tv Euromaxx Deutsche Welle March 19, 2023 6:30pm-7:01pm CET
6:30 pm
160 kilometers on only one charge. we put that to the test. and what else does it have to offer? read? in 60 minutes, boy d, w. ah lou, what people have to say matters to us. mm. that's why we listen to their stories. reporter every weekend on d. w. getting into character a look at where many film and tv productions get their costumes. instagram versus reality. do vienna's landmarks measure up to social media posts and the need for speed uncovering some of the myths about germany's autobahn all coming
6:31 pm
up on your ro, max. oh ah, ah, ah, whether it's for britain or the crown when major film in series productions need elaborate outfits. paris costumes in spain, answers the call. we took a step inside the world's biggest wardrobe. with about 10000000 costumes in store. this is considered the world's biggest wardrobe collection, hollywood studios, netflix, amazon, and others outfit, their productions here. but why is this spanish company near madrid, the go to costume rental? what are the income that among best to what are you here? you can find costumes for every production and every era followed with land,
6:32 pm
not just clothing, but everything that goes with it, including the accessories facility of everything and production needs from head to toe, fairly affordable film. does that come with us to look below? paris costumes has outfitted hits like house the dragon, the pre qual, to game of thrones, and the netflix productions bridger tin and the aliens, hist, or have yet to later has served as the rental, c, e. o. since 2013. his motto is never throw anything away. every bit and scrap can be repurposed over and over. looked at my heart. albert, why do you think? what improves the collection of any costume rental is the costumes being used, the more often the better. therefore, all our costumes are being used. everything in the parish. costumes collections include jewelry, both originals and replicas, from across many centuries. and vast collections of shoes and hats of many
6:33 pm
different models ah, to meet demand. they make some items themselves like in the shoe factory. it turns out hundreds of shoes a month. the leather department employs experts on historical costume making. they've been, they caught up in, it depends on the garment or the item we're looking for some, we have to apply some super elaborate techniques to them. recently we outfitted a film where we had to make them everything by hand. tell up an amino estrella caballero has been working in the trade for 25 years and knows all the tricks. do you think will guys go the middle here? i have a metal helmet that's almost an exact copy of the ones used in the middle ages. alanine and les program. if you're ali total good, weighs about 3 kilos. started that and that's why we make a leather version of him as a burglary yawning. widow, well yeah, given the look it's very lightweight molded leather that imitates all the din
6:34 pm
another that makes it much easier for the actors to mount their horses 0 or you mean done damage than if they fall out. they don't get hurt as badly, although it works very well. i get a guy he that knows how to go on for the and i'm leaving paris costumes. 22 warehouse halls contain many historical garlands. they can also serve as a basis for new costumes created by using older tailoring styles and techniques. as those from that target though, this is a jacket from the 19 thirty's went by. it's very slender and the waste with a v shaped cut. the arm holes are also kept very kind of is this nowadays pieces like this aren't made anymore, i guess when i talk at the outta was a sterner sit around with, but it gives us a bit of inspiration. i have for example, we set out to reproduce clothes from the 1930. we model or 19 thirties lying on cuts like these. for example, ethan was thrust akbar, handle her as costumes was founded in 1856. but the company 1st made its name
6:35 pm
internationally after have yet to aledo, took over in 2013 under his management. it grew from 10 employees to over 250 to day. now, paris costumes leads in the industry or for buffers moines or something, but it's very important for us to invest. and that's just what we've been doing these past 10 years. also will have the adequate stock to meet the demands of every production and every era that the little petals sags. so we acquire other costs you makers and taylor shops for as well as finished costume. local barbara fiona's. yet total. ah, the company is also working on a new strategy for digitizing it's inventory. it's creating a kind of digital wardrobe using 144 synchronized cameras and software developed in house. good listener is fuller lithia full. um and then what we do is we photograph every garmen deadline aiming to convert it into
6:36 pm
a digital 3 dimensional reproduction in because i mean you're horrible or, and, but as a so video game or 3 d companies can select their outfits, it will not fit, filling in her room and use them say in battle scenes with 5000 soldiers and do it all digitally without using extras. and linda think they are the fetish threats. so as time goes on, paris costumes continues to expand its collection, both analog and digital. ah, the austrian capital vienna has many attractions for travelers. it's known for its palaces, cathedrals, and historical city center. it all looks really great on instagram, but do the beautiful images on social media matched the real thing? we conducted a reality check. ah, beautiful buildings, sunny skies, bright colors, vienna looks great on social media,
