tv Malediven Deutsche Welle September 20, 2020 3:30am-4:01am CEST
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are in danger. prime. 45 minutes on d w. what secrets lie behind. discover new adventures in 360 degree. and explore the mating sites of the. w 360. now. it's hard not to get lost in europe's largest bamboo the way average could we will go there anyway later in the show. hello welcome to the new edition
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of the europe max and this is what else we have in store for you. tiny emphasizes the monkey turns to world and surrealistic ritualists. fragrance and why oh i love finds all being green beans for her restaurant in. brings to mind stunning mountain scenery and traditional costumes for me at least this typical swiss instrument belongs in the alps but the dress sits in the orchestra had other ideas day took the alp horn down from the mountains and brought it to an urban celtic but still high up in the sky we went to the capital of sex in the foot a world premiere of very special concert. pine
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sounds in the urban tower blocks of the paulist district interest in the alps corn spring from a height of 50 metres. an open air concert with distance marcos current director of the dressed in symphony orchestra came up with this idea over a year ago when he 1st saw the 17 story high buildings. that were. very similar to an all plane once. the buildings create steep gorges. and that's when i thought about having the musician spread out across these different roofs playing together building by building or house or husband. to match the surprise the housing company agreed to the project. the members of the dressed in symphony orchestra play from atop multiple high rises. and the car park
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is no exception musicians are playing the w. try. it's a concert that requires a great amount of planning and preparation the dress rehearsal took place at rest in the exhibition center the other morning has a leading role musician usually on a balcony or has been playing it since childhood. to spirit this is when you play it you can see that it's quite a simple almost primitive instrument you can play about 1617 notes on it i can demonstrate it if you like. that's. composed the marcus layman haun wrote a new piece specifically for the high rise concepts the distance between the musicians meant there was another level of planning involved the invite to the
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defense furthest away from the audience in the middle east are playing 1st and that's mainly possible by having a metronome ring in the ears and then the timing needs to be adjusted accordingly so the 1st group leaves the 1st bar almost a 2nd before the for crushing the stone blue to him. just before opening night the orchestra members warm up by playing little concerts during the day letting the music fill the neighborhood. registrations are. many concerts are really nice the music was beautiful. i love music and it's great when it's combined with new concepts and the concept of directing marcus clint would like this idea to develop even further. current this project and we could be the beginning of a series that could take place in many other highrise cityscapes around the world in the future. or could reach so many people by bringing music directly to where they live seaborne was 11. opening night is here and the musicians are
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in place on the rooftops securely fastened. then the big moment arrives the premier of the newly composed peace the heavens above paul this. as it's been i'm so happy and now the sun is setting giving everything this golden sheen beautiful. success perhaps this isn't the beginning and the dressed in symphony orchestra will transform high rise rooftops around the world into open air concert for us. from the urban jungle to major a lot of us probably remember from childhood to fear of getting lost in the woods that might be where the fascination with the labyrinth and maze starts from well if
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you're interested in mazes there is one in italy which is considered the largest in europe maybe even the world's for our series europe to the max we send report a henrik well going into that labyrinth i wonder if he ever made it out i haven't seen it for a while. i got lost no wonder because i'm in the big labyrinth and europe. with seemingly endless paths. lots of branches. and how hundreds of thousands of plants and in the center of it a great art collection. i venture into the labyrinth and it's a total of 3 kilometers of passages on about $70000.00 square metres of ground area
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. of bamboo maze. it's the biggest labyrinth in the world. the love it into that i must go on or near the city of parma in northern italy is designed to get its hapless visitors thoroughly confused. and what's the fulfillment of a dream by the late publisher franco mario ritchie yet some 200000 bamboo plants put in on his private land. they grow fast stay green and reach heights of up to 15 meters perfect for making a maze. this way. on this. letter and has an entrance and exit and many many passageways in between enough to get hopelessly lost. already.
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everything looks the same here you always think i know this path and then you realize it's in a totally different area it talks a different path and i have no idea where i am love. the love it into the elements so on is based on a geometric design. i mean this isn't often roman music straight corridors and right angles only which makes finding your way of the heart oh. i'm just as fascinated as confused but help is available in case of emergency your position is marked at regular intervals and you can call in your location on your phone and it could be you know the labyrinth director to come and get you in person he showed me the way out of the labyrinth to the center of the state. it's a neo classes of buildings. people have always been fascinated by labyrinth
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they appear in antiquity in ancient greek sagas and in literature. the original meaning of the labyrinth is something really serious and since important is the symbol of our life. the kind of difficult things that if we found and difficult path that we follow in our life and now we're beliefs and find their way out and find the salvation. the sight is part of the legacy of the late italian publisher and editor from richie he put together an exhibition showing his lives achievements here he made his fortune with exquisite special editions of art books as well as the art magazine f m m and as a designer his private collection of art from 5 centuries is my reward for having mastered the labyrinth. it was the last major project for franco maria ritchie who died recently at the age of 82 his wife la rock assad has collaborated on it.
