tv ZDF Bauhaus Deutsche Welle November 8, 2020 12:00pm-1:00pm CET
12:00 pm
this is deja vu news live from berlin. u.s. president elect. joe biden says now is the time to heal and america i try to put in words a harsh rhetoric lower temperature. see each other again and listen to each other again. biden delivered to speech in his home state of delaware after being announced the winner of the us presidential election.
12:01 pm
a michael welcome us president elect joe biden has addressed the nation for the 1st time since claiming victory in tuesday's election. biden delivered their speech in his home state of delaware, alongside vice president, elect campbell herons. the running mates emerged victorious after taking a clear lead in the swing state of pennsylvania. after days of tallying the votes. fireworks light up the doc sky in delaware, but will a new dawn soon be upon america. joe biden has one power, promising to a country that has been living through a year of pandemic, cannot rest. the veteran lady is promising to bring a new book to bob tells us very, very nervous, saying a time to bear all the time to return to time to see oh,
12:02 pm
an entire day here. this is the time to hero in america. alongside biden, a woman who says she's determined to heal the country's rice who divisions. camilla harris will be the country's 1st female, a minority vice president. she did the key to victory to the civil rights movement and said it will help restore us democracy. and when our very democracy was on the ballot in this election with the very soul of america at stake and the world working, you ushered in a new day for america in washington d.c. and in many of america's blue states that was celebrations for these people. and many elsewhere, not motz, a huge victory in america's beats,
12:03 pm
a culture war. they see themselves as weakness, who've won back their own country. is like america again. and i feels like it feels like we're now back on the right track. america is back. we have regained america for all people. time is static for the nation, but the other americas being out on the streets 2 on saturday stop the still rallies were held in closely contested states like here in michigan. these people believe the president's on their fight theories and the view biden's claims to be the we know, with suspicion believing he had their hands on the ground at night and that they think and it was ill never arrives in anchorage president shows a continuous lawsuits. you know, fight for, you know, this, the stealing of the stop is new in this election right now. the current president looks like he's digging into his bunker. as joe biden won the election and donald
12:04 pm
trump went golfing supporters cheat him on the way back to the white house, the much of red america. don't know, trump is still very much the president the ever present? peter real adele is with us. part of the u.s. election team that sure has your name on it. peter joe biden says that he is going to heal the nation. how exactly is he going to do that? well, one of the very 1st thing he's done, and he's done pretty consistently throughout this campaign, is to really doll down the rhetoric to not point fingers, but really try to extend his head to the other side. he said repeatedly in his speeches that he considers it one of his most sacred duty hours for presidents not just represent the people voted for, but to really be a president for the entire country. keep in mind, more than 7000000, people did after all vote for donald trump and he really has the record to show for them. you need someone who spent about 15 years in public office 1st. this is senator then as a vice president,
12:05 pm
now he's about to become the president. when president obama, for instance, took over in 2000, made at the height of the financial crisis. joe biden was a person he was looking to to help get through the stimulus bill. that's largely credited with saving the economy because joe biden had a stellar reputation as someone who could reach across the aisle a lot of good republican friends as well as democrats. so he really has that record in the last thing. i think we talk about healing item is someone who spent his entire life healing his entire life has revolved, because he lost his wife and his daughter. back in 1982, he was inaugurated at in the hospital after they had just been involved in a car crash which died from he lost his son beau biden, in 2015. so he's someone who very much understand pain and whose empathy has become one of his hallmarks, throughout this campaign, and one of the starkest contrast to donald trump show the biden harris ticket that
12:06 pm
we saw on the campaign will now become of course, at the top of the new administration in january, and they get indicated what their 1st steps would be. well, they've all already said that they're setting up a coronavirus task force to combat the pandemic to get help get that under control . and then there are just a flurry of executive orders. donald trump passed a lot of a lot of the action that donald trump took was through executive order. so that is something not joe biden can now do. he said, for instance, that he will rejoin the world health organization which trump pulled out of not long ago, he will rejoin the climate accord. he will roll back some 100 rules that trump helped pass to really watered down climate protections, and so on and so forth. so there's a very long laundry list of things to do, a lot of which he can actually do without the help of congress. if you really do with the u.s. election team,
12:07 pm
thank you so much appreciate you. and as we already heard, president donald trump has not conceded defeat yet, but announced again he would challenge the outcome in court. let's bring in kirk younker. he's a professor of law at the university of cologne. welcome to you again. professor trump has repeatedly said he wants the result determined in the supremes corps. what are his chances of changing the outcome of this election? good afternoon. we have to look for legal foundations here in 2 different directions. big clock is already running on having the electoral college vote on december the 14th and you have to do something before december the 14th. you have to do something before december the 8th, which is when the electoral college, as they are say, parv. all the states must certified what the results are. so the party is running.
