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Transcripts For DW Arts.21 - Looking Back Looking Ahead Our Highlights 20171218 12:30:00

me there is something truly magical about a fast food staffed. and looking at what the world of arts and culture has in store for us in twenty eighteen. but first we look back at twenty seventeen and odds twenty one's highlights of the year. january set the bar high with the opening of the old film only in hamburg all the troubles with cost overruns and construction delays were as good as forgotten replaced by genuine excitement and an endless rush of visitors to concerts and the viewing platform. come out has really reinvented itself as a city of culture but lynn is still in the midst of construction in two years the it's helps give african artists a confidence boost but it hasn't been without controversy since the people behind it are all white. everything different that was also the guiding principle behind the fourteenth document the world's most important art exhibition took place in two locations in two thousand and seventeen its home of castle and the greek capital athens that was appealing but also quite expensive economically the documenter ended in the red distinctly it remains contentious. politically motivated double exhibition its main themes were social criticism displacement and the plight of refugees this double documenta insisted the current contemporary art can also come from old or dead harassed by soon other major figures in the world of film and politics were also implicated before twenty seventeen was through time magazine honored the silence breakers behind the me too movement as its person of the year seldom has a past had meant so much to so many. draws to a close as turbulent as barry kosky. by avoid for me that was the premiere of the year it provided a totally new look at the walk not biting and sarcastic. at the end of the show we'll tell you the highlights were special looking forward to in two thousand eight hundred. five artists five stories of people forced to flee their countries and of new beginnings starting a new life in germany wasn't easy but make a learn german finished high school and went to university and she discovered her love of music her debut album victim of truth makes darvon soul with reggae and afro beat now thirty six nick has put out four more albums and tours europe in the u.s. . her songs deal with god and family as well as violence and social injustice in nigeria . in the city of console we meet another musician a hallmark met when he performs it's an act of defiance against the wall. that. big a member of syria's palestinian minority a half might survive diaster the bombs and hunger he's written a book about his experiences entitled verdun singham or and the birds will sing in it he describes his sheltered upbringing in what was then a peaceful syria his blind father who made musical instruments and his friends in damascus he recounts how the rebellion began the horrors of the war and his dangerous escape to germany. but time and again his music gave his people solace and encouragement and music literally saved a life he played amidst the rubble in the bombed out streets of his neighborhood you tube videos made the pianist of yarmuk world famous. he kept on playing during the gunfights in the ruins of yarmuk islamists captured and destroyed this area of damascus. i think. we see. then in twenty fifteen i asked burned his piano and them fled syria he had to leave his wife and two children behind him. are two of the five artists who tell us their stories in the t.v. documentary and online special feature after the escape. sasha astonishing each was born in bosnia but his family fled during the civil war in the early one nine hundred ninety s. in germany he began writing fiction and in twenty fourteen blundered leipsic book fair prize for his novel before the feast. antonio scar matter left chile following the military coup of nine hundred seventy three he settled in berlin and exile became a major theme in his writing only in one thousand nine hundred nine after the end of the military dictatorship could he return home famous children's book author judith fled nazi germany a mother saved one of her first drawings by packing it in a suitcase. back to matt a year and a half ago he was able to bring his family from syria to germany. is a trained music teacher he'd never planned to become a professional peronist. today it's too pleasant for me to play again. with a beautiful friend we will play a song. from germany make some things happen maybe we can change this crazy war going. on. in late twenty fifteen am was awarded the international beethoven prize for human rights for his efforts. to become. the law. in some way to play. only small i believe to still in my country for proof. has made peace with our past in nigeria and lets our shannon and her life story through her songs. i hope the first is that news it that i do. is able to. turn then. be part of people's lives. that touch them. move there motivate them empower them in it in a spiritual way. after the escape the d.w. multimedia special about people who fled their homelands and rebuilt their lives elsewhere giving others the courage to do the same. we've got lots more arts and culture for you. follow us on facebook. the address d.w. culture. time now to head to hamburg for an exhibition of work by photographer peter. that explores the aesthetics of the ordinary. pay to be a librescu isn't searching for subjects that catch the eye photographers from glossy magazines probably wouldn't notice the images he say's he spent five years capturing what represents heimat home and came back with thirty thousand pictures. as photographic series is called despite a high marked second time anyone expecting sentimental coziness be disappointed. this is a list the hope mine. what i'm doing is meant to be pessimistic. it's just to counter this happy clappy feel good stuff that we get otherwise. all we have to do is look around at advertising posters it's always hostile fassel beautiful people if you look at city p.r. . over themselves with loads of inaccurate adjectives that my work is something you actually see it's verifiable not something you were led to believe in at least it's a world that appears authentic. though. there's nothing slick about as he doesn't use photoshop he's interested in everyday life takes pictures of places that to many look more like nowhere then somewhere. a decade ago conveyed a very different image of germany and his first series entitled simply heimat. it was full of romantic landscapes the dwarfed people to insignificance. this seeming innocence that the first series has with the landscapes and these tiny figures in the cortex it's naturally interrupted by this and other parts of the country we live in they're run down streets places that we don't go to in hamburg either. this image may be plain but it is a puzzle that inspires the imagination kind of people who live here. and that's a very poetic moment in there for me but all in all this something ironic to. and i think this interface between irony and confession and the embrace of something that many people see is ugly to me there's something truly magical about a fast food stand from its path as it was. a fast food stand can also evoke the idea of home his subjects are often found in overlooked places in limbo side streets and backyards far away from the usual sights to seeing. home can be anywhere. i might add to your mother smith's home always involves memory and experience as a person has had. this part will someday represent home for a few kids they'll remember specific smells the exhaust from the ships hanging in the air and the vegetation and when they somewhere at some point encounter the same smells it will remind them of home and everyone has their own individual sense of home because it is always something that is actually taken along in memory. in the ongoing and the photographer who studied political science and sociology is now working on a new project in hamburg's brand new half in city district the transformation is taking place here that interests him he's intrigued not so much by the before and after but the spaces in between. an artist in search of authenticity. so what awaits us in the year to come. gives us a sneak preview. are. talking to chris most recent work is burning back along the most expensive german t.v. series ever. the director owes his big breakthrough to a small film run lola run after which he went on to big budget international productions. come to quote has won numerous prices throughout his career and now he can award a few to others too and february his head of the jury of the berlin international film festival of the bell right here on pot some up lots from berlin to the well session has also managed that there choreographer will be a topic of conversation in two thousand and eighteen two. sasha violence has gained international renown with her brand of eiji which the physical theater. she's conquered major european stages with her trademark choreographic offer of work frequently brings dumps into dialogue with architecture. the. the sus about says dance company is one of the most popular in the world and then twenty eighteen it marks his twenty fifth anniversary will be at the party the. big thing in art these days is performance but the question is how far can it go as far as violence against the artists own body will get some answers starting in late april from a major solo show and we're well familiar with the artist. no one else has radicalised performance up like marina abramovitch she's interested in loss memory pain trust what human. jur of what they're capable of. in april the blunders const holler in a bomb will be devoting a major retrospective to this exceptional artist early in his big here but frankford promise is even more art in two thousand and eighteen the city is planning three cultural highlights. an extensive exhibition of works by flemish baroque painter peter paul rubens opens at the stables museum in february. and the t.v. colleagues will be showing installations by the celebrated south african artist william country. the sherman will host a multimedia show of work by post-punk underground guy calm. so ahead for frankfurt and for venice the tourists throng city where the architecture. no way at the end of may this time the theme is free space. twenty one is especially looking forward to seeing the german contribution which is being curated by an unusual team politician. and the founding trio of the graft architectural firm in berlin. for eleven years money and a bit love was federal commission for the stasi records agency. graft architects have designed apartment buildings museums bars public buildings and affordable housing that common theme in venice is the expiration of limitations of the opening up of the world and the fears that result from isolation and marginalise ation. by the way the venice architect to be an artist said the end of may we've also circled may fifth. in our two thousand and eighteen cultural calendars on that day two hundred years ago marx was born the legendary economist and social critic. he was the hero of the labor movement in the nineteenth century and a passionate critic of bush was society come months together with his friend treated gangers became the most influential theorists of socialism and communism marx his main concern was the inequality created by capitalism. it's astonishing but true marx foresaw many of the problems we face today can we learn from him it's worth reading his works at any rate and marks his bicentennial he's a good occasion for that his birthplace of trivia will be honoring him with a major exhibition happy birthday karma it's. two thousand and eighteen also marks a major anniversary for an entire social movement inspired by karl marx the student movement whose members are known as the sixty eight generation. these young people protested against conservative social structures the vietnam war repressive sexual morals and the failure to effectively address germany's nazi past thousands of students took to the streets and the events of nine hundred sixty eight came to define an entire generation. this era produced exceptional artists such as sigma pahlka. and joseph boys rebellion and the people change the federal republic of germany because it all for the better for all the sixty eight is responsible for a loss of social values a drop in the birth rate and a crisis in education but the era did produce really great music. really great vibe so i wish that for all of us in two thousand and eighteen happy new year stay healthy and stay with us season. moves on the. part of god and that brings us to the end of this edition of fox twenty one. next week we get into the holiday spirit with musicians from germany and ukraine. till then. and alfie doesn't. a cleaner india part nine of our series founders valley in thirty minutes on d. w. . every journey begins with the first step and every language of the first word and the physical the cohesive germany to punch remember. this is just why not listen to him. it's simple online on your own mild and free. to suffer. d.w. zealand in course because fake german made easy. g w true diversity. where the world of science is at home in many languages. on the front of programming go on there it'll be a show he says he'll get there with our innovations magazine for any. of us from every week and always looking to the future fund d w dot com science and research for a shocking. crime fighters in the new season of radio crime thrillers begins. moving. domestic violence cyber club and human trafficking for investigative cases that will keep you on your toes the crime fighters stories at the base idea so every young person needs to listen to crime fighters and share tell a friend tell a friend to a friend close fighters don't miss it. meet the germans new and surprising aspects of planes and culture in germany. us american keep losing takes a look at germany idiosyncracies at their traditions every day lives and language can just come out of my lungs i'm

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Brooke Baldwin 20180808 18:00:00

