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tv   Euromaxx  Deutsche Welle  June 21, 2020 7:30pm-8:01pm CEST

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the drive home feeling. read. 16. to. the global corona crisis you can find more information online at the w dot com and on t.w. social media channels. these items might look at a poll but you'd better not take a bite will find out later who's responsible for this colorful display on the
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street. hi everyone and welcome to another edition of your own max i'm your host meghan lee here's a look at what else we've got in store for you today. this secret behind the famous neapolitan pizza. and. how to see the beauty of europe in just a few hours. just great of lose yourself in dance and forget the days of worry well the coronavirus pandemic has all but put it into late night dance parties and big clubs with world famous d.j.'s like paul van dyke normally fun dyke would be flying from venue to venue racking up the air miles in playing for tens of thousands of ravers across the globe but now he's been forced to rethink how to reach his fans and he's doing that from home in berlin. 7 pm on
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a sunday in bed and pull down dyke has transformed his office into a one man club. the star djimon d.j. cranks out electro beats in his own living room streaming live on the internet live every week he got the idea when an appearance in moscow had to be cancelled because of the corona pandemic known world come to some new session marsh dream from berlin . this is guns i'm boss august i simply deliver the soundtrack and people in berlin communicate with people in new york and people in tokyo with people unknown to me that's the essence of it. just connecting people with each other and with us and making them aware that we're all stuck our same situation and we have to get through it together. until recently his work with a d.j. routine looked like this stadiums and vast pools filled with his trance inducing sounds. that is most active proven diet leapt from one gig to the
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next flying around the world as many as 16 times a year. over 3000000 people attended his d.j. sets annually. as a. scene in appearance of mine i think you know how energetic it is and that has a lot to do with the interaction between people. not to live. now of course that doesn't happen at all. so in terms of the performance and a static experience it's pretty difficult right now. so paul van dyke is exploring new possibilities for his art. so one of his sunday sessions in early may he's done discs with his face. soccer
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team boosie a dog months in an empty stadium. he's also used the time to compose music for a project called looks part of the plan is to broadcast the interactive light show over the internet for 10 days. it's long it was a bomb it was an approach to taking this distancing and making something creative out of it. doc was born in 1971 as not ts powered and grew up in east germany he made his debut as a d.j. in the 1990 s. at butlins legendary. in this very simple i do j. because i love music and i'm a total freak i'm an absolute fanatic when it comes to this kind of music. he produces and albums and if techno the fans raving on almost all continents has been voted the world's best d.j. several times. back then to 16 tragedy struck during an appearance in
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traced the netherlands paul van dyke fell off the stage plunging 6 meters. i sat in a wheelchair for 4 or 5 weeks not knowing if i'd ever walk again. in your perception things in the present from more important things like a stroll even things that might annoy you normally like going to the supermarket or stuff like that so you live with a bit more gratitude and i have to say my wife's love is one of the principal reasons i'm standing here today. it's nothing short of a miracle that paul van dyke can walk and talk again today. at age 48 he's just glad he can work even if present conditions take some getting used to. when he's going to have 3 hours on a sunday. complete tunes that are a bit quieter and have
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a different mood. and calm the whole time i'm getting all the comments through our social media channels and that's feedback of course but it's still different from when you see jumping smiling people are going to loads of. the dancing ravens may be missing but happy and grateful pull over and like remains his new album consists more of relaxing ambience music was a song on the sessions from berlin thanks for watching on sunday to become public but. when you take a closer look at a bird feather you'll realize that it's in fact a masterpiece of nature and we humans have always made use of them in multiple ways such as in blankets quill pens dusting tools or even as excessive rees well berlin designer heiko book found are goes even further with
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feathers just skirted by the poultry industry and here's how she sed sheds light on the subject. soft and warm are dark in. different land for different moods but the shades have 2 things in common they're all made of feathers and they're all creations of berlin designer haiku. and then itself is a fabulous material that was created by nature. that. famous decorative and serves to steer in flight well the shaft attaches it to the body and stabilizes the structure. and what a feather like this is actually a wonderful architectural thing. during her lunch shades exclusively with feathers . with plums from geese roosters. available as
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a waste product of the poultry industry. she makes every loved by hand. it's painstaking work. also cool the experience made up of about $4000.00 it takes a whole week to arrange them all about it and serving the say it takes about 7 hours by itself. she happened upon a material of choice by pure chance. and having been afforded grandes place i noticed how beautifully a light shone through a feather. and that's when the light went on in my head you could say right off i could imagine it as a compared surface when i got some feathers from feather bed stores the little down one and experimented with them excrement here then i bought her this directly from the decorative feather industry the stalls for. beings have a long history of incorporating feathers into their clothing that's been shown at
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an exhibition in winter thirst with the land called feathers. seduction flight. treat in the exhibition shows feathers as a marvel of nature. it demonstrates what people can do with others see what they make out of them needful whether in a functional science in everyday objects or in fashion as decorative elements. of the fashion designers who make use of feathers are walter van burned down in belgium and french brazilian textile designer. feathers are also incorporated in the collection by the italian label lu jo some of her book photos creations are included in the exhibition. she sells her lumps all around the world . she has critics to. the larger scene those are far
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tend to see the animal 1st and there are some who don't like it at all it gives them the creeps you could say but others are totally impressed and stand there and stare almost reverently at this a white light i've seen people react that way too. early if. i could but father has been designing her lamps for some 15 years now. she always starts with a basic geometric shape. she's never lost her fascination with feathers. it's always been this question the way real across cultures decorative feathers have served as status some guys in the head dresses of native americans for example annoyed that you can still see them today in museums and their age old so this is a very stable material and. these unusual feathered lumps create a very special atmosphere in the room. and might just inspire dreams of flight.