12:08 pm
getting to the supreme court was the he needs some state decision or some action by a state official that he can file a lawsuit against appeal from out lawsuit. because the supreme court is an appeals court. and that's how he would get it before the u.s. supreme court. unlike in 2000, with bush and gore, we don't have that state decision yet because there hasn't been any substance that any of his state lost engine. so until that happens, i see the supreme court. so in a word tough, tough period of no, i mean if you will, even if he doesn't succeed, there's a sizable segment of the electorate that now appears not to trust the system. how dangerous is that for a democracy? i would hesitate to paint the entire system one presidential election. it carries a lot of sociological, impart, political impact. but keep in mind what we really should be focusing on right now,
12:09 pm
i think, is in senate races. if we want to be looking at legal impact, because as your previous speaker said, if the senate stays republican party back to the situation of barack obama, where he has to do everything by executive order, which is not making law, it's only an interpretation of walk in a weight for which he has discretion. i don't think that legally there's a problem. we have state elections happening and have happened without problems. i think i'd say senate united states house of representatives, we're always on the selections. well, we only have this focus on the president, and we shouldn't take that as really being representative of the entire system. we only have about 40 seconds left here, professor, but in january, obviously, donald trump will most probably lose the immunity from prosecution he enjoys as president. what could that mean for him? even as president? well, let's go back to question that he is likely possibly,
12:10 pm
he could be prosecuted. and i think that his tax records have been a bit of question got made. come and we've read enough and heard enough about actions in new york at the new york state. attorney general may well be prosecuting him. he would mind, unlike with richard nixon, if the state prosecute him, he cannot be pardoned by the next president. understood. if i can get a yes, no answer from you on this one for pfeffer 1st effect. professor, if that's possible, can't candy new. can donald trump actually pardon himself from any of these. ok, got it. thank you sir. very for fessor, kerk younker for us. really appreciate your time. thank you very much. german chancellor angela merkel congratulated biden and harry shortly after major networks declared them the winners. in a statement posted on twitter, she wrote,
12:11 pm
i look forward to working with president biden. our transatlantic friendship is indispensable. if we are to deal with the major challenges of our time. so how is news of biden's victory being received here in germany? our reporters have been getting reaction from people. i've talked often. think what you want to buy, trump, but he's divided the united states. let's see what biden will bring in the end. it can only get better for america on the face of america. if i am sad yet, i hope that a change, but i'm not on biden side. i think he definitely is the best choice in the end. trump and his methods are impossible. maybe the world will be a more peaceful place, not better than time for sure. i'm on. it's always a matter of opinion, but after the way tom has acted in public, i think for the us, it's better that biden has won the us election has revealed
12:12 pm
a starkly divided nation on a wide range of issues. one of the issues, republican and democratic voters were most slid on though was the coronavirus pandemic. and just how to handle coronavirus for some, a deadly pandemic. for others, a political and economic nuisance. president trump has mocked mask wearing and his supporters have followed suit gathering at large campaign rallies and ignoring basic coronavirus precautions. yet he's even mocked the viruses name. when he said the other night, there's never been anything with have so many names. i could give you 120 names for that right? to get all different names. hans was catching on. coronavirus right. i confluent. 5. joe biden has called for a nationwide mask mandate to combat the pandemic. it's not going away
12:13 pm
automatically. we have to do our part to be responsible means following the science, listening to the experts, washing our hands, social, distancing it means worry to mask, and probably good means encouraging others to do so as well. trump is focused on reopening the economy at any cost, and many people are behind it. shuttered businesses have caused a historic wave of unemployment. it's kind of a good get things going because the economy would go really well before covert. but i think we need him look on the state charges. the biden campaign has argued that an economic recovery can only come once the pandemic is under control. biden has also promised to be a president of all americans after a year in which racial unrest, often breaking into open conflict, has surged across the country to put the harsh
