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Transcripts For DW Kino - Rebellion On Film 1968 20180416



a new generation demanded change. hi and welcome to kino the movie magazine today we re paying tribute to that swinging sixties generation by looking at how they changed filmmaking forever we start in america in the early one nine hundred sixty s. hollywood was in a bit of a rut bloated us film studios were spending and losing millions of dollars on splashy musicals and cheesy historical epics that nobody wanted to see anymore it was up to a new generation to tear down that system and build in its place a new hollywood. it s the start of the wild new decade the birth of a few hollywood margin she fell into a break from the rigid studio system. it was the advent of a new generation one that celebrated broken heroes and outside. i. attribute to the flower power and protest it s the time of his vietnam war and the student protests against it pick these and hasheesh instead of bush well constraints and taboos the dreams of the flower child concord the cinema. do you think you can down the door that the film is a brisky point dreams of a world free of racism and it shows how that dream is brutally repressed. happiness can only be found far away from civilization. in one nine hundred sixty eight america was deeply divided between those striving for change and those afraid of. backtracking last summer like benjamin in the graduate are stuck in between benjamin is twenty one and his parents and their friends expect him to enter the normal society instead he withdraws. until his board neighbor mrs robinson seduces him. during the break of course. in easy rider the classic new hollywood film the search for freedom comes up against suspicion and. hayley fear that will make. you name it out. i think she didn t feel yes with the little woman still. it was put me in a cage and charged ignition dishing out. a . new hollywood wasn t just about hippie fantasy it s the best films of the era are also darker and more of the listing than the studio fare that came before. there s no happy ending for easy rider freedom stuck to its tracks. in the frisky point the character imagines american affluence blown sky high but it s only a fantasy. thing and. even the ending of the graduate doesn t begin its own business for over fifty years on you can still feel and seen its influence still. if hollywood in one nine hundred sixty eight was in need of a revolution so is german cinema here the young directors if anything were more political than they were in america inspired by the student protest movement at the time they took aim at the mors and also the political crimes of their parents generation. in the one nine hundred sixty s. marked a fresh start for german cinema young filmmakers with a wild and provocative style stuck to a sufi sentimental fare of the one nine hundred fifty s. new german cinema was born coptic cinema was still the opening salvo of this rebellion was fired in one thousand nine hundred eighty two with the overhauls and manifesto in the furious statement a group of young filmmakers condemned the sentimentalize tear jerkers that had come before the so-called hina films the simplistic and superficial. and i think obama was and was an important rebellion because it changed public awareness and make people understand the need to make films that were totally different was leading the way was alexander kruger who condemned the film industry for being obsessed with the economic bottom line to fund and life to jesus we thought the whole system of simply buying actors and screenplays bundled together like packages to created something that could never be a completely rounded piece of art. yeah they didn t respect the audience just the suspect yet we felt it was a hostile attitude. tortes filled with in food. they want to directors to be authors of their work writing their own screenplays in yesterday girl anita who has fled east germany wonders unhappily true west german cities the films unsentimental realistic look at ordinary life was a revelation. by the shift you know investigation. into the just as she sits for fish heads are going to do that in the philippines and on fifty five minutes from the museum is on the families just as he. is from the us so she. directed his own sister alexandra in an almost documentary style the thong said this movie offers are not candles or lion tamers who are not even gardeners got some of that see their collectors they respect the material the actors the camera itself that means it s a very cooperative effort a party line starts this way of working was totally new in german cinema the movie won best film at the german film awards and the silver lion in venice but it was this man s films that made the tenets of the german cinema known abroad the radical provocative sign of the enough to spend and it induced. his debut film was an homage to the french new wave and hollywood gangster film fest and a took a deliberately artificial and stylized approach to tell highly emotional stories of characters battling the system. get up and. i mean accounted for but most of. the most bills one of the few female directors of this new generation made the most commercially successful work of new german cinema go for it baby with a light touch because i. believe. the company documents all night but they were free of ideology or any political agenda it s a breath of fresh air. much viewed in one nine hundred sixty eight papa cinema was dead but his children were just getting started with those and. not all of one nine hundred sixty s. cinema was political many young filmmakers saw themselves as pure artists they did away with the conventions of narrative of image and sound a centrally smashing movies to bits and rebuilding them as something new it wasn t for everyone but it was definitely something different. the exports legendary tappan touch cinema groping instead of seeing a cinema so small only hands fit and. found in place of celluloid naked skin. film without limits experimentation instead of rules for filmmakers of the era nothing was sacred and anything could be the subject of a movie. like this for long boring shots of someone in bed call it art. dialog changed to becoming more spontaneous and mundane and within my budget when he was going. from home now and. cups that he bought me the southeast. of the money money and. had a. or why not get rid of talking altogether into no there s no narrative at all just the single name repeated like an incantation. the film didn t have to make sense it could be any mix of manipulated images and sound flickering light and noise. or stripped naked everything became cinema. and. this movie is a relay through berlin for student revolutionaries including future real life terrorists like the mayans pass a red flag from hand to hand as they race through the streets right up to berlin city hall where they hoist above the symbol of repression the symbolism revolution or the carcass of a meets politics meets cinema. and with that mix of art politics and the movies we wrap up today s cinematic to one thousand nine hundred sixty eight we re taking a closer look at one of that year s most revolutionary films in a future episode of kino well into a deep dive into stanley kubrick s groundbreaking scifi masterpiece two thousand and one a space odyssey check out our website for more information on the films and today s program we re back next week and until then i ll see you at the movies. what does a football loving country now. to reach its goals. we ll tell you how to german soccer made it back to the top. in our web special on dot com football made in germany. birth place home tunes of species. a home worth saving and. those are big changes and most start with small steps global ideas tell stories of creative people and innovative projects around the world. by deals that protect the climate boost green energy solutions and reforestation. results of people you cannot protect the forest to create interactive content teaching the next generation about environmental to touch it. using all channels available to inspire people to take action and more determined to build something here for the next generation global ideas food barmen series of global three thousand on d w.

