Da sind sie ja! Endlich werden alle Konflikte wieder im Podcast geklärt, am wichtigsten der, welche Musik in Rooftop-Bars vertretbar ist. Super erholt und erfrischt nach der Sommerpause teilen Jan und Olli in Rundumschlägen gegen alle und alles aus, was nicht bei drei einen eigenen Podcast produziert. Hier wird Ozempic inhaliert und krasse Influencerschokolade verzehrt, geht dann ja wieder! Und hey, was trägt Olli da eigentlich am (muskulösen) Arm? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Hey, it's me, Tyler. Bose open earbuds are stylish. The color, it looks almost like an earring. I feel like it could go with anything. The music I'm making right now feels like a holiday. I want to look like it too. Check out Bose.com for more.
With a Boost by Smiths Rewards Membership, you can save up to $1,000 a year with double fuel points on everyday purchases and unlimited free delivery to help you save both time and money. And every Boost Membership comes with member-exclusive offers, including free items. So add it all up and we think you'll agree, the benefits of a Boost by Smiths Rewards Membership are more than worth it.
Turn on my bluetooth box Face off and I'll follow your voice Turn on my bluetooth box
Du hast so viel gemacht, du hast so viel getan Du bist mit deinem E-Scooter durch die Stadt gefahren Du hast so viel gehasst. Du hast so viel gegeben. Jetzt ist mal wieder Zeit für ein Break in deinem Leben. Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Ey! Ey Jan, you know what I think? I think it's going to be one of these shows. It could be one of these shows. Welcome! We're back. It's tight and fluffy here. Yes, welcome to Spotify and thank you very much, Jonas Wagner, who gave us this great first intro after the summer break. Very nice greetings to Nuremberg, because Jonas Wagner is sitting there. Shall I briefly read what he writes?
Oh come on, I'll read it to you briefly. Hi Olli! It's hard not to sound cheesy, but such a podcast really becomes part of life with time. On the way there, just a huge thank you for all the nice hours. It's great fun to be part of your journey and development. No, development, I'll leave that there. Development is exactly what I meant. I don't know about development either.
Dear greetings, dear Jonas, thank you very much for this great intro. And you can hear our crackling cheeks a little bit. We're smoothing ourselves because we've seen each other for the first time in six weeks.
Exactly. And that was just the most important moment when the cameras went off and we looked into each other's eyes. Because that's how you can tell if you still like each other, if you still find each other. Whether the band that connected us is still tied up or not. From my side, I can say, you look good. You look relaxed, Jan. I'm happy to see you. Really.
You look good too. We both have a black t-shirt on. I also have an overlapped shirt with me to challenge you a bit modestly. But you also look fresher than ever. If I may ask you, Olli, with such a long article. Tell me, how was your summer, Oliver?
I really had a fantastic summer. I can't complain. It started very, very nicely and ended very, very nicely. And I have to say, it's still summer here. Thanks to climate change, we'll probably be walking around in short pants until December. You have to start now, just for a moment, with all the election results, with the weather and everything else. You have to do your best, Jan.
We only have this one life. We have to try to master it as well as we can. And I'll just start very briefly. Summer has started for me. Summer holidays. Hamburg Taylor Swift concert. That was the start for me in the summer holidays. In Hamburg I was in the Volksparkstadion at the big Taylor Swift concert. And I'll tell you how it was. It was good. It was only three and a half hours.
And at some point I started yelling at my daughter, with whom I was there. I was with Jule Pollack, who was also there. Oh, greetings. And at some point I started yelling so loudly, and everyone got upset. I was like, what kind of era is coming now? Because this is the era. It's the Eras tour. And after three and a half hours I also thought, dude, she's just 32, how many Eras has she been through?
But I'll tell you one thing, I've never seen 55,000 happy people. Probably all A, that they could buy a small card for 180 euros, minimum. And despite all that, it was really a great concert. I'm a Taylor Swift fan now. And as I said, I've never seen 55,000 people so happy. Armbands were distributed. I still have one left that was made for me. What is that? What does it say on your bracelet?
That's what Jule did for me. It just says Lolli on it. Lolli. Lolli. That was the only thing I couldn't change. I made a few, my daughter made a few, her friends made a few. And at the very beginning, I bought the tickets with my own money. I don't have a bonus for being a celebrity. There are always celebrities at every Taylor Swift concert.
But I'm not yet prominent enough to be officially invited. And then really at 9 a.m. when it started on the computer, I kept pressing enter until I could finally have tickets.
So really like an Oasis fan you organized Taylor Swift tickets. That's the next big musical highlight that we have to have for breakfast at the beginning of the show. I just want to have your opinion as a layman. Would it have been better if they had been separated and never went on tour again? Or do you think it's okay for them to do it again?
I think it's okay to do it again. I have to say, I've seen Oasis three times. I didn't fall off a chair. I also have to be honest, I don't want to bring the Oasis fans who have never seen them live into a downer, but I don't think it's the really cool live band. I think they have mega hits, of course. But I'm not the ultimate Oasis fan either. At some point, the songs were too long for me.
And I like the band very much. I especially like Liam Gallagher. I think he has made a very interesting, positive development in recent years. A very self-reflective and also a guy who understands a lot of fun in the meantime. And I sometimes watch Liam Gallagher talking about other celebrities on YouTube. And then he tells me how he thinks I'm cool, how I think I suck.
The same goes for Noah Gallagher. And the crazy thing is, at Oasis, Noel Gallagher wrote all the hits, all the songs, Liam only sang, but Liam's solo records are much better than Noel's, I think, the ones he did in the last years.