12:14 pm
rhetoric of the campaign behind us to lower the temperature. to see each other again. to listen to one another, tweet to hear each other again and respect and care for one another. to unite to you after the election, america's divisions will not simply go away as hatred and mistrust make governing the whole country increasingly difficult. you're watching d.w. news more headlines at the top of the hour. we'll leave you now with the fireworks show in wilmington, delaware, celebrating joe biden selection. thanks for watching. i'm
12:15 pm
12:16 pm
beethoven, it is for every beethoven 2020, fiftieth anniversary, here on i'm this week on world stories, partying in spain, despite coronavirus planting trees, to save forests in russia. but we begin in belgium, like almost everywhere else in europe, a number of covert 1000 infections and seriously ill patients is rising. hospitals are struggling to keep up this used to be the recovery room for patients
12:17 pm
who've had surgery. now it serves as a makeshift intensive care unit for covert benteen patients on life support. hospitals in the belgian province of leah's are now the epicenter of europe's 2nd wave, and struggling to keep up. we are not able to admit one new patient any more. so if a patient comes in the emergency room with a through the, we have to transfer him to another or be done in belgium until the flemish, both of benjamin will be ortho 4th devo tells us his team is not only short of beds, but also personnel one in 5 nurses in the region have tested positive for the virus themselves, but the pressure is so high that those who don't have symptoms continue to work under strict safety precautions. and the actual number of infections is likely to be higher than the official figures across town at leisure. as university hospital testing is ongoing. i can't smell or taste any more and i have
12:18 pm
a headache. medics here can conduct 280 tests every day, but these tests are strictly for those who have a doctor's prescription, family members, friends, or coworkers who have been in close contact with them, but don't show any symptoms, cannot get a test for them or as the moment we have so many positive cases. the problem is there are far too many contact persons given the huge number of people who have symptoms, we'd be unable to test them as well as all the people they've been in contact with, at least not with the amount of tests we have currently. if we had more tests, we probably could. back in the covert ward, doctor duvall fears the lax handling of the crisis in summer will put him and his colleagues in a very difficult position. very soon. when you have only one bet, and 10 people asking for the same bets, you have to choose between the team that which one you were after and meant no doctor with one could do. that's one thing. it's like, you know,
12:19 pm
we are not doctors who do that kind of thing. we all doctor up to treat patients, not the truth which patient treating in germany has started to take patients from belgian hospitals, with infections expected to continue to rise here in the coming weeks. the medical staff already at their limit will need all the help they can get to combat the increasing number of corona virus infections in spain. the night the curfew has been put in place, but parties are still being held in private apartments, even though they're not allowed every weekend, madrid, police have been knocking on hundreds of doors to shut down illegal parties. my drift allows meetings of up to 6 people who are not related, but police have broken up parties of more than 200 who are keen as a business student in madrid. he only wants to speak briefly and anonymously, as he regularly goes to such parties. he himself recently helped organize one
12:20 pm
that we just rented a place so we could drink and smoke inside just a few visitors even wore masks, but that didn't last long. honestly, young people's biggest fear is having to pay a fine. that's why the places need to be well insulated. so the neighbors sent the police want to take anything that, you know not to get who are keen and his friends seem unfazed by this that the 3rd of spending has become infected with the coronavirus at private parties. 200 illegal parties were broken up in madrid last week alone. police chief javier friend and this is especially troubled by the new business model, being developed bars that are actually supposed to be closed. certainly do take money in exchange for letting people in. there's a clear economic incentive for it. apart from that, we have discovered private homes that were charging entrance fees right at the
12:21 pm