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Transcripts For DW Kino - Rebellion On Film 1968 20180415



here s what s coming up. on the road use those words here on a mission to change how to smart women smart smart stay on legend this implying no means missed out on and bring creasing dangerous time. ludes. peace love and revolution maybe fifty years ago in one thousand nine hundred eighty eight a spirit of cultural and political upheaval swept across the world and a new generation demanded. hi and welcome to kino the movie magazine today we re paying tribute to that swinging sixties generation by looking at how they changed filmmaking forever we start in america in the early one nine hundred sixty s. hollywood was in a bit of a rut bloated us film studios were spending and losing millions of dollars. on splashy musicals and she s even storable epics that nobody want to see anymore it was up to a new generation to tear down that system and build in its place a new hollywood. it s the start of the wild new decade the birth of new hollywood mark him up she volunteered for town a break from the rigid studio system. it was the advent of a new generation one that celebrated broken heroes and outsiders. i. attribute to flower power and protest it s the time of the vietnam war and the student protests against hippies and hashish instead of bush while constraints and taboos the dreams of the flower child conquered the cinema. do you think you can down your door that the film is a brisky point dreams of a world free of racism and it shows how that dream is brutally repress i was. happiness can only be found far away from civilization. in one nine hundred sixty eight america was deeply divided between those striving for change and was afraid of. krakow last sunday like benjamin in the graduate are stuck in between and jamin is twenty one and his parents and their friends expect him to enter normal society instead he withdraws. until this board neighbor mrs robinson seduces him. to. join the force. easy rider of the classic new hollywood film the search for freedom comes up against suspicion and. a leadership that will make. you name it out. i think she should keep it is you know yes with that little moment feel like. it was put me in a cage and charge a good nation dishing out but i. really. have to have a. new hollywood wasn t just about hippie fantasy it s the best films of the era are also darker and more of the list than the studio fare that came before. oh. there s no happy ending for easy rider freedom is stuck to its tracks. in the risky point a character imagines american affluence blown sky high but it s only a fantasy. thing as. he did me ending of the graduate is ambiguous benjamin breaks free nations or does he agree. what s certain is that new hollywood produced some of the best american films or multimedia and changed the film business forever fifty years on you can still feel and seen its influence still. if hollywood in one nine hundred sixty eight was in need of a revolution so is german cinema here the young directors if anything were more political than they were in america inspired by the student protest movement at the time they took aim at the mors and also the political crimes of their parents generation. in the one nine hundred sixty s. marked a fresh start for german cinema young filmmakers with a wild and provocative style sucked away the sufi sentimental fare of the one nine hundred fifty s. new german cinema was born top sentiment was to the opening salvo of this rebellion was fired in one nine hundred sixty two with the over house in manifesto in the furious statement a group of young filmmakers condemned the sentimentalize tear jerkers that had come before the so-called high note films the simplistic and superficial. i think obama was and was an important rebellion because it changed public awareness and made people understand the need to make films that were totally different from was leading the way was alexander kruger who condemned the film industry for being obsessed with the economic bottom line if i understand life is we thought the whole system of simply buying actors and screenplays bundled together like packages to created something that could never be a completely wrong. ended piece of art. yeah here they didn t respect the audience just the push me yet we felt it was a hostile attitude towards film with the food. they want to directors to be authors of their work writing their own screenplays and yesterday girl anita who has fled east germany wonders unhappily true west german city the film s unsentimental a realistic look at ordinary life was a revelation. i thought. you know investigation. has been changed since fish ninety seven the definition of a function fish i should know from for dismissing those on the solutions as he in fact you know i ll give you this i was from the us so she. did directed his own sister alexandra in an almost documentary style but the one since the first third are not candles or lion tamers hoover not even gardeners got some of that see their collectors they respect the material the actors the camera itself that means it s a very cooperative effort applied to you and starts this way of working was totally new in german cinema the movie won best film of the german film awards and the silver lion in venice but it was this man s films that made the tenets of the german cinema known abroad the radical provocative sign of the manifest spend spend it induced. his debut film was an homage to the french new wave and hollywood gangster film fassbender took a deliberately artificial and stylized approach to tell behind the emotional stories of characters battling the system. get up on it. but most of. the bills one of the few female directors of this new generation made the most commercially successful work of new german cinema go for it baby with a light touch. to. the company. night but to free of ideology or any political agenda it s a breath of fresh air. in one nine hundred sixty eight papa cinema was dead but his children were just getting started with those and. not all of one nine hundred sixty s. cinema was political many young filmmakers saw themselves as pure artists they did away with the conventions of narrative of image and sound a centrally smashing movies to bits and rebuilding them as something new it wasn t for everyone but it was definitely something different. than the exports legendary tappan touch cinema groping instead of seeing a cinema so small only hands fit in it. found in place of cellular make it skin. film without limits experimentation instead of rules for filmmakers of the era nothing was sacred and anything could be the subject of a movie. like this for long boring shots of someone in bed call it art. dialogue change to becoming more spontaneous and monday. to the point of your skin . from now on. study about maybe half the. president on the other then. said i m still convinced that s the. or why not get rid of talking altogether into no there s no narrative at all just the single name repeated like an incantation. a film didn t have to make sense it could be any mix of manipulated images and sound flickering light and noise. or to eat. or stripped naked everything became cinema. and. this movie is a relay through berlin for student revolutionaries including future real life terrorists the mayans pass a red flag from hand to hand as they race through the streets right up to berlin city hall where they cost about the symbol of repression the symbolism revolution the perfect arc for pete s politics of the many cinemas. and with that mix of art politics and the movies we wrap up today s cinematic to one thousand nine hundred sixty eight we ll be taking a closer look at one of that year s most revolutionary films in a future episode of kino well into a deep dive into stanley kubrick s groundbreaking side masterpiece two thousand one a space odyssey check out our website for more information on the films on today s program we re back next week and until then i ll see you at the movies. where would you find living british. where do women who love a man. where does the world s hottest chick up a. visit to the. last ten come to. and the largest family in the world enough so stop. india s crazy moves east next d.w. . mysterious story teller. a struggle for survival. arcs twenty one presents sharon sadeh. the symphonic suite by nikolai bruschi corsica. in sixty minutes on d w. we make up oh but we watch as of a film that found out that we are the similar service of. a month to shape the continent s future it s a part of it and join our youngsters as they share their stories their dreams and their challenges the seventy seven percent platform for africa s charge of freedom of expression. a value that always has to be defended and new. all over the world are to a freedom freedom of art. a multimedia project about artists and their right to express their views freely. d.w. dot com or to freedom. it s one of the most. fascinating and all known regions on earth for a long time it was sealed off from the rest of the world plagued by rebellions and terror foreigners needed special permits to enter the region. but now peace is gradually returning and visitors are welcome again to a place where contrasting.

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Transcripts For CNNW Smerconish 20180609



morning i am a faithful trump supporter. what s the attraction to trump? backbone. backbone? that s right. also, two high profile suicides this week designer kate spade and cnn s own anthony bourdain, sadly they echo new cdc findings that suicide in the u.s. is up 25% in the past two decades. is it any coincidence that the most popular course ever at yale university psychology and the good life aims to teach students how to be happy. and miss america pageant ending its evening gown and swim suit competition, but will anyone watch without the bikinis. i ll ask miss america who won the democratic nomination to an alabama congressional race. but first, the suicides of 55-year-old kate spade and 61-year-old anthony bourdain jarred many of us this week. here is the thing, just one of the things that makes this so hard and confusing, everybody wanted to be anthony bourdain. i did. we all did. the passing of two who seemingly had it all just confirms that old island saying that you don t know if the roof is leaking until you live inside. two days after spade s death, one day before bourdains s the cdc said the suicide rate in the united states has grown nearly 25% since 1999. the cdc report said between 1999 and 2016 suicide rates increased significantly in 44 states with 25 states experiencing increases of more than 30%. the rate declined in only one state, nevada. it grew by 57% in north dakota. one thing that has remained steady the manner of death, roughly half by firearm. the highest incidence is among men who represent three quarters of the suicides. the highest, nonhispanic whites. the report reveals 54% of those who took their own life did not have a known mental health condition. that means our efforts to alleviate this national catastrophe must focus on nonmental health factors that are further upstream. what are they? according to the cdc, suicide is not caused by a single factor, experts often site a combination of mental health, economic despair, drug and alcohol abuse and access to firearms. the cdc findings echo a provocative, more broadly drown 2015 study ann case and an gus and found that middle age