Skip to main content

tv   Euromaxx  Deutsche Welle  September 17, 2022 3:30pm-4:01pm CEST

3:30 pm
the forklift, he's got it. i'll see you on the campbell with all the marks. why? nothing changing. we're 77 percent. 60 minutes on d. w. sometimes books are more exciting than real life. raring to read. ah, what if there's no escape? w to richer list? sherman street ah, ah, ah, absurd costumes performances and celebrations, find out what this festival is all about to later on in the show. but 1st
3:31 pm
hello and welcome to another edition of your max with me, your host, hannah. hm. well, here's what else we've got for you today. german ham hawk is libertarian. specialty being served out october fast, and watching artist transforms empty plastic bottles into sustainable works of art . but 1st, the whole world seems to be focused on great britain right now. millions of people are saying their goodbyes to the queen who passed away last week after over 70 years on the throne. hundreds of thousands of people are laying flowers outside, buckingham palace and other official residences in order to pay their respects to queen elizabeth of course. but likely also in the hopes of catching a glimpse of the new monarch time to find out a little bit more about the new king charles the 3rd. ah, britain has
3:32 pm
a new monarch, king charles the 3rd since the death of his mother, queen elizabeth the 2nd on september the 8th. charles is the new head of state. he will carry that legacy on really understand that his mother was not just his own mother, his mother, to a whole country into a world he's got taken some circumstances on climate change, for example. so i think it'll be interesting see how that shows in his style. i like the new king because i know he's gonna carry on the tradition of the clean for 70 years. so he's going to do a really, really good job. charles has already made history as britain's longest serving as a parent. and now at age 73. he's the oldest british monitor ever accede to the throne. historian and a white law cast followed his career path for some while it's very hard to know yet how the king style will differ than the queen, and fundamentally, he will know,
3:33 pm
he needs to be seen to be believed. he needs to be out there. he needs to be doing the royal walk about as his mother understood. charles philip offer. george was born in london on november, the 14th 1948. in 1981. he married lady diana spencer. the couple had 2 children to princes, william and harry. but later developed in 2005, 8 years after diana died in a car crash in paris. charles married his longtime partner, camilla parker bowles. she is now queen consort. she's been with camilla all the way through the last few days. and i think that really shows festival the significance of the queen's intervention earlier in the year where she said the camilla would be taking the title queen console. and remarkably, that hasn't really been an issue a few years ago. one might have imagined that asserting and declaring that camilla was quinn called, that was the
3:34 pm
a source of massive controversy. charles champion the environment early on. once marked as the prince, who talks to plants, he's now seen as a pioneer for 5 years. london based, designed you, ivan and o me have been using wheat like stinging nettles from charles's high grove estate to produce textile fibers and create new fashions knowledge around sustainability, the environment and stuff. so vos, i hope he doesn't give up on all his interests because i'm not sure if anybody would have that much of a passion for the environment or sustainability as he, as the prince. charles also wrote, books supported a variety of charitable organizations and youth foundations. and founded the food company dodgy. organics, will he make his markers mon, up to i think he never to bleed charles's assault, filling kin. he's not going to be king for decades. and in many ways,
3:35 pm
i think he is a sort of stop gap figure before the accession of king william. and i think the hopes for the monarchy really ah, for finding a relevance and voice for the 21st century will be very much focused on william. bought fast begins the reign of charles for thought long lived, the king. now the flex this movement of the 19th sixty's might have been made famous by the lakes of yoko ono an yoseph boys, but one of its founders george maturin us was born in the small lithuanian city of conus, which lies west of the capital, a villainous. this year, counties has been named one of the 3 european capitals of culture. one of the highlights was the flex this festival held in memory of the cities famous son. you're a max reporter axle,
3:36 pm
plymouth. easy got involved. ah hey, i am accept him of easy and i'm here in colonized one of this year's european capital of culture tonight is the fluxes festival happening. one of the biggest events this year. you have no idea what to thought about. well, me too. so let's find out it's about happening as i understand. so i'm kind of marching on top on the hill address and different close this and certainly thought . so obviously i do need a costume for the flocks of festival. i'm in cone us home to round 300000 people. it's lithuania is 2nd largest city during its year as a european capital of culture, it will host over a 1000 events. and the fluxes festival is one of the biggest. i'm heading to one of
3:37 pm
the many workshops at which people can make cost. oops. the organizers have provided all kinds of materials, so everybody can let their creativity run right for free. i think i feel like a kid like to do something i haven't done cuz this like event doesn't happen like 10 years ago. so it's pretty cool. wings that these are supposed to be wings and the process just get going on and on . and it's something now it's fun seeing other people doing this. it's a fun. see what everyone comes up with and just everyone have a good time. so this is my creation. i call it the flexi car. the festival starts at george much from the square at the edge of the city center.