front door. this isn't just about a few friends meeting up. psychiatry's, diego figueroa is calling for more empathy with a young people. even if you support strictly abiding by the hygiene measures, experts are starting to acknowledge the consequences of such drastic restrictions on young people's social lives. right now we have finding out that young people's mental health problems have increased dramatically as a result of the springs to lock down a suicide safe increased by 22 percent so far and attempted suicides have even increased by 35 percent. on top of that, there's been a major increase in the consumption of alcohol and psychoactive drugs. young spaniards are now confronted with new rules. all bars in madrid must close at 11 pm starting this week, and curfew begins at the midnight. even so, business student who are keen doesn't want to be forbidden from party. he says he
12:22 pm
can decide for himself what risk he's willing to tolerate, even if it means partying in private homes until 6 am, for the duration of the curfew. the hill brown district of johan is bergen, south africa, is considered to be a problem area, drugs, violence, prostitution and garbage, plague the streets there. but now the residents want to change it for the better these volunteers meet up every saturday to clean up their neighborhoods. 35 years old and has been living and who broke for 4 years now in it was in this event i took the letter saying it seems like, you know, it takes no, you have the people so you don't have to do the same to take interest. that's a i said to this, who bro has a problem with rubbish? it's everywhere. the city's waste collection service cannot cope on its own. so the
12:23 pm
volunteers decide just to form their own organisation. it's called city. the organisation has launched a program called adopt a street to help residents feel more connected to their community. in the days of apartheid, only white people were allowed to live a year later, it became a melting pot with people from various ethnicities and cultural backgrounds. but as the population and unemployment grew problem started to emerge, it bro became known for violence criminality and prostitution. but that reputation is beginning to change, actually in parks and people, enjoying the district's improved image. they live here is the environment. so it's, it's bringing beds, pride to their own environment. no, you don't have to just eat something out of a plastic, would bring something out of a bottle and throw it on the ground. so we started to get the ads change of behavior in the people and the community that lives here. and then eventually,
12:24 pm
once a street on the air or a park is cleared and the crime elements, they move out, the killer must seek or says, crime, particularly robberies needs to be addressed. he takes us to the block of flats where you works as a caretaker. he says, while the situation has improved dramatically in recent years, the coronavirus pandemic is threatening to roll back. that was improvement is the best that they need. this said premise of the increasingly unhappy because people almost become past that finish then i'm talking. so i know this, but just like them to get their foot in the side of the house, they're starting to get left with it. so they're taking to friends and for their kids. so i'm saying that they could, and that's not good for us. i'm going to quote enough to the finish and then that's it. and it would be like if you check into my sickle, wants to do what she can to make the locals a little bit happier next weekend and make the neighborhood a little more pleasant. even if you can solve all the areas, problems themselves,
12:25 pm
plus eco, and many of those very happy to live here in her room. let them know droughts and pests are destroying forests in russia. activist marianna, munching on a less dedicated her life to conservation says there's only one solution, planting more trees. what looks like random bunches of greenery are in fact pine tree saplings. thousands of them already for planting marianna monty, a new explains how it's done. it's going to be simple. you place the sampling in the hole, then fill that with earth and check that the saplings firmly that it is. the f. check once more that it can't be pulled out of
12:26 pm
a great i'm still for the soft snow. 8000 saplings are due to be planted today. here on the outskirts of moscow. marianna munteanu asked for help online, and an army of volunteers has responded. she regularly invites members of the public to help air rushes forests of taking quite a beating in recent years. huge areas have been devastated by wildfires, pests like bark beetles pose a further challenge. russia has more forest than any other country. trees cover nearly half of this vast land as your items and more as i have been doing at this instant little town. there were terrible wildfires back then throughout the whole of russia. but it's, you know, i saw a picture of huge, well established trees being gun owners across the fields by the way, when they were breaking off like matchsticks teach people, why didn't they stop marianna studied economics and initially worked in finance.