white americans are dying younger for the first time in decades despite positive life expectancy trends in other wealthy countries and among other segments of the u.s. population. they supplemented their research from brookings and documented what they call deaths of december pyre. meaning suicide, alcoholism and drug overdoses, particularly from opioid painkillers, which are a growing problem for midlife white people. now, as you can see on the left side map, the epidemic started in the southwest, now it s country wide. the study authors write that the increase can be seen at every level of residential urbanization in the u.s. so, it s not just a rural problem or an urban problem. it s both. the crisis is particularly acute, as i said, among middle-aged whites as case and deeten wrote, deaths of despair come from a long standing process of cumulative disadvantage of those with less than a college degree. the story is rooted in the labor market but involves many aspects of life, including health and childhood, marriage, child rearing and religion. i ll never forget a lesson that i learned about suicide when trying my first case as a lawyer. it was 25 years ago in federal court here in philadelphia. and the subject matter dealt with the tragic passing of a young woman who had taken her own life while hospitalized. during the voir dire process, the jury selection process, i asked the roughly 75 prospective jurors whether any of them had personal experience with the subject of suicide. whether it had touched their families or anyone in their friend s circle. i was shocked when about a third of the hands went up in the air. that result was an eye opener for me. and i would never have predicted the commonality of the experience. i ve often thought that my surprise was a result of the way in which the subject matter has been both stigmatized and shunned. perhaps the passing of kate spade and anthony bourdain will further a necessary conversation about mental health. i want to know what you think. go to my website. i m curious about this. answer the question at smerconish.com. has suicide touched your family or anyone in your friend s circle? joining me now is frank bruney, the opinion columnist for the new york times who wrote this piece, the unsatiable and unknowable anthony bourdain. frank, i m so glad you re here. i want to put on the screen a paragraph from your essay. his death, meaning anthony bourdain, coming just days after the suicide of the beloved designer kate spade is at least as noteworthy for another reason, how powerful it speaks to the december crepesy of what we see of people on the outside and what they re experiencing on the inside between their public faces and their private realities, between their visible swagger and invisible pain. parts unknown. that was true of bourdain and true of spade and true of every one of us. expand on that, if you would. well, i think these two deaths, michael, it kind of goads back to the tweet that you put up from our friend john berman who said that he wanted to be bourdain. i think a lot of women wanted to be kate spade. what they wanted to be had to do with an imagine that was only part of each of those people. we re all very complicated in what we show the world and what we re experiencing inside are different. i think these two deaths afford us a real opportunity, a moment to think about the faulty assumptions we make about people, the way in which we draw conclusions solely from appearances. we need to pay closer attention to the people around us because they re often hiding things, going through things we don t realize. i think we could do everyone a great service to be more sensitive and attune to that. and as per the cdc findings, oftentimes i think the number was 54% that i just offered without known markers, right? so there are many among us struggling right now that we re not aware of. yeah. and we don t know the known markers thing is very fascinating. when i read all that is you did part of it suggests that, you know, as we know that suicide isn t kind of a tidy thing. you can t say okay this person suffered acute anxiety or chronic depression and thus this happened. i wonder if that tell us that a lot of people are undiagnosed. there weren t known factors because nobody marked things. if they had been in therapy people would know there was a symptom there. the class at yale it was the cover of the new york magazine. i don t know happiness is a tricky thing. you know, we talk in politics about things like affluence and things like security. happiness is a subtle or tricky thing. right now in this country you see enormous loneliness. that s not a word that came up in your intro and hovered over that entire intro. we see a break down in a lot of community bonds and social bonds. we have a lot of people spending time alone at their screens not interacting with others. all of that factors into this and we need as a country, as a people to ask whether we are interacting with each other the way we should, whether we re paying as much attention to our emotional health as we should and whether some of the trends of modern life, the kind of fracture, the polarization, the amount of time on the internet, technological adventures, what are those doing to our bonds with each other. i think it s a good time to talk about all of that. i think you re so right. i wouldn t have used the word loneliness. i would have used the word isolation. frank bruni, you make me think of the book from last year igen. she would say corallation i would say causation but i don t have the credentials. smart phones. and there s a book coming out in two weeks that i already read, your privacy has been hacked i think is the title. i wonder in 25 or 50 years when we look at technology and this era and some of this subject matter whether we re going to view it differently. i think you re right. i think one of the great ironies of our moment right now when it comes to technology, when it comes to the internet is that these tools that are supposed to speed us to each other more quickly, bring us to new horizons are, in fact, freezing us in place. they re freezing us in our political beliefs and often leaving us alone because we can use technology to feel like we re diverted, like we have company when really we have nothing along those lines at all. i think the promise of technology has been at great odds with reality of technology and the way we re using it. thank you, frank. thank you, mike. joining me now is a professor of psychiatry at tufts university school of medicine and author of these books on depression drugs diagnosis and despair in the modern world and first rate madness uncovering the links between leadership and mental illness. doctor, the cdc data, does that comport with what you see in your practice and your academic research? yes. hi, michael, nice to be with you again. yes, definitely. what we re seeing especially in the younger populations, teenagers and young adults is doubling, tripling rates of depression in the last decade. there s no biological explanation of that. the cultural ones which you touched on make the most sense, access to websites that make it easy to learn about how to commit suicide and of course social media. we could call it snapchat depression where this higher depression rate probably increases the propensity of people to commit suicide. in other words, the pressure that social media brings on one is to have to compete, to have as many friends, to present this ideal life because that s what you see among others in your social circle. yes. there s all that. there s the cyber bullying. there s the fear of missing out. it s complicated, but adolescence and young adulthood is tough enough as it is. what social media has exponentially worsened a lot of the negatives which seemed that way of what positives are there. this time of year, i didn t know this until you and i had communication in anticipation of this dialogue, but this time of year is itself a spike. explain. yes. there s a peak of suicide in the springtime. this has been shown for over a 100 years. the thought about it is that the light increases energy and it elevates mood. and for people who are really sensitive to it, who are susceptible to depression, usually manic depression, in the springtime they get some manic-type symptoms. they get sped up in their energy, feelings and so on. they re still depressed. so they get this mixed state where they re depressed but now they have the energy to commit suicide. this mixed state is really the highest risk for suicide and not just pure depression. and that s one reason why we think that there s this peak of suicides in the springtime as we re seeing now and hearing about. dr. ghaemi, people do recover from depression. this is the most important point that you can underscore with your credentials. definitely. let me just say, suicide is an end point state. it s very complicated at the end, but the necessary internal kind of center of it is the depressions. it s almost always there. 90% of people who have depression don t commit suicide, but 5 to 10% do which is much, much higher than the general population. so, the key is to try to get at that disease of depression. there s the old saying if you have a what to live for, you can tolerate almost anyhow. and they lose that sense of meaning, the disease takes that from you at the end. that s treatable if you get diagnosed correctly and sometimes people get anti-depress sants. and you get treated correctly. i want to mention lithium has been proven to prevent suicide and reduce 90% and at low doses you find in the drinking water where suicide rates are lower in the populations in those areas. we have that treatment. we can prevent it. i was just going to say i think that a step in the right direction is reduction of the stigma which your book a first rate madness in pointing out how many effective world leaders have suffered from mental health mallties and nevertheless were very effective at what they did, went a large way in that direction. dr. ghaemi, thank you for coming back. thank you. thanks for having me. that s nassir ghaemi. has suicide touched your family or anyone in your friend s circle? we ll have results at the end of the hour. tweet me @smerconish. i ll read some as time allows throughout the course of the program. what do we have from facebook, tough subject. i got into an argument with someone this week who said kate spade was selfish because she left a child. yeah. she was clearly suffering under some mental health mallty the last thing i would do is blame her. give me another one if you can. smerconish, we don t know the roof is leaking until we re inside. that is the wisest thing i ve read regarding this. hey, it was said to me by a housekeeper. grace, grace snags who worked in domestic capacity for my family for 30 years from tobago and she would say that. you don t know if the roof is leaking until you live on the inside. up ahead, we ll go to the high powered g7 summit live in canada. allies are unhappy about the president s america first tariffs and request to reinvite russia to the meetings. and then the president heads to singapore to meet with kim jong-un. we ll hear from a former presidential advance man about how tricky it is to stage these big deal events. what are the possible pitfalls? 