6:37 pm
but doesn't live up to its picture perfect image in real life. we took to the streets to investigate the austrian capital as one of the most visited cities in europe. 5.6000000 tourists came there in 2022 for centuries. it was the home of the hapsburg dynasty, which made the city their showcase. the vienna half berg in the center of the old town is a photographic hotspot. the complex of palaces and buildings is so huge that it doesn't even fit in one picture . nowadays, the hochberg is the residence of the austrian president, but many museums are located there to ah,
6:38 pm
to check out what's behind the magnificent besides head into the state hall in the austrian national library in the half berg. it costs $10.00 euros to enter, but is definitely worth it. towering in the centre under a 30 meter high dome as a statue of emperor charles the 6th. don't forget to look up at the impressive ceiling fresco. the library holds around 200000 books, some 350 years old. so in reality, we agree that the photos on instagram are not an exaggeration. the hoffer again, national library are definitely a must see. this big knack was that the remarkable thing is that charles, the 6th who commissioned the state hall not only wanted to build a universal library and a functional building office. he also wanted to set up a monument that represented himself and his ancestors void. that if you look for pictures of vienna on instagram,
6:39 pm
you'll definitely find the cause kisha or saint charles church built in 1737. ah. the church has byzantine architectural elements since it was influenced by the haga sophia in istanbul. but it's more than a selfie backdrop for an entrance fee of $9.00 euros and $0.50. you can marvel at its impressive baroque interior. ah, the church was commissioned at the beginning of the 18th century by charles the 6th, the same emperor who had the state hall of the court library built so what's the final word on this hotspot? yes, the cars keisha is also worth a visit. and any one who goes inside it will understand even more why it's so popular. well, i think the most remarkable thing besides steve, the physical building of the church is actually what it,
6:40 pm
what it stands for. and the church of saint charles was built as a vote of church as a monument, so to speak, or as a bulwark against a epidemics and pestilence. good book, the 3rd, frequently photographed vienna site also has something to do with overcoming an epidemic. the blue book, the baroque plague column, also known as the trinity column, is an eye catcher on the gob, vienna's prominent shopping boulevard. passers by and tourists frequently stopped to admire. the 20 meter high monument many figures and scenes relating to life and death are carved on it. blew this towering sculpture was built by emperor leopold the 1st pictured here.
6:41 pm
although the monument from 1693 as an eye catcher, hardly any one seems to know why it was built. this is a column ha to give thanks for surviving a very that the plague that struck vienna in the 17th century. it was the end. we say about a quarter of the people died, so a big trauma for the people. very, very religious in the sense that this is a present and offering to god they believed save them. in conclusion, the plague column looks great in pictures and takes you to the heart of vienna. so does be in his instagram image live up to reality. we say yes, vienna is a stunning city and a great place to visit the german auto vine, a symbol of free in the drivers seat. fans of high speeds can put the pedal to the metal on the autobahn, but is it really unrestricted?
6:42 pm
we find out it's a 3 accountable harbor one. today i'm going to explore the culture of driving on the famous german autobahn. and i will show you some of the do's and don'ts ohio fees. driving along for the ride is my co pilot and car expert. andre, normally under a owns over 15 cars and spends a lot of time on the highway and tour as a swing musician with who were at 3 lanes. it's quite a bit of traffic, but i can already feel the discipline kicking in of being very aware of my
6:43 pm
surroundings, very rare of the speeds. the german autobahn is famous for having no general speed limit, but our journey begins within limits. feel a kind of a myth that you can go on german, audubon, that's positive you want, which is actually not true because this became more, i used to drive to train the 240 sometimes what is wonderful car, you know, you don't feel the speed of your 10 going to 100, you still feel like 120? well, we might experience that soon enough. what is the major don't of driving on the autobahn. last thing it says passing on the right. passing only on the left, only on the left. don't try under. i don't believe they look at it this really terrible. do you see what you're almost at you if you're wasn't you?