12:27 pm
but she quit her job to devote all her attention to reforestation, to mining to michigan who can change the world. one small step at a time to build it and people will pull together for a good cause. just sitting it's 7 years ago, marianna maggio moved to moscow to build up her own environmental organization. but she's still not a lover of the city. her childhood in the countryside, very much shaped to she is i love nature, i love the forest. as a child, i always spend the summers with my grandmother in the village. all the good, that's her house right next to the forest. we would go out several times a week picking berries or mushroom. back to the forest on the outskirts of moscow. it's time for lunch in the past 10 years, marianna and her helpers have planted more than a 1000000 trees. that's the equivalent of around 1300 soccer fields. a large number
12:28 pm
of volunteers of all ages have helped to make it possible. last year she was selected by the united nations for the young champion of the earth award right nearby. she shows us some other young trees from her project that have had a chance to get established with you. this situation was planted just 7 years ago. and as you can see, it's already bigger than me, and i wish him enough soon. this area should once again be a strong, healthy forest, hopefully strong enough to withstand all the challenges of the future the but
12:29 pm
these works of art are made using stamps. not precious impeccably captured snapshots by frederico, an artist with extraordinary technique. who creates a perfect combination of motives and time for your world., w.-r. garia of people rising from china to the village of the residents grow to a ripe old age. but why? because they eat yogurt and lots of yolk. the secret ingredient is the bacteria lotto by civil guard inducing drug in 45 minutes on the global lines. yes,
12:30 pm
it is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do we make cities greener? but how can we protect habitats? we can make a difference. global ideas, fundamental series of global 2000 on g.w. and all mine. it's the most valuable spice in the world. separate. and it's also cultivated in europe, in a small mountain village, the set from blossoms, right in early heights of the alps. hello and welcome to your own lacks, who would have thought saffron from switzerland. and we have lots more coming up.
12:31 pm
any teddy, an artist who uses the date stamp to create an aging picture. absent the colorful, vibrant british and dinah trade. gil but 1st, what hats to portugal, the southern european country and especially its capitalist been, is famous for colorful the painted tights called you can find them all over in houses and caught yachts even on entire they are a symbol of portugal and in the meantime i exported worldwide and of course copyright but the riches from portugal mostly still hand might these ceramic tiles called as they lay shoes are one of portugal's most iconic traditional art forms. the designs have changed continuously over the years of all
12:32 pm
going into the familiar ornamental tiles in blue and white. in lisbon. they appear at almost every turn for almost 20 years now, bible has overseen the preservation of the capitol ceramic heritage. but before was a law that famous quite like the light of lisbon comes not only for military was true and it's very low as true. but from the portuguese products, which are white. and primarily the reflections from the tiles on the streets of the that gives the city a special aura that light, it's known for. the don't go to the tiles, give lisbon much of it specific character. but aside from their decorative function, they don't protect the buildings from the heat and salty air gusting in off the
12:33 pm
atlantic. ideal for this southern european city. the ornamental tiles have a long history, beginning with the mourners, largely of not bred berbers, who occupied most of the iberian peninsula. starting in the 8th century, the muslim caliphates were ousted 8 centuries later. but the as relations when made the idea beers in were part of our lives for 8 or 900 years or for small even today, we continue to make new ones are quite minor, such as these panels. you see here because of what i feel. it's an art form, constantly evolving, going back now and worse influences with influence years or more. this factory dating back to 741 produces a very particular kind of tile. it's the all this tile manufacturer in portugal and one of the oldest in europe. francisco to mush is the managing director. the other
12:34 pm
lesions are still made by hand using techniques that have hardly changed in 300 years when they were 1st developed to turn out tiles in large quantities. here, quick in 1755, destroyed the city of fees went almost completely to rebuild the city. they had stone and tower at the time that i was much cheaper than stone and the due to the volume of buildings being being made at the time they start to develop, developing some designs took over all the better for saints of office went. so this was that they're not the turn turning point on these 3 off the tiles in portal. every muslim nation starts with clay that's pounded into a mall. a bit of advance planning is needed, as it takes the tiles about 2 months to dry, then they're baked for 18 hours at 1100 degrees celsius.
12:35 pm
so after the 1st fiery, you have now the 1st quality control check. this is a very important phase because at the time it's handmade, it is always possible with these natural clay that we use to leave air bubbles on the inside. and it's not just the majority of the times, it's only possible to detect them using a sound test because it's metallic sound that tell us that this is it. if we have a bad tile, the sound is completely different. painting the tiles also requires a certain level of skill to keep the water based acrylics from bleeding into each other. stencils are used to with a special under glaze firing the tiles again, often changes the colors appreciatively.