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[struggles] show me the carfax. start your used car search at the all-new carfax.com. slonly remfresh useseep one in ion-powered melatonin ht. to deliver up to 7 hours of sleep support. number one sleep doctor recommended remfresh -your nightly sleep companion. hey, the foreign policy intelligence has it proverbial hair on fire over the president s interactions at the g7 summit with other world leaders. i m looking at a headline in the times today by way of example, stark rejection of the geopolitical order. what are the political consequences of the president being a disruptive influence on the world stage? saturday morning before i began this broadcast, i often do a facebook live, sometimes while walking down the street and give a preview of the show. this morning while doing exactly that, i came upon nathaniel smoking a cigar. watch. so guy is smoking a cigar, i m envious. how are you? hold on now. i m doing a facebook live. are you okay being on it? i don t mind. okay. what s your name? nathaniel. what are you spoking there? z palmer. it smells good. yeah. i m from the old school. we re probably from the same area. i m 57. i m 56. yeah. i used to listen to you everyday on the radio. so what s the deal? you re just here what time is it? i m a concierge. it s 7:30 enjoying a fine cigar. i start at 8 so i give myself some time. yes. i want to tell you something, i am a faithful trump supporter. a faithful trump supporter. i am a die heart. damn. you know how many people in my neighborhood voted for it? secretly on the down low. because what s the attraction to trump? backbone. backbone? that s right. a man of his word. a man of his word. we haven t seen that in a long time. i respect him more. this is a good interview. i had no idea i would be able to conduct a street interview here. are you getting what you wanted from him? every promise that he has during the campaign, he kept his promise. and he s keeping his promise. and the thing with him is when he says it, he means it. there you go. all right. cast your ballot for donald trump. oh, i will. you going to enjoy the rest of that cigar? yes, i am. let me see you take a hit on it. oh, yeah. uh-huh. have a good day. all right, mike. see ya, bud. some say erratic behavior, some see backbone. i think it underscores a point, they re getting exactly what they wanted. needless to say, enormous social reaction to that interview. katherine, hit me with something. what do you got from my facebook page? if what that man said is true, trump is in for another four years. maybe canada or england will take us in. angela, i think the point that needs to be made in the face of the condemnation of the president, oh, he arrived late, he s leaving early. he didn t want to be there for climate discussion. he s showing disrespect, to nathaniel and others, he s rattling the cage of the world leaders in a way he said he was going to. hit me with another one. i guess nate hasn t been listening to the news. marilyn, i think he s been paying attention to the news. nate s take is different than the one we re accustom to seeing on the front page of the times. one more. they voted for him secretly because he has backbone. interesting about the inner city. tremendous peer pressure. diamond and silk touched on the topic. not overlooked is the fact that he was making a point not only what he respects in the president but that he says his neighbors voted similarly for him. i have to say, i don t think that the data bears that out, but given the decline in the lack of unemployment figures, perhaps in the next go around. who knows. any way, i told you a year ago when president trump was elected, i got to get out of my own bump. i m trying to do it. that s good evidence. still to come, we ll be live at the g7 summit in canada where the president s america first policies and demand that vladimir putin be reinvited to that group will put him at odds with other world leaders. how is this going to play out? dad! hiding when i was supposed to be quitting. i thought, i should try something that works. i should try nicorette. nicorette mini relieves sudden cravings fast. anytime. anywhere. nicorette mini. you know why. we know how. .to give you the protein you need with less of the sugar you don t. i ll take that. 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well, first of all, michael, thanks for having me this morning. you know, there are so many things that have to be planned out for this summit. especially with no prior track record. these two countries haven t met at this level in many, many, many years. and so, you know, the simple things of who arrives first at the venue, who sits on what side of the table, what meeting participants will be allowed in the room, will there be press conference, will there not be press coverage, how are the press pools made up? this will be interesting to see how kim jong-un reacts to the u.s. media. with a state run media there would never be anybody in the state north korean media that would shout out questions, i m quite certain. and so he s going to have to see how the u.s. press and world press operates when they go into a meeting like this and shout questions at the leaders. so there are so many things that have to be worked out, hours and hours and hours of planning meetings, several trips, some secret, some not secret and planning process. so this has been going on for months. and, one little decision, one little decision that has to be made could take hours and hours of meetings to get to the result. on that endless list of minutia that need to be dealt with, things like the height differential between the two of them, right? i m sure that is something that the north korean side is going to want to handle as best they can. absolutely. there is quite a significant health height differential between the two. so, yes, all of those things come into play. and you know, what s interesting is that international protocol, order of precedent, kim jong-un has been in office longer than president trump. and according to international protocol, he gets to arrive last and leave first. and so all of those little details have to be worked out. and it s going to be interesting. there s really no road map to follow with these two leaders. and they re both quite different in the way they conduct their foreign policy. so, it s going to be interesting tv. spencer, how about food preparation? yeah. that is an interesting topic. obviously food security is extremely important. and so, you know, the secret service is going to have their hands full with making sure that the meals that are prepared are safe for president trump to consume. i m sure the north koreans will be interested in making sure that the food that their president consumes is safe. and so, all of these little details, i mean, there s not a single detail that s not accounted for, looked after and watched by somebody on either side within the delegations. so, right now because this all is on tuesday in singapore, at this particular moment, you would expect that on the ground, in singapore are representatives of the presidential advancement for the united states and some form of contemporary for the north koreans working through all of these aspects. correct. they re probably in the final walk-through stages of the advance, meaning that most of the details have been worked out. you know, if there s anything still undecided, they re probably going to have some late meetings to figure that stuff out, but generally at this juncture in the trip, everything has been decided and now it s just a matter of doing the final walk-throughs to make sure they haven t missed anything. you know, but this is the two leaders can decide to take this totally off the road. and, throw away the map and do their own thing. so as much as this has been planned and scripted, it could easily change completely by the time that this thing is over. spencer geissinger, thanks so. for coming back. great, michael. still to come, we ll be life at the g7 summit in canada where the president s america first policies put him at odds with the other world leaders. how is this going to play out? 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give me the take you have on this? hey, good morning. you know, here is the thing, throughout my year as miss america i did so many wonderful things that most of the general public knows nothing about. and partially that s due to poor branding and poor marketing by the former board of directors and the former executives at miss america, but a part is also because this telecast reflects nothing of what we do throughout the year. what we re really trying to do is just marry what miss america does with what the general public sees in the pageant and i think it s going to really help people understand that miss america is a job. it s a very well paid job. it s a very demanding job. and it s one where you re expected to be an advocate and speaker throughout the year. and not a bikini model. okay. but will anybody watch? i certainly hope so. you know, we have enough models and aspirational body types out there in the entertainment industry. i want to see young women have a spokesperson to look up to and someone to aspire to be and perhaps emma roberts or oprah or anyone one of these inspirational women across the country who doesn t necessarily use their body in order to create change and do good. and i think that we need more young women in public eye who are young people can look up to and aspire to be and i hope that people will tune into miss america to see we have a lot of young women across this country who are just that and now we need to showcase them the way that they should be showcased. but can t we do both? listen, i do this as a compliment not to be demeaning. sure. we have the image of you when you were miss america. you re stunning in that bikini. what i m thinking about when i remember by the way, don t embarrass her. we can put it on the screen. she looks great. she won. there it is. mallory, it s not just guys who like to look at beautiful women. women like to look at beautiful women. my mother is one of 11, eight sisters and three brothers. when i was growing up, i remember when before the cell phone era they would all be working their push button phones and calling one another my god, look at miss mississippi, look at miss texas. they loved getting caught up in all of it. sure. we can absolutely do both. and there are women everyday out in the community doing wonderful things that are both beautiful and service driven. and you know, no one is saying that moving forward in the miss america pageant shouldn t take care of their bodies, shouldn t be healthy and shouldn t be beautiful. listen, the miss america organization is not going to change their public perception of what is beautiful or what is desirable. and in every judge s minds and in the public eye, they re going to be drawn to the young woman that they are attracted to. that is totally acceptable and a part of human nature, but what we re trying to do is let people know that miss america is a spokeswoman for children miracle network hospitals, an advocate for platform, mine had to do with child sexual abuse prevention and a spokeswoman throughout the year. we want people to see that on stage. it s not to say you can t be beautiful and can t do both because you certainly can and we celebrate that. we just want to show our audience what it is that miss america does and that s she s a spokesperson. mallory, good luck in your congressional bid. thank you so much. appreciate it. see what you re saying on my smerconish twitter and facebook pages. smerconish, i m not understanding why everyone thinks the beauty is going away because they re getting rid of bathing suits. they are not one in the same. well, that s a great point, krissy. you re still going to see beautiful women, i imagine, al beit not auz. of them. how is that? one more if we have time for it. smerconish, archaic. ditch the entire stupid degrading thing. well, i wonder if it s not now on a downward spiral if they get rid of this aspect of it. time will tell. we ll see what the ratings hold. right? we ll go live to the g7 summit in canada where the president has been tardy to this morning s breakfast and generally been at lagger heads with the other leaders. uld fix . 