Go there, maybe you'll do something cool, I'm not going to talk about cards now. But I found that totally comforting. So much has gone wrong this summer. First of all, I have to say, my vacation started with it. I drove away with my little one and thought, come on, one week alone out, open the phone in the morning, shoot Donald Trump. And I'm like, dude, I'm on vacation for three days now.
What's going on? And we didn't even talk to each other anymore, because so much has really happened that material for 80 podcasts follows. But I was very happy that Kamala Harris became the presidential candidate. The international things alone, apart from the elections in East Germany. I was very happy that we were out, that we raised the needle a bit from the plate.
And with a fresh look, with a little distance, now coming back from the summer and rolling up the whole thing a bit differently and not so much in the subject.
No, I don't know how far I'm still informed, because I actually had a social media break again in the summer. You deleted Instagram, did you?
I deleted Instagram, exactly.
And now I have Instagram on again, of course I had to put it back on again because I played a few festivals. That was really great too. I think I played 14 concerts this summer that all went through the park.
So you didn't really go on vacation? I have to say, it's not work for me. It's still going on stage.
The work is the waiting, the hanging around, talking to other people at festivals. That's a bit of work. But standing on stage, that's not work for me. That's great entertainment, great joy.
Wo wir gerade beim Thema keine Arbeit sind. Das ist ja hier auch keine Arbeit, das ist im Grunde genommen eine öffentliche Therapiestunde. Wir besprechen sehr viele Dinge, die liegen geblieben sind. Mein Dokument hat sich im Sommer auf mehrere Kilobyte angefüllt. Ich habe sehr viel Text hier, aber wir sind jetzt zurück aus der Sommerpause. Wir sind wieder bei Spotify, wir sind wieder da.
Natürlich traditionell mit einem Imagewechsel. Olli, du bist relativ sportlich, hast eine ganz tolle Haut bekommen. Alter, was hast du für Kanonen, ey? Yes, I started with strength sports again. What do you mean with strength sports? What kind of strength sport did you do?
I always do push-ups through strength sports. What? Masturbation is not a strength sport. What I see is that I have shown my belly muscles and so on. I'm back. My God, I have to fight against the others, take this Ozembex Sprint. How much food I have seen from people from the media industry, good old dear acquaintances, who suddenly look like little raisins. I don't want to mention names.
And I'm especially wondering, there is now the big RKI, Corona time, what will come out one day, what is in Osempic. I guess, that's certainly all cleared up and certainly highly serious and so on. But it could also be, with a small percentage, that in ten years people will say, then I lost my arm at some point. But I mean, of course I just took it off.
It looks so sick and so unhealthy for you in any case. That's the problem. Especially, I think, the days after that you really look like you have a deadly illness. I'll say it very deliberately now, rather stay fat, people, instead of chasing it in.
Yes, or do it on the old tour. If I want to lose weight, then I just put on a stomach crutch, by just overflowing with something. difficult jobs that are just exhausting. There are definitely a few new things at Fest und Flauschig. We have to do a little bit, I think it's called ordination, we have to do a little bit of ordi, we have to do a few strategically new things.
So first of all, this edition of Fest und Flauschig today on September 8, 2024, the The very first episode since we switched to Spotify in 2016. I still remember very well when we switched. I still remember very well our time at Radio 1, gently and carefully. Back then we were somehow on one of the podcast charts, no one had ever done something like that before.
And then we went to Spotify and suddenly we were exclusive. And we've now sat down with Daniel Eck. We said, watch out, Daniel. The boss of Spotify.
He picked us up with a rocket.
It's also a new rocket thing, but much better than Elon Musk's. We said, look, Daniel, listen to us. We brought the podcast game closer to you back then. We said, you have to do that. That's something for your platform. That's a good idea. We want to take this podcast to a whole new level now. And we said, we are actually people from the people for the people.
We would like to continue to be a Spotify podcast. The collaboration is great. I don't know what Daniel Nicolaou, our assistant editor of Spotify, would do if we weren't there anymore.
I don't know either. Although he is also with the other podcasts.
Who are the other ones? After the shots on Donald Trump, seven podcasts were set up this summer. That made me very sad.
Would you connect the connection to the shots on Donald Trump with the end of the podcast? Formulated differently.
I think there would have been a lot more impulses for the True Crime podcast scene if the murder was successful. Praise God, it didn't happen. I would argue vis-a-vis and Ines Agnoli would still be together if Donald Trump had been hit at least or had been hit harder. But it's just a guess. Did you actually hear what happened there? Why are they apart? Do you know something?
They sold out stadiums. No idea.
Greetings to Lotti, who is still suffering from long Covid and whom I haven't spoken to for a long time. Greetings. I don't know the others.
But that's one of the podcasts. Riccardo Simonetti and Anke Engelke. I don't think Riccardo had time because of the wedding.
Can you imagine that with Anke and Riccardo?
That's because the wedding preparations were so intense. Riccardo married his husband in Mallorca. And you have to imagine that when influencers get married, the face of the partner is also revealed. Basically, Riccardo Simonetti's Instagram game in recent years was something like a big drum roll for the moment when finally the face of his husband was revealed with the wedding.
So basically something like a digital veil from the face. That happened, we now know what he looks like. I was very happy about the photos, congratulations.
Congratulations, I'm still sorry that I wasn't invited. Last year at the Heidi Klum Halloween party I talked so long and so intensely with Riccardo. I also called him the nickname at the time, Riccardo Simonetti. Francesco Rosinetti. Francesco Rosinetti. And what are you actually smoking there?
