Skip to main content

tv   Euromaxx  Deutsche Welle  October 8, 2022 6:30am-7:00am CEST

6:30 am
i, we talk with communities from africa, andy, african dice. you know, if you find a different life path to bring to 5 different perspectives, aren't 21 a good, 30 minutes on d w. how about taking out the race? you could even take a chance, a don't expect to happy ending literature west germany. mm hm. oh, oh. these courageous people are taking human pyramids to the next level,
6:31 am
literally more on that later in the show. but 1st, a warm welcome to another edition of your max. if meet euro's tannahill. well, here's a sneak peak at what we've got lined up for you. 82 year old fashion designers, van der rule, it shows us her world in technicolor. and we take a road trip to italy's lake, garda, and an electric, comparable but 1st let's go to tarragona in the north of spain where they take building towers pretty seriously. now i'm not talking about building blocks, which is hard enough in itself. they actually make towers. i to people is an old catalan's tradition. i used to do acrobatics. so i know how hard it is to build a human pyramid. i have just 6 or 7 people, but their towers can be up to 10 stories high.
6:32 am
ah, one up there, you don't have time to look down. i just look ahead. i don't think about looking down in, and i just think about the job. no more. 13 year old to this i got bo has a special hobby. she's been climbing human towers for 4 years now. she's facing of real challenge. tarragona, spain, host, the world human pyramid championships. called carstairs, this is more than sport here. it's an expression of katelyn national identity. 12, yes, to view a franca, my grand. my whole family has been here my father to i've done this since i was a little boy. my closest friends are here. i couldn't give this up. we're not talking about the human tally tradition began interrogation. in the 18th century,
6:33 am
rival groups competed for the best shapes which over time grew toola antola. the 1st will championship was in 1932 because stells have had unesco world heritage status since 2010 night. we took it, but if there isn't much risk, despite the highest and the impact, if you do full really rather he in fact, so if it or he can be there have been some serious injuries. so listen to it, but nothing major in recent years. miss with it about i said, a trains subs, children 3 times a week. she's been accustomed yet for 10 years and knows what it takes to miss you . then who knows? mean, the more like you see the speech, you have to be like a foster. them in your physique decides which level you go to the so the smallest one is to go to the highest to win. must have even the fee, the mounts,
6:34 am
the competition will begin soon. the 600 members of the cast their yes to be le franco, into the arena together in the last will championship in 2018. they took 2nd place la jolla, after wanda's team has came to get in. and it's very exciting to see the crowded stadium about indiana. they trained a year for this event. the plan structure is far from simple. each has a defined position. thus sanchez tries to keep track of things that i given them all day. my bye a yeah, this is the plan of a 10 story tower and we want to build people, noble and, and a gable. the whole team will inspect the base to make sure everyone is in position . i wanted to discuss ideas in order to make the castille
6:35 am
really impressive, but i guess the last many and most of the team forms the opinion of base this broad foundation stabilizes the castell all its weight rest. if the tower collapses, the base absorbs much of the impact i thought was about for us. down below we can see nothing, especially when we have 2 or more people on top of it. so we're quiet and listen closely to the music. depending on the pitch, we know how high the tower when the base is in place, the trunk is built. 10 stories high. everyone is fully focused. at half height, the music starts with by many, a boy climbs to the top and crowns the tower. with an arm weigh points
6:36 am
are awarded for the construction and form as well as for the dismounting. a crowd of, of a 6000 cheer them on. i liked the collective experience and the teamwork that the one at the bottom is just as important as the one to talk to somebody about. i come every year because it's such an incredible display of cattle and culture. they've done it because he has given up front a will champions in human talib building for the 12 time in the clamps history fung. i'm because when i 1st started, no one had any idea how high the castelow would become, that we could come so far. but, but you can always try to go higher with my so happy that we've learned it shows that all the time. now we're entering the world of one of britain's most iconic fashion designers. she's celebrating 50 years of fabulous fashion pop and glam.