12:36 pm
one of the biggest markets for the tile outside the country is the us and of course the many tourists. but to satisfy the market for souvenirs, deaves often pry the little artworks on facades. a few decades ago, there was a huge wave of left live shows. they were sold on the n.t. and now we have visitors are more aware of this problem with us, or have been sensitized to it by information campaigns. and the portuguese are giving more and more respect for their own heritage. where with their mom, you're not only does lisbon shine with a light of its own. portugal's capital literally sparkles with its many colorful as relations. and we've brought back something very special for you from portugal ahead. makes thai a without what the that we're giving it away to just go to our facebook page and
12:37 pm
post a photo into the commentary of the place of ana, the tile gets in your house. so good luck next from hand painted types to hand them back when the arts academy in rome, he always find his work with the date. one day he came up with the idea of making time itself a part of his out how he does it. take a look, does it use brushes? he uses stamps and pads. he creates his images with an ordinary office stater. ringback he presses it onto his canvas, thousands of times until the over dates for change and textures. i decided to use because it was the simplest 2 i could
12:38 pm
find to capture time. the excello gallery in rome, our perception of time is the artist's dominant theme. it takes him up to 2 months to complete a picture, to date or always records the correct date of its close examination of the work reveals when which parts of it were created. i worked on this picture for instance, for about 2 weeks from september 16th to october 1st. so you can see here, for example, is october 1st. and what's the painting called? it's called 16 to october 1st. has been using daters
12:39 pm
to produce his artworks for about 20 years now. he shows them in exhibitions all over europe. he was born and raised in rome, where he studied at the academy of fine arts, the eternal city provides no end of subjects. urban street scenes. classical architecture and nature within the city of cortes. the subjects for his works on his nobel this is one of the classic observation points in some of the tourist in my own hometowns and i think the clouds over the city as my subject. i meant to direct the gaze and reveal new perspectives as well. then alters the photos on his computer until the contrast and color temperature are just right to be turned into a stamped image. he'd like his art to prompt the viewers to think about their
12:40 pm
concept of time. here at the my time is your time exhibition in rome. i'd like to have more time. i think time is the most precious resource you've got. everyone's all be short on time. right now we have lots of time. during the pandemic, we have more time than we used to have very little time now we have to get used to having more time to fill in his hometown is no conventional solo show of his works here. he's constantly viewers can share their time with him. and 100 years, maybe somebody will read that and be able to imagine
12:41 pm
a that i tried to capture turns a very particular dates into timeless works of art. this small blossom is very valuable. no one does. saffron is nicknamed red gold, and single gram can cost more than $30.00 euros. extraordinary, a legion of galveston and iran and the kashmir region. for example. here in europe, there are only very few areas on the cultivation. one of them and you would probably never guess the through its ups. the most precious spice in the world is extracted from these flowers, some from a farmer of a mic eales tough and has a lot to do in the heart of which is the harvest time. here in the swiss count on a valet, he picks each crocus blossom individually. other went through the flower,
12:42 pm
make sure to press it down a little bit and then bend it. he has to collect 130000 flowers for a kilo of stuff from spices associated with warmer regions of the climate in the mountain village of moment is very special and is the only place in central europe where crocus is thrive at a high altitude and the water the flowers need hot or i'm summers, but on the other hand, they also need cold, snowy winters. if we compare our climate to the countries of origin, we're sad from grose weather and cost me about this town are run. to have similar conditions on harsh, cold winters, as well as hot summers in the summer. the sandy clay, if soil of the swiss alps is perfect for saffron, where the spice has been cultivated since the 15th century. the 62 year old farmer
12:43 pm
has dedicated his entire life to it. his parents own the saffron fields, and o'grady is a small boy. he had to help with the picking get me off guard, and it's important to me to preserve this engine tradition of cultivating saffron from which we've practiced for centuries. that like to inspire younger people to get interested in it. and that's a big i'll use them. there's an educational hiking trail in one that explains the secrets of harvesting. the self-proclaimed son from the engine is a tourist magnet and takes pride in its history. and i meet you. founded a small museum. in the past, saffron was used as a dye for textiles, and as a medicine, saffron was probably brought to switzerland by spanish smugglers who wanted to sell the precious plant at a high price. saffron can be used to refine many things, like only the core and faster than lots of phone calls. when you buy sephora,