I got myself an inhaler, because I don't vape, but that too, a remnant of the summer. I think I had Corona, but I didn't do a test. And since then I've always had a very unpleasant cough. It's part of the show, the podcast. But I still have a worse cough and I've started inhaling cooking salt solution. I've never seen that before. It helps a lot. It moistens you.
Sorry. It's definitely interesting. Well, in any case, I really had a little bit, a very small little trick was already, because first of all I'm also a good party guest. Besides, I think one cis man should be there. I think one cis man belongs to every wedding. And that would have been me. And Palina was there.
Now I would like to know from Ricardo, can I also ask directly in the show, with whom do you have more contact privately? So have you ever been with Palina at the Heidi Klum party or something and have you talked to her for so long? And... I'm also a good confidant, I'm someone who can play a song with a guitar, I'm always good to my mother-in-law, the older people can too, so I've been a bit sad.
That's a bit unfair, because he can't answer about the podcast now, because he doesn't have one at the moment. He doesn't have one anymore. But maybe Podimo will be grateful, even though I'm talking about Podimo right now, and that's the first big innovation. We are now, I wanted to say that, we are now the podcast that has agreed with Spotify to finally go into the mainstream.
We are a Spotify podcast, but we are now everywhere. That means, if people now wonder about RTL Plus, what kind of great quality content is coming in between the restaurant provider and the new podcast.
And Olli Pocher is lowering some people on the internet again.
We are now new. That was also an impulse from the federal government, which said, we have to see that the podcast landscape becomes a little bit more civil. Jan and Olli could take over. And Spotify has embraced itself and said, we'll do it. We are now actually hearing for the first time on all platforms since 2016. Also on iTunes?
Wir sind bei iTunes, wir sind bei Apple Music, wir sind bei Amazon Prime, wir sind bei Wondery, wir sind bei Podimo, wir sind überall. Also es kann sein, dass einige Plattformen noch nicht das wissen, dass wir das sind, theoretisch, und das noch nicht eingestellt haben. Aber wir haben quasi als erster Spotify-Podcast, und wir sind weiterhin... A very strict mistreatment.
Directly signed by Daniel Eck with his titanic hand.
Are we still ... Yes, but we have loosened the chains a bit. We have loosened them a bit.
Yes, because we said, we would like to try something new. We would like to try our business model on the mass. Let's see if the market gives it away now. What is actually our business model? How do we actually earn money?
Do we advertise? How do we earn money? Two idiots are talking shit and in between they are advertising.
I suddenly got an advertisement for Bumble. I said, I don't do that, because I think ...
What is Bumble actually? Honestly, I don't know.
That's for things like Tinder, but I think that people have hairier, fluffier genitals.
So un-braided and bumble. Bumble is the English word for bumble, right?
Or bumblebee.
Bumblebee, yeah, yeah. So people who... So un-braided people who also Tinder. Yeah, I don't know. I really don't know. Bumble is a contact... I don't know what it is.
In any case, this is not... We don't have any contracts with Bumble. You have to ask Passmann. Let's say that in advance. What will never happen, I promise you, we will never read advertising in this show. That won't happen. I didn't say that at the beginning, it will be presented by...
No, and to be honest, the things that we have here, for everyone who has just joined us, hello.
Hello.
Yes, exactly, hello. Hello to everyone who has just joined us. Moin, RTL. Moin, moin, RTL. Moin, moin, iTunes. Moin, moin, Podimo. So this podcast consists of us both talking about the mind. We talk, sometimes there are very tender moments, sometimes we rub each other. We are an old couple. We've been doing this for 13 years. Maybe you've heard it before on iTunes.
A lot has happened to us, although that's actually not much.
A lot has already happened, but in essence everything has remained the same. But now the great thing is that not only people on all platforms have the opportunity to listen to us, haha, or the disadvantage of listening to us, but also the archive of Fest und Flauschig is unlocked. Really? That means people can also listen to the old songs on all platforms.
That's not so good.
There were phases in my life that I don't like to listen to again. There's always someone I want to fuck up. And then he takes something from 2017, a small part, cuts it out and says, look what they said there. Look there. But you know, Spotify is a very enlightened audience that has gotten used to a lot of things.
I can imagine that now erroneous messages come because people want us to say the N-word more. But it can be that with this new audience, now suddenly a completely different wind blows here. That could be. Olli is definitely the one of us who is always good to reach. I usually don't have time.
I'm not either. I was on a vacation on an island. I was on the Aluern. That's an island for rich people who are dissatisfied. And who just never like it. Who switch from hotel to hotel. And then I came home, Jan. And what did I find on my security camera from my apartment? I don't know. Naked snails have entered my apartment. Drunk. What do you mean?
They hit me with a broken iron in the balcony door. With a broken iron. And they had a party in my apartment. For days. And you know what? It was a naked party. Naked snails. Really. And they did all kinds of things. What I want to say with that is, we have a naked snail attack here. Without end. I think one of the most pointless animals on this planet. But now I looked it up.
There is no hierarchy. They don't have a patriarch. Ha ha ha. But they are Twitter beings. Aha. That's very interesting. They are two disgusting animals, they are completely senseless, they are Twitter beings and there is no one who... so no one is being fucked, but they all do it.
So basically a large non-binary community, so the ideal image of human society even now at Nacktschnecken.
That's what I wanted to say, maybe we should take the naked snail as a great role model. It is in any case the case that I started, and now I'll tell you one thing that I've decided to stop. I watched a few movies on vacation. And then when the cell phone is next to me and I see an actor, I think, wow, let's see if he's still alive. And then I start scrolling Wikipedia while the movie is running.