is alleged in the indictment that he illegally relaid the results of that drug test so that his son could trade on that information. >> so his son, cameron collins, has also been indicted along with the father of his fiance. the two men made more calls and in the end prosecutors allege theed inners saved themselves more than $700,000 from this tip received by the congressman. and what happened to investigators not in the know, the indictment says when the company announced its clinical trial was a bust, the stocks went from 46 cents a share to a more 4 cents. a mere 92%. let's talk this over with our The latest news from around the world with host Brooke Baldwin. stock transactions himself, he's liable as a tipper, someone passed insider information down the line. i don't see anywhere for him to cooperate. there's not a lot of good news for the representative. >> we see the video of him. he's at the white house for a picnic. gets this phone call from this pharmaceutical company saying, the drug is a bust. and so he picks up his phone and calms his son seven times. cell phone records. and tips him off to sell. he had to have known better. >> yeah. i mean, he seems -- it seems clear that he knew better. one of the elements in proving an insider trading case is the criminal intent that he willfully and knowingly committed this crime. and not only should he have known better based on his -- the fact that he is a member of congress, but we can see that almost a year later, when he was asked by the fbi if he had told his son cameron about this bad specifically ran on and promised his supporters that he would get to washington and change the way that things are done. when you're talking about insider trading and this idea that a member of congress got this kind of proprietary information and then used it so that his family could lose less money, that is the opposite of draining the swamp. and, you know, congressman collins, any congressional reporter will tell you he's the guy you look for when members are coming out of meetings to try to get that, quote, defending president trump on anything. he's been that guy from day one. he was the first member of congress to support president trump in his candidacy. so the fact that this person who is so closely in line with the president now being in this kind of trouble, that's not good for the president either. >> okay. stand by, everyone. i've got more to discuss in just a second. just in to cnn, counteroffer in the works. president trump's lawyer rudy giuliani says they are outlining new terms for a face to face interview between the president and the special counsel robert mueller. what exactly did rudy giuliani mean this should be over by september 1st? also the impact of the escalating trade war with china being felt in trump country. one south carolina company now saying it will be forced to lay off almost all of its workers because of this new tariff policy. and we are keeping a close eye on manhattan's federal court where moments from now, as we've just been discussing, sitting congressman chris collins is set to be arraigned on insider trading charges. we will take you there live. you're watching cnn. i'm brooke baldwin. at ally, we offer low-cost trades and high-yield savings. but if that's not enough, we offer innovative investing tools to prepare you for the future. looks like you hooked it. and if that's not enough, we'll help your kid prepare for the future. don't hook it kid. and if that's still not enough, i was just finishing a ride. i felt this awful pain in my chest. i had a pe blood clot in my lung. i was scared. i had a dvt blood clot. having one really puts you in danger of having another. my doctor and i chose xarelto®. xarelto®. to help keep me protected. xarelto® is a latest-generation blood thinner that's... proven to treat and reduce the risk of dvt or pe blood clots from happening again. in clinical studies, almost 98% of patients on xarelto® did not experience another dvt or pe. xarelto® works differently. warfarin interferes with at least 6 of your body's natural blood-clotting factors. xarelto® is selective, targeting just one critical factor. don't stop taking xarelto® without talking to your doctor, as this may increase risk of blood clots. while taking, you may bruise more easily, or take longer for bleeding to stop. xarelto® can cause serious, and in rare cases, fatal bleeding. it may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. get help right away for unexpected bleeding or unusual bruising. do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. before starting, tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures and any kidney or liver problems. learn all you can... to help protect yourself from another dvt or pe. talk to your doctor about xarelto®. ♪ major multiple headlines breaking this hour with all these ties to the president. moments from now, a trump ally and sitting republican congressman will be arraigned for alleged insider trading as a former trump campaign operative finishes testifying against the former trump campaign chairman now on trial. all of this as major development breaks in the case of the president's own legal troubles. his attorney, rudy giuliani says they submitted a counteroffer to the special counsel robert mueller regarding an interview with trump. so giuliani told dana bash here at cnn that the team is open to obstruction of justice questions but he says absolutely no, his words, perjury traps. he went on to tell dana, quote, for example, what did you say about flynn? why did you fire comey? giuliani says they already know our answer, so let's start there. joe, i want to start with you. so let's analyze these questions. so if giuliani says these are the sorts of questions that are the no-go because he says mueller knows the answer, what did you say about flynn? why did you fire comey? explain to me why you think they would be falling into these perjury traps with these. >> they're fraught with danger, no doubt about it. the best way mueller can prove an obstruction case is with the president's own words. that's why it's so dangerous for the president to walk into an interview. i'm convinced it's not going to happen. a lot of this is theater. i think the president likes keeping this issue alive, like he likes keeping alive the question of whether or not he will or won't fire mueller. at the end of the day, it's not going to happen. he will not have any kind of parameters that mueller will agree to in any kind of mutual arrangement. >> if someone is telling the truth, then what is the trap? silence among all of you. i'm just asking. >> the best way to avoid a perjury trap is not to commit perjury. >> thank you. >> i agree with joe. mueller -- excuse me, giuliani is insisting on these absurd conditions that no prosecutor would agree to. i agree, i think it's theater. i think ultimately they're not going to come to an agreement. mueller perspective, we can do this easy way, reasonable terms or subpoena which will kick off a long battle in the courts. >> just to be clear, this wouldn't be technically speaking he would not be giving this interview under oath, so it wouldn't be a perjury trap. it would be false statements. the reason why these specific questions i think he's putting off limits is because we don't know the answer. giuliani says you know the answer, but trump has given different answers to that very question of why he fired comey. to say you know is not true. and i think that's the problem. >> of course there would be followups to questions that certainly wouldn't be yes or no answers that would get to trump's behavior or intent, yes. all right, so, jay sekulow, the president's other attorney, has a radio show. did you know this? no. >> i found out this morning. >> he has a radio show and on said radio show, it was julianmy and sekulow saying we responded to mueller and saying the ball is in mueller's court. here they are. >> it's about time that it ends. i also think and i hope the special counsel is as sensitive to it as we are, we do not want to run into the november elections. so back up from that, this should be over with by september 1st. we have now given him an answer. obviously he should take a few days to consider it. but we should get this resolved -- if there's going to be an interview, let's have it. if there's not going to be an interview, let him write his report. honestly he has all the information that he needs. the interview will provide nothing in addition to what he already has. so he can write his report. >> okay. quick easy question to the group. show of question, who thinks this will be over september 1st? that's what i thought. to you, is this going on this radio show, coming on tv their way of saying premidterms, to the american people, we're trying to cooperate with the mueller team. we've given them offer back. we're trying to work with them. >> look, i would say there isn't just tension between the trump lawyers and mueller and his team. there's also tension between the president and his own lawyers. and i think that's important to stress. you know, these negotiations have been going on for a number of months now. and i think that in part is because of the inherent tension between the president and what he thinks the strategy should be, which is that he had said this publicly, i should be interviewed and i would be fine if i'm interviewed. versus the real concerns that his lawyers have made clear they have about trump's possible and possibility of perjurying himself if he gets into that seat. keep in mind when you go in for this interview, there are no retakes. you can't have somebody sort of clarifying in the moment what the president is actually saying. >> yeah. >> so the stakes obviously are very, very high. >> the treatment that this trump legal team is giving bob mueller, it's like our way or the highway. >> yeah. bless robert mueller's patience, right? he's shown throughout this. i think sekulow's quote right there sort of tips off what the p.r. strategy is. >> how so? >> let's get this wrapped up by september 1. i'm going to insist on ridiculous conditions that mueller will never agree to. that will stretch right up to and including the midterms. and then trump and his team will say, look, mueller is polite sizing the midterms and say we made an offer. he said no. now we're in court battling this out with the elections around the corner. i think that may be their p.r. play. >> do you think they want to drag this out and have this not happen before the midterms, get the midterms over with and then have it afterwards? >> yeah. i think they may realize there's no way this is realistically going to to happen. >> on the bending, what does mueller do? how does he respond? looking to both of you guys. >> well, i don't think he can agree to condition that would limit the questions that he would ask the president, especially he's going to need to ask him, why did you fire james comey? so that cannot be off the table. >> what does mueller do? play it out for me. >> so -- we don't know what the actual question was. mueller has to ultimately subpoena the president to appear before the grand jury and this will play out if he does this similar to what happened with bill clinton and ken starr where once that subpoena is right in front of them, then maybe they'll really negotiate in good faith. when he agrees to show up and answer questions they can withdraw the subpoena. >> do you agree that trump would be subpoenaed? >> yeah, i think that's probably where this is going. >> you do? >> there's a strong likelihood -- we haven't tested this, whether this goes all the way and you can subpoena a sitting president, but you probably can. so it's not going to end well. to jennifer's point, they're looking at the bill clinton and ken starr model and playing this out just like that. remember, i'm sure the president does not want to be in this situation, since he has to be, he looks at bill clinton, kind of turned out okay to him. i'm going to the air waves. i'm going to deploy rudy, i'm going to pitch our argument in the public domain and let the chips fall where they may and i have a pretty good chance of surviving this. >> just big picture, just that they're looking to the bill clinton model as donald trump given the 2016 election and who he was running against, we're in bizarre world. i appreciate that conversation. coming up next on cnn, the president declaring victory in ohio even though the special election there is still too close to call. does the cliff hanger spell trouble for republicans ahead of the midterms? and moments from now, republican congressman chris collins is set to be arraigned. we will take you there. jimmy's gotten used to his whole room smelling like sweaty odors. yup, he's gone noseblind. he thinks it smells fine, but his mom smells this... luckily for all your hard-to-wash fabrics... ...there's febreze fabric refresher. febreze doesn't just mask, it eliminates odors you've... ...gone noseblind to. and try febreze unstopables for fabric. with up to twice the fresh scent power, you'll want to try it... ...again and again and maybe just one more time. indulge in irresistible freshness. febreze unstopables. breathe happy. but if something happened to you... you need life insurance! and chances are selectquote can get it for you for under a dollar a day! selectquote found michael, 38, a $500,000 policy for under $23 a month. selectquote found anna, 37, a $750,000 policy for under $22 a month. selectquote's secret? they comparison shop select group of great companies like these for your best rate. give your family the security they need... at a price you can afford. since 1985, selectquote has saved over a million families millions of dollars on life insurance. call the number on your screen. or go to selectquote.com. discover what over a million families know. we shop. you save. the answer is simple. i'll do what i've always done... dream more, dream faster, and above all... now, i'll dream gig. now more businesses, in more places, can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. ♪ call them cliff hangers or nail biters, a couple of too close to call races from the primaries could be making republicans nervous about the midterms. it could be a test of the president's sway with his base. so let's look at deep red ohio in a race the gop spent millions to avoid an embarrassing loss. the republican troy balderson has a tiny, barely visible lead of less than 1 percentage point over democrat danny o'connor, just small enough margin that could trigger a recount. then you go over to kansas, another red hot state, another nail biter. this could test the president's popularity. trump's hand picked chris kobach holds a razor thin lead in the governor's primary lead -- barely behind him the republican incumbent governor jeff collier. there could be legal challenges on this one before it's all over. so i have with me radio host eric ericson there in atlanta. nice to see you. >> good to see you. >> when you look at ohio and again highlighting this district 35 years republican, you have this republican candidate up by this teeny tiny percentage point, even if balderson goes on to win, it's a bit of a hallow victory for them. and so you tell me if what i'm about to say is total myth or real that this is just the latest signal that republicans will lose big in november. >> i don't know that they will lose big because they have some institutional things in place that help them, but if you go back to 2009 and 2010, the trend lines are the same. 2009 after barack obama got elected, you had a series of special elections and elsewhere that went to republicans, some of them really closely. >> so reality, not myth? >> not myth at all. the end of 2009, democrats in 2009 lost the virginia legislature and then in 2010 there was a steady stream of republican pickups in places no one saw. we're seeing the same pattern in reverse this time which typically happens in these midterms. here is the thing that republicans are starting to freak out about. a third of the seats republicans lost weren't on the radar as possible losses until after labor day. in 2010, half of democratic seats the democrats lost weren't on the radar until after labor day. we're seeing the trend lines in place. we're not