6:37 am
even if you don't recognize her name, you will recognize her work. her clientele has consisted of celebrities and nobility, but what makes her stand out most aside from her bubble gum, pink hair and bright blue eye shadow is her drive to continue creating works of art . well into her eighty's, introducing dame xandra rhodes fashion means to me, my life. it means to me what we wear our life that goes on around us. and it's ever changing. so it means that it's a wonderful rainbow that i can call the raining princess of punk is now 82 years old. xandra rhodes has become a design icon in her hometown london. she was among the 1st to bring the punk look from the streets on to the runways. she dress british princesses, anne and diana, as well as queen's lead singer freddie mercury and other celebrities too. i had
6:38 am
a little tiny studio in bayswater, london, and i could pull the clothes off the rail of freddie put on the pleated top that you always think of which was a bridle tell and he just looks wonderful in xandra roses penthouse makes her love of color evidence, back in the 1960 s, she had no plans to become a fashion designer, but rather an illustrator. then she discovered textile design. but when nobody bought her designs, perhaps thinking they looked to extreme roads decided to take matters into her own hands. yes. i started in fashion because i needed to sell my textiles and i was a textile designer and i'd lead to print to college. and that's what i've been doing ever since. but making i then ended up making dresses or jackets like i'm
6:39 am
wearing a skirt. so everything i do is nearly always printed ah, nothing was off limits to sandra rose from garments to shoes and socks to home accessories. and almost every single design is stored in her memory. especially this one for lady diana from 1986 played tai and it was very shine. she's very shy and, and really lovely. and you know, a lot of americans think that you just friends at them. you go in and you can't see and you take the dress and you try on her. but i was very proud of her and how she looked xandra rhodes has never slowed down. she explains that her life and her work are thoroughly interwoven and an integral part of it are her sketches. i get inspired by my friends. i get inspired by going on trips and doing drawings
6:40 am
and seeing things. so i go to somewhere and i might draw relief for a flower or a bug. it could be any thing, and you never know where the drawing lead you. it could lead to another design or it's picture and sketch blue roads has been living and working in south london since 2003 here she had an old warehouse remodeled as a fashion and textile museum. i think as a designer, the worst thing is if you think i've made it, because that's the time when is it going to be a big ho and you're going to head down down, down and down. i think that you're always like a tight. rote walker. you're always on a on a tight rope and that's how you have to do. you have be grateful that you've got work and people want it. in 2014, she was appointed dame commander of the order of the british empire. patchy
6:41 am
achieved the zenith of her career. she has no plans to stop. i never even considered whether i was going to get to 80. i just, i'm lucky, i love my friends. i like my work. and i think the most important thing is to try and live every day as a crops up and, and try and enjoy it. i don't mean it's always is enjoyable. they go down. but you know, try and think of death that way. in that way, dame xandra rhodes looks back at over 50 years of creativity. currently, she is busy organizing her vast archive and selecting parts of it to present to various museums, always with her sites firmly sit in on the future. now have you ever taken a road trip through europe in a van? i've tried it. it wasn't for me. i like to think of myself as low maintenance, but it turns out i need a little bit of hot running water in the morning to be
6:42 am
a nice person. but youtube are as allison and eric feler from the states make their tour and an electric camper. van looked very dreamy. let's see what they're up to in their 3rd episode. ah, good afternoon, once again. hello, eric and allison, coming out to again, we're continuing our camper. van rhodes have now through italy. we arrive to lake garda, which if you're not familiar with it, it is italy's largest li. yes. we left the mountains in the chilly weather behind and traded in for the last bit of summer warmth and sun. as he mentioned, lake garda is the largest lake in italy and it is absolutely stunning to take out the water. is this amazing crystal clear blue? it has the beautiful rolling hills with vineyards, little villages, italian villas, speckled throughout the camp site. the we're at today is called clamping resort
6:43 am
weekend. and it is an amazing spot to have all these different pitches for caravans, which is what we're in right now. but they're also all these different types of accommodations. they have these tent like structures that look like a ton of fun to stand there. a little smaller cabin type of structures dotted all throughout the property, somewhat epic lake views some that are kind of more nestled into the woods. but 1st things 1st. we got to get this baby charging. oh yes. the charging game begins now and we're charging, it always starts off saying it's going to take a full 24 hours to charge, but then it always falls down to around 14 hours. so we'll see where we land today . ah, you got it all set up at our camp site and we have our mobile kitchen here, our and ready to cook with making some sort of stew. we just had a bunch of left over vegetables from our travel, so i'm gonna put it all together in this cut and make some delicious dinner. yeah,