3:38 pm
normally it's a busy intersection. but the year, the square, which is named after the founder of the flax's movement, disclosed to traffic and open for costume, revel us george machine, us and others kicked off. the flax was movement in the early 19 sixty's distancing themselves from elitist hi art. the focus was on performances and happenings. the creative idea was more important than the finished work, and the more observed the idea, the better famous artists like your corner, belong to the fluxes, movement. one part of it was instructions like how to make her a one kind of performance. just stand there, look at the audience, clap and do that. so there's like chuck chuck chuck chuck instructions these 2 years ago and 2 till now like this been damien, all the stuff. everybody got a lot of instructions. you know how to behave, what to do, what not to do. what were to say, how to stay safe, you know, and so we,
3:39 pm
for what if fluxes could give some instruction, would make us more free to, to make us look around, bit differently, instructions to feel that it's not so scary to explore yourself. personally, participants can't wait to get started. now they just have to climb up palatas hill in typically flax's style. the festival 1st took place him corners in 2018 at the top. playful and absurd. his performance is a weight festival guests here folk search for colonels of grain in mounds of earth, while blindfolded they deal with
3:40 pm
oh my good with the so random out there in the world here. i like about it. i love how people are united during this event. the maker, it's crazy and this should be i'm glad that we can get like out of our comfort zone, you can be whatever you want today. so that's why i like it. like for you, then it's time for the grants she not. the fiery message means lead flax's, keep burning inside you because it's working on it that way. i well, thankfully, we can always rely on act. so to get involved in the fun. now it's that time of year in germany again, the october vast celebrations are kicking off in munich this weekend. yes.
3:41 pm
octoberfest starts in september. it's confusing. i know. but you can expect to see a see of later hosen and plenty of darned dose being dawned in bavaria right now. and the beer. well, it's flowing thought to watch people eat at october, fast spines, taxes are german hancock. it's the most popular food there. so let's take a closer look at this traditional bavarian dish. ah, this is german hancock or shine saxon being served in the huff boy house and munich . and it's always prepare it according to the original bavarian recipe. for a decade now, this man has been passionately cultivating and integral part of the very and dining culture here been the most from it up. my name's both gong right meyer. i'm the
3:42 pm
head chef at the hope. boy, how's it? and i'm always delighted to cook and serve shrines hawk soft every year. it inspires me with its quality. it all. it brings to mind the dishes home and it's blue and white sky louder than typical image of the very 5 to me spines. hocksey is bilberry. i had me shop by on the hoff boy house lines at the center of munich in southern germany. it's the beer hall of a brewery and has belonged to the bavarian states since 1589, both getting high to my use as simple ingredients for his bavarian. fine saxon, but i'll unite a ham hawk of bavarian quality and you add salt, pepper, caraway garlic and beer you think fit it. so it's important to use regional ingredients if not for so you know, just where everything came from. flash of the chart, i make sure the meat is of the very in quality this whole, and that the farmers arrays the pix humanely, that you can take. it says that it because the animals are not that stress idle it on it is today, august the this um and that's where marianna stovall comes in. she selects the
3:43 pm
farms authorized to supply the huff boy house with meat. and it's crucial for the pigs to be able to roam around freely and they're stole the way they're naturally inclined to either way my, my, my visit was when you take a look at them with how alert and interested they are, you can just tell they're doing well, back in the kitchen, both gang heights, maia is seasoning the pigs for leg. he blends garlic with salt pepper and a caraway seasoning and rubs it into the meat. but he leads out the rind. the spices have to soak into the meat for an hour. he then puts the shines axa in the oven for half an hour, at a $160.00 degrees celsius. he then douses it with black beer and cooks it for another 2 hours at a $110.00 degrees. then high to maia prepares the traditional side dish,
3:44 pm
potato dumplings, fair golden corral, dove, making a good potato dumpling takes a good potato with a lot of starch and salt hard. he shapes the mashed and salted potatoes into balls by hand and cooks them in boiling salt water for 20 minutes. after 2 hours, he raises the oven temperature to $230.00 degrees for half an hour, and douses the shine taxes in black beer. 2 more times, but it has to so again, when the crust gets porous, i pour the barrow over it tear, the dark beer has much more sugar and it karma license giving the shines hawks a glossy look and caramels labor. convinced the out the crust gets crispy or the growth because moisture is added and escapes again out and it pops open like popcorn or the album bomb blocks is all through. popcorn shines accent is served with a little dumpling and sauce sauce comes from the black beer poured on top. and
3:45 pm
this is where the centuries old tradition at eating shrine taxes. dickens with eating fines hawks is a little celebration wash, right. you don't just sit there alone with your spine talk so you have fun eating out with the right atmosphere, music, beer and pretzels. so by dia breeds. but what's the right way to eat? shines hocksey. tobias, once again, it's a regular here and he shows us how to do it. oh, it's trim because sky carefully cut off the crop. this is not the most dangerous part because he can get a bit tricky to list excite. their main thing is to keep you shut clean. it was all but live with erin spines. hocksey is a real specialty insurance policy. ah,