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[struggles] show me the carfax. start your used car search at the all-new carfax.com. you finished preparing overhim for college.rs, in 24 hours, you ll send him off thinking you ve done everything for his well-being. but meningitis b progresses quickly and can be fatal, sometimes within 24 hours. while meningitis b is uncommon, about 1 in 10 infected will die. like millions of others, your teen may not be vaccinated against meningitis b. meningitis b strikes quickly. be quick to talk to your teen s doctor about a meningitis b vaccine. there s a lot of tension behind the smiling handshakes at this weekend s summit of the alliance of the industrialized nations. known as the group of seven or g7 in quebec, canada. the other leaders have been confronting president trump about his tariffs and so far only one has agleed with president trump that russia should be reinstated after being banned for its actions in crimea. this morning the president arrived late on gender equality breakfast. we go to boris sanchez for an update. boris, was he just late getting out of the sack or was that a reflection of the subject matter that was being discussed at breakfast? that is a good question, michael, one that i presented to white house officials. i have yet to get a response. some may say that the president perhaps took a bit too long picking out a tie. this was just a coincidence that he was late, but we should point out that the president was late to the summit by more than an hour. he had to reschedule bilateral meeting with french president emmanuel macron. and obviously white house officials told us that he is departed early. he s not taking part in a number of sessions dedicated to the environment, climate change, the health of the world s oceans. so for the president to arrive late to this meeting perhaps could be read with some intention on his part, especially when you consider that donald trump is so sensitive to optics. this is a president that understands the power of an image. for him to show up late to this meeting, perhaps it sends a signal to these other leaders about how he feels. after all, he spent much of this week in a spat with his french and canadian counterparts on twitter, talking about what he perceives as unfair trade practices. there is a podium set up. and we just got an alert, just now, that president trump will be speak iing at 10:00 a.m. eastern. we ll get remarks from the president of the united states, likely to discuss his private conversations with emanuel macron and justin trudeau about trade. he has been very vocal when he talks about what he feels is a disadvantage to the united states when it comes to bargaining and trade deficits. some other leaders have pushed back, specifically macron, tweeting out if the president of the united states wanted to isolate himself, then the leaders of the other six nations in the g7 would ban together and move forward without him. we ve not seen anything on camera, other than the president showing up late to this meeting. behind closed doors it s possible there have been very tension discussions. so far only handshakes and smiles. we ll see what the president of the united states says in a few minutes, michael. boris, he s scheduled to speak in less than ten minutes, then leaving quebec soon thereafter, presumably because he needs to prepare and get to singapore, which seems at odds with what he said yesterday. i ve been preparing for this my whole life and one doesn t need to overprepare for a summit. look what happened to hillary. et cetera, et cetera. there s a cracks in there, is there not? you certainly could say so. it is notable he s leaving the g7 early. probably not surprising he s missing those sessions on climate change. after all, he has claimed that climate change is a hoax being perpetrated by the chinese. however what we heard from the sources inside the white house is that the president was hesitant to come to the g7 because he didn t want it to be a distraction from this historic summit that he s going to have with kim jong-un next week, the leader of north korea. again, this say president that is sensitive to optics so he certainly wants to play up that historic meeting. again and again he has said that he is the reason that this meeting is taking place. though critics have pointed out that the north koreans have been pushing for one on one meeting between their supreme leader and the president of the united states as a way to sort of elevate that regime. it will be interesting to see what happens next. and perhaps we may hear a preview of what the president is going to say in singapore the next few minutes when he speaks at the g7. nicely done. thank you, boris. we appreciate it. thanks a lot. we ll see what you re saying on my smerconish and twitter facebook pages, what happens come in. well your president showed up late to g7 maybe it s cause i m canadian but that s just rude to show up later. what else? one more, quickly time for it? my motto is if you re not early, you re late. michael, words matter. trump did not demand putin be included in g7. he suggested that it be considered. big difference. it does raise the question why he s doing the bidding for vladimir putin, especially in the context of the ongoing mueller probe and what we think we know about the meddling efforts in the 2016 election. if that s part of america first, very odd. we ll give you the final results of the survey question. smerconish.com cast a ballot. has suicide touched your family or anyone in your friend circle? results in a moment. dad! hiding when i was supposed to be quitting. i thought, i should try something that works. i should try nicorette. nicorette mini relieves sudden cravings fast. anytime. anywhere. nicorette mini. you know why. we know how. with free fishing at our catch-and-release pond this weekend. plus, great gifts for dad! like flag t-shirts for only $5. and an igloo 120 quart cooler for under $50. you might or joints.hing for your heart. but do you take something for your brain. with an ingredient originally found in jellyfish, prevagen is the number one selling brain-health supplement in drug stores nationwide. prevagen. the name to remember. you wouldn t accept from any one else. why accept it from your allergy pills? 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Transcripts For DW Euromaxx - Lifestyle Europe 20180614



extraordinary flowers. side attic fan medley collects anything and everything to do with the only stones. and do it yourself in our series we show you how to make a coffee table out of old fruit crates. flour was say more than a thousand words sounds trite but it is somehow to no matter whether it s a modest they for birthdays or as a declaration of love with flowers you can say a lot however x. but thing that almost one in every three species is in danger that the photographer richard fisher has a special way of bringing this to our attention with his photos which will mostly rest pieces of flowers so his current exhibition in the german town of vessel is a kind of noah s ark for plants. laughs in flower as american poet ralph waldo emerson wrote in his poem have a trail. photographer richard fisher shows us blooms that brighten our spirits even though they re indoors at the german environment agency flowers like these radiate joy and light. of the bunar plant on a stage give it a relatively neutral background and i separated from all the foliage from everything that surrounds it and i focus on a very fundamental factor the flower itself. and then it looks is imposing as this rare rothschild slip. shows it just before blooms and in full bloom. there bloom of it all this flower is traded on the black market or that you won t get one for under five thousand dollars why he is because it s extremely endangered that only grows on the island of borneo on mount kinabalu off the bow and nowhere else in the world t w incidentally the flowers are all much smaller than i appear here live in the line i see here doris that house as you see here doris this one s so high and so long that when it opens rhythm roughly so small when it s closed. then you was photos on display were taken last year in close cooperation with the botanical garden in potsdam it s home to many endangered plant species. richard fisher also set up his studio here. to take the photos he uses old fashioned flash bulbs that aren t produced anymore. for quality and they have a special radiance and range of contrasts that i exploit to the fullest form there are different qualities of like now that there are reasons why it s a question of fashion well it is there s no thought of them i don t follow fashion woman i stick with what i think is best. best this is my light and i m sticking with it was this my list. after he takes the shot the creative process continues on the computer here fisher uses light painting a technique which originally stems from analog photography and gives his photos they re incredible women all city. he sets of little shy contrasts light and shade and light painting to give the impression that i m depicting a three dimensional flower really it s like here this is a very flat leaf yet if i take it in capture it s contours with light and shade the leaf bends acquires a structure a depth and height. a selection of his photos have been published in a new book entitled a tribute to flowers. it reveals the fragility of his subjects and presents dying diva s flowers which have entered the final stage of their lives the forgiven the doubt and the decay dying and death make us uncomfortable we d rather not have anything to do with them. two months of the we do it in nature and in this case taking the flower is a metaphor you realize that there s something spectacularly beautiful and or inspiring about it but not by many or inspired by the hardness for. the german environment agency often shows art which depicts the destruction of nature and the environment normally there apocalyptic images which leave little room for hope. richard fisher is very different yet he opens our eyes to what creation is and how to preserve it because he shows us how unbelievably beautiful nature can be. those. not to come. but much of this natural beauty is disappearing it s estimated that one in every three plant species is threatened with extinction so ultimately richard fisher is creating a kind of photographic noah s ark with his speeches. but all of the first endangered flowers that i photographed fifteen or seventeen years ago no longer exist but some are already extinct or says it s a big dilemma or a big problem but at least my photographs exist. and that is something to be thankful for. the queen is known for her fancy outfits adelaide as a gauge meant she even had a flower