And scrolls around, looks for the guy, looks at the filmography and messes up half the film with it. Half an hour the film then continues, because I want to watch something on the internet, who wrote the script or something. You have to do everything after that. I have to get used to that now. That's really a disease, you don't really enjoy the movies anymore.
When you start everything, you always think, have you actually done that too?
The second screen problem. Yes, and there is a counter-movement in the generation Alpha and the Gen Z, that there is now, for example, the latest trend this summer, I noticed at the first business events, that was such a non-profit or a corporate celebration event, we did such an incentive.
We actually wanted to, come on, can I tell you briefly, we actually wanted to go somewhere with the whole company, where it is cool, we thought to London, until we calculated it and realized that it is completely too expensive, you are stupid, definitely not. And then a great group from our company thought, okay, we can't afford to go to London, but we do.
We stay in Cologne and we do everything, only things that you could do in London. So we rented a double-decker bus. Then we are on such an outflow steamer, like on the Thames, just climbed from the cathedral, drove back and forth for an hour and got out again. That was totally sweet.
How did I get that? I saw from Florida TV, they had a foam party or something like that. I saw that somewhere, really expensive, they have to have a lot of money.
They have a lot of money, of course. I've also seen that they even have posters. The new season of Wer steht mir, the show, is huge, on every second Litfaß column. I'm asking myself if you're there, especially as a public lawyer, I'm mainly active in the ZDF here, in addition to my podcast activity.
There you are a bit, whether in the private sector, whether no one will calculate whether it is now worth it, whether they may not have a little too much money. Whether we may not
Jan, you are my television expert. I had my television trips, but actually I hardly show up, also consciously and have little idea about it. I read that Stefan Raab, who is boxing Regina Halmich on September 14, 90 million, a deal over 90 million euros.
I even read 250 million euros, it should be over four years. And that's very important. Now that we have a podcast here that really runs everywhere, this dear media agencies, this advertising budget that you throw on old television, that's really wasted money.
If you knew, we can't forget that, if you knew how incredibly many people listen to this podcast and you're directly in the ears, in the brains of people, just listen. Just throw something here, let yourself think of something. We're not talking about advertising ourselves, but you can book it without end. It doesn't have to land on television, it's an old, dying medium.
I say as someone from television, it dies. And Stefan Raab, watch out. I've been thinking a lot about Stefan Raab in the summer and I have to say, I'm looking forward to next week. 14th September, the boxing match Regina Halbig against Stefan Raab.
Have they already boxed against each other twice? Yes, it's the third one. Exactly, it's the third one. Yes, but I haven't seen any of the two fights. Really not. I just looked at it afterwards. I wasn't that interested. It's a bit like Andy Kaufman, who used to fight against catchers. I think that's where this idea actually comes from.
Andy Kaufman, the legendary stand-up comedian from New York, he always did things like that, also fought against women. That was even crazier and crazier in the 70s, what he did there. And I think Stefan Raab has this impulse. You haven't seen him yet. I only know that he's boxing. But what else is happening? Is he doing a new show? Is he moderating again?
It comes from Düsseldorf, it will be broadcast live at RTL next week on Saturday. And I don't know anything about it, I just have a few thoughts about it. First of all, you have to say, unlike the other two boxing fights against Regina Halmich, this is a boxing fight that takes place under completely different circumstances.
It was Olympia in Paris, we have so much to discuss, oh my god, Olympia in Paris, Imane Khelif, the Algerian boxer, a huge scandal, J.K. Rowling and some other half-wits.
I only got that at the end.
Alter ist das unangenehm. Und jetzt hast du, ne, also dieser Beef, oder, der heißt nicht mal Beef, also dieser absolute Wahnsinn.
Algerische Boxerin, die aus, ich hab noch einen Bericht gelesen, algerische Boxerin, die aus wirklich armen Verhältnissen kommt, die in ihrer Kindheit mit ihren Eltern, da gibt es so eine kleine Biografie, Müll gesammelt hat, um über die Runden zu kommen. Ihr ganz großer Traum war immer zu boxen.
Und die Art und Weise, wie natürlich in einer aufgeheizten Gesellschaft, aufgehitzten Gesellschaft darüber geredet wurde, ist es wirklich zum Kotzen gewesen.
In the meantime, some people are so anti-trans that they even meet people who are not even trans. Someone who doesn't look like someone like J.K. Rowling imagines a woman. Also great that the woman who has 80 fantasy beings in her head and has become rich and famous, that she is not able to ride a little bit over a plate. I don't understand either.
No, but I understand why a person who has earned so much money, who actually wanted to make children happy and many people suddenly have such a hatred in them and really have nothing better to do than on social media. I don't know, but I just hear it every week.
So Imane Kelif is definitely a woman. She won the gold medal, an Algerian boxer at Olympia. And that's what swings with her, to stay in boxing language. Hoho, a swinger swings with. Because in this context this fight is taking place now. And now Stefan Raab is basically
Regina Halmich on the face, he says afterwards, haha people, I'm a woman in reality, as a small politically incorrect gag about the RTL people.
I also found that a bit strange in the first two fights. I like Stefan Raab very much, he always treated me well. I was often there in the show, not so often, five, six times, but it was always cool. I think the guy, I can't say anything about what he did.
Correct guy, correct guy.
Correct guy. To musicians, I think, because he also has a great musician heart, he has always been particularly nice. I can't say anything against that. But this woman against man boxing thing, I don't understand.
I think it's going to be a huge, it's going to be a street fighter. It's really going to be the TV street fighter of the year, right after the Olympic opening ceremony. And the triathlon with the little shit balls that swam in the sand and had to do slalom around it. And I think it will be a street fighter. I bet that Alec and the other from Boss Horst will do something with spraying guitars.