6:44 pm
i'm believable. i did that. this kind of driving left lane is modern. another major don't is tailgating. you can lose your license for up to 3 months, but that doesn't stop people from doing it. the main difference i would say with driving on the u. s. highways is the u. s. highways don't have many rules. you can pasco, on all side. i mean, the only thing you have to pay attention to is the speed limit. even the distance, for example, you know, you're already too close to the white car. you're supposed to have half a diesel at 60 mirrors. that's not 60 meters. ah, we stopped for a little break along the way. germany has one of the longest highway networks in the world with more than 13000 kilometers stretching across the country. talk a little bit about miss of the out of on one being that there are no speed limits which we've seen is absolutely not true. tell me another major myth about the
6:45 pm
german highway. people associating the audubon with a 3rd dr. with adult feet. lot of causes poverty, correct, because he actually expanded, but the idea of having out of bond in germany was developed in the 1920s. he benefited for matthew to well up to it and it was part of the policies. but the original ideas, older, there's actually a major debate here in germany about imposing a speed limit on the german autobahn. where do you think of that reckless driving one stop just because of imposing a speed limit, i really believe in a voluntary change of things. so it's better to, to convince people than to limit them. i'm for speed limit really. i don't understand why, because it seems to me as a vase, speed limits are just a recommendation to you. i got the hardware and i'm about to prove that to andre,
6:46 pm
as we get back on the autobahn. oh wow. now it does now dance okay. actually generates my chance go failing. i haven't now indicated that we can go as fast as we want. you've got to rush because the speed limit is coming back in vital . so here we go. 167. when 88. you don't feel it. i feel nothing. it's not south. 200. i'm slowing down. anyway, i want to make you know, fun. so that was it. so driving on the german auto von is those exhilarating and very stressful. and to tell you that bruce, i got cited for speeding. that's going to be costly but like were there anything in
6:47 pm
life? no risk, no fun, via beer is filling and bread is filling. but what happens if you combine the tube? one craft brewer in berlin makes beer out of day old bread and looks back on history for inspiration. beer is a real hit the world over. it usually contains mouth, hot water and east, but there's a more adventurous option. spread beer, beer out of stale bread, one, berlin bass producer knows how to do just that retail lumpkin uses baked goods, meant for the dumpster to non alcoholic beer. it would be as into mm hm. i came up with the idea for bread beer because food waste and sustainability are huge topics of course lot oh, video. and there's a lot of brand in particular being produced that ends up being fed to pigs or put
6:48 pm
in a bio gas plant. sato. and that's a pity. so we decided to turn bread into beer and build awareness about the topic or model of the same of met some to mom. breweries that make bread beer aimed to cut down resource consumption and avoid waste. it takes about 75 kilos of bread to make 27000 bottles of bread, beer, berlin based master baker. tail kosta carefully plans how much to produce, what are always leftovers, but not just any bread can be brewed into beer. and this was of the info and what it has to be a bread without any other ingredients. besides grain, meaning no raisins, no knots, no coil seeds, because they want ferment reliably and make this good tasting beer. it should be over. when done mists with you, some retribution, good. people have been making bread into beer for centuries like bosa from egypt and mesopotamia, or call us from medieval eastern europe. in recent years,
6:49 pm
bread beer has been seeing a renaissance and giving craft beer brewers like michelle lumpkin. new ideas. he 1st crumbles the old bread into little pieces and adds it to the mash at the start of the brewing process of e. m. i somebody missionary of us. so here in the mash rat, we mix water with malt cry and, and enzymes are activated that turned the starch into sugar. i missed that takes about an hour. i'm going about india. the special thing about this beer is that we add 5 percent bread to the mash mixture and then pump the mash into the purifying bat where we separate the liquid from the solid william lloyd, about 10 mit on. this liquid is called beer word, and that's what we make beer out as organ on. did you have would? so even entropy that call, then he adds east. it would normally convert the sugar into alcohol,
6:50 pm
but not with bread. beer it is. i've worth high a, b, m, a board, make this non alcoholic bread beer. we use a special yeast that can only for men to one type of sugar again, and the rest of the sugar stays on the beer and meaning not much. alcohol is created without again, sydney is over like, or drinks containing up to 0.5 percent alcohol. i considered non alcoholic in germany. once the beer is finished brewing, it just has to be put into bottles and it's ready for sale. but how does bread, beer taste? oh, it's a lie and it's very trudy. it odds being very dominantly acidic. i do think that albert should work the towards achieving some same ability factor. i'm minimizing their water usage using sustainable packaging in and like quite easily recyclable. i think especially nowadays anything that can
6:51 pm