in a traditional hat matching the cold of course wesley waltz and with whom let s find out now in today s express. meghan markle and queen elizabeth the second had the first royal engagement together on thursday the duchess of sussex accompanied the queen for a series of engagements in the county of cheshire in north west england they inaugurated the bridge and attended the performance by schoolchildren from the town of witness megan married the queen s grandson prince harry in may. an exhibition celebrating mexican artist frida kahlo opens at london s victoria and albert museum on saturday frida kahlo making herself up will feature paintings photographs and some of the artist s personal items including medication she took after suffering severe injuries in a past accident and some of the corsets that were made specially for her. readers i don t see her parents. all wrapped in the landscape of her disability she lived her life in pain but she transcended. frida kahlo who died in one thousand nine hundred fifty four was one of the most important artists of the twentieth century the exhibition will run till november the fourth. british actor hugh mcgregor will play the lead in a sequel to stanley kubrick s legendary horror film the shining the one nine hundred eighty cult classic is about a family that spends the winter in an empty hotel over the course of the film the father jack torrance played by jack nicholson begins to lose his sanity just. in the sequel dr sleep ewan mcgregor will play jackson danny has now become an adult. those the shining and dr sleep are novels written by best selling us writer stephen king. so easy and live an august mean novel fields across the states the twenty six year old russian is a prima ballerina with the boss or ballet in moscow but at the moment she is especially guests at the hand of ballet where she s dancing in a piece called the lady of the chameleon us to become such a great dancer across immense discipline and a great deal of hard work and of course a passion for the dance. times fiery and powerful at others graceful and sensitive august man over expresses emotions through her dancing in hamburg the soloist of the world famous of all showy ballet is playing marguerite the cortisone in the lady of the comedians smen over discovered her love of ballet early on. that the first time i was in the theater i just wanted to reach the highest levels of proficiency and i wanted to be the center of attention and master the toughest techniques for it they were good idea with nothing but once i started to perform choreography like those of john neumeier i realized that i needed to be an artist on stage and that emotions are also part of the role that was starving and put in enough it s an every job noir maya director and chief choreographer of the hamburg ballet invited men over to perform here for a long time he s wanted her to dance the lead role in his ballet the lady of the chameleons and go on and call home one reason why olga has such a positive or a is that she s the prima ballerina clean about an ace but not a fast car how can she has no airs about her and but rather a direct message that s astonishing her blue frontiers as a dancer she s famous for her perfectionism and her stage presence something noir maya has contributed to. the book drawn so expect that what i find fascinating about john new meyers work is how he teaches you to just be present on stage and that it s not about doing nothing it s the very essence of stage performance. it allows you to be honest and trust in yourself that that s the interval you know. this man over has been a prima ballerina with the bolshoi ballet since twenty sixteen but she s already graced the greatest stages in europe asia and north america long before that now she s. guest perform a in hamburg. symphony in times and her dancing very smooth and pleasant very expressive she s very suited to the role while a passing stroke i really like her expression for a lot of the dancers because that oppression has such beautiful technical proficiency it s nice to see how that she can layer her artistry on top of that as well. in november all grossman over will return to hamburg to give further performances of the idea of the coming years. it s all over now a song where used by the rolling stones in one thousand nine hundred sixty four it seems it s never over for them the members of one of the most famous bands of all time i have aged a little but musically they are turning up the heat down the stones are on tour again most of the voted founds is matt leaf from london who won t miss a single concert by the british band and he has one of the biggest private collections of songs more billy around. there s almost three hundred years of life experience assembled on this stage the rolling stones are currently on their no filter european concert tour and living up to their reputation as the hardest working band in rock n roll. bands still come in droves to see them. they know how to do. and i don t know a song about them that you they would never ever knew they were not ever that little something i don t know what. it was amazing we saw them in and she saw you in round a parking raids and it s the first time you see them since i think was amazing and tough to get all the old stuff to this new stuff and he was pretty happy he would have sold the guy with the i just i was i was just making a little and i d rather keep. matt leave from london is also a big rolling stones fan he started collecting stones memorabilia when he was nineteen now he owns one of the world s largest collections he loved the band s music as a child. and when i was twelve my father gave me rolling stones compilation cassette called solid rock for christmas and i played and played it wore out i was remember it started with honky tonk woman and the cow well again i want to trumpet. to rolling stones were formed in one nine hundred sixty two to this danger their live shows are legendary often causing fans to go wild. first time i went to see the nice ninety five live they were just you know i kind of knew that the catalog had five or six days and i was as a lawyer. in my opinion i completely unraveled and it was just the excitement of. it led me to to want to continue. now at least has seen the stones more than one hundred fifty times traveling to over twenty five different countries to catch their shows. the band is known for its lavish stage shows on the bigger bang tour the stones played to four point six million people and raked in some five hundred fifty million here and. i. highlighted the tour was their performance at the super bowls halftime show in detroit in two thousand and six. matt levy has assigned football as a souvenir from here for example you can say they are the big bang which is our album and tour across two thousand and six and seven one particular. party with director martin scorsese documented that tour in his rockumentary shine a light. for. the film got a cinematic release and matt lee has a special souvenir to remember that occasion. as they found the custom shop guitar made to celebrate the release of shine a light martin scorsese picture so they have charlie watts keith richards when he would. mick jagger and martin scorsese. twenty five studio albums and sixty four tours under their belts the rolling stones are in a league all their own along with the beatles one of the greatest british bands of all time and these rock legends continue to perform live to the delight of their fans people enjoy this band in many many different wise some some people collect and we re going to rock or some will just go to shows some people just listen to the music and the absolute experts and exactly every try at length and every scientology detail of which which is played by which musician eccentrics r. and r. the fantastic. as far as the band and their fans are concerned you re never too old to rock n roll. bands because a rolling stone gathers no moss mick jagger and his band mates are on the road again. on now it s time again to get creative and you can join in a tone because you know your max d.i.y. series we show you how you can brighten up your home in no time and with just a few things today you x. but hang should shows you how you can put a really i catch in coffee table have fun with it. there is tension. and would like to have an eye catching piece in your apartment with just four crates for example you can already build a stylish and rustic coffee table that will give you home and individual touch oh sure you have. a four wooden crates you can get them online or at a free markets a small wooden board if this will later become the center of the coffee table for that you need for shelf brackets. staying. a paintbrush and mixing container. a troop with the fish really need to bit. connected both sides of the story driver these are available in home improvement stores sent in three different grades medium and find. a pair of scissors. ascending sponge to wrap the center paper around measuring tape. and for marking. and another sponge to clean up the fruit traits. down your sets of first scent of the fruit crates with the call center paid to get the brush sports next to medium great sandpaper and finally the fine great keep sending the crates until you are satisfied with this move this. once you re done wipe off the sawdust with a sponge now it s ready for staining some with going into a cup so you can apply it with a brush. i d suggest to lay some scraps of fruit underneath so to fresh with trying to dry through only. plywood stain two to small wooden board. let everything dry. for at least two hours. once a strike arrange the crates the way you want to have to remember their concessions every crate with a different letter. next mark the drilling code leave a mark on the top and bottom of each crate so you can true right through me later on i push the crates against the wall so they don t slide voluntarily a cushion can help protect the wall from scratches and scrapes. now through through the crates where you have marked them. the crates standing opposite each other with quiet additional holes for the small wooden board at the center of the coffee table. now set to crates up where you want your coffee table to be. time for the connectable. use them to screw the crates together. finally and start a small wooden board. and your homemade coffee table it s ready to use. i think the coffee table in a way that you can easily disassemble it again so you have fewer problems next time you know. i know that was a bit too fast no worries if you want to see that video again or other interesting d.i.y. projects then just had to our you tube channel did w. interior design there you ll find many creative ideas for your home and much more. interior design at its best check out our you tube channel detail the interior design stunning ideas spectacular buildings and d.i.y. tutorials on home ticker ration we ll take you inside the most beautiful european homes show you the latest in furniture fabrics and excess aris subscribe and don t miss out see you on you tube. do you know baby it s dough we know not david s but we in fact we re talking about baby it s dough you it s the name of the new exhibition at staten your home book on this play out works by you not to me. and that at least i want to the three there are to have to do with david bowie well nothing but that s not the only thing that makes the exhibition so special the john pictures of the show were created