Then Oli Porra will rant about Amira again. RTL will drive up everything. Christian Haeckel will come out again, the old weatherman. Maybe Peter Klöppel will come out again in a stock car.
Maybe Salvatore will come again and make a lot of jokes.
And do you still know Karlchen? Yes, yes, yes. Or Matti. Matti from Der lila Launewehr is being incited on stage or something. We know that they've been a couple for 30 years. So I don't think RTL is going to let it go. It's a huge spectacle. And Björn Schimpf, please, with Karlchen again. I want to see him again. Björn Hergen Schimpf, I think he's one of the... Is he still alive?
The poor people of Podimo are used to quality content on their podcast platforms. Now they have to get the two cynics here. Do we have to talk slower for the older masters of Podimo? Björn Hergen Schimpf is 80 years old and I've never understood that. Hergen is his first name. Björn Hergen. If one day I should get a son, then he should be called Hergen. Hergen the Terrible, there was this comic.
His name was Heger. Heger the Terrible, right? Do you remember that? Stefan Raab. So he got about 2.4 billion euros from RTL, of course directly from the taxpayer. And I think it will be a street faker, but then the big question is, what comes next? What happens after Stefan Raab's big boxing fight? First of all, the next day everyone will tear their mouths apart.
And then you must not forget, what did Stefan Raab notice in the last four years before the end of his great career? Well, do you still know? Relatively much boredom in his own program. After the first commercial block at TV Total, moderating the show and forgetting that the show is still going on for three quarters of an hour.
That's it. That was really like that. I noticed that the last time I was with Stefan Raab in the show, in the break, he then took the ballpoint pen and somehow painted on the block, instead of talking to me, which he actually always did in the break. And then I stood up and said, what are you painting there? And then he made a cheese box. That's not a joke, because he was completely moderated.
Who can we suspect after such a long time?
Yes, exactly. He was especially noticed by organized laziness and regular stuttering of pro-7 checks. That was the last few years. But I think the energy is back, because I'll say that now from a Cologne media business, the hottest rumors. So I heard the rumor, and it's really just a rumor, and podcasts, you know, are there to spread unnecessary rumors.
And that's a rumor from a area where I say, I don't think, where there's no plaintiff, there's no judge. I don't think anyone will complain. I heard that Stefan Raab actually plans to challenge Sebastian Puffpaff, the current moderator of TV Total, to challenge him to a fight. at the same time, on Wednesday, at his new show RTL, moderates a weekly show that runs against TV Total.
Because I think ... I'm a bit dumb, but isn't that part of TV Total? I just wanted to say that, you have to say that. That Stefan Raab, through the dismissal from his old company, through his career end, I think he made a few quick decisions, because he wanted to be on vacation somewhere and just didn't feel like watching TV anymore. And I think he was a little too hasty.
I can only paraphrase that now. A little too hasty with his old colleague Markus Wolter, with whom he used to do V-Version, we older people remember that, who stood behind the camera. And these two men, who have worked together for years, are now the big antagonists. I don't think Brainpool is responsible anymore. The old production company, where Stefan Raab did TV Total for years.
Did he argue or split up? Or did he sell 51%? I don't know.
Read the media magazines. In any case, TV Total doesn't belong to him anymore. He has no influence on it anymore. He started the show, but now he has no say in it anymore. Nobody can do anything with it anymore. I don't know if he'll get any more money. In any case, it was taken from him or he let it go. I don't know.
And now the stake is deep and I fear that a large part of the energy that he uses for his comeback is also coming from the fact that he really wants to defeat his old companion Markus Wolter, whatever that may look like. Friends became enemies. Yes, exactly. And when I read that, I thought to myself, could something like this also happen to us? Or are we far too few in common businesses?
Because I have made the experience, when you are moderating in front of the camera, then you just argue. And at some point you meet at parties and say, oh, come on, it doesn't matter. Disputes are always problematic when you are in some kind of society with each other. When you are in some companies, when one has to sign some papers for the other.
And then it's like, we have founded two new companies. And you are not part of it now. And by the way, all rights belong to me on your market or something. That's always a bit difficult. Could that happen to us too? That we argue like Stefan Rapp and Markus Wolter and one day the big fight will be. You have no idea.
If I would make a big satire show on Friday at 1 p.m. on Sat.1, I think it could be a problem. But I don't plan it, Jan. I don't plan my own show on TV on Friday. And I'm not going to start as a singer-songwriter.
That's why I lack the energy. You already have.
You already have your music performance delivered.
But to be honest, I always see it as an expansion of the satirical material. Music is not... No, the Rundfunk-Tanzorchester are musicians. They are mainly musicians. With whom you go on tour next year, by the way. I'm not mainly a musician. I just like to sing like a hobby. Yes, you sing very well. You can say that. Olli, you sing very well too.
I sing in the middle because I'm an animal performer. That's also the special thing about our podcast. We are always so moved by love. We almost never argue, actually.
And if you do, it's great. And then the sex is fantastic. You have to say that too, right? If you look me in the eyes, it's always like that. I love that afterwards. Jan, before we start, we have a little time today, it's the very first show. I was in hotels quite often in the summer.
Why? Did you try out something new?
No, not that. But one thing I wanted to ask you, what I noticed, when you go to a hotel and they say, visit, we have a rooftop bar upstairs, go to the rooftop bar. It's always the same. I go to the rooftop bar, look at it and think, dude, what kind of shit music is that? And then I go down again immediately.
Is it somehow agreed under hotels that rooftop bars always play this shitty, house-ambient shit that is so stressful that it is always played there? I don't know any rooftop bars. Where the DJ is capable. And that's why only the idiots with the laptop are on the rooftop bar.