6:44 am
i mean how legit does this look? looks like you got a little kitchen over. so it's like, it's like allison's little cooking show just take whatever much to what you haven't thrown upon and leaking as many that there's actually what we're doing with dinner is served. yeah. check it out. not too bad at all. huh. oh, it's definitely not still. it's just noodles and pastor's house with a bunch of a veggies are and we're going to eat our delicious dinner tonight with good morning everybody. and welcome to sir me on a this city a very, very special because it is not just the city by the way. this is a city invoice. yes, it's been on the skinny peninsula that goes,
6:45 am
jetting out into lake garda. so it is completely surrounded by this amazing green crystal clear water. it's also just a beautiful city. you have all the stone streets that you get to walk through. a bickley old preserved buildings. they do a lot of cars, though. they gotta watch out for that. when you're walking talking to with, when you come to the city, you have to visit the castle, which is one of the best preserved castles in all of italy. it was built in the 13th century and has a man made harbor that's actually built to protect the castle ships. ah, with i didn't see myself being a princess at this castle. maybe the queen knows you know, dream big little girls out there. ah no, i'm digging this little peninsula. it's so interesting because you walk in to the
6:46 am
castle, which seems very medieval, a very european and then you come back here to these olive trees and these ruined and you almost didn't feel very mediterranean and it's so warm and nice out. it's like you stepped into ancient room. i know it's wild. we. we went through so many centuries in just like 10 minutes with all righty. we're all charged up back on the road. we are going to be trading in that lake like the coast to what y'all. that is right. we are headed down the coast to the mediterranean sea to check out the land or chink with terry. ah, ah, looking for more euro max clinton, we've got you covered had to our youtube channel. here. we know reporters on their
6:47 am
adventure with the tradition and uniquely here and then have it don't make a introducing go to the holy grail of german cheese. okay. it's actually from the netherlands, but the germans love it. and admittedly, it's pretty darn good. guy does success story began and abusive all historic city in north holland called you get set up, but what makes it so special? let's find out in this episode of our theories. good secret. ah, it some of the processes move all for years in aging case and making
6:48 am
a richer cheese face book a natural product can be so important for a dog to found, gets rich from it. it's like champagne and france or be are in belgium and we have g. i look with boulden, how cheese cheese produced on the same farm and where to cow's milk and we don't hear the milk, so we produce cheese from rock mill. i am trunk complain. welcome to our cheese farm where we produce f buddha house gas real ducks, gout up farmers, cheese roughly every day reproduce between 12 to 14
6:49 am
keys. his milk sour with harris and reynolds are after the milk, the 1st 2 and main ingredients. and then we use some little bit of extra calcium adding, run it through milk. that's the point. when you start cooling things, piece reynolds comes from the young cows, the cos in order to digest milk. the golf uses read it to flow to digestion down in his guts. in order that the rena's can do its job. the milk has to be still off an hour. the milk which used to be liquid is then solid. 90 percent of mill is water and water. we don't need in making process by cutting. we get rid of the watery part. our keys produce today will stay for almost 24 hours inside the wooden mall.
6:50 am
a with powder cheese is a name that everybody knows. we speak a lot of tourists who are surprised how that is also without i am a current old buyer school. i am sitting here in front of the how the keys experience, where you can learn everything about cheese and the production of for cues ah, how to became a dirty capital of the world. because how it is situated in kind of schwab and around how they're good not to grow anything but grass. and what can you do with ross? you buy a house and they eat grass because produce milk and from the milk. you can make it
6:51 am
right before the new jesus will get into the moles. we take that jesus out into the soul, beth, we need that to make a crust to the keys so that the cross dries out, contains from sold, and that makes it a better resistance. against the mold or anything like that ever you should reproduce is basically the same recipe, the same way of doing things. what makes different in paste is the aging of gees. so we have young cheese, 10 weeks, 3 months, one year old, 2 year old 3 year old, 5 year old, 6 year old and an adult at the moment. the oldest was 7 or 8 years. and the best way to eat how to tease is in the morning and in the afternoon flies of dark red. put good, real farm. i was better on top of it and not less slices of real gout, a piece. and then eat it. that's the best.