in just two days but the three artists have been friends for twenty years and he is the result of the cooperation. at first glance it may seem like an ordinary contemporary art exhibition and yet the concept of this museum in northern germany is quite different this time. the artists are curating the exhibition themselves and we haven t hung works on the wall as we would like or from the perspective of art historians it s very important for us that artists curator the exhibition themselves and we re letting them do it . solo artist you answer me is daniel richter and tao are spoilt for choice they have a whole crate full of words they ve created together they don t always agree on which should be hung on the walls and. the three have known each other for decades and of course their relationship has its ups and downs. our good hunt and hunt we work hand in hand and also side by side like captains on a ship on the ship it s like make a get some conspire with them be friends back me believe but then we might grow past this before and it can come together again and good parts again it was that but in any case we create create create. over the years they ve created so many works that they might run out of wall space. is the second stop on what they ve called their baltic world two ah. well we were offered london paris and new york or finland denmark and germany we opted for finland denmark and germany was for reasons of provincial ism and local matters a man does a statement against. well i forget my statement against something. some of the paintings are brand new almost got reactions. that took them out of we weren t allowed to do that at art school until our gut feelings but it was forbidden so that we were doing. the gut is a second well i think the third one actually i m just going to. do with i understand everything and nothing. breaks brain drain braining people think it s a joke but they re kidding themselves of course. there are also several individual works by the three contemporary artists who are inspired by absurdism and isn t just too much it s called david because we couldn t think of anything better or more stupid. the exhibition title certainly didn t push off the museum. bisan dance with us we re very glad to be part of this storm absolutely of course it s a special experience for us mark retreats fun and it will surely be an absolute highlight for the coming years that we will think about a lot. the main window exhibition runs until the twenty third of september at princetown. that s all we have time for today but you can find much more stories from all over europe on the internet just go to d.w. dot com slash lifestyle or join us on facebook us here all next time thanks for watching by. next time on your i m max. diver and filmmaker down since ten meters underwater in her short film. the frenchwoman can hold her breath for up to six minutes long enough to capture some amazing and astonishing underwater see. lunch into the world of judy next time on your. own. home. cos my mummy takes football personally. when. all is well come preview goes into the final round to finish he takes a look at. things to get very tense and exciting especially in these two by munich players class. odd. thirty minutes on t w for. european stocks to the finals and performance of the big. murray concerts every weekend the two flew in concert. the fee. we make up of what we watch as a cause that under budget cuts we ought to seventy seven percent. want to shape the continent s future. to be part of the answer to youngsters especially share their stories their dreams and their challenges. the seventy seven percent of the platform for africa. crimes against humanity. civilians become witnesses to. their recorded images travel around the globe via social media. what is fair game to fiction and what is fact. digital investigators combing through the flood of images and they combine sources trying to reconstruct what happened and to substantiate claims of crimes. thanks to this video recording but have a soldier who shot the young man is on trial now. forensics between bits and parts. of the. painting again. evidence. of a chance because justice is about the truth. truth detectives starts june thirtieth on g.w. . the united states canada and mexico have won the right to host the twenty twenty six football wild card that began rocco in a vote at a fee for congress in moscow it will be the first time three countries have hosted a well cup. a saudi led alliance has launched an assault on yemen s main port city of her data the battle could prove a turning point in yemen is three years civil war the coalition is trying to retake the city from.

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Transcripts For DW Euromaxx - Lifestyle Europe 20181220



seen christmas traditions and they tell you i will get you. the atmosphere at this french film festival is always i see in the best sense of the wood that is because that the backdrop to the event is one of the largest ski resorts in europe the festival which they features of course screenings actors and directors on hands to answer questions the festival is only celebrating its tenth anniversary this year but it s celebrity status is growing. from the three thousand meter summit you can ski right down to the cinema where a total of one hundred twenty european films are being shown at the film festival. between photo ops and red carpet appearances people have time to enjoy the local being to culture here in the french alps. it s good to breathe because. you. can breathe it s really amazing look. at the wonderful controlling nature to enjoy films at the same time it s ok it s a very unique place it s a very good week for i love them and i love the nature of it you know i m not specially good skier notice no girl i have to be honest and very down jerusalem ski. caster feels more comfortable on the red carpet even if it s covered in snow filmmakers and actors from around the globe pose for the press in freezing temperatures. it s a lot of snow on it but i think it doesn t change it still fits. both you for the walk you through because. yes surely it s better we go straight to the point of the. tsetse castaways here presenting one of the highlights in the official competition a faithful man the film marks her first on screen collaboration with her husband. he also directed the dramatic love story it deals with a complicated love triangle. because there was a view a good at best in the life gauge i take a risk jane says feel i try four for four weeks and the killing him so it was. he. is still me. i could go in prison so i have to to control myself. and been just an actor. a faithful man is considered to be the favorites in the official competition in which ten films five for the top prize the crystal arrow. another favorite is smuggling hendrix by matisyahu pepper he does on the divided island of cyprus a greek man s dog runs away and crosses the u.n. buffer zone to get his dog back he must work with a turkish satellite. the whole we fear the unknown it s all over i think one of the main themes of the film is dealing with. matters peppery dares ventured into unknown to rain outside the cinema to add layers arc he don skis for the first time in his life and hit the slopes well sort of. global. growth. for being over grid ski courier. one of the festivals seven cinemas could only be reached on skis the short films were shown and there s a glue jury president. was awarded a star on the slope of fame for his contributions to the film industry his most recent film the square won the palme d or a car. window that invented a story in a word or do you read a little bit of experience was that i was nearly bit disappointed that none of the other directors writers of the year old already out there ones that got hit hard didn t have years. i m going i m going to be the first going skiing at a school like. this was the festivals first european ski cup competition everyone managed to get through the event and make it to a film premiere the next day afterward everyone gathered at a seafood brunch and talked about their latest film project. believe it like our own yeah it s like. pizza low profile. so we we can we connected each other and people can meet for a project of films they can find distribution they can find produce. makes in a few my happened here. whether people are enjoying a rock concert set against an alpine backdrop or a party at the bowling center that is art film festival office cinemark refreshments a chance to meet and talk about film. and from the french arts we had to do an industrial town in south wales and check out a lot and then we re special circus is in town and visit so even for some royal d.i.y. on that in today s express. a new mural by british street artist banksy has turned up in the town of. the artwork seems to be a warning about the dangers of pollution it shows a young boy catching what appear to be snowflakes until you look around the corner . or snowflakes are actually ashes from a fire. he confirmed that the mural was his by posting a picture of it on his instagram account with a message season s greetings. the american production circus nine hundred eighty three has made its european debut in london fish and features a wide variety of acts that celebrate the golden age of circus entertainment around the turn of the last century one on usual feature is the circus animals which actually joined puppet many sexes these days no longer use live animals one thousand and three will be in london for three weeks. sweden s royal family has released a christmas video it shows crown princess victoria her husband prince daniel and their children princess is still in prince oscar making traditional christmas decorations the royal family released a christmas video every year and offer the swedish people best wishes for the holiday season there will be a big celebration at the palace on sunday as queen sylvia marks her seventy fifth birthday. angry melancholic and the bits depressive that s how critics this drive the first songs by the british band news but perhaps they didn t expect the musicians to enjoy experiment because while their songs the found rocky and powerful there are no more hints of depression. well don t. use. maybe this band doesn t really exist and maybe the new song doesn t either for music s new album bellamy imagine that the whole world is just one big simulation a giant videogame. simulation theory is the name of this eleven track album why is the band really calling into question its only existence. of a good interrogation. all for the software cool idea but it s something which is coming a little bit more talked about now which is the idea that it s going to be is going to be possible to use computers to simulate not just virtual reality games but simulate like reality simulate like another universe or something like that simulation is becoming very important to understand the universe you know so using computers to kind of understand how black holes are formed and how the galaxies come together so i think these two things are correlating an interesting way you know so that s all the fringe of science in this whole fringe of entertainment. music the nineteen eighties and all the cool in the us. the max headroom recalls the famous t.v. signal hijacking incident. the zombies could have stepped out of michael jackson s thriller. and the film back to the future retro with a new twist. i m interested in what you know simulation stuff