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time now for something to eat and pizza is an all time favorite in every part of the world and the classic neopolitan pizza is often they would take. but never really duplicated the ingredients are simple enough but special preparation is necessary for making the perfect neapolitan pizza for our series food secrets we traveled to naples in italy to go behind the scenes in times before the coronavirus pandemic. they mandated a place at this time to eat pizza and i have pencil for breakfast and. a piece of business for a new policy and it's the joy of living. my
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life revolves around pizza and mozzarella. actually i never really started making pits i was born into pits. i was raised in a pizzeria by my dad i followed in his footsteps and i still follow his role model every day. he also idea because surely owner of that that's a real f. in that a president in naples. i don't even pass the classic me a polish and picks at those made a nice salt and flower bed out type of pizza we let the day rise for 12 to 18 hours. not one or forming a day is
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a key part of pizza making here we give the pizza its round shape. this is that if we stretch the dough to enlarge it because neapolitan pizza is thing. but if you know the simplest rainbow at the end of the 18th century there were already 30 or so pizza pickers who were classified as such a not as bread makers. on almost all of the i don't know pick the terrible professional journalist i've written books on neapolitan cuisine and obviously also on the history of pizza. in a major city since around the 17th century. but it's always had a problem with overpopulation. in the european century it was the largest city in europe after paris. with stuff like to spend
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a lot of time outdoors. pizza found its natural birth place and became a classic street from. apple. but. i don't know that he added maine from the summer sun a tomato from the i grow some days in a challenge no it's the classic to most head that you put on a pizza margherita it has a sweet taste but is also a little ascetic. we used to use for our. buffalo mozzarella to. make all that he says the basic. buffalo mozzarella is added as an extra on some of them.
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then also of their production the difference is the milk. the fewer is made with cow's milk. is made with buffalo milk. but i don't care when the owner of the dario yani in crisp you know naples. the buffalo mozzarella is a little more delegates than the fewer the latter. the stronger the buffalo mozzarella is milder. as well so we have the. colors white red and green and of course what's a robot should always be put on before the pits is baked because it releases its flavor in the oven with. pickering or among the trees that we add to the pizza this is to give a special taste let the neapolitan pizza at least in your mouth when it's on.
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the phone and in a mental and i mean the oven is the key element and it's like in a relationship it's the pizza maker and the baker are 2 figures that work hand in hand one of them makes the pizza the other day. the other side with beechwood which burns well but doesn't produce smoke and doesn't give a particular smell to the pizza but it should have a constant temperature of 40450 degrees celsius. or should beg for a maximum of 15 seconds. and they say what makes a good pizza chef. the love and passion he entered into your work. it's important to enjoy your work even my pizza chefs collaborate with me they share my feelings. and that's how it my product comes into being when you put love
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and passion into everything you do. looks easy enough right well if you can tell us which i'm greedy and go into the dough of a neapolitan pizza then you will have a chance of getting your hands on these olive wood salt and pepper grinders just go to our website for all of the details and if you're interested in more appetizing reports all about food drink and dining then take a look at our new you tube channel d.w. food. down like you see these. stories. to see as. the smell of amazing the best chefs with their best chips from meat dishes to peking diets and all the recipe secrets while. europe's diversity is a smorgasbord. subscribe and enjoy
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deep w. food. we turn our attention and down to the french street artist lore ca while most people out in paris are looking at the beautiful monuments larcom is on the lookout for bulking trash that others have thrown away on the streets mattresses are a big find for her for example she then creates an art installation right there on the spot while people are walking by her goal is to get pedestrians to see objects which they would rather ignore. overside sculptures looking good enough to eat block the sidewalk where passers by can stumble over the. 33 year old street artist larkin mix installations out of junk she set up her work studio in a suburb of paris this is where she prepares her projects she got the idea for her
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new series for the many discarded mattresses she'd seen. him again on the back using an old mattress as everywhere with me it's almost become an obsession i absolutely had to develop a concept that had something to do with. the studied art of the song university in paris and developed an interest in waste products of all kinds are consumerist and throw away society is the central theme of our works trash is transformed into a piece of cake. these objects attract people's attention because they look appetizing and at the same time they're familiar all at once an old mattress that people once found disgusting or just overlooked becomes interesting and that's what fascinates me that people will look at something they didn't originally want to see . trends into objects of art pop up all over the city. worker couldn't imagine making them for an article or. here i can set out on my own