6:52 am
okay, it's time to talk about german culture. so in our culture, to be specific. for those of you still in the dark germans love there san us, complete with a fancy infusions, cold plunge pills. and as is the case in one by linds bar, under water attack, no speakers. but and here comes the twist. you have to be naked quite the culture shock for some, including d, w reporter rachel stewart from the u. k. j click oh, it's 90 degrees celsius. i'm sitting in a cramped, dimly little wooden hut with about 40 strangers and my own make. the 1st time i visited a nude thorn or in germany, i was way out of my comfort zone. but soon i noticed that nobody seemed particularly interested in anybody else's naked bodies. in fact, if anybody was staring, it was me simply because i'd probably seen more naked bodies in that 1st half an
6:53 am
hour in the sauna than i had in my entire life. they were all shapes and sizes on display and the full range of body her. it was fascinating educational. now. the thing, the sauna is a regular pastime for millions of germans, but do you really need to be in the new to enjoy this hobby that even well, why not conic illness? there's nothing wrong with it. it's culture. oh, why? that's the way it's was been. you just wouldn't go into this a little and clothes line. so now it's about hygiene. it's more. hi jenna, but it's unhygienic with clothes is niema. does that copper? i suppose more of your body can warm up that way so that you can sweat better. oh, so it's also a way to break down area was in by monday meeting after spending the whole day at the sooner you won't even notice that you don't have any clothes on. i'm not, i'm not sure it can feel pretty liberating to bear all, but the freedom is not absolute. there are strict rules that must be adhered to if you want to be accepted among the sonically intel. totally gathered by now. the 1st
6:54 am
group is no close. never to there must be a towel between your on the bench at all time. rule number 3, no talking under any surf pushed, sorry, highlight, but any trip to this order is the output, which translates directly is infusion. this is the ultimate sooner experience is about where you arrive at the designated time and find the spot in the sauna. there were usually 2 or 3 rounds which get progressively hot in between each round. you might get the chance to go outside and cool down and form an orderly make a q for the shower. kudos to anyone to take the dip in the ice. each outpost generally has a phoenix or the water labeled over the hot coals will be in queue to something like coconut or you can if you're lucky at some point, because this is a coffee, scrub salt, or honeywell behind the ground, the sooner will become a hive of activity as people slab of their bodies from top to toe with honey sweaty, honey. an outburst is led by a solar master. they keep order in the sauna due to labeling and performed all
6:55 am
important. how order to watch the hot air and every quarter of an unmatched wet session in the nude. it's not what you're used to. it sounds bonkers, but don't knock it till you tried it. it's true once you've spent a few hours surrounded by naked people, you kind of get used to it. and on that note that we've got time for today. but be sure to check out our website for this week's job and a chance to receive some d. w goodies. and of course please follow us on social media for me and the whole year max team here in berlin. thanks for watching and take care with
6:56 am
. ah, with
6:57 am
you a point in august 21 at the global media form 2022 a frickin off the cross with we to work with creatives from africa and the african diaspora. you know, if you find a different life path from different 5 different perspective art with coming up on dw, the 77 percent were they was forced to flee when russia attacked
6:58 am
nigerian students living in ukraine. the thing that we really got me skate like be this kid was with us. how are they doing now restarting it? we got to do it was 77 percent in 30 minutes on d. w. ah no. has no limits. love as for everybody. love is life a love matter and that's my new podcast. i'm evelyn sharma. and i really think we need to talk about all the topics that north divide and deny that this. i have invited many deer and well known guests. and i would like to invite you to an end the or eternal dynamite
6:59 am
and the pillar of sticks and society, a symbol of arbitrary rule. in the struggle for justice tax in many ways i think taxation is one of the most stream actions by a government. but it's also the definition of government because without taxation, there's no government the right to levy taxes and the obligation to pay them both inherent in the sovereignty of nation states and their citizens. but what happens when the power of taxation is undermined? a tax on top of the tax on top of the tax. that's the straw that broke the camel's back. i've been renting forever. thinking to myself here. when's it all going to come crashing down. take on stuff
7:00 am
can't pay won't pay. taxation and politics starts october 21st on d w. ah, this is debbie news. these are our top stories, 3 champions, the civil rights share, this year's nobel peace prize. jailed bella racine rights activists, alice pulaski, russia's memorial organization and ukraine's center for civil liberties. the judges hailed them as unwavering defenders of human rights in europe. they also called for violence case release that are anti thailand's king and queen of visited survivors of the worst mass killing in the nation's history.

25 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on