also like your own quiet time travel that s kind of crazy but like this idea of when you revisit a nostalgic moment you know. but you don t just revisit it and repeat it you revisit it and you kind of reinvent it and make it feel like it s now. and in this hotel they could be stay. a scene from stanley kubrick s nine hundred eighty horror film the shining. product as a comedy. it. would be very. good to live. these days muse perform at progressive rock in the future stadiums to sellout crowds. but things were very different when they were starting out. we spent about five years like playing in like pubs and tiny clubs to a to not many people at all but one man and his dog somewhere down in cold day time gig and i think the only person i was actually into dancing was my son little toddler so it was like sitting around everybody. put like five people with eight people and it was early days because german guy came up and said come here come what you what you really were. but his days are long gone the three man rock bands are known for their great live shows. the best gigs for me and only the ones where you just feel completely completely lost in the music you don t even seem to be in control of all the parties to. doing it and we re trying to get people to know how you feel you know in that moment and how you feel is great. making people feel great with them except that it s new music. gingerbread is a traditional part of christmas especially in the city of baghdad in the southwest of new. no way they re the lot just gingerbread town in the world is bid every year in a foremost swimming pool visitors can enter a winter wonderland where they can model at the mouth wait a ring exhibits eating them is of course forbidden. every year at the start of advent a miniature town made up of some delectable buildings is unveiled in bare. barragan is norway s second biggest city but it boasts the largest gingerbread town in the world. just the bronx style is the architect of the sugar resettlement. fund you go around looking we want to audience to dream themselves into for instance that they re sitting on the front steps or they can dream that they re sitting in a park and go into the merry go round we want to give them their spare ounce of escaping from that reality and to. locals pitch in to help build the gingerbread city kindergartens schools families and local societies all get involved. a total of ten thousand volunteers contribute to the project including members of coastal culture center. prepares gingerbread creations right up to the very last minute so improvisation is key. so then you maybe have to change that a bit if we get the last of a photo with. paris paris and then we get. the kremlin cathedral and then have to make space for the. bronze star and her team of thirty work for around a month to transform the four hundred square metres of a former swimming pool into a hilly winter wonderland starting at kristofferson began the festive tradition twenty seven years ago back then it was more of a gingerbread family. idea. ninety nine to one. look at things. that we had exhibition area what we want to do something put on. we ve got the idea of making the gingerbread city. since then bear against gingerbread city has morphed into a major tourist attraction some one hundred thousand visitors flock to see it each year some of them even join in to help build the city. there were five hours together and building all this house is an old besiegers is in them used to go for children and families call the christmas the magical christmas we made a fave on. it s the. little train that goes up and down the hills in very good picking them up the kids build a different frame house a cheer this year s theme was halloween was you see all of us head over. the architecture is certainly diverse the train chugging along the tiny track leads from norwegian style buildings to paris s eiffel tower and maybe makes a short stop at london s iconic houses of parliament. there since gingerbread city will be on display throughout the christmas season until december thirty first. and this week serious home for christmas we are visiting places in europe where christmas is celebrated in a very special way and tradition place a leading role today we had italy where the timet is very popular you can buy them in all shapes and sizes the nativity scene is also performed by real people for example in good actual north of rome so we went there to find out more about this chris christmas tradition. will be. the new gold. nativities i performed in italy sabina hills near the village of correction. this is where saint francis of assisi created the very first nativities play back in the thirteenth century. i want to create a new bethlehem here. the derivative and then he hails from. every here he starts as francis of assisi and the. other a bit sooner give you an example this is a very old tradition that dates back to twelve twenty three when francis of assisi returned from palestine and so with you. he hike through this region which reminded him a lot of the holy land. so he stayed here and asked his friend the great joy noble man. to stage an a to b. to play. same francis s legacy is still on the present in the medieval village of. nearby a mighty franciscan monastery sits atop a month. many visitors come here to see the grotto with francis states the first evan activity in twelve twenty three to bring the story of christmas closer to the people. and he wanted to portray the birth of jesus christ. for everyone to see with their very own eyes. so they can better grasp and appreciate it. across her features a fourteenth century fresco to depict to mary the baby jesus and demeaning him praying francis. was. some thirty years ago new life was breathed into this negativity play tradition now every year starting on december twenty fourth the negativity case performed in front of an international audience. was. the. play is organized by enthusiastic locals it s become a tradition since one nine hundred seventy three they volunteer they re not paid to do this. has also opened a unique nativities museum feature. exhibits from italy and other countries. this nativity scene for example comes from books one a in africa. very nice very nice these are all wonderful but i like the alaskan exhibit best of the few. that are present that are from the birth of jesus christ represents the family . we can all relate to this aspect of the christian faith. who gives one of its least most important religious traditions. many market stalls and retro also offers small nativities seems. some pretty unconventional options are available she knew this is shaped like a swan and is made from a pumpkin it was hollowed out and worked on for two years it contains figurines made from cloth and it s part of what i thought corn that you saw called. for the locals the negativity scene is an important aspect of christmas. but the highlight each christmas remains the actual play of course. it s performed between december twenty fourth and january sixth. and gets visitors from all over the world into the christmas spirit. a major challenge before christmas is to buy all the presents in time don t forget anybody and fulfill as many full wishes as possible and then of course you have to gift wrap the presents too and that is the way our d.i.y. expert comes in. gives are just as much a part of christmas as the autumn ends on the tree and should be nice to read. and see the if you know a few folding techniques. all you need is wrapping paper and various colors. some ribbons. and he s a phone and double sided tape. and a pair of since it s. stopped by centering your presence in the upper half of your wrapping paper. take the bottom measure to the paper and fold it outwards it should be able to cover at least one quarter of the present. price and i decide. now the upper top over the left side of the president. do the same with the write up a tab make the creases show. time for the lower left top folded up words and then do the same for the right you know it s tough. at the top of the paper to create a line down the middle. fix it with double sided tape. you can close the upper anyway you re used to. now around your present and how about getting a little twig for decoration. use a thin strip to come forth just fold the back side of paper from bottom to top do this about family for six times. turn it over and for the first crease. pinch the other lines and fold them forwards quickly for about how a centimeter between two pieces. and turn it over again and secure the prints with ted. address you present the blank can only. take to two. types of wrapping paper and use a thin strip of complex a fold them from bottom to top about five or six times turnover lightly crease the upper layer of reckon paper in the middle. of the triangle. cut it out along with the second piece of wrapping paper. now apart a bit and codify. turn it over again and secure it with change. now you can finish wrapping your present the usual way. and those are my favorite ways to wrap a christmas present. ones to give distract i think i read a small decorations that are tied to the bowl for example i use a small christmas tree bubbles i think it gives to give added beauty. and don t forget that you can check out our you tube channel for lots more d.i.y. tips and ideas for brightening up your home and on that note we ll wrap up today s show thanks for tuning in don t forget to follow us on social media and my colleague megha lee we ll be back same time same place tomorrow for another new show but i would sign off now i wish in on a few who celebrate a very merry christmas and so by by. next on on you re about six. much of europe goose where all the trimmings is green a traditional christmas meal a hundred years so that it s tender inside crispy outside isn t so simple we ll show you how to make them perfect. next time on your own. come on. block. the. mob i m going to. have. midweek matches in the bundesliga it ll be christmas soon and who s getting the gifts observe me now i m serious absorb the men pick up their first loss of the year against the band and it ll be a blue christmas for shaka after losing to the bottom of the bowl. we make up oh but we watch as folks that fund of hedge funds we are the civil service and. they want to shape the continent s future. to be part of it and going after the numbers of testing share their stories their dreams and their challengers. the seventy seven percent. platform for charging. storerooms people who. information. they want to express g.w. on facebook and twitter and up to date in touch follow us. twenty team comes. first starting with his account to settle for the premiere event of focus. let s have a look sit and identify the favorites coma. coaches players friends from up close personal touch. twenty nine to. the big kickoff series starts december twenty seventh w. n n gemini with. at any time claim a place. you have i don t like a. song to sing along to. come from super. interactive exercises. everything is online. interactive. demonstrate this to tell you. why and. u.s. president donald trump s decision to withdraw american forces from syria has been met with criticism from within washington and its major allies germany france the u.k. and some u.s. politicians have disputed trauma s claim that the so-called islamic state has been defeated they say the battle to clear out the terrorist group should come to.

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