And the people who want to drink a cocktail, who steal from people, who say then, hello, turn around, see the assholes sitting there, hear the music and go out again. I would also like to sit in the rooftop bar, but there is no rooftop bar where the music is decent, but always like this.
So actually the extension of the driving school music with which you drove up is in the rooftop. The only rooftop bar that I could take seriously would be when you go up and stand at the turntables just Nils Ruf. Nils Ruf. As a gastro concept.
Ruf Topper.
You know, there's a guest host who came up with an idea. Watch out, guys. We're doing Ruf Topper. And we're just learning Nils Ruf as a resident DJ. And then we call them, but not Ruf Topper with double O, but with R-U-F.
Genial, yes. The call is on fire.
And once a week, Ruth comes to the rooftop bar. The Ruth-top bar. The Ruth-top bar. Bar with Ruth and with roof.
That's the one hotel idea. The second thing that comes to mind, a reflex. When I'm in the hotel, checked in, go to the driver's seat and I see there are still people there, I press the button right away where the door closes faster. Always. That's the reflex I want. I don't even know why. That's one of those things you should... Most of the cool people stop. I do the opposite.
I press on that this door finally closes. And I noticed something else. Then I get into a hotel and if there are pilots and stewardesses in front of me and I don't want to think so shabby anymore, I always think they all fuck each other.
What else should they do?
I always think that the stewardesses and the pilots check all their uniforms and then they get fucked up until they have to fly on. I know it's a stupid idea, it's primitive, but sometimes the person is just primitive. And I always think, at the very least I would say, let's fuck up now. Come on, we have a big room for you. Sorry. No, that's a hotel thought that I had that summer. Oh man.
It's nice to talk to you, Jan. Yes, it's nice.
Do you notice how it sputters like two shaken bottles of wine? Something really comes out here. When I just spoke briefly about Paris and the Algerian boxers, I really noticed, oh yeah, Olympia was still there, dude. So much has happened, Maka. A lot has happened.
It was a big opening party. I don't know if you've seen it, but I remember the opening party of DEM in Germany. That was so mean of them.
That was really mean of them.
And they really, really got up. Tom Cruise jumps off the roof. Who was there? And that was the farewell party that Tom Cruise jumps off the roof.
It was Lady Gaga in a three-minute performance with some weird dancers in an awesome costume Celine Dion on the Eiffel Tower, dude. No joke.
Honestly, I looked into Celine Dion's documentary a little bit. It's never really my music, but the woman first lost the love of her life, is seriously ill and is a very brave woman.
And the voice actor, dude, that was probably... So it really has changed. It was sung live, you saw it, it wasn't Playboy or anything. Insanely well sung. Great opening party. The rain was almost irrelevant, because it was just so sublime. It was completely insane. There is another novelty at Fest und Flauschig. We have now ... We always moderate naked from now on.
Genau, und zwar mit zwei Schnecken im Bauchnabel jeder, die wir uns dann gegenseitig am Ende der Sendung mit unseren Zungen aus den Bauchnabeln des jeweils anderen herauslöffeln.
Einmal im Monat moderieren wir jetzt live vom Marktplatz, so wie Willem damals bei Welle Nord. Ja, einmal die Woche sind wir
von irgendeinem Simson Festival in Ostdeutschland, um die Leute im Osten näher an den Podcast zu binden. Ich habe das Gefühl, die Menschen haben aus Protest gegen das Programm, was vor der Wahl in Brandenburg, vor der Wahl in Thüringen und Sachsen in den Regionalmagazinen der ARD und im ZDF lief, How many Simson festivals have I seen there?
Some cult mopeds that were turned off by curious West German camera teams in the hope that it would somehow turn the election results away from the right-wing extremists. But no, the East German likes to drive a Simson and likes to vote right, very simply. That's the way it is at the moment. Maybe change.
That's exactly how it is. I have this summer about Jamel, we'll talk about that in a moment. I have to say one thing, I was not shocked, it was all marked out, this election. And then I thought to myself, 40 years of socialism, then the wall fell, 89, 90, reunification, and what do they do first? Neonazis and incite asylum seekers. That was part of it.
The pressure has to go somewhere. The pressure has to go somewhere.
You have to understand, you have to see it humanly. And I mean, now we have a 35-year wall case and they just want a monarchy or a leader again. That's just the way it is. But on the other hand, they don't want to have a leader because they don't want to have any Corona measures. And then I have to say, it's just the way it is.
And now the East Germans shouldn't misunderstand who come to my concerts. The 70% who didn't choose the AfD. The 70% who don't, please don't attack, but the 30% who think that with the AfD everything will get better, they want that. But on the other hand, they don't want to have Corona measures, but they want a leader, a strict hand, so that they can get out of this victim role themselves.
Because that's the worst thing, I think, this victim role they get into. There are the Rammstein who, I thought first of all, that's because they're maybe socially detached and maybe don't have much money and don't understand much. But I mean, Rammstein is exactly such a victim role. They only got lawyers and see themselves as victims for fucking their fans. And yet they are the victims.
Hey, it's really not clear that they are accusing us of fucking our fans and that we have systematically built it up. To be honest. And are they also victims? I think it's an East German thing to just like to see yourself as a victim in a part of this.
But alone with this little rant, again 5% more points for the AfD. We really have to keep our feet still and keep quiet and we must not address them. And if someone writes about East Germany, then in the time of Jana Hänsel, Martin Machowitz, then I ask myself if they might... Why didn't they perform?