yet to labor day. we're starting to see those trends. >> but freaking out, yes, trends -- if you look at trump's twitter today, it is a win, you know. you see him saying watch out for the red wave. all is swell. >> well, listen, the democrats were saying that in 2012. behind the scenes they know that. both sides may do this. they may save the senate but the house of representatives looks more and more likely that republicans are going to lose. you saw karen handle's seat in a special election, she should have won by a wider margin, but it was a very tight race because democratic mobilization. the same in ohio 12. democrats are way more mobilized than republicans. this is a district the president won by 11 points two years ago and they're barely hanging onkts wi on. >> we know last week trump swooped in for two hours for that rally and sent out a tweet. do you think trump should get the credit he clearly thinks he deserves. >> i think so in this base. he mobilized his base. you have blue areas of the country that are very mobilized against the president, but there will be some republican areas of the country that mobilize for the president and because of jerrymandering, some institutional concerns, congressional districts hillary clinton did not win that she should have, republicans could neutralize some of the democratic wave. it may not be as big as they want, but they only need 23, 24 seats to do it and that's very possible. >> how do you explain how tight these races are? >> because they are traditional areas ohio 12 or georgia 6 last year, they are very republican areas traditionally, but in special elections turnout is always down and democrats are way more mobilized than republicans. >> okay. on the democratic side, let me ask you about them just from your republican perspective because the far left progressive candidates you know the bernie sanders, cortez, they lost big last night, which means republican candidates will go up against more established democrats. >> that's bad for republicans. >> bad for republicans. why do you think, though, that that wing of the democratic party isn't catching on? >> well, you know, when the republicans were battling the tea party activists in 2010 against the conservatives they are running in areas and in states that tended to be more conservative already. the progressives who are doing this, they're trying to battle in heartland states that aren't necessarily as progressive as california or new york where they would have better success. they need to do a better job the progressive wing the democrats do of matching up their territories. they really got into their head that more people agree with them. in certain areas of country, yes, but not in these areas. >> okay. last question, i just got to ask, i want you to finish my sentence, the future of congressman chris collins is -- >> in the clink, i hope. >> clink. eryc raiericson, thank you so m. >> thanks for having me. also ahead, the paul manafort trial turning deeply personal. defense lawyers accusing manafort's former deputy rick gates of having multiple extramarital affairs, wrapping up a dramatic three days of testimony. we'll take you live there coming up next. with tripadvisor, finding your perfect hotel at the lowest price... is as easy as dates, deals, done! simply enter your destination and dates... and see all the hotels for your stay! tripadvisor searches over 200 booking sites... to show you the lowest prices... so you can get the best deal on the right hotel for you. dates, deals, done! tripadvisor. visit tripadvisor.com ♪ former trump campaign chairman paul manafort on trial, major theme emerging today about the prosecution's key witness, rick gates, is an experienced cheater, by his own admission, gates cheated on his wife, cheated his ex-boss, manafort, out of money and cheated on his taxes. let's go straight to our senior washington correspondent joe johns outside that federal courthouse in alexandria, virginia. and so, manafort's defense team really hammering away at the credibility of rick gates. >> yeah, absolutely, very much so. and you know, you talk about cheating. there's actually a question during the cross-examination, brooke, about whether or not this guy actually cheated on his wife four times instead of once, but the judge didn't allow that in. so what does all that have to do with overseas bank accounts? it really does go to the credibility, whether gates, for example, spoke truthfully when he was talking to the special counsel's office and when he was getting his plea agreement deal. gates did get an opportunity, in fact, to address that question of credibility. he was asked about it by defense counsel. we have a graphic of that exchange if you guys just put it up. after all the lies you told and fraud you've committed, you expect this jury to believe you? he says, yes, i made a decision to tell the truth. manafort had the same path. i'm here. so that's that. he's off the stand now. couple fbi agents right now. there's a morgan who is a forensic specialist with the fbi, really going through chapter and verse all the big purchases that manafort made, including there's been so much talk about the jackets made of python, the jacket made of ostrich and they traced that. they traced payments over a million dollars to allen couture out on the west coast. and they also traced the bank accounts, the overseas bank accounte accounts at the center of this case. and they were able to find manafort in the files because when one of these accounts got opened, they would take a copy of this passport and make a copy of that. so, that's how they were able to trace manafort because his name wasn't supposed to be on the bank accounts, brooke. back to you. >> keep following every twist and turn for us, joe johns. thank you so much. back to our breaking news, sitting congressman chris collins about to be arraigned on insider trading charges. and he wasn't the only one facing a judge this afternoon. we'll take you there live. also, hand delivered from washington to moscow, senator rand paul revealing he personally delivered a letter from president trump to russian president vladimir putin. and what we want to know is, what was said in that letter. cleaning floors with a mop and bucket... brin grass is outside that federal courthouse. any sign of him yet? >> no sign of them just yet, brooke, but we know this was set to happen at 2:30. very likely that all three men are in front of judge right now. again that is the congressman chris collins' 25-year-old son cameron and cameron's soon to be father-in-law stephen. i know you've been talking about this throughout the entire show, but we were at a news conference prior to this court appearance and really they focussed on the crux of the timeline that you have displayed so well for your viewers. that is that the congressman received an e-mail at that 2017 white house congressional picnic saying that a stock that he was heavily invested in served on the board for was failing a clinical trial. and then a series of phone calls he made to his 25-year-old son cameron about that stock ahead of the news going public that this drug, which this business relied on, was going to fail that trial. and then the series of happening after that cameron notifying his f fee on say. one more thing i want to touch upon, brooke, because you brought it up earlier with your panel, that was this discussion of all these family members having some sort of stake in this stock and selling it off or at least being accused of doing so. we know this s.e.c. has moved forward with trying to suspend the practice of lauren zarsky, cameron's fiance. they want to suspend her practice for five years. she and her mother allegedly are going to agree to pay back some penalties. the s.e.c. also making movement on the congressman from serving as director of public company and preventing him from trading penny stocks. you mentioned with your panel, is this family turning on family? we asked that question to the u.s. attorney and he wouldn't make a comment on that, but certainly that is raising some eyebrows right now. >> worst betrayal of all so said one lawyer. brynn, thank you. as you get eyes on the congressman and son and soon to be father-in-law we'll come back. thank you so much. the other big story, rudy giuliani delivers this counteroffer to the robert mueller team, at least according to rudy giuliani, right? he's responding to mueller's request for this interview with the president. he now says, he being giuliani, that they are open to questions about obstruction under certain conditions. and next, have you seen what's happening on all these magazine covers? what is the common theme. women of color. let's talk about that next. your hair is so soft! did you use head and shoulders two in one? i did mom. wanna try it? yes. it intensely moisturizes your hair and scalp and keeps you flake free. manolo? look at my soft hair. i should be in the shot now too. try head and shoulders two in one. with a $500,000 life insurance policy. how much do you think it cost him? $100 a month? $75? $50? actually, duncan got his $500,000 for under $28 a month. less than a dollar a day. his secret? selectquote. in just minutes, a selectquote agent will comparison shop nearly a dozen highly-rated life insurance companies, and give you a choice of your five best rates. duncan's wife cassie got a $750,000 policy for under $22 a month. give your family the security it needs at a price you can afford. they've had meetings where they discussed paul's trip to russia, trump and him discussing this in the oval office. this of course coming after the helsinki summit. rand paul was one of the few republicans not to criticize the president's handling of that summit. rand paul taking this trip to russia to meet with russian officials and announcing on twitter that he hand delivered this note saying the letter from trump to putin emphasized the importance of further engagement in various areas, including counterterrorism, enhancing legislative dialogue and resuming cultural exchanges. now, i'm told that he had gotten that letter before he left from washington to moscow. but after this tweet and after the reports of paul doing this, the white house responded and gave a little different interpretation of exactly what happened -- said that at senator paul's request, president trump provided a letter of introduction. in that letter, the president mentioned topic of interest that senator paul wanted to discuss with president putin. and that came from a white house spokesman hogan giddily on the record. so it appears that the president rand paul wanted to discuss, according to the white house, with vladimir putin some of these areas of interest to the white house, which is one reason why the president and rand paul had discussed what these meetings would be like for days after the helsinki summit. the question is exactly what he said in any of these private meetings with other russian officials, what else was said in that letter and what was said in that first meeting between trump and putin still a big question about what exactly was discussed in that two-hour private meeting that they had last month. >> sure some of his intel chiefs would like to know as well. manu raju, thank you so much. and now to this, anyone and everyone who pours over fashion magazines knows that this september issue is a big deal. and lately, who is on the cover is an even bigger deal. on this year's september vogue beyonce gets the spotlight. and inside she details why gracing the september cover is so important to her as a black woman. she is by far not the only african-american woman grabbing september covers. actresses tracee ellis ross on el canada. tiffany haddish on glamour. eeee anna on british vogue. so, i wanted to talk about this today. so initi ladies, thank you for being on with me. my kayla, angela davis just first to you, this is major. >> yes. >> tell me why. >> i just got happy when you were reading off the names. was that happening to you, too? i was getting really -- so, about 25 years ago a great fashion editor named poly mellon said to me over lunch, you know the day of the great white wasp is almost over, darling. she was 25 years too late, but what this is saying is that september issue is not only when all the trends come out but it's when the business makes its biggest bet, right? so you sell your most advertising. you sell your most issues. so saying that you are placing your biggest bet on black girl magic is major. this is the superbowl of fashion. and vogue is very particular because not only was edward the first fashion director at british vogue but beyonce requested vogue's first black fashion -- >> tyler mitchell, 23 years of age, the first they've ever done this in the magazine's 126-year history. >> 126 years. that struck me. i thought maybe gordon parks. we've had these major fashion photographers of note and it wasn't until this moment that beyonce had agency. so this is also really incredibly important because most people fall at the feet of vogue. and what beyonce is saying, like she said at coachella, she doesn't need vogue. so she gets to have agency at the institution. so this is significant because of the business and also because of the agency that the woman had on the cover. so there's so many -- there's a plethora of reasons to be excited about this. >> nichelle, it's tiffany haddish, rihanna, lieu pea toe -- >> you're making me happy. >> yes. >> yes. and i know that these magazines were highlighting because these are specifically magazines that don't traditionally have women of color gracing the covers. >> yeah, it's true. and just on what mikayla angela davis is saying, is my woman crush wednesday, i'm so happy to be on with her today. >> get in line. >> beyonce, she outlined in her interview with vogue, one of the things that she was told 21 years ago when she got in the business that it was going to be hard for her to get these covers because the narrative in this business and in this industry for so long has been black women don't sell. whether it's on magazine covers, whether it's opening movies, leading television shows, it's hard for black women to sell. that's what we've all heard for so long. >> this is the first september issue. >> that's why this also makes this so historic. the former editor of british vogue in an interview last year with the guardian, she laid it out. she put it out there bare. the reason why there hasn't been but eight black women on the cover of british vogue in my 25 year reign is because i have to put people on who are instantly recognizable. what happens if you put someone on that's not instantly recognizable? so what she was saying was, we don't know you in this industry. and that is what makes this all the more historic. >> but also that's a signify to they're off the pulse. the coolest girls in the world are the black girls. >> rihanna. >> beyonce. who runs the world? so for them it is about their bottom line now because if the hottest girls in the world happen to be women of color, they're not in the business of loving black girls. let's be clear. >> of selling magazines. >> right. so this isn't just, you know a diversity moment. this is clear where the business is going. >> let me add a layer to this conversation, though, because i want to give love to lisa france who wrote this whole piece up for cnn.com who recognized this. >> my friend. >> loves of lisa france. and she wrote in her article the importance of representation is, of course, not a new discussion in communities of color, but the abundance of these covers at a time when the united states feels to many more divided over issues of race has been cause for even more celebration. >> absolutely. >> you know what's also really significant on the two vogue covers is the floral crowns, right? >> yes. >> so you see beautiful flowers. we see crowns. we see afros. there are cultural things that are not from a euro centric lens that is being displayed. and so maybe some of these editors will now see a new way of seeing beauty. so we get to celebrate but also it gets to expand the business and the industry. so you must get bored at blonde all the time, too? it's boring if you're into aesthetics and beauty and fashion. everyone benefits when you see