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this is franco. dream he started in the eighty's to talk about. one day. be the one who built the largest maze in the world and about 30 years later he actually started he sold the publishing house you know he's always been somebody who did things in a different way so frank has always done so the unexpected in his life actually. i really want to get this figured out so once again i enjoy the world's biggest labyrinth. i never thought of getting lost in so much fun and that will be my takeaway for life that you sometimes have to go the wrong way to find your own path .
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if you want to see more fascinating stories from our series europe to the max such as the world's biggest cuckoo clock just go to our you tube channel w you. this is our studio shrunk down to dalhousie size funny how tiny i look in reality of course i'm very very tall well we also just dumb all mama has made these kinds of miniatures his life's work he turned special places into realistic tiny rapley cause he even opened a museum that showcases them we went to the you know in france to walk through these remarkable tiny worlds. seen the renowned restaurant in paris is known around the world. but why do they have ready made tables here when there are neither waiters no cares.
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this mini version of the famous restaurant in the french capital was created by done oh mom it took him a year to finish the handmade miniature. now and then i mean you're throwing the miniature is an art form has existed for centuries and can even be found in the ancient egyptian pyramids. in the 17th and 18th centuries you had miniature pinching which usually depicted daily life. disappointing technical but also 3 dimensional many of the band and they are quite emotional. after working as a carpenter and interior designer done started doing stage design for theatre and opera productions as part of the job he had to build small models of his ideas 1st that's when he discovered his passion for working as a miniature wrist which remains unchanged even 35 years later.
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stage than all mark is constantly working on new tiny creations. staying true to scale often requires months of hard work every one of his miniatures is an exact copy of a real scene which he replicates on a scale of one to 12. they have what polish sometimes a neon munster finish them chairs there's always something to improve or redo. it can be annoying but it's still satisfying to have that he your time that this work you need to be courageous to you and persevered but when you finish it's a moment of joy sometimes it takes an entire year to finish one miniature. in 2005 done almost opened his museum of miniatures in the house of long's historic district it was here in francis 3rd largest city that he arrived for an exhibition
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in 1809 bringing along 3 trucks bearing tiny artworks he immediately fell in love with the city. i'm fortunate enough to know them beyond the quarter all year round it's a medieval part of town and it's readily. unesco world heritage site and you can see how beautiful it is to me it was like a miniature itself. on an area of 2000 square meters visitors can see over $100.00 extremely realistic miniature scenes built by the various european miniature wrists though the majority were made by done on more himself. oh michael for them you're sure but i think the miniature of the bally hall is particularly beautiful because it really to pick the cityscape of lunar which you can see through the windows of the opera house. my favorite miniature is this leo bistro the whole scenery is full of little details and it's very precise in its
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depiction what really impresses me is the light as well as the individual objects in the room you can see how much work has been put into it. in addition to scenes from your done omar has basically replicated half the world. but he's not short of ideas for future miniature projects. i saw very atmospheric place a family lives there is an old palace there are a lot of empty palaces they are in the atmosphere easing credible and in these fantastic palaces hundreds of white sheets we in the window and it was really impressive. i'm currently working on a miniature of this scene and it will be a beautiful scene with. i don't listen. to the lens natural history museum as a doll house in down on mons work gigantic skeletons are easy to handle and huge
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rooms are rather cute viewers are stunned by his artwork even though or maybe because the scenes hardly differ from the real thing. when chef piccolo needs ingredients for her restaurant she goes to our grabs for a basket and walks into the nature of wild herb's berries seaweed and plants that all of us would call weeds she creates a menu according to what ever she finds and that is quite a lot because she lives on the isle of man a real paradise. for. just walking along and just seeing what there is and browsing the aisles. that for me is my supermarket. why
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my name fits the bill on the shop window you know the restaurant that's on the i'm not and i'm going to show you how it started tonight it's for the rest. i need to be out of my just a couple of years ago i actually came to open a different restaurant and just completely silent over the place on the far as an opportunity and just decided ok my plans for the future i'm just going to do them now is the perfect opportunity and i did. that man is that so far it has its place the authorities haven't. made. the consummate ground so it was a cool guy out weeds and this is like we really have a just kind of coffee flavor is a nuisance to gardeners but it's like really invasive intrusive because it was right to get rid of it and i'll use this in the restaurant in many ways it makes me not spoil the fish i'm going to try a lot of this out and then just use it to season into.