So we've already laid it out, the strong East German voice in every newspaper editorial that has something to do with it, there is the voice of the East explainer, the East explainer who writes and speaks about the East, because she comes from there. Have we not listened enough to these people?
Or is it simply that these populist paroles are being used by the people in East Germany because maybe in rural regions of East Germany something like an infrastructure is no longer available, because the train stations are closed, because the buses are no longer running, because there are no free time offers?
I'm sure that there are also parts that play into it, to be honest. I think that's a sum of many different things.
To keep thinking about the AfD, maybe it's just genetics in the end. Maybe it's just genetically dependent.
Okay, I don't know. But to do this big analysis now, we are still not Precht and Lanz and I don't think we want to start now. My neighbor is also not warm. I know, I've seen that. I have to laugh a lot. It's one of the scariest parodies. I also notice how much fun it makes you.
And I don't even have to listen to Lanz and Precht. I've never heard it before. I've only seen two episodes on YouTube.
I have to say, I watched the first 20, 30 episodes. Why?
To maybe make you curious and to build for our podcast?
It's not just that they only talk bad stuff. On the contrary, I was annoyed. At some point, the idleness of both protagonists annoyed me. But I have to say that I also really liked to hear that. I'm unfortunately completely, I haven't heard a podcast in the summer. What do you mean?
That makes me really sad.
I discovered a few YouTube channels for that, but I can't talk about that here. I can't talk about that here, Jan.
Now I haven't said what the second big neuro-reflection is. We've blown up something that was actually never really part of this podcast. We've always been... We have always never dared to sell it as solid and fluffy with such a shameful label. It is the last remnant of the Corona time. We thought, if you want money, do it rarely. We now always do it on Sundays like before. Yeah, not a big show.
And I have to honestly say, you've just never found the time. So it's not up to me. I lie at home on my lazy skin. I'm happy if you call me when we find an appointment to record the Wednesday show, Boomer Cringe. But it never worked out, because you're always here, then you're there, somewhere. So our fans can't really...
Fans can really praise me for it, because I really thought that it's just exhausting when you have to do things from time to time. You know my family's circumstances. You have to do things. It's terrible. You have to do so much. Eight pitch work, I would say. Patchwork family, where I always have to pitch something. Pitching the patchwork families. And it was just a great, beautiful show for me.
And then we have time all week and are looking forward to it. And we can somehow do the things together. It doesn't mean that something falls away. We can still do our metal ... I have a new ... Today we don't do it yet, but I have changed the metal intro a bit.
Metal on Sunday?
Metal, metal, metal, just yet. But we'll play that next time. You can also submit your metal intros that are no longer day-related. Maybe you have something cool at the start. And I think we'll do it very briefly, after we've been talking for 40 minutes ... We're taking a little break. There's a little advertising break for the first time.
There is a little commercial break, but there are also a few music tips that we will also keep. And at the very beginning, in my Instastory, before I went into the break, I had written, please don't send me any songs, film tips or anything, but only now when we're back, because then I'll read it all again.
It's really like this, guys, if you've written something, a summer break, my mailbox was full, just write it again at some point, maybe not right away tomorrow, but think about it over time. I read like 10, 20 mails a day and then I'm tired and I don't feel like it anymore. And sometimes some go away. It's all a bit random with me. I'm not very professional. I'm the worst editor you can find.
I'm completely confused.
If we can be heard everywhere now, if we have broken the Spotify chains, if we are finally free again, Where is the Fidi & Bumsi playlist then? Also on Spotify, Deezer and Podimo? Or where is it all now?
Maybe there are people who also have playlists with a lot of small work, like iTunes Music. Spotify is actually the best. When it comes to music and making playlists, Spotify is the best. Really. I totally agree with you. And still, we keep that in mind, right? Because I've heard so much music. I've met so many musicians at all the festivals. I've played with Team Scheiße. Hey! Greetings!
I played with different bands and on the last day I got a mail from Yusuf Sahili and I was really mad. I thought okay Yusuf, I'll listen to your song too. I opened his mail. Yusuf lives in Berlin, has syrian and turkish roots. He wrote, don't worry, no hip-hop and no world music. And I heard it, it's really fat produced, awesome rock music.
Rock always sounds so old-fashioned, but he plays different instruments and I heard all his songs and he deserves one... No song, no hip-hop and no world music. I just discovered world music a bit for me, but we'll get to that in one of the next episodes. Yusuf Zahili with the song Lost in a Crowd. His album is coming out in November and that's really awesome.
I've heard the song really often over the summer and I think it has earned a lot more listeners and that's why I put it on the list. I also heard recently that Lara Hullo wrote a song, an insanely awesome song called For Annie and I heard it with my daughter in the car and she looks at me and says, Dad, that really touches me. And then I say, me too. And it's really a really good song.
Lara Hullo definitely has a great Instagram performance. It's going well with you too. I just see 130,000 listeners. I don't have to feature here anymore, but the song is so strong. It really sang me great, also great text. Very nice greetings, Lara Hullo with Für Annie, I'll put it on the list. And then I have two more. I just played for two weeks in Stade at the festival, in the Welsstadt Stade.
And the container next to me, Hannes came to me and said, good morning, I'm Hannes, I just played and I didn't see it. And then I first checked that he was called Zartmann. Musician is, I don't know, a songwriter, songwriter, somehow. They do it all today. He has a song with Chiago, which is very good, by the way, the song.
I also overdid my opinion about Chiago a bit, or his new record, Wilmersdorf. I think he's relatively free from everything. Then he makes a prologue song with Icky Mel, then he makes a deep song with Zartmann. And somehow I think it's really cool that he's so completely free from everything.