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Transcripts For DW Euromaxx - Lifestyle Europe 20180929 13:30:00

activists against my shield going to. be the land of the land. but who will leave the borneo case starts october ninth on the w. hello welcome to your max the lifestyle magazine here on the w a thanks for joining us is a look at what we have in store for you today. quite impressive how frank was all tom has been making music again. really daring why we followed so willing to take huge risks. simply delicious how can i brought my tweets about fish soup in italy. and i won who enjoys listening to rock music knows the classic album covers the permit the cow or the powell planned but on based design studio hypnosis created these and the record cover us for bands such as pain floyd led zep and then ac d.c. in the seventies and they were considered sensational at the time now get away and the wind has put together a few highlights for an exhibition that kicks off this weekend. one of the most famous album covers of all time pink floyd's the dark side of the moon the result of a night of brainstorming. i was looking through a physics book. and inside the physics book was a picture of a glass paperweight with light coming through a window and it created a rainbow effect stormont to me i've got it he said a triangle like this with a source light on the rainbow coming from it this sums up floyd. was one of the founding members of the london design studio hypnosis between one nine hundred sixty eight and one nine hundred eighty three he and his now deceased partner school for this one created some of the most iconic album covers in music history now some fifty years later an exhibition in bellini's browse gallery looks at the studio's legacy it all began in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight it was revolution and you know everything was changing the world of young people was changing storm focus and i shared a flat with syd barrett who was the originator of a floyd in london and. when the pink floyd came to do their second album source of full of secrets we happened to be around and suddenly one of the it was david gilmore who had joined lloyd said all we have to find somebody to do the new album cover storm it was never backwards it coming forwards but obvious alice said well there it also full of secrets was the start so we're career in which hypnosis developed a completely new style for album covers they presented epic landscapes provocative text and abstract collages inspired by surrealism records lease became. this isn't all this is directly respond to sean. in a way that it has nothing to do with music it has nothing to do with the lyrics it has nothing to do with the title. other things like this you see on the actual album cover there is no title. and this was really lateral thinking in the states and the record companies would but it worked because it stood out soon all the artists were commissioning hypnosis to design their album companies like led zeppelin peter gabriel and black sabbath powell and designed over three hundred album covers in ben london studio. we were ever going to do a picture of a rock n roll. bands like pink floyd they appreciated that and said we don't want a picture of us on the front we want something interesting we want something different and they didn't think about the commercial aspect they had no interest in not at all they wanted something that was important creatively some creations group done intentionally provocative like this for the scorpion album lovejoy. and the one nine hundred seventy three the figures on led zeppelin's house of the holy proved too much for some. it was hugely successful nomination program me and all that stuff but in middle america. christian fundamentalists they said oh you have to put a stripe across the children's bottoms so we put a japanese o.b.o. a piece of white paper to cover it up with a name that. is it a photo montage or a real picture of the graphic design of the play with perceptions and bands paid them handsomely for their well. one of their most spectacular productions was the man on fire the pink floyd's wish you would hear about today a businessman shaking hands someone being bugs in the deal and i remember saying to storm this is a great idea. so i flew to l.a. i went to. studios but. for real the difference between hypnosis in the one nine hundred seventy s. and now is you have photoshop you do go all that info to show but hypnosis always shot everything for real. with the advent of c.d.'s in the early eighties interested in record companies started to wane hypnosis dissolved in one thousand nine hundred three but their greatest album covers remain in our collective memory to this day. and i treasure a music icon and the french politician we've put together a particularly creative express for you today. the fair for modern and contemporary art is underway at the german capital temple course some one hundred twenty calories from twenty countries i hear sending their works to collectives from around the world in recent years but then has become a big draw for artists and as home to a thriving art scene. this is where art happens in this country this is exhibit is the crucible where art is made. this his face is dominated by large format paintings and object arts. these two words by stanley an installation artist. also attracting lots of attention. from a beatle paul mccartney has written a new children's book called a grand duke the picture book relates to ventures of a gentleman with his grand children. grandchildren and they're all beautiful. one of them said to be a grown. ok. so from then on i was no use trying to. come in children's book an adventure novel called the clouds came out in two thousand and five but kids will have to wait until september two thousand and nineteen to read a grand do. caricatures of french president manuel micro are currently on display at the drop me on my crawl exhibition in more switzerland works by eighty artists from france belgium and other countries are on show at the house of press caricature. some caricaturists say the politician is hard to satirize because he's simply too attractive visitors have until september thirtieth to visit the exhibition and see for themselves whether the drawings capture the essence of a man well mccraw. this week the city of frankfurt is in the mood to celebrate the reason germany's banking capital has a completely new old town quarter during the second world war the oldest part of the city was almost completely destroyed many years and a lot of our work went to into it was storing it and some new buildings were even at it everything on the side of the original half timbered houses now the reconstruction is finished and people are couriers to see the results including us . beneath frankfurt's modern urban skyline only a few hundred metres from the sky scrapers a hard tim but houses and narrow lanes the banking metropolis has rebuilt its all town in march nineteenth forty four the seven hectic quarter was reduced to rubble in a single air right. now much of it looks as it did long ago. architects and urban planner york i'm your den has reconstructed the most beautiful of the old buildings like the house of the golden scales which once belonged to the dutch spice merchant and confectioner abra handphone hommel. gotten by the golden bargain by thais about ending in the case of the house of the golden scales and partly for other buildings we were very fortunate that a great many elements had survived the war in the city and we managed to talk to the owner of many parts of the hours of golden scales into giving us these stones that he used to build his library as a relation. modalists of fun hamel family heirlooms mentioned gilded waterspouts shaped like dragons. a total of fifteen buildings will reconstructed while twenty more would build new in the historical style even many local people are booking to us to learn more. if you're going to reconstruct something you need photographic records today the square is called that you know mark dorian's market your one vote for gooders melber lived in the origin of building on the site she was the sister of gurkhas mother little johan lived with her for a year when he was six and in his old age she wrote about his memories are not the newborn either but in. the courtyard with their arcades preserve some of the old charm. at one time merchants from all over europe station when they came to fame is in frankfurt the city's tourism director is overjoyed at the new old town i know so it's new to look on the one hand it's a residential area a neighborhood of reconstructed part of town that's been completed with great success on the other there's a huge demand among the asian american and british tourists to come and see this new world is you know i start to see but not just to aristos. he's asked why he just does annoy. this is the first time i've been through the new old town and it's totally fascinating that they managed to reconstruct so much i really like is it. my very first impression was that i thought it was beautiful it's aesthetic the nice for sauce and everything turned up very well i don't know how much money went into it raises the question of whether it was the right investment or not. it still seems pretty lifeless to me what can i say it doesn't have any real human element yet maybe it will when the right shops move in leaving only selected shops will be allowed to open for business in these buildings like this wine store. close by one of us is oldest pottery makers has opened a shop. just in the most popular writer mother little houses probably because the tourists who come here like the idea of a souvenir of the house is typical of the region it's not kid they have their charm and you can see the love that our crafts people have put into our pieces. and this bob i came up with a concept that got him a spot. where this is what this corner already is something of a village character the shopkeepers all know one another. time i'm. in addition to the shops of the two hundred rental units will be made of. in the old town the old told the entire project cost around two hundred million euros you could norden sees the result as well worth the investment. because it's here can remember to see how things were in the past and now they can ask themselves how should we proceed into the future the hearts of frankfurt is beating again the way it once did and for many here that may be just a start. it's always been man's dream to take of the skies like a bird in flight and thanks to modern technology it is now possible for those there devotees who want to get as close to the real experience as possible there is the wing suit and this big serious extraordinary half latics we've already presented some weird and wonderful sports activities but today's example is probably the most extreme of extreme sports jumping off a cliff at a dizzying hide isn't recommended for everyone and it's very very dangerous. but we have. images that take your breath away high up in the swiss alps unconscious on a dull long scandals of the condo wings of pilots meet regularly to plunge off cliffs in their back like suits in everyday life they may be bank his nurses oh i see specialists but in their free time they want an adrenaline rush not here with about ten or fifteen other friends from all over the world and it's really cool cause we never really get an opportunity like this so i'll jump together it's really cool be able to share this experience the everyone. wins to have fabric under the arms and between the legs when the planet fools this extra fabric acts as wings when two pilots race through the air and up to two hundred fifty kilometers an hour and extreme experience that many find addictive. and the feeling you see is happiness for me at least after i've done a nice jump i'm really really happy and fulfilled and that's the main reason why i do this you can even put words to how good it feels to try to explain it to my friends and i say it feels like you're falling in love every time you make it. and then brennan is well known in the ways it seems she's won many competitions the out is here on pick it is either going in a wing suit because instruction and training a false move can result in a deadly accident. one hundred forty two wings two pilots have been killed since this extreme schools became popular at the beginning of this century. but many parents say the risk is possibly kick. obviously we all know that there are risks booked the reward is so much higher that we are willing to take the risks we take these risks because. yeah it's an incredible feeling when you when you can control your body and your wing suit and fly where you want. we suit base jumping for many it's the ultimate sports the doctor few minutes even the highest flying turns to come back to. well that lose both winning and exhausting i have no doubt that those wingsuit fliers are hungry off the jump like that lucky for them italy is right next to switzerland we've got a great tip coming up on our latest installment of your m x i catch up where we introduce you to a traditional dishes from all over europe that you can prepare at home in your own kitchen you can find this recipe and many more on our website at d.f.w. dot com slash lifestyle so what's cooking today we're heading to rome to try out what just might be the best fish soup ever. most american solely is on his way to his favorite fishmonger in the middle of friends i'll tell every day the ship buys a freshly caught fish for his restaurant. here he finds everything he needs for his famous fish soup. was considered a meal for poor people the basic recipe is centuries old. procedure that at two point three shoot dates back to the romans. michigan they took what cash was left behind by the fishermen and boiled it in seawater on board their ships and that's all the broth was made of but i'll bet they are the same that was buried things like muscles were uttered not your part of every good fish so a little bully me here we have both clams and mussels he recalled says you bully gentle ball. most of us says there's hardly a fish all seafood that come into a good soup even that dog fish all good it and definitely shellfish so has he got it oh. there was something else. once you know the mussels we forgot the mussels by going to gold's here. to respond to they needed an orchard to see my parents opened their restaurant in the mid one nine hundred sixty left to go to the fish was available seven days a week and my father brought his passion for fish with him from sicily your father vinny with us issue and the second generation of the family to run the restaurant you use on all of you on the journey that's your own it. says the fishes gutted and filleted whatever's left over such as head and fins is put into a pot of boiling salted water along with center east. carrots and onions the fish stock has to simmer for about an hour to develop its full flavor in the meantime most emotive chili fries garlic and chili in plenty of all of oil the squid is the first to go into the hot oil it has to cook the longest because of its tough meat. we're finally everything is doused in try white water. in crisp or we. know we need tomatoes because the fish can cook very well in tomatoes. tomatoes which doesn't just give the whole thing a great color it will be the taste of fish and tomatoes just goes well together if you're to be sure it will go. shellfish and mussels are added after that and then finally the fish process which gets to see if it's characteristic taste. it's then seasoned with fresh herbs. over your meat and this is enough for four people. we put the soup down in the middle of the table and everyone takes what they want some broth the fish. leave baby. a push of salt as much as possible feels the need phone. and then everything is poured into a hot serving dish. and once wine is the traditional choice when serving fish dishes but i must admit it surely recommends the red wine. and cheese and this is a change from the lots you know reach. it will be. full bodied but it's fresh at the same time. and goes very well with the taste of the fish soup so. you know what a fish soup. a tasty way to spend an enjoyable meal with friends or family. there are any number of ways to furnish a home but most people want something comfortable unaesthetic leap easing that also applies when you go on holiday we've shown you some rather unusual accommodations here on the program over the past few days i have to say i'm looking forward to our next report we head into the black forest here in germany they can spend the night in an old wine barrel sounds weird but it looks quite cosy to. imagine spending the night in a vineyard surrounded by a group from that hotel and suspect fired in the black forest you can do just that in style a thousand little wine barrels soaked in repurposed and converted into small comfy a bode's. rush through the the for k. i got him out here there's a lot less traffic we go it's quiet and peaceful and then get my guns in c. he can just sit back and relax and enjoy the landscape guns of the scenery the sunset when the calm it's wonderful the guns toward this shot of judicial review of it it's just spectacular full apia you feel like you're all on your own over looking down on the world without a care oh. you're good you go and. water and all and off to a monastery in two nights the couple is impressed with the panorama but how are they managing the hot summer weather. hisham ahmed that moment when we first arrived yesterday i was taken aback by how terribly hot it was so we opened up all the doors and windows then in the evening after the sun went down it was a lot more pleasant wind picked up and really cool things off it was lovely. people come to suspect in from all over germany to get a taste of this unique experience next to the bedroom barrel there is another one with the refrigerator for wine of course a sitting milk and a small bathroom. there's even on site catering on the food and drinks are brought directly to your barrel for one hundred sixty euros a night it almost feels like you're in another world market returned all unfair and you are thrilled. it must suck i'm with you have to stay at least two nights to really get a feel for it of my the first night is so amazing you keep asking yourself is this real am i dreaming about yesterday we were really able to relax and settle in and could really enjoy the second night it's incredible to look out at the stars at night while lying in bed around midnight we went inside but couldn't sleep for another hour we were just so busy gazing at the night sky so incredible. the frontiers first heard of the barrel abode overlooking the black forest in the rhine valley two years ago. they had to be patient. i tried to make a reservation but they will booked out for the entire year the next year was also booked so i essentially had to reserve a year and a half in advance of this august it's a very belated anniversary present. so we had a year to hope to look forward to it. when my bones once you've been here for a while you feel really content so you have everything you need we always think we need so many different things to be happy but that's not true at all. you are spend the night in and i'm kind of on shelf place that's what we wanted to know from you many of you voted to tell us about your adventures and send in pictures thanks for all the entries this viewer for example spend the night on a beach in miami. this couple from germany stayed in the wastewater treatment plant renovated while the lady is bought the winning picture comes to us from the back from bolivia or enjoyed an overnight stay in a sold hotel well that was certainly an extraordinary experience coordination as you can look forward to receiving your max watch from us to everyone else you can enter the cow and draw on our website at e.w. dot com says live so good luck next time and to tune in again tomorrow for your next highlights of the week under that in five. minutes time on your own marks the harlem. cathedral is celebrating an anniversary four years there's a world heritage site. for luminary before moving on is making a big splash screen for free. d.w. reporters for you to visit with the world's biggest folk festival yoko but first and more next time on our highlights show. from. the be. able. to. move. and demand. language courses see. where. w. media center. a tiny bit of florida and the song remains the. that's all you need to give you an eco friendly mosh. thanks to this come watch company in paris. we find out how they're doing after one year in business. go at africa being thirty minutes on d w. tara at the mall every british e.g. chance there's a terrible suspicion coursing through one of europe's largest refugee camps on the island of les last allegedly father was a said to be terrorizing the refugees some say they've created criminal structures we meet witnesses and victims in an exclusive report today in reporter on. an unusual friendship. is the story of paul and he. is a student from cameroon. the other a filmmaker from germany has read or not likely never be able to say whether he chose me or i chose him whatever the case this is the story of how many. on europe's most dangerous border. up. what began as a documentary. by my parents sacrificed everything for i can't go back and free and it. became a story about lucy. and those ready to help. when paul came over the city from cameroon to berlin and starts october fourth on t.w. . this