help with environment good thing. and if i can drink beer and help, then fantastic. why, why would i not like? that's great. the bread beer trend helps prevent waste and save resources and shows how more sustainable brewing doesn't mean sacrificing taste. ah, and finally we're off to the netherlands where one dutch photographer walks in the footsteps of the old masters by staging his daughter in historical paintings. and he uses everyday materials to do it. ah, these portraits reflect a bygone era. even though neither brushes nor oil paint are used here, the photographs are reminiscent of paintings in the style of the old dutch masters such as rembrandt, martin, fantine peck,
6:52 pm
and yon fun. i for his work, paula kirsten's poses for her father dutch photographer hendrick ashton's it's in your blood yard dutch, you like to same atmosphere, but not a copy of a hendrick aims to capture something of that atmosphere with his photos of paula. but his props are definitely modern. a household objects are an essential part of the arrangement. as in the portrait of a girl with a plastic bag may. when i went to new york to south 6th, 2007, we noticed many plastic bags wandering around st. would also for crows, for shopping. we thought, well maybe we can make something nice out of an insignificant material. and maybe we can show the beauty and dignity of the material into our own body of work,
6:53 pm
or they make a great team as they produce works of art in their amsterdam studio. hendrick harrison's uses a high resolution camera. the arrangement of this subject in settings as well as the careful light composition are essential to achieving the desired effect for each photo. might be could you tell the light by 45 degrees? the work is based on says, are fun ever. diggins girl in a large hat. the 2 got inventive and used gold cake mats for the hat, the right shape upgraded the to looks really good, roman, wonderful, and new. as you turn your head a little, just look it up. great, beautiful, beautiful comment. this photo relies on the use of the simplest elements. the team have produced over 70 portraits together a process that has evolved over the years and even helped to shape their relationship with both only daughter goal after while we discuss, discuss about of what he did and sure her discussion about it for you,
6:54 pm
for reference to an art baiting and there with the meaning of did show it, show its own way of life and rituals. very comfortable to, to get her. and that it's so great, i think, is the most beautiful or re to learn your child for your well, in fact, that's how it all started for hendrick care stance. he was a stay at home dad who began chronicling the development of his daughter the snapshots turned into a portrait series. now the photos have one international renown and numerous awards . it was very easy to if you model it home she, she daughter, she's always shirt or sharon too. and if you showed a photograph, outdoor, it has consequence identification. can you do that? came to do that with a little child or not. of course i am the subjects of the art works, but i can look at it's very objectively as an outsider,
6:55 pm
almost the role paula care stance plays has also evolved over time. now she contributes her own ideas with a degree in art history. she's familiar with the collection of the old masters here at amsterdam, writes museum is a treasure, chest of dutch art history, and a source of inspiration for her. father and daughter are both fascinated with rembrandt in particular. he brings to ty, kale, to model into his artworks, and when you see this artwork, it has a formal distance because of this distinguished lady. but on the other hand, it also has a fairy bic intimacy. and that's also a thing we really like to bring in our own body of work, especially to convey a feeling that a camera is not present, a bridge spanning the past and the present. that's how the cares didn't see their art. in 2013, they published a book of their photographs, galleries in the netherlands and in the united states exhibit their work and
6:56 pm
collectors world wide by them. i had no idea what roster ward was to entry shows. this is some re, re re surprise and now we understand the meaning of the soul. and an end to the series is nowhere in sight. oh, we're that we wrap up another addition of euro max. be sure to follow us on social media for more from the world of culture and lifestyle. thanks for tuning in and join us again next week. ah ah, with
6:57 pm
6:58 pm
a global perspective. we'll be your guide and show you what's possible. you decide what really matters to you. shift in 15 minutes on d, w ah, mobile luxury made in china on the way coffee one. this plugin hybrid is said to go 150 kilometers on only one charge. we put that to the test. and what else does it have to offer? read? in 30 minutes on d, w o. d w, this award winning offer is available worldwide. owning german has never been simpler
6:59 pm
. german to go. several did and right wing extremists, women's rights regression again, world might be a couple rate and burned in south africa. people with disabilities more likely to lose their jobs. in the pandemic black lives matter po, shine a spotlight on racially motivated police violence, same sex marriage is being legalized in more and more countries. discrimination and inequality are part of everyday life. for many, we ask why? because life is diversity to make up your own mind. mm. d. w need for mines. imagine how many portions of love us heard out in the world right now. climate change, if any, call the story. this is my flex the way from just one week.
7:00 pm
how much was can really get we still have time to go. i'm going all with what with his subscriber all morning was like ah ah, this is the news that live on berlin. vladimir put in visits occupied mario pole. the kremlin house released the major's up here in tissue, put in the ukranian city, which brash and forces captured in may. this comes out on a restaurant is issued against the russian need.
17 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=790152698)