is hard to watch as i must destroy and. i have mocked to my cities days for centuries and the company of my country. 3 times during the years until the day i mean. not have done differently. johnson april and.
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this is developing in the news live from girls and as the coronavirus death toll tops 10000 governments around the world take on president instead just to try in science lives the u.s. stands a new goal california and illinois tell milly everyone just die hard that's over 70000000 people only those working in the most essential services are allowed to go to work also coming out. initially records its highest daily toll from the coronavirus the deaths of sick.

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