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Transcripts For DW Check-in 20190407 04:30:00

it flows faster to everyone and me too but. the lack of water is equally dangerous . there's junkie is evil move south so they can plant crops and trying to food. floods and droughts climate change become the main driver for mass migration you could write any apocalyptic snyders you want and probably most of them to come to. the carnifex abyss starts here for thirty years on d w. an oasis of peace at the heart of the capital i'm in berlin visiting the bauhaus. one reason why it's so quiet right now is that the museum is closed for renovation . the bauhaus school was founded in one thousand nine hundred nineteen and next year will markets first centennial what better time to retrace its footsteps through berlin how did the bauhaus quite possibly history's most influential modernist school shaped germany's capital. bauhaus and what was that like and what still remains that's what i want to find out today through arts architecture and chocolate and. also on the show a locals recommendations for cork and ireland. our viewer video will take us on a tour through cambodia. and we'll explore powerhouse unesco world heritage site. where limbs bauhaus is set to remain close for a few more years due to extensive renovations in the meantime fans can still get their fix at a small outpost in the contemporary bauhaus a heat in this landmark retail store in the district of charlotte and book here you'll not only find a carefully curated shop with iconic design products there's also plenty of information on the history of the bauhaus a heat. based klavan shows made plans for the new archive. a large glass tower by the front will certainly make it more visible. must know what makes the bauhaus so relevant even a hundred years later down the halls. as an artist powers as well house is a fascinating topic because agreement is intimately linked to german history and how in light of the upcoming bauhaus anniversary we have the opportunity to shine a light on its role in impact of you for from take for example the last thirty years of research on the role of women or how about how students and masters fared in the third reich. we can now bring these topics into the open and talk about why we are so interested in the interview or period. we can talk about it's optimistic elements and where it might have failed in the exchange between society and creativity you've got all these topics are related to t.v. to us and i list the indian vice this powerhouse who on. before continuing to follow the footsteps of the bauhaus here in berlin i want to give you guys a brief overview of the legendary schools evolution and how it came to travel from death south to finally end up here in berlin. the bell house school of design and architecture originated in the university town of weimar in the early twentieth century. here architect of. merged the academy of arts and the school of arts and crafts into one institution his aim was to join art with craftsmanship renowned artists like the painters vassili kandinsky and paul plaint soon joined together they pioneered a new language of colors and forms. the bauhaus design came to be known for its functional and elegant aesthetics it was meant to improve people's day to day lives . weimar's house on horn was the first building following the bauhaus design its cubic shape is distinctly minimalist in the. nine hundred twenty five weimar stopped funding bauhaus the school relocated to the industrial city of to hear about house engineer who go you design things like gas heaters and aircrafts. at first i was happy to host the bauhaus school and even afforded it a brand new building. to feel odessa many people into so were a bit shocked they've never seen architecture like this before it was an entirely new approach. was. next door typical power house housing was built for the professors or masters as they were called their uniform exterior belies the varied interiors it ranges from bright and colorful to white minimalism depending on what the inhabitant preferred. even the furnishings were created by bauhaus designers. does so commissioned by house architect. to draw up plans for the city's new unemployment agency. in one thousand nine hundred twenty eight he was succeeded by harness maya as powerhouse director he oversaw the construction of dust sounds five houses with balcony access for low income residents people's needs over luxury mansions but in one nine hundred thirty two the nazis drove the bow house out of debt sell its last director meese fund or oversaw the move to berlin there it was shut down by the nazis again bellhousing germany was gone but not forgotten. people had to wait until after world war two to see former bow house architects bring their ideas back to germany not far from the famous bottom up plant you'll find another bauhaus related construction site the no you're not. built in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight but ninety nine. by the last director new fund in twenty eighteen this icon of classic modern architecture turned fifty the design definitely stood the test of time but updated safety and conservation all requirements for things to get a bit of a faith. there's lots to do repairing damages installing a modern ac this is the first overhaul the nine hundred sixty s. museum has ever undergone and it is much needed. the noir not sonali gallery it was designed at least fundable was architecture firm in chicago the former powerhouse director had emigrated to the united states in one nine hundred thirty eight but fond of always plans were originally drawn up for an entirely different project. freer coolbaugh field designed a building for the card company in cuba as an end of the glass hallway in the basement for the administration because they never followed through with the plans because the cuban revolution happened occurred he had to leave the island. because he couldn't construct it the plan was basically shelved you come to them from the road got the berlin commission and adopted the plans to the new projects you have to in up on the whole for india. construction began soon after one thousand nine hundred sixty five. by now an old man traveled from the united states to berlin to celebrate the laying of the first stone the project was close to his heart. i dedicate this to the lights of the people. and service of the arts on the mines. installing the gigantic one thousand two hundred ton steel roof posed a major challenge it had to be lifted very slowly found a hole or watched carefully from his car. recalls the moment. here's a grandson world the car they drove on the neat the roof. and truly relished watching this vast new space take shape it was a special moment for him it was a great it's. unfortunately he was unable to attend the museum's inauguration in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight misspend or passed away in one nine hundred sixty nine the noya not sonali gallantly soon became a major architectural landmark in berlin and a cultural hotspot. is a copy this combination of glass stone and steel is exemplary of bears testimony to and marks the culmination of a long process of designing open spaces to be dissolved. miss found always grandson inherited the rights to the building she now ensures that his grandfather's architectural legacy is preserved. stored that made him proud to be able to build a structure like this in his hometown. of to. the restoration of the noir not sonali gallery is said to be completed by twenty twenty. work on the night he will still take a while in the meantime you can visit another free ation by means fundable or in the whole engine house district and nine hundred thirty three country house built for the owner of a print shop. in your view what makes this house so special. this is well i don't know about you but most people tend to feel it ease here at the large windows create a feeling of a vast open space of freedom and openness by. phone from. the inside is flooded with light it has beautiful proportions all of this creates a distinct feeling. that's why i ask you how you felt earlier when visitors come they tend to just feel good i mean this was a master at creating well proportioned spaces. better what is the house used for today i see some pictures on the wall is it a gallery space. yes it's mainly used to exhibit modern art buildings like this by muse funder or are grand and create spaces where so much can happen here it can be transformed with each exhibition. the whole thing of the moment and also known for. and we deliberately look for people who fit the building and match muse unique style. but right now we have works by sebastien on display he's a photo and video artist. and as you can see his works take a humorous approach to furniture designed by me. you have to. understand quite about this with this property is shaped like a square of means have this house built on the northeastern edge of the square in order to have a large garden. as well so you can see that neighboring houses were built in the middle of their respective property as part of. the flats is another example of his special talent for cleverly arranging buildings on a plot because i'm going to boyd of them construct. a country house with you. yard in the middle of berlin not bad. i don't know about you but i just can't get enough of this green that's why we're hopping on over to ireland the emerald isle and this week's nina local our viewer john kennedy is taking us on a tour of us hometown court. fights ago called kick welcome to cork as we say in the gaelic language i'm john kennedy i want to welcome you to cork ireland's real capital city. cork it's going to mazing up with spirits and young city students city great pumps friendly people on the banks of the beautiful river the. so this is one of vikings from the city here the river leap now over a thousand years ago this eerily was a marsh containing many small islands and that's when the vikings from the city because from here they could trade and raid with the interior and cork the name comes from gaelic corkey meaning marsh or swamp. not a thing the special cork is called has got twenty nine bridges on the river the dr has only got twenty four so that makes all those the venice of part of. the sentence church was built in the eighteenth century built on the site of a much older medieval church not only is it a beautiful church the visits but it's the active church sunday service is held here every week and the best thing about sentences. you get to ring the bells. you choose the song you will play it all the numbers and just listen to the song. here in st john's not only can we get to ring the famous bells we also have a terrific view of course city. so this is where we get to show your cards in this market famous for its locally produced imported organic produce but it's much more than that i come here to buy my fresh fruit and vege however i also come here for the chance to catch up on the gossip. so that english market dates right back to the eighteenth century it's called the english market because back then the only ones in the stalls and there were the protestants were known as the english and the name that in this market. was you know if you're very busy here today every dark know it's a silver lining in every survey lining of your clothes. so what's the best thing about the english market it's the sights and sounds it's the smells you can smell you can sense where the food comes from it's like having the whole world right here in cork. somebody's finished in cork what else but in the pub this is where you meet genuine core people. and i can assure you when you're in the public cork you always have a point to beamish and you're never alone so it's not your. bounce architects and contemporary innovators built a number of housing projects in berlin known as the berlin modernism housing estates these subsidized homes are unesco world heritage site one example is the who are horseshoe estate what is the essence of this estate it's got the motto back then was lights air and song for all of us. the idea was to get people out of their crimes tenements out of their dark backyards and build spacious the states close to nature that's what happened here. we are standing in front of the horseshoe estate includes like the realisation of part idea. because if new residents were welcomed with open arms welcome this is the home of the new man and there is fresh air and social encounters are part of the package. going out of that link and there seem to be lots of parallels to the bauhaus movement here is that really the case you seem is well. under this is the sort of the one nine hundred twenty seven card was well connected enough to pursue the same idea is. strictly speaking it's not about a house architect you know they're taught or studied they're pretty pleased he wrote on housing board and little to gropius he was a main figure in the german association of craftsman and the architectural collective. but he also realized his own ideas here. because it's. can you give me an example. that was going to tell it's job to create housing for the masses so the idea was to build affordable worker homes so they created standardized. on hot potato it was a master at using small variations in extravagant colors to break up any monotony and as extravagant top people. know to me of course. modern architecture helped chamberlain as we know it today if you want to see another original bauhaus construction you should consider a trip to neighboring brandon book and we're now about an hour's drive from here in the bowels second director one of my undesigned a trade union school alongside other powers buildings environment and death so it's considered a unesco world heritage site. in the late one nine hundred twenty s. meyer the second bounce house director and his colleague constant value set out to design a trade union school that would provide an ideal setting for learning. today almost one hundred years after its completion the impressive building still fascinates visitors young and old. to fly with my hand like this group of students i have ever. interviewed working hard we're here today to gather inspiration for videos and familiarize ourselves with the bauhaus style hold more. one typical bauhaus aspect here is that this complex was focused on the role architecture could play in facilitating learning all rooms were built with the outdoors in mind. concerns with some tell us something about this boathouse more of this water. sponsor about what you did so i asked don't if i mean bus z. i was built in one thousand twenty eight and its prime purpose was to convey education and that was done quite effectively because teachers and students alike felt a sense of freedom thanks to its beautiful natural surroundings and the space and nice rooms are provided as if cry of joy or. the building complex was meant to encourage communal learning and living. the school is full of incredible features that you often only notice at second glance. to the fitness card actually did to him and then next to the gym it has a really nice feature the windows slide open so in the summer they can be fully opened. that way the gym feels like it's outdoors even i was actually inside. yeah. when your baby gets when you look around you can see clear materials you know paintings or ornaments just pure functionality so no food to annoy you to . understand the picture going to school here. on your. yes the memorial is situated nicely and i was nearby where you could go shopping at locations nice you have many options for spending your leisure time i could picture going to school here. today true to the bounce house spirit the chamber of crafts uses the building for vocational training. i'm still at the horseshoe estate in berlin just like me you're probably wondering what these houses look like on the inside and bush still shows me one of them. it's been restored to the original nineteen twenties designed today you can rent it as a vacation home there. this is typical furnishing from the weimar republic era. about it has a few modern touches like the slump or some of the earliest chewable or steel furniture produced in death so. that's awkward. time now for one of your travel videos this week micanopy now that he shared his journey through combo deal with us he started in the capital phnom penh headed to the coast and then man as a way to cull tons are in the so-called rabbit island oddly enough you won't find any rahman there but you will catch and beautiful sunset. down down down down down every day of so it's. not. like you. thank in berlin there's plenty of the bauhaus legacy to discover often it tends to hide in plain sight it h.r. month chocolate factory isn't just a must for anyone with a sweet chick it's also a place where you can experience original bauhaus interior design your highness one of the first balanced masters designed in one thousand nine hundred twenty eight. how did mr iton come to design the stores interior. professor it's and my grandfather knew each other personally by the. boat sailed on lake fanzine and the future little boat because that's how they got to know each other. and mr holman just said hey i have a shot i want to design my interior or what happened to. my grandfather built this in one thousand twenty seven twenty eight miles far as i know professor it to not only designed the shop but also greatly contributed to the entire house with us by a good common often do people still come to look at the design or do they make. mostly come for the chocolates only law. most come for the chocolate lord but some are also interested in the architecture and are listed in several architectural gods for them so people want to see that tonight with more on. its design isn't the only thing historical about your shop your chocolate is to what something i shouldn't miss as a recommender specialty chocolate. has only one of the manufacture in germany makes this kind of chocolate but it's produced industrially. i was made by hand you should try it. the barrels only survived a couple of months and berlin but the architects. director is still man and plenty of traces throughout the german capital really excited to see what next year's anniversary brings us. thank. you. the bauhaus turns one hundred. one hundred years of modern instructor temperature. one hundred years of functionalism n.p.r. isn't. what's behind the legend. we ask the experts about the. coming up on d w. in good shape. cigarettes are the latest trend but the long term health effects are still on no. coming to school stores you could call it the biggest field study that's taking place in the health sector worldwide and. we asked the expert. on d w. it's time to take one step further. than face. time you're just such the other no. and fight for the truth. is hard to overcome boundaries and connection. it's time for. a deed of it is coming up ahead. minds. a city in ruins. morrow a. symbol of a long come flicked in the philippines. between the muslims. and the christian population. when the finance fighters occupied the city center in two thousand and seventeen president to church's response was told. by a dinner it will never again book called game of. the rico inquest turned into a tragedy. that's not a reason at all this is not the kind of freedom that we want. how did our become a gateway to islamist terror. until now the sorry country wasn't as a result. of an exclusive report from a destroyed city. philippines in the sights of bias starts april eleventh on d w. israeli prime minister binyamin netanyahu has promised to begin annexing jewish settlements in the occupied west bank every elected the policy u. turn is being seen as a last minute bid to rally right wing supporters ahead of next week's election under international law the settlements are viewed as illegal. in venezuela rival