3:46 pm
well, he certainly look to so he was enjoying it. now, how often are you able to really get stuck into a novel? i studied english literature and even i find it difficult to drag myself away from my phone sometimes. and carl up with a big but i do love reading. so this next report is a highlight for me. many famous story tellers and writers are from germany. the brothers grimm, of course, and greats like gutter and schiller, dw reporter rachel stuart, investigated the history of bricks and reading and germany. once upon a time, there was a prince who sat in love with a beautiful mystery. enough to shield the girl even to print for them. so they make
3:47 pm
she sit by chopping off, but they're not going to print to look at the wedding the evil sexes. however, i like the brothers grimm, a gory twist on european folk law. back in the 1900 century. thanks to them. and right like good on schiller, germany has long been known as the land of poet, some thinkers. but if a land of book club germans read less than people in countries such as brazil, russia, italy, in china. but germany does by nobel prize winner furniture and the biggest book fair in the world. an avid reader in germany is known as a book, a book cruel, or rather charmingly, a reading wrap, science. let's see how well these reading wrap. no, they won't get us too many have more brewery. the libraries are taking. is maria perez? yeah. the, the libraries i hope. yeah, definitely libraries that who wrote death in venice that, that was that connie might write too much money. germany sell the most book license
3:48 pm
today to which country i taught usa no idea. holland switzerland breath. no sign of what a surprise ride so late at night and wind. i know it's the father with his child. it is the father with his child, the palms called the l king. it's sheila, it's the other one, gerda, sorry, sure you go son. fact many countries, right, the titles on their books by and from top to bottom, but in germany, they usually rest from bottom to top. so when a german book is cover up on the coffee table, the title is upside down on the spine. books can be pretty pricey here because all shop have to sell new releases at exactly the same price. the idea is to protect independent bookshops and to ensure that the diverse range of gets published, the best sellers off all the full prize, essentially help finance the more nice books and works by and over. the book has been rather symbolic at various stages in germany. history, german scholar johan a student that revolutionize reading in the 15th century with his mechanical
3:49 pm
printing press that use movable metal type. he seemed to work making the 1st printed copies of the bible. 500 years later books that were approved of by the nazis were being tossed into bonfires across germany. the images shooting the recall the words of german writer homeless china were books of burned people will also be burned. today's german national library as a sign of german reunification having brought together existing institutions from east and west germany. it how this sum 36000000 items and anyone who publishes anything in germany is required by law to send 2 copies to the national library. talking of libraries. lavish one, i don't really think sermons have a special relationship to their books and to library where they can not only find those books and who, but also make the most of other services and activities. and that's even more value to the sunshine. so what does the germans like to read? there are a few regulars in the best seller. this, the dictionary, the bible,
3:50 pm
anything by or about the pope one gene or the often dominates, the fiction jobs. here is the semi or crime. these come with gloomy covered, and ominous titles like the corpse in the beach. many books that make it big in germany, translations from other languages like harry potter, which has sold more than 33000000 copies in german. i'm muggle is a movie. buck big is i novel and fluffy, the 3 had a dog as cools, now fluffy jen, and book. they always make it onto the global market, but there have been some rebounding export successes like missile and this never ending story or been, i think the reader and often of the j. k. rowling of germany. cornelia phone has captured imagination worldwide with an inquest series about a little girl who loves to read. there was another reason why maggie took a book whenever they went away. they were home when she was somewhat strange. they were familiar. voices. friends never let the
3:51 pm
in germany, plastic bottles like these aren't actually usually thrown in the been people take them to their local shop to recycle them because you can get money back. but elsewhere around the world, they're thrown away all the time. and this of course creates endless amounts of waste and plastic pollution. but one artist in the czech republic saw an opportunity to transform trash into vivid pieces of art. yesterday's trash becomes tomorrow's art. sculptures made from discarded plastic bottles with these recycled objects. are the works of check artist veronica, which throw ha, said may. mm hm. yeah. this is my 1st work from plastic bottles. i made it in 2004 . said that was the beginning of my pet art, but at veronica, at least, whoever lives in bush jarrett near prague. she studied art architecture and design
3:52 pm
both in the check capital and paris. in france. she mainly worked with scrap metal . at 1st she hadn't thought of using plastic for her sculptures. said that that has allergens it was he that was purely by chance and thank ok. rather i don't know if it was by chance or if it came upon me from on high i. once i was working with hot air and tried to heat up a bottle, i'd been drinking from shed off in that 2nd. i got the idea to use this material for sculptures. oh, did he says and materiel poor. every one said, you're crazy. that's trash. fools. the, they share b t bottles are made from polyethylene, theresa late made from crude oil. it's bad for the environment and doesn't bio degrade quickly. the artist has opened a new perspective on the material and the great potential of creative recycling.