12:44 pm
make sure that it's a thread, and not a powder. and secondly, measure that the color is right. it beautiful, she had a red light, the color white over time to develop a good nose, the smell of saffron and it's a roll of the aroma is created. while the soft from threads are drying. each tower has only 3 threads after the harvest. they're placed in a dark room for 2 days. i'm not president even these if i don't see it through these threads, these 4 fifths of their weight on drawing. which means that all this is left, all the work invested in picking off the threads in the fair. these are gone, so i just know from oak, so perhaps it no longer comes as a surprise. so i say from the source, i don't see themselves wrong. just approximately 45 kilograms
12:45 pm
of sack from trends are harvested per year in the mountain village of mine. but the effort is worth it. the taste of swiss saffron is unique. one that's all for on the start of the cellphone, from now on, is unique because it's cultivated according to a special method for the thighs and cry from the separate olds are planted in the same interview with a view to write a song called heat into cold sweat saffron is a mix of diverse influences, and some gourmet saying this sound from from the highest cultivation area in europe is the best saffron in the world. saffron from the swiss alps, maybe full spicing up your payout or risotto, but don't use too much, it can be quite strong. and of course, it's not cheap. so stay tuned for more culling every reports which will tickle your
12:46 pm
taste buds here. don't let you see these stories in doozy as i'm just now raising the best chefs with their best tips from meat dishes to begin diets and all the recipe secrets. it's a model of europe's diversity is a smorgasbord here. my list going to subscribe and enjoy d.w. food these days in times of a trauma pandemic, we're all spending a lot more time at home. so feeling comfortable in your own. 4 walls is more important than ever. and they say your home is a mirror of your soul going by. that's british design. i can tricia guild must be a very cheerful person. she is sometimes called the queen of colors,
12:47 pm
and her mission is to make a living spaces small knife. she's been extremely successful, best idea for more than 5 decades. a collar frenzy. tricia guild boldly combines patterns, colors, and materials creating brightly colored rooms that break with conventions. the british artist has a flair for the right combination and look at the uk to me, it's just in my heart. how are you, scala? if you want to see my passion for color, it's all over here. whether it's these beautiful soft, vapor cards, fabrics, accessories, wallpaper, and furniture, tricia guilds, collections have made her a european design icon from the design to the production. every step of the process
12:48 pm
is equally important to her. tricia guild wants not only to create beautiful products who ruled of colors should be more than just decoration. when i 1st started, this would lifestyle didn't exist. i think it's really important to show people different ideas of how they can live, so that we're kind of an interaction. and that is what creating lifestyle is all about. it's about creating a space that people will enjoy to be with. in 1900, killed established the company designers guild, in a small store on kings road in london. today the company is known. so this is where we started, and i had 30 fabrics and 6 fabric. i want to show people that you could lift with color and i'm constantly learning and
12:49 pm
constantly trying for something new. that's what i've always wanted to do. i suppose i like a risky life. tricia guild always swims against the current. she made floral walloping paper is socially acceptable when minimalism was in fashion. she likes to spend time in places that provide inspiration for her walk. you've got to keep looking. i think that's what's important to me. it's looking around and not ignoring my surroundings wherever that is, whether it's of india or whether it is the fashion and textile museum in london is now showing tricia guild's complete life work for the 1st time work from 5 decades . even back in the 1970, s. her search for fabrics and colors. let her as far as india, india is, you know, is always being such a strong inspiration for me because, i mean,
12:50 pm
firstly there's a spirit in india that touch my heart from the last time i went and they know more about text in there. probably were the designer tries to reinvent herself with every collection. repeating recipes for success is part of the question for her. and trends. she just ignores them. i have a lot of information about people like you, but you cannot design a collection like that. you have, for me, i have to design it because i feel that it's the right thing to me. it's all the same thing. you know, a lifestyle, the space, how it looks, how it functions, how we eat, how the world is going to survive. to me, it's all part of the same day. she continues to draw inspiration from all over the