Bauhaus
Sixtys-museum
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One-thousand-nine-hundred-nineteen
Berlin
Capital
Markets-first-centennial
Germany
Modernist-school
Chocolate
Arts-architecture
Cork

Transcripts For DW Check-in 20190406 23:30:00

what to believe today c n n g o the secret of the cross. sixteen or. earth a home or saving googling to goes tell stories of creative people and innovative projects around the world ideas to protect the climate and boost green energy solutions by global warming to those the series of global three thousand on d.w. and online. an oasis of peace at the heart of the capital i'm in berlin visiting the bauhaus. one reason why it's so quiet right now is that the museum is closed for renovation . the bauhaus school was founded in one thousand nine hundred ninety nine and next year will markets first centennial what better time to retrace its footsteps the ripper lent how did the bauhaus quite possibly history's most influential modernist school shaped germany's capital. bauhaus and berlin what was that like and what still remains that's what i want to find out today through arts architecture and chocolate. also on the show a locals recommendations for court and ireland. our viewer video will take us on a tour through cambodia. and we'll explore a powerhouse unesco world heritage site. for limbs bauhaus is set to remain close for a few more years due to extensive renovations in the meantime cents can still get their fix at a small outpost the temporary bauhaus the heat in this landmark retail store in the district of charlotte and book here you'll not only find a carefully curated shop with iconic design products there's also plenty of information on the history of the bauhaus as he. basically even shows me plans for the new archive. a large glass tower by the front will certainly make it more visible. last night what makes the bauhaus so relevant even a hundred years later the town halls. as a team of us powers it's now house is a fascinating topic because i knew him and his intimately linked to german history and as i intend now in light of the upcoming bauhaus anniversary we have the opportunity to shine a light on its role an impact of you for from take for example the last thirty years of research on the role of women or how about how students and masters fared in the third reich. we can now bring these topics into the open and talk about why we are so interested in the interval or period. we can talk about its optimistic elements and where it might have failed in the exchange between society and creativity if you've got all these topics are related to a t.v. to us and a list indeed but i've just powerhouses grown. before continuing to follow the footsteps of the bauhaus here in berlin i want to give you guys a brief overview of the legendary schools evolution and how it came to travel from death south to finally end up here in berlin. the bell house school of design and architecture originated in the university town of weimar in the early twentieth century. here architect of alto capias merged the academy of arts and the school of arts and crafts into one institution his aim was to join art with craftsmanship renowned artists like the painters vassili convincingly and paul plaint soon joined together they pioneered a new language of colors and forms. the bauhaus design came to be known for its functional and elegant aesthetics it was meant to improve people's day to day lives . weimar's house on horn was the first building following the bauhaus design its cubic shape is distinctly minimalist in the. twenty five weimar stopped funding bauhaus the school relocated to the industrial city of the s.l. hear about house engineer who go younkers designed things like gas heaters and aircrafts. at first i was happy to host the bauhaus school and even afford it it a brand new building. for philo desert many people invest so we're a bit shocked they've never seen architecture like this before it was an entirely new approach. was. next door typical power house housing was built for the professors or masters as they were called their uniform exterior belies the varied interiors it ranges from bright and colorful to white minimalism depending on what the inhabitant preferred. even the furnishings were created by bauhaus designers. does so commissioned our house architect. to draw up plans for the city's new unemployment agency. in one thousand nine hundred twenty eight he was succeeded by harness my own as bauhaus director he oversaw the construction of death sounds five houses with balcony access for low income residents people's needs over luxury mansions but in one nine hundred thirty two the nazis drove the bauhaus out of to sell its last director meese found a hole or oversaw the move to berlin there it was shut down by the nazis again bellhousing germany was gone but not forgotten. people had to wait until after world war two to see former bauhaus architects bring their ideas back to germany not far from the famous potsdamer platz you'll find another about house related construction sites that know you not to nagaland built in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight and ninety nine. the bauhaus is the last director. in twenty eighteen this icon of classic modern architecture turned fifty the design definitely stood the test of time but updated safety and conservation all requirements for things to get a bit of a facelift. there's lots to do repairing damages installing a modern ac this is the first overhaul the nine hundred sixty s. museum has ever undergone and it is much needed. the noir not sonali was designed at least fundable was architecture firm in chicago the former powerhouse director had emigrated to the united states in one nine hundred thirty eight but fond of always plans were originally drawn up for an entirely different project. coolbaugh field designed a building for the record company in cuba and a glass hallway in the basement for the administration because they never followed through with the plans because the cuban revolution happened occurred he had to leave the island. because he couldn't construct that the plan was basically shelved . the road got the berlin commission and adopt that the plans to the new projects you have to vote for in that. construction began soon after one thousand nine hundred sixty five. by now an old man traveled from the united states to berlin to celebrate the laying of the first stone the project was close to his heart. i dedicate this to the lights of the people. and service of the arts on the mines. can take one thousand two hundred tons steel roof post a major challenge it had to be lifted very slowly find a hole or watched carefully from his car. recalls the moment. here's a grandson one of the cars they drove on the new the roof. and surely relished watching this vast new space take shape it was a special moment for him it was a great is. unfortunately he was unable to attend the museum's inauguration in one thousand nine hundred sixty eight mrs van dorn passed away in one nine hundred sixty nine the noya not sonali gallantly soon became a major architectural landmark in berlin and a cultural hotspot. is a cop along this combination of glass stone and steel as exemplary bears testimony to and marks the culmination of a long process of designing open spaces to be dissolved in one of these kind of always grandson inherited the rights to the building she now ensures that his grandfather's architectural legacy is preserved. stored that made him proud to be able to build a structure like this in his hometown. of to garnish to. the restoration of the noir not sonali gallery is set to be completed by twenty twenty. work on the line up to nigel and he will still take a while in the meantime you can visit another creation by nice fundable in the whole engine house district and nine hundred thirty three country houses built for the owner of a print shop. in your view what makes this house so special. this is well i don't know about you but most people tend to feel ease here with the large windows create a feeling of a vast open space of freedom and openness by. often the inside is flooded with light it has beautiful proportions all of this creates a distinct feeling. that's why i ask you how you felt earlier when visitors come they tend to just feel good i mean this was a master at creating well proportioned spaces. better what is the house used for today i see some pictures on the wall is it a gallery space. yes it's mainly used to exhibit modern art buildings like this by muse funder or are grand and create spaces where so much can happen here it can be transformed with each exhibition. the whole think of a moment and also look for. and we deliberately look for people who fit the building and match muse unique style deal with right now we have works by sebastien on display he's a photo and video artist. and as you can see his works take a humorous approach to furniture designed by me is. wonderful and quick about this with this property is shaped like a square of means have this house built on the northeastern edge of the square in order to have a large garden. as well so you can see that neighboring houses were built in the middle of their respective property as part of. the flats is another example of his special talent for cleverly arranging buildings on a plot of those and then boyd of them construct. a country house with you. yard in the middle of berlin not bad. i don't know about you but i just can't get enough of this green that's why we're hopping on over to ireland the emerald isle and this week's nina local our viewer john kennedy is taking us on a tour of us hometown court. fights ago called kick welcome to cork as we say in the gaelic language i'm john kennedy i want to welcome you to cork ireland's real capital city. cork it's going to mazing up the spirits a young city student city great pubs friendly people on the banks of the beautiful river leaf. so this is one of vikings from the city here the river now over a thousand years ago this eerily was a marsh containing many small islands and that's why the vikings from the city because from here they could trade and raid with the interior and cork the name comes from gaelic. meaning marsh or swamp. not a thing the special court is court has got twenty nine bridges on the river the docket has only got twenty four so that makes all those the venice of our the. sentence church was built in the eighteenth century built on the site of a much older medieval church not only is it a beautiful church to visit but it's the act of church sunday services held here every week. and the best thing about st annes is you get to ring the bells. you choose the song or place all the numbers and just listen to the song. here and sent down not only can we get to ring the famous bells we also have a terrific view of cork city. so this is where we get to show your cards in this market famous for its locally produced and imported organic produce but it's much more than that i come here to buy my fresh fruit and vege however i also come here for the chance to catch up on the gossip. so it was market dates back to the eighteenth century it's called the english market because back then the only ones allowed to own stalls and there were the protestants were known as the english into name that in this market. was your your your very busy here today every dark know it's a silver lining in every survey lining those dark clothes. so what's the best thing about the english market it's the sights and sounds it's the smells you can smell you can sense where the food comes from it's like having the whole world right here in cork. you. saw the finished in cork what else but in the pub this is where you meet genuine core people. and i can assure you when you're in a pub and cork you always have a point to beamish and you're never alone so stauncher. bounce architects and contemporary innovators built a number of housing projects in berlin known as the berlin modernism housing estates these subsidized homes are unesco world heritage site one example is the who are horseshoe estate what is the essence of this estate it's got them and more to the motto back then was light air and sun for all fast. the idea was to get people out of their crimes tenements out of their dark backyards and build spacious estates close to nature that's what happened here. because we're standing in front of the horseshoe estate include it's like the realization of that idea. because if new residents were welcomed with open arms or welcome this is the home of the new man and there is fresh air and social encounters are part of the package . going out of the clink and there seem to be lots of parallels to the bauhaus movement here is that it really became seen as well. as easily sort of the one nine hundred twenty seven card was well connected enough to pursue the same ideas for strictly speaking it is not about a house architect you know the taught or studied there but he played a role of housing. while to gropius he was a main figure in the german association of craftsman and the architectural collective. but he also realized this own ideas here. because it's art. and can you give me an example. it was i don't know it's how it's job to create housing for the masses so the idea was to build affordable worker homes so they created standardized houses. on hot potato it was a master at using small variations in extravagant colors to break up any monotony and as extravagant top people kind of wanted to me of course. modern architecture helped chamberlain as we know it today if you want to see another original bauhaus construction you should consider a trip to neighboring brandon book and we're now about an hour's drive from here in the bowels second director one is my own design a trade school alongside other powers buildings environment and death so it's considered a unesco world heritage site. in the late one nine hundred twenty s. anas meyer the second bounce house director and his colleague hans schmidt valley set out to design a trade union school that would provide an ideal setting for learning. today almost one hundred years after its completion the impressive building still fascinates visitors young and old. nothing if not i would not have it like this group of students that. you know if you work hard we're here today to gather inspiration for videos and familiarize ourselves with the bauhaus style or more. one typical bauhaus aspect here is that this complex was focused on the role architecture could play in facilitating learning all rooms were built with the outdoors in mind. concerns but some tell us something about this boathouse memorial that's what. it's once you know about what you did so ask don't think of it was zero it was built in one thousand twenty eight and its prime purpose was to convey education and that was done quite effectively because teachers and students alike felt a sense of freedom thanks to its beautiful natural surroundings and the space and nice rooms are provided as if cry of joy or and all friends name on. the building complex was meant to encourage communal learning and living. the school is full of incredible features that you often only notice at second glance. the fitness card actually did to a man down next to the gym. it has a really nice feature the windows slide open so in the summer they can be fully opened first and that way the gym feels like it's outdoors even i was actually inside. yeah. when your kids when you look around you can see clear materials. you know paintings or ornaments just pure functionality so no food to annoy you to. understand could you picture going to school here on your. yes the memorial is situated nicely and i was nearby where you could go shopping at locations nice you have many options for spending your leisure time i could picture go to school here. today true to the bauhaus spirit the chamber of crafts uses the building for vocational training. i'm still at the horseshoe estate in berlin just like me you're probably wondering what these houses look like on the inside still shows me one of them. it's been restored to the original nineteen twenties designed today you can rent it as a vacation home there. this is typical furnishing from the weimar republic. not it has a few modern touches like the slump or some of the earliest chewable or steel furniture produced in death so. that's ok. time now for one of your travel videos this week and you can if you know that he shared his journey through come up with us he started in the capital phnom penh headed to the coast and then man as a way to coat the so-called rabbit island oddly enough you won't find any rabbits there but you will catch and beautiful sunset. every day it's. not. like you. thank in berlin there is plenty of the bauhaus legacy to discover often attempts to hide in plain sight. chocolate factory isn't just a must for anyone with a sweet it's also a place where you can experience the original bauhaus interior design your highness one of the first balanced masters designed in one thousand nine hundred twenty eight. pounds how did mr iton come to design the store's interior. i certainly my grandfather knew each of the person by the. boat sailed on lake van zyl in the future little boats because that's how they got to know each other so coming up in a book on i mr holman just said hey i have a job i want to design my interior or what happened to. my grandfather built this in one thousand twenty seven twenty eight why as far as i know professor it's a not only designed the shop but also greatly contributed to the entire house and it's always us but a guitar comment often do people still come to look at the design or do they may. mostly come for the chocolate song or local law. most come from the chocolate lord but some are also interested in the architecture you know and were listed in several architectural gods and so people want to see that one bordered on i mean it's design isn't the only thing historical about your shop your chocolate is to what something i shouldn't miss as a recommender specialty chocolate. there's only one other manufacturer in germany that makes this kind of chocolate knows what it's produced industrially. ours is made by hand you should try it. the bows only survived a couple of months and were a lemon but the architect. director is still manage plenty of traces throughout the german capital really excited to see what next year's anniversary. thank. you. are you. going to. go to college. keep learning merged reality wait a second do you want the whole picture out facts instead of make ideas shift to live us. from a dimension reality to cryptocurrency to your topics for live in an ever changing digital world let's start going to devise a some clear shift. d.-w. . its message remains a mystery lock the cross. more than a symbol of christianity mock. it represents torture and death but is also a sign of hope and redemption. in what you believe is today seems off the secret of the cross. thirty minutes. fake hair and real story. where i come from a lot of women who like me have fake hair sometimes the hair style takes up. that's a lot of time that needs to be filled so people at the salon talk about what's happening in their lives. i became a journalist to be a storyteller and i always want to find those real authentic stories from everyday people who have something to share. with all of us i must find at the salon i know a good quality here when i see it and the good stories when i hear it. my name is elizabeth steel and i work at c down. the city in ruins are always. symbol of a long conflict in the philippines. between the muslims and the christian population. financed fighters occupied the city center seventeen president to tear his response was told. by children