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and create really big objects with just my bare hands and a tool bag. almost i noticed in that this is even possible on the street it wouldn't have any meaning for me in a room the contact with people just isn't the same. almost in my search for junk mainly took me into the multicultural knows gravitas drains people don't have such ready access to the are. the more you. like that i can cure she's hoping to raise some eyebrows with her latest idea as well. for. projects about advertising posters she's looking for products that have been advertised but are now discarded. as what she needs in a neighborhood of eastern purpose so they don't isolate these pain packets i knew that i'd stay here this is the kind of trash that i can use for my post. within
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just one hour the installation is completed. i found the post it was that way station this week it's advertising for a home improvement store because i was looking for items that you could originally find in stores like this that i'd be able to connect to the poster i'm dependent on the trash i find on the street and i like it that way but this could all be removed even for lorca the final results are quite often a surprise and people have widely varying reactions to them but. that's a part of the experiment. i don't get it isn't labeled as art or an art event people prefer to keep their distance but on the street it might end up in a dialogue because people are hearing. smokers work standard public spaces they can be classed as public property as such they can be taken away by the trash pickup at
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any time. you know it's not a matter of keeping an object around as long as possible i'm interested in whether i can actually complete it since it how long it will survive and what reactions it . is beyond all that look i was left with projects of the photons. how would you like to visit all you member states in one afternoon without having to go into a corner and teen afterward not possible well actually it is in brussels in the mini europa park now it gives visitors a chance to zip through major sites and even get some tips on traveling during these times we went to brussels for a closer look. westminster and big ben in london. the acropolis in athens windmills in the netherlands the eiffel tower in paris and
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the brandenburg gate in berlin famous landmarks from all 28 european union members can be viewed in one place mini europe in the center of brussels. but wait 28 e.u. members is that correct. so what about breck's it on january 31st 2020 1000000 i did kinda left the european union. you need to dollar unity in diversity has always been the european union's motto that has media you know more than ever so from this perspective the parcher of england is a pity for the europeans. cherry misuse given use mint parks founder is unfazed by brags that. he's had new border markings put in. i think. it's a good solution. but the border. i think it's clear that it's
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finished now because you know it already thanks quite though and it's also very interesting as a way to explain things to the children. and there are many more things to be discovered here among the over $350.00 structures. 9000 figures and 33 animations. there are even tips for how to get by during the corona crisis. 2 at the moment we're getting around 10 percent of the visitors we usually have i think if by the end of the year we've had 40 percent of the visit. as we have the year before we go to. the previous year we had some 400000 if we get 160000 visitors this year i think we can be satisfied. here this leaders can still enter the united kingdom without
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a visa and definitely without having to quarantine themselves while they're at it. at all. and united kingdom as a former even member state as well as an embodiment of european values. that's one place where democracy was developed and the coach or shakespeare for example has become universally european so i think it's important to keep the united kingdom europe you'll need. the united kingdom may not be a part of the e.u. anymore but it will always be in the heart of europe at least in miniature form here in brussels. and with that we wrap up i know their show don't forget to follow us on social media well for me and the rest of the crew here in berlin as always thanks for tuning in let's see against it .
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what's going on here. a house of your very own from a printer. computer games that are healing. my dog needs electricity. shift explains delivers facts and shows what the future holds.
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living in the digital world shift. 15 minutes on d w. passengers here are informed by. the drivers here need nerves of steel. while passengers here can get an eyeful along the way. taxis accommodate passengers all over the world. the drive our ceilings. read. what secrets lie behind these walls. discover new adventures in 360 degree.
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and explore fascinating world heritage sites. d.w. world heritage 316 get a nap now. armstrong really walk on the moon. isn't the earth really slash after all. those the government claims to close and. conspiracy theories spread like wildfire on the internet and. some people are convinced they are true. just tyranny in times of small groups who shout louder than others and profit from a laugh. the interest among reasonable people. scientists are studying why some are so susceptible to ideas that are obviously wrong and absurd and turn it accomplishes that all. these really serious crimes are going to come from a deadline reality into another.
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democracy of the gobi church july 1st g.w. . played . this is the w. new saliva from berlin a major coronavirus outbreak at a german slaughterhouse raises questions about worker safety soldiers are deployed to help with mass testing at the facility after more than a 1000 employees are inspected also coming up on the shocking. scenes of violence as hundreds of people go on the rampage looting shops and attacking police in the
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southwestern german city of stuff cuts. and and going to sleep football minds guarantees themselves another season in the top.

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