12:51 pm
world to make living spaces more colorful and lively tricia guild the ground of design. one of the things i really miss in these days of the corona pandemic is of course traveling and lots of acacias here in berlin. used to begin their trips at the airport, but a new airport. the b e r has opened and that means is closing its gates for good and many are feeling nostalgic now. it was popular not only with the limits, but with travelers worldwide. it even has its own so many ways to go has achieved cold status. these are the last airplanes to land at berlin's tago airport. and for plane spotters like felix matei,
12:52 pm
it's the last chance to take farewell photos. this point from the highway is one of his favorite locations from which he practices his hobby. was almost special. think about this, but is that you have the airport in the background. if you turn to the left, you have some planes approaching it from a nice angle. and sometimes the light is just perfect. they're almost right above you. but your plane spotters specialize in photographing, different types of airplanes. they use an app that tells them when where and which plane is landing. felix maté has captured many special moments here. i've caught all the government planes from my camera. moments was the last air berlin flight in a minute. but on the flights the libya conference, many government planes, also only once new 7 $47.00 was there. for the 1st time,
12:53 pm
was a highlight, also many really beautiful, customized pete works, which you wouldn't otherwise see. take on an airport lies in the north of berlin. it was built in the 19 $170.00 s. opened a $974.00 and named after a german aviation pioneer. the hexagonal ground plan is an architectural landmark. the rounded signs, friendly colors and the hexagon as a recurring motif, for example, in the tower and the pillars. all of these were designed by the german architects, meinhardt, fun and fun. the airport's main terminal was declared as a listed heritage building in 2019. now there are plans to turn it into a university campus. i think it's very obvious lifeline from here too bad because it's actually good to have an airport on each side of the city. the heritage, my daughter's very airport is part of her childhood memories. we always devoted our
12:54 pm
time between south america and berlin, germany never to leave you here and evelyn cha by i have worked at the airport for more than 25 years. they've written a book about their experiences for them. ttyl, it is the greatest airport in the world that's see, that was the great thing about this place. you came checked in and then you were already seated on the plane to the airport is small and compact. it is only empty right now because of the corona pandemic before it was overflowing with passengers. there are lots of anecdotes, but at most airports, arrivals and departures are separated into 2 different floors or terminals. and here they're right next to each other. and that became emotionally evidence when you spent a lot of time here. it's just too many to go. fans gather for the
12:55 pm
last time to say goodbye on the visitor's terrace plane spotter felix matteo also takes a few more photos. people are getting set for the realisation that it's really the end where you always thought about it, but unfortunately, it's becoming a reality. the only airport, it is a beloved place, full of memories for learners and travellers from all over the world. with a heavy heart, many will say bye bye and thank you. take bye bye. that was all from us here today, but check out our facebook page where you find our latest view, a drawl, you could soon be the owner of this backpack. so stay healthy and again next time, bye bye.
12:57 pm
12:58 pm
it was the 1st international tribunal in history. the number of trials 75 years ago, high ranking officers of the nazi regime of war. you're going to be by the allied forces. they were the 1st war criminals to be held accountable for their crimes. for out my bill to have going root out pair years. frasier, our 2 part series, the 3rd reich, the talk starts november 12th, on d. w. how does a virus spread? why do we panic? and when will all this just 3 of the topics that we've covered and the weekly radio
12:59 pm
prog show is called spectrum. if you would like any information on the krona virus or any other science topic. you should really check out our podcast so you can get it wherever you get your podcast. you can also find us at dot com and slash science . we know this is a scary time for. the coronavirus is changing the world, changing. so queenie's, take care of yourself, good distance wash your hands. if you can't stay at how we're d.w.b. for here for you. we are working tirelessly to keep you informed on over platform. we're all in this to get on together and when they can stay safe, everybody stay safe, stay safe. a safe phrase. this
1:00 pm
26 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on