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Transcripts For DW Arts And Culture 20190815 08:45:00

i'm voice i do you he'll join me in the studio to talk about his legacy their hands his future plans. well his one of the most celebrated personalities in our press had a and now spanish tenor placidyl domingo has seen his name added to a growing list of powerful men accused of sexual misconduct 9 women say they were sexually harassed by domingo as far back as the 1980 s. and they say his behavior was an open secret in the industry for many years. he's considered one of the most powerful and celebrated singers in the world of opera but soaring tenor voice is now said to have long been accompanied by a story surrounding his treatment of women the recent allegations of sexual harassment have resulted in 2 major houses counseling upcoming performances featuring the star the los angeles opera where domingo is general director has also announced an investigation. 8 singers and a dancer told the associated press that they were sexually harassed by domingo in encounters that took place over 3 decades. but only one of the 9 women has allowed her name to be used next or soprano patricia wolfe. when a man that. he's almost like got in my office when he would come up close and say that the 1st thing that goes through your mind is why but you also think as soon as you walk away and get away you think did i just ruin my career. there is you came forward with the allegation said they felt emboldened by the me to movement doing it has denied the accusations but no tears still it is painful to hear that i may have upset anyone make them feel uncomfortable. joining me in the studio to talk about this is my colleague melissa holroyd thanks for being here melissa just how serious are these allegations you know they're fairly serious one accuser has said that domingo stuck his hand down her skirt and 3 others have said that he forcibly kissed other women of spoke of being stalked backstage touched without permission forced to fend off persistent romantic overtures it has to be said that none of these women authored documentation in the form of phone calls or texts or anything like that but the a.p. said it spoke to almost 3 dozen mostly colleagues who said they also witnessed inappropriate behavior i think more troubling than this level of harassment is that he's also accused of punishing the women who refused his advances 7 of the 9 women said that their careers suffered adversely. so it's looking like yet another shocking abuse of power we i mean there is still accusations at the moment which is interestingly enough has been received very differently in spain than it has in the rest of the world there's been received a lot more skepticism. and there in the world of opera it doesn't get much more powerful than domingo as we just heard in the piece he really is something of a god for these people and when your presence guarantees full opera houses and concert halls you can imagine that it would be very easy to abuse that power it's very easy for him to say i don't want to work with that woman anymore so you know any advances at all a very loaded day and also that level of power is very easy to corrupt not just for the person who has that power but people around him who are all trying to desperately to keep him happy no one wants to upset the cash cow which of course he definitely is not tell us a little bit more about these other reactions that you intimated there in spain france yes so a couple of. spanish opera singers have come forward and have both said that that while they don't necessarily want to disagree with somebody else's experience they say they say that he always behaved like a gentleman to them and always treated them with a great deal of respect it's interesting how the different reactions have been because we've had 2 opera houses in the united states canceling concerts and in europe have sort of held on to the their appointments to keep our eye on the development of that story thanks very much melissa horan for bringing us those details thank you. well that's one of the most photographed bridges in the world and since $84.00 it has straddled straddled the river thames and become an iconic symbol of the british capital london the famous tower bridge of course and in our series on european landmarks to learn about it. a unique structure a revolutionary one of technology that's how the british celebrated the completion of the tower bridge more than 120 years ago. the iconic landfall spans of the thames river in the heart of london since 8094. richard smith is a city guy in london since 2012 he's been showing tourists around for maybe europe's most famous bridge the fairy tale towers are the ultimate monument to victorian in the style but the bridge which draws almost a 1000000 tourists a year also has some element. in 2014 through. heighten the experience here it's our bridge. is our behalf a ton. of sense for me to stick. strictly strong economic 250 people on here 5 elephants were never managed to get far on offense in the lift our salvation we can't prove that. the tower bridge was built at the end of the 19th century to relieve the jam packed streets of london which had the most traffic in the world at the time construction took 8 years architect horace jones based his design strictly on the style of the famous tower of london. it wasn't until the silver coronation jubilee of queen elizabeth the 2nd in 1977 that the steel parts were painted in britain's national colors red white and. today the 244 suspension bridge is still one of the city's most important traffic arteries and every day 40000 people have to pass frew this bottleneck but even at rush hour ships always have the rights of way there are no exceptions. many visitors don't know that the bridges $70000.00 sun towers are part of the attraction a few times a year the huge empty spaces in scientism are used for chamber concerts. but if you can't get tickets for the chamber concerts never fear you can always listen to one of the many street musicians. against a truly iconic and back row. i'm going to cons tala in bonn bids farewell to hang its director general since the year 2013 and during that time mr ross was instrumental in raising the museum's profile considerably overseeing a series of daring and often controversial exhibitions on diverse topics such as michael jackson's legacy in pop culture and. the burning topic of nazi art theft to name just a couple of examples numbers broke the 600000 barrier in 2018 alone. heads to. december to head up the state of the museum for modern and contemporary art 1st he's taken the time to join me here in the studio welcome and so glad you could join us. here living bon as the germans say some beautiful with one laughing and one reaping adda so not without a bit of sadness perhaps you can tell me what your personal highlights were junior time. by real highlights was shows i would see which. way the exhibition cui a show like. respect to the performance artist a serbian performance artist which became very touching and very. very active. we had to show. respect to the 4th perspective of the. people and visitors through to dance exhibition in a way so i was very much interested in humid ising an exhibition planned to support of exhibitions definitely now there was of course the famous michael jackson exhibition on the wall earlier this year which caused quite a stir and that was over the planned when the very damning h.b.o. documentary came out about his sexual abuse of children how challenging was it to stay true to that exhibition to hold on to it and. to steer a meaningful conversation around it was challenging because a great amount of the world wanted to know if we would do the show or not if we would stop the show or if we would 3 d. continue to do it and we continue with it we said from the beginning we need to consider the freedom of an i think submission speech we need to be able to talk about what happened we we also for. this raised ethical moral questions and we saw just before placido domingo i would say that what happens in the world these days in the culture world these days that there is also a bit. more focus on ethical and moral questions i think that's interesting that aesthetics is yes that they say the more they also are able to discuss it on a general level general societal level now the exhibition of the words from the state of let's the son of hitler's art dealer was also a real undertaking because it concentrated on nazi art theft and the consequences they were involved in this process from beginning to end how how did that affect you it affected me very much it was an exhibition which we developed also in close collaboration with the ministry of culture and but we were of course independent as an exhibition space and we were able to build up a very touching narrative showing the whole exhibition at the elephant project process all fields and the topic it was an emotional topic at it wasn't historically very important topic and also a bit of a forgotten topic because everybody knows about nazi germany but this looting aren't and there's looting over this whole project of building a museum in leading through a museum in london and what this cost in terms of individual faith of people of families who are wrapped of their artworks this became very important to make the air and through and through to. open up for the big audience you're particularly admired as a man. and as a fearless leader and you're off to the stankovic. and what are your plans there just like i mean to stay that is of course more a museum of modern contemporary art this more focused and the other was more general in a way what i am interested in is now to see how we can diversify and how we can globalize a west museum in our current time we need to do something we need to become more inclusive and we need to be taken into account what happened in the rest of the world last is definitely going to be i'm sometimes gangway wish you all the best in that i'm going back to the roots thank you for joining me. and that brings us to the end of this program so from myself and. from here in berlin and i'm just. robots are still in the development phase of the book that's going to happen when they grow. on official intelligence is now spreading through our society ai will experts be able to agree on ethical guidelines or will this technology create deadly more autonomy weapon systems. paradise lips in 50 t.w. . enter the conflict zone confronting the powerful. my guest this week here in berlin is the qatari foreign minister's folks passing on the last 2 years the gulf states of qatar has been blockaded by a court stance of the arab states which of jews it's of supporting terrorism she has always denied the charges. conflicts of. minutes on t.w. . what secrets lie behind these moves to. find out in an immersive experience and explores fascinating cultural heritage sites. d.w. world heritage 360 getting up now. you're going to unofficial estimates more than 1200000 venezuelans live in colombia legally and illegally. already. returned to venezuela. visit friends it's not i don't think i'd ever go back there to live you know when i lived there again i don't know so i'm not sure. witness global news that matters. made for mines.

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Transcripts For DW Arts And Culture 20190814 18:45:00