3:53 pm
here she's at work on a chandelier gouge. i'm also jerry day when i get started, i have an idea who often i see that it won't work challenge then i have to try another technique or find another bottle of her during the process. and i figure out how i can make it work. the comalla, the cheque artist has developed various techniques for transforming plastic trash into art. she heats melts, cuts and fuses, the plastic bottles together to shape them into all kinds of objects. in force of where you have to know how to hold, it can be able to the how long to heat it up, temper and at what temperature that comes from experience. oh, there's experi young. so she regularly routes through the recycling bins in her
3:54 pm
hometown looking for new material. yeah, head day. i'm looking for pink bottles. fried abigail orange bottles are good and sturdy bothers the key piece. being funny to call like this one said i may have acted more, provided they're looking for bottles, is the best part of my work is of them. i never know what i'm going to find and i'm up for surprises over a gym to me. this is an adventure because i've been a collector ever since my child had my sir. well now, from she stores thousands of p e t bottles of all shapes and colors and her garden shed and a small barn a unit fung spock. as your boots, i don't think i can save the world with my art may come m u, but i like to show people that you can reuse things additional. so this won't go often when i create something for illness. pieces of the bottles are left over day
3:55 pm
. this here will become the body of a fly. this suki my leftovers can become something else, a plant or whatever long to that in the fires me there's no end to it because the unfinished omit. oh, her kitchen chandelier, swarming with plastic flies, is now finished. you abandon me. now i can let that go and start on something else of this work was commissioned and has already been sold for 800 euros. she recycled 40 bottles to make it. veronica visto vas, plastic art is both creative and climate friendly and that set for today's edition. just a quick reminder to take part in our draw for a chance to get your hands on a bag and sweat trek from our dw uncensored collection. thanks for watching. take
3:56 pm
care and see you next setting with ah, with
3:57 pm
ah, with who i want to talk to you about inequality, the 77 percent. my connie, it is kamani and her crew talk to the people who feel left behind the street debate from lagos, nigeria, is it more resources enough regarding the problem is that if you got the theme on
3:58 pm
the co width of the much see why nothing changes with the 70 percent in 30 minutes on d. w. who the landscape a reflection of a turbulent history. the cities, the mosaic of different people and languages. the ron's mountains reveal unparalleled beauty. ah, a special look at a special country. iran from above. in 75 minutes on d w. oh, we're all good to go beyond the obvious
3:59 pm
as we take on the world. 8 hours. i do all where i'm all about the story that matter to you whatever it takes. 5 police my follow up with you. we are your is actually on fire made for mines. oh, how did she become at all for hitler's favorite director? and how did he become a forgotten filled pioneer? lady he finished and arnold funds between hitler and hollywood. in 1932, they set out into the icy wilderness of greenland to create a life threatening a film project that became
4:00 pm
a major milestone in their lives. love, seduction. and our ice cold passion starts october 8th on d. w. ah ah, this is d w. news alive from berlin horrific scenes out of ukraine's east. investigators say they have uncovered evidence of torture and murder, added master grave. near the city of israel. the site is an area recently liberated from russian occupation, also coming up, people in lebanon, take.

22 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on