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the. time that you got. it from a baby boy. it's been like driving. it's kind of on the beginning of the. time and then you like it but such a bright green doesn't taste like see if it tastes like the sea. i would never leave behind of man it's a unesco buyers for everything just grows in abundance issues so biodiversity just insane. this is just like a sea of words over the whole literally this whole forest floor is covered in in one song. this is just so shot the message is perhaps such a strong play that just in such
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a small bites it's very very useful in the kitchen. so. i just wanted to start something that was soley about. nature has to offer i'm not going to use ingredients from heaven every last it's not available it's not available. this is a movement which is all that in mind and to be honest there's not much point in going into it just because the fish is not fresh and that's what we did not wish cooking just make us on the plate and. the weekly changing menu just goes hand in hand into play and exciting things the main account is that which members has done to customers to get them excited about the i did. just around the tasting menu to see them in person meadows be cookies and then we have some fridge but current sometimes just been a little bit of logic really. i think is really important so people
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read what nature was what the water is about so that then they respect it and they want to look after it. the big 5 making each day enjoyable and making our jobs enjoy able actually enjoying being a chef again. so i really really think that in the restaurant trade sustainability should be at the heart of everything we do now because fundamentally the one thing to me that everybody has in common is that everybody has to eat and it's something we can all sat. down with you see these. stories. in louisiana. the smell of. the best chefs with their best tips from dishes to begin diets
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and all of the recipes secrets. europe's diversity is a smorgasbord. subscribe and enjoy deep w. food. a lot of photographers like to take pictures of supermodels or of nature that's on the same level but what about photographs of factories so will a melting fern says or distilleries doesn't sound very glamorous well those are alistair philip wipers favorites motifs he gives power plants and container ships are whole o.p. you come with us now into the glamorous world of industrial photography. images reveal an interconnected world of pipes wires and cables there
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a glimpse inside the industrial universe of parts usually concealed from the public eye this is where british photographer alister philip wiper is in his element he's photographing the inner workings of copenhagen's new armor a bag a heat and power plant. that can never resist. point 3000000000 records that is why a. 40 year old alister philip wiper has a very individual i for industrial spaces it has photos pipes machines and shafts look more like graphic designs or even abstract art he and downs the sterile factory halls with an artistic purpose and expresses his enthusiasm for them. i'm amazed by the way humans can build. your structures are just.
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the parts of nature of that. kind of. thing given for places other people don't get to go to. these images are no feel good calendar aren't there to our steel or for that. about 10 years ago why we discovered his affinity for industrial complexes and started photographing them above all he's fascinated by there on intended beauty but his compositions also tell us something about what humans create and how. these robots will be able to process frozen pork fat for sausage making. this is a radiometer for atomic particles in a nuclear research lab. and this is an outer space simulator big enough to accommodate entire space ships. and on this photo is a giant container ship a vessel. this size can transport around 850000000 bananas. one of the things that
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really fascinates me about this is both the graphical elements and the size of it the scale the enormity of it but also there's like a story involved about the way that we live how much of it we produce and how much of it needs to be shipped all over the world. in 2004 wiper visited denmark and stayed on he taught himself to talk with me. he doesn't process his photos much on purpose i try to do as little as i can. because i'd like to work in a simple way it's not because i have any problem with with editing too much but i like to just bring out what is there already rather than trying to kind of add too much to. viewing is images we soon notice that hardly any people appear and. every now and then i do have a person a picture when i think that it adds something to the picture and it's telling
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another story but these machines they're all about people built by people. so even the absence of people his works tells about people about their needs and their creations for instance this green house is a plantation for medical cannabis. the museum of decorative arts and design in bordeaux france has collected his images in an exhibition i like the idea that people are amazed by the fact that humans are kind of building this stuff. but i also want people to use their imagination about where it could. where it could lead or what could be happening. mr philip wiper is always on the lookout for new subjects his photographers are high keeps exploring industrial spaces while his images reveal their hidden worlds along with their unintended but subtle beauty. that was all for today but visit our website then you can answer oh alexis you
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who tunes prime. in 15 minutes on d w. i was issued when i arrived here i slept with 6 people in a room. it was hard i was free. i even got white hairs. learning the edge of my language head telling us this keeps me and they'll bunch nicky to in truck loads of say you want to know their story my parents were fighting and reliable information for margaret. how the virus spread. why do we panic and when we'll all this. time for just 3 of the topics covered and the weekly radio show is called spectrum if you would like any information on the
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how would the world sell with the biggest composer of all time i constantly begin to imagine a world class horn player singer willis on a musical journey of discovery. 2 2 world without being told. this week on. this is day w news and these are our top stories republicans in the united states a valley to push ahead with selecting a new supreme court justice to replace ruth i had a ginsburg who died on friday president trump tweeted that he was judy bell and to carry out the task he was elected for democrats argued that the process should take place after this.
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