famous landmark but the tower bridge still trumps them all. and of course tell him bond visits director general hind voice i do you feel joined me in the studio to talk about his legacy there and his future plans. well his one of the most celebrated personalities in our press had a and now spanish tenor placidyl domingo has seen his name added to a growing list of powerful men accused of sexual misconduct 9 women say they were sexually harassed by domingo as far back as the 1980 s. and they say his behavior was an open secret in the industry for many years. he's considered one of the most powerful and celebrated singers in the world of opera but soaring 10 of voice is now said to have long been accompanied by stories surrounding his treatment of women the recent allegations of sexual harassment have resulted in 2 major houses counseling upcoming performances featuring the star the los angeles opera where domingo is general director has also announced an investigation. 8 singers and a dancer told the associated press that they were sexually harassed by domingo in encounters that took place over 3 decades. but only one of the 9 women has known her name to be used that's or soprano patricia wolff. born a man that how. he's almost like god in my eyes when he would come up close and say that the 1st thing that goes through your mind is in one hand but you also think as soon as you walk away and get away you think did i just ruin my career. there is you came forward with the allegation said they felt emboldened by the me too movement during their has denied the accusations but no tears still it is painful to hear that i may have upset anyone make them feel uncomfortable. joining me in the studio to talk about this is my colleague melissa holroyd thanks for being here melissa just how serious are these allegations you know they're fairly serious one accuser has said that domingo stuck his hand on her skirt and 3 others have said that he forcibly kissed them other women of spoke of being stalked backstage touched without permission forced to fend off persistent romantic overtures it has to be said that none of these women off the documentation in the form of phone calls or texts or anything like that but the a.p. said it spoke to almost 3 dozen mostly colleagues who said they also witnessed inappropriate behavior i think more troubling than this level of harassment is that he's also accused of punishing the women who refused his advances 7 of the 9 women said that their careers suffered adversely. so it's looking like yet another shocking abuse of power we i mean there are still accusations at the moment which is interestingly enough has been received very differently in spain than it has in the rest of the world there's been received a lot more skepticism. and there in the world of opera it doesn't get much more powerful than domingo as we just heard in the piece he really is something of a god for these people and when your presence guarantees full opera houses and concert halls you can imagine that it would be very easy to abuse that power it's very easy for him to say i don't want to work with that movement anymore so you know any advances at all a very loaded. and also that level of power is the reason to corrupt not just the person who has that power but people around him who are all trying to desperately to keep him happy no one wants to upset a cash cow which of course he definitely is now tell us a little bit more about these other reactions that you intimated there in spain france yes so a couple of. spanish opera singers have come forward and said that while they don't necessarily want to disagree with somebody else's experience they're saying they say that he always behaved like a gentleman to them and always treated them with a great deal of respect it's interesting how the different reactions have been because we've had 2 opera houses in the united states canceling concerts and in europe have sort of held on to the point let's keep our eye on the development of that story thanks very much melissa holroyd for bringing us those details. well it's one of the most photographed bridges in the world in things $8.00 to $94.00 it has straddled straddled the river thames and become an iconic symbol of the british capital london the famous tower bridge of course and in our series on european landmarks to learn about it. a unique structure a revolutionary wonder of technology that's how the british celebrated the completion of the tower bridge more than 120 years ago. the iconic land call spans the thames river in the heart of london since 1904. richard smith is a city guide in london since 2012 he's been showing tourists around what may be europe's most famous bridge the fairytale towers of the ultimate monument to victorian in the yoko flick style but the bridge which draws almost a 1000000 tourists a year also has some elements. in 2004 trying to. heighten the experience here it's our bridge these panels why it's our behalf and. centimeters thick. strong economic 350 people on here 5 elephants were never managed to get far on offense in the lift our salvation we can't prove that. the tower bridge was built at the end of the 19th century to relieve the jam packed streets of london which had the most traffic in the world at the time construction took 8 years architect horace jones based his design strictly on the style of the famous tower of london. it wasn't until the silver coronation jubilee of queen elizabeth the 2nd in 1977 that the steel parts were painted in britain's national colors red white and. the 244 suspension bridge is still one of the city's most important traffic archery every day 40000 people have to parse fruit this book from nick but even at rush hour ships always have the rights of way there are no exceptions. many visitors don't know that the bridges 70000 charm towers are part of the attraction a few times a year the huge empty spaces in science them are used for chamber concerts. but if you can't get tickets for the chamber concerts never fear you can always listen to one of the many street musicians. against a truly iconic backdrop of. the goodness in bonn bids farewell to high involves its director general sense the year 2013 and during that time most of us was instrumental in raising the museum's profile considerably overseeing a series of daring and often controversial exhibitions on diverse topics such as michael jackson's legacy in pop culture and. the burning topic of not seeing art theft to name just a couple of examples where visitor numbers broke the 600000 barrier in 2018 alone. heads to amsterdam in december to head up the stated i am for modern and contemporary art 1st he's taken the time to join me here in the studio welcome and so glad you could join us. here living bon as the germans say some beautiful with one laughing one reaping so not without a bit of sadness perhaps chicken out. tell me what your personal highlights were during your time. by real highlights was shows i would say which. in a way the exhibition cui a show like. respect to the performance artist a serbian performance artist which became very touching and very human very active . and we have a show like. respect here for it perspective of the germ a choreographer which was also. involving engage people and visitors to to dance also in the exhibition it always so i was very much interested in you guys saying an exhibition planned to supportive exhibitions definitely now there was of course the famous michael jackson exhibition on the wall earlier this year which caused quite a stir and that was over the plan when the very damning h.b.o. documentary came out about his sexual abuse of children how challenging was it to stay true to that exhibition to hold on to it and to steer a meaningful conversation around it it was challenging because a great amount of the world wanted to know if we would do the show or not if we would stop the show or if we would 3 we continued to do it and we continue with it we said from the beginning we need to consider the freedom of and i think submission speech we need to be able to talk about what happened we we also for. this raised ethical moral questions we saw just before placido domingo i would say that what happens in the world these days in the culture world these days that there is also a. focus on ethical and moral questions i think us interests to get the aesthetics yes to think so the more that also are able to discuss it on a general level general societal level not the exhibition of the words from the state of let's of hitler's art dealers also. real undertaking because it concentrated on nazi art theft and the consequences you were involved in this process from beginning to end how how did that affect you it affected me very much it was an exhibition which we developed also in close collaboration with the ministry of culture and but we were of course independent as an exhibition space and we were able to build up a very touchy ignorant tears during the whole exhibition at the elephant project proceso fields and the topic it was an emotional topic and it was a historically very important topic and also a bit of a forgotten topic because everybody knows about nazi germany but this looting arts and this looting of i've been this whole project of building up museum in leading fewer of museum it and what this course is of individual feats of people of families who were robbed of their artworks this became very important to make the air and to. open up for the big audience you're particularly admired as a man of i.d.'s and as a fearless leader and you're off to the stage. what are your plans there just like i mean to stay because of course more of museum of modern contemporary artists more art focused and the other was more general in a way what i am interested in is now to see how we can diversify and how we can globalize a western museum in our current time we need to do something we need to become more inclusive and we need to be taken into account what happened in the rest of the world last is definitely going to be i'm surrounds again we wish you all the best in going back to the roots thank you for joining me. thank you and that brings us to the end of this program so from myself and from. the best from here in berlin and until next time just. entered the conflict zone confronting the powerful. my guest this week here in berlin is the qatari foreign minister spoke 1st and. the last 2 years the gulf state of qatar has been blockaded by a quartet of the arab states which accuses from supporting terrorism she has always denied the charges for. conflict so fluent in dublin. her 1st day of school in the jungle. first camillus and. then doris crane the moment arrives to. join the ring a tank on her journey back to freedom. in our interactive documentary. dora reputation returns home on d.w. dot com tang's. i'm not all think it's a cloud i guess sometimes i am but i stand up in whip it up and we should have a think sneak into the german culture of looking at the stereotypes aquatics fit in a single suit a title that i doubt i am. needed to be taking his grandmother down to me it's all about. nothing i might show join me to meet the german sunday w. . post such. a and. plan. the body. plane the boat. this is the w.'s line from berlin more tear gas on the streets of hong kong police fire multiple rounds of gas or disperse pro-democracy demonstrators following the violence that broke out at the airport sit in on tuesday china reacted furiously to what it calls terrorists like attacks on its citizens by protesters also coming up to one year on the people of genoa remember those who died when

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Transcripts For DW Arts And Culture 20191112 21:45:00

only north korean artist in exile. talks about his life working as a propaganda office before he escaped to the south and his life since then. and a moving photographic exhibition of homeless people here in berlin. charlie's angels was a hugely successful t.v. series back in the 1970s featuring initially found forsett mages jaclyn smith and kate jackson as 3 beautiful private investigators righting wrongs on america's main streets the franchise go to reboot with 2 films and another series at the beginning of the century but none of these really achieve the success of the original now hollywood is having another go with yet another movie. the new charlie's angels is all about female empowerment of women can do anything just because they can doesn't mean they should be. in the franchise's latest installment the angels have gone global with butt kicking agents all over the planet. i sure am just a decrease that person says you are backed up by newcomer i love bill and sky. but together these new angels have to protect a young whistleblower engineer played by naomi scott i know the program how to tell him to revolutionize the power industry but there's a possibility it can be weaponized and i would be too. but. not i'm jane not the movies written produced and directed by elizabeth banks who plays the angels manager possibly ironic over groups of exceptional women. you guys are like babies to. work out. and think. it's the 1st film in the charlie's angels franchise with a female director despise me and you keep. i really want to build the good feelings of camaraderie and sorority and surrounding scene where you want to change the names of colleagues to me like. i. was really good brings charlie's angels into 29 teams with plenty of action but also. a message of solidarity to fans part is in taking down international. if you . think you don't. called it david leavitt's joins me now here we go again david so what is different this time around right well i think you really can't tell this time that this is a movie made by women for women i mean i think looking back at the old charlie's angels in the series the other movies from the early 2000 we have this idea that they were always about female empowerment but if you actually look at that old series it's kind of condescending i'm talking about the series from the late seventy's you know it's kind of like oh look they're cute they can shoot they can carry. this is no hold up today at all and the 1st 2 movies in the early 2000 starring cameron diaz drew barrymore lucy woo these are really raunchy comedy is that are clearly made by a man who are madly. anything like that i just like to write it rough and hard because that's how you know i signed that release waiver so you can just feel free to stick things in my slot. to listen to your peers to the no one. it's the new one is all about fashion which i don't know you know you get this this new character who's supposed to be an engineer who turns into the new charlie's angels and she's so excited about the closets that they've got also the flirtations things are so much more innocent in this movie that really surprised cameron diaz awful text but they go i'm sorry where you got you got these this is the sort of have the hots for this young chemists and there are jokes about oh my favorite my favorite chemical is fawcett and then kristen stewart walks by and she's all are you flirting with with the handsome nerd and that sort of the existence of it in this movie which is so different from drew barrymore licking this during we hope my yeah there were times of chinese it is different i can see that but it still begs the question why is hollywood really doing this again well it was all about action franchises right now it's a commercial thing you know they're leaving leaving it to amazon and that's likes to take the risks they want movies that have name recognition and that's what a movie franchise like charlie's angels does it's also got a very commercial soundtrack with every on agron day miley cyrus a lot of del ray. stars that young girls teenage girls and young women really really like to their credit though this is different it's got cameos by all kinds of really strong female role models olympic athletes. and you've got you've got kristen stewart who is in a relationship with a woman she's playing possibly the 1st gay angelus not really clear so this is a much more work much more 2019 version ok story ok looking forward to the cinema you as they say from november the 15th all around the world david leavitt's thanks very much. why we here in germany have been set up right in the 30th anniversary of the fall of the berlin wall there's another country which has been divided even longer no wolf and south korea never signed a peace treaty at the end of the korean will back in 1900. 3 and they're still technically at war the artists used to work as a propaganda artist for the regime but escaped and now lives in the south he fears that unity or reunification is a distant dream. they left somewhere in bavaria a makeshift studio for an enemy of the state sun moon has fled north korea meaning he's the only contemporary artist from that country who can work for even. freely means incognito wearing a mask to protect both himself and his family here he's painting a fish in blood red sea spray it's some most last painter before he returns to south korea where he lives in exile. it's interesting to compare the current situation in divided korea with german reunification here east and west one again many people remain divided i feel the same way i see and draw myself within this in between. north korea is the world's last remaining past the end of stalinism and it's one with a perfect command of propaganda techniques perspectives that create a sense of being overpowered using the masses as ornament. in his early work sun moon copied the official aesthetic and was so good at it that he was trained as a north korean propaganda painter. i started painting because i wanted to make chemical song and kim jong il happy with my pictures. son move letter basically harmonious life he was looking forward to a great career as a painter in service to kim jong il but then in the mid 1990 s. came the catastrophe. united nations estimates some $20000000.00 are starving resorting to eating roots and grass there's only enough food for each adult to get 100 grams per day to need to. starvation drove sun moon into the tumen river he swam to china knowing he could never return soon lose escape still affects him to this day he depicts it in his paintings and sketches the absurd odyssey through pyongyang beijing and laos covering thousands of kilometers in order to reach south korea just over the border. he was helped by the chinese mafia who smuggle him to laos where he struggled his way through the jungle. when he finally saw the church crosses above seoul it seemed unreal and freedom brought confusion a cult of personality in pop music a uniformity of commercial brands. the dominating position of religion. all strategies that seem similar to those used in north korea. in north korea there's one political ideology but in south korea there are several powerful ideologies. since i painted so many propaganda paintings i was sensitized to those things. today some movie uses a propaganda stick style to oppose the powerful and challenge taboos in both north and south korea exhibitions in china germany and the united states have made the artist increasingly well known. combines ideological symbols from north and south korea seeking a new language of fellowship. he turns propaganda into a melancholy utopia simple and powerful. at the end of our interview the sun moon sings the song. because. it's the in official anthem of unified korea. fascinating story that now with winter approaching here in the northern hemisphere and the night sky i think cold of this is the most difficult time of year for homeless people at the moment in a church here in berlin that's a very moving exhibition of photos featuring people with most of as a blind eye but not the photographer the burra rupert. remember i meet with people who have become invisible people on the margins of society. basic essential things were taken away from them there aren't really seen anymore in fact they're not seen at all. back. then based photographer has been taken photos of homeless people for 10 years her latest works are currently on show in a church and berlin in an exhibition called no space and counters with people without a home. is a so it's important to me that you see the person and the human with his story with us when he bends and that you show and meet the people in a dignified way i. look at takes photos all over berlin and disadvantaged areas but also of people sleeping out in the open at the chance to reach the people she's photographed get their portrait as a gift. not everyone agrees to have their picture taken but cast norman did he lived down the street for over 6 years today the 54 year old lives in a shelter. seeing his portraits brings back memories but not only bad ones. there reminds me of my grandpa he looked almost exactly like me. short with a cigarette in his mouth like me. so much of it. but i like it. if it's. shows home as people and their daily fight for survival on the streets from a new more human perspective. again a very moving story mall on these stories and lots of other topics from the world of ops and culture on our website of course at d.w. dot com slash culture and facebook page jup do check them out that's all for now thanks for watching and do join as at the same time tomorrow if you catch. education the future. how is the situation worldwide. global $3000.00 takes a look which educational models create opportunities for the future. what does it mean to learn in an interconnected world with ever increasing expectations. around google 3030 minutes on d 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