I've seen him without a ski mask. Do you know what he looks like? Like a maulwurf. No, instead of eyes he has two huge chrome masks. On the eyes. You take off your glasses and instead of two eyes you see two panda masks.
Really? Unbelievable. From Zartmann I put the song Fussbaumeln on the Fidi and Bumse list. Greetings to Hannes too. I drove back to Berlin in the evening from Stade and listened to all his songs. And I think that's very well-textured, good music that he makes. I really became a fan of it. So Yusuf Zahili, Lost in the Crowd, Lara Hulu, Für Enni und Zartmann, Fußbaumeln, I'll put them on the list.
I still have countless other songs here, but I don't want to overwhelm you all either. There's still no music podcast here, but I can only recommend these three songs the warmest. One thing very briefly about Stefan Raab, which I just noticed that I wanted to tell you. John Mayer, you probably know him, the guitarist, the singer, the female swan.
I think the records are always so semi-cool, but live is incredibly good. I only saw him once in England, that's already 10 years ago. And he was with Stefan Raab and thought it was so shit that since then, it has been confirmed to me from several sides, he no longer plays in Germany.
He goes on a Europe tour, plays in England, plays in Paris, plays in Spain, but doesn't even come to Germany for one concert. Because he thought it was so shitty that Stefan Raab was so badly prepared and also moderated him so badly. And that was really, I looked at it again on YouTube, not the strongest moment, that was also the phase where Stefan Raab thought, who's coming now?
Don't go to Germany, that is totally crazy. There's a guy from Italy hosting a show which is like completely...
He had to put on a funny hat, Tom Hanks. There's this picture, I remember it.
When I was at Seth Meyers in 2017, I met Fred Armisen backstage. Yeah, the drummer. The former SNL man and a total nerd. He had a great stand-up, he's already 6-7 years old, but I love it. I think he's going to be in Istanbul next week with this stand-up, so he's got stand-up for drummers, also non-musicians.
And he also said, what we hear, and he had a few examples, his father, I think, comes from near Soltau and he spoke half German with me. And then Fred Amundsen said, it's so nice to have someone from Germany here, but because everybody is afraid of German entertainment, because there are so many crazy stories. And they all know that. And behind the scenes you talk a little bit, hustle, hustle.
German entertainment is a bit more difficult, because there is actually no great story that anyone brings with them, who was from America or Germany in a big show. Unfortunately very few.
I have to say, there were legendary performances by Stefan Raab, for example Eminem, where he rapped with him, or ACDC with Angus Young, it wasn't all shit, but at some point it was really like that, that Stefan Raab was already on a sailboat and was just anchoring somewhere in Greece and wasn't in the studio anymore, so only physically, but not mentally anymore.
Apropos not more mentally, but only physically. We'll be back soon with Fest und Flauschig. But then it really goes off. I still have to say, I have a publicity uproar this summer. Before I came out with the podcast, I said, I'll do it now in writing, now it's enough for me. I have some great stories to tell from behind the scenes and much, much more.
Do you have anything else you want to make people curious about? Yes, with the Ozempic spray. We'll spray together right away. Would you say a few names of people, direct names, would you say a few names in a podcast of people from whom you believe, only from the point of view of their Insta-Stories, that they hang on Ozempic?
No, but we'll send you my story.
Then you just don't do it right away.
Okay, I'll do it. Yeah, yeah, I know. I'll say a few names right away.
Okay, I'm excited. Stay tuned for Fest und Flauschig here. Spotify and everywhere else. Bundesweit. Bundesweit, right?
Bundesweit.
Yes, bundesweit. Endlich wieder Podcast. Fest und Flauschig ist endlich wieder ein Podcast.
Wie heißt die? Wollen wir die Sendung heute eigentlich Deutschland kommt nennen? Einfach so, weil das gerade passt. Oder bundesweit? Endlich bundesweit. Endlich bundesweit. So, bis gleich.
Entschuldigung, was kostet eigentlich der Kaffee bei Starbucks?
Das ist der Kaffee bei Starbucks, der kostet 50 Cent. Aber dieses Hi Babe, I love you Babe, what's your Vorname Babe? Do you have an allergy, Laktose, everything? I don't know Babe, I love you so much Babe, schnuffelpuffel. Das macht 6 Euro extra aus.
Alles klar, danke.
Und genauso ist es auch bei Fest und Flauschig. Das ist der Humor, mit dem wir die Leute hier abholen, da wo sie sind und auch direkt dorthin wieder zurückbringen, wie sie abgeholt haben. Herzlich willkommen zurück.
Herzlich willkommen zurück. Für alle, die uns auch noch nicht so gut kennen, es gibt ab und zu so ein paar Rubriken, ab und zu gibt es Einspieler, die haben sich seit Jahren nicht verändert, weil wir denken immer noch Never Change a Winning Team, obwohl ich zwei neue Einspieler habe, die habe ich nur noch nicht auf meine Konsole eingespielt. Aber seid gespannt, was da noch heißes auf euch zukommt.
Stummlicht, liebe Grüße, der gerade am vergangenen Mittwoch In his Insta-Story, he put an advertisement for Metal am Mittwoch on his car. Of course, the news hits him like lightning from heaven, that Metal am Mittwoch will never be available again. Because we just gave Spotify back on Wednesday. We are paid the least amount of money after minutes.
This is what happens with every podcast minute in Taxameter. And in the last few years we have noticed that we have given away too much. We just produced too much content. And in the end it just didn't pay off for us anymore.
I see that right now. I'm just wondering where he got the script from. Because I have the same one here and wanted to give it away. Or did I already give it away? And he has it. I have no idea.
That's the good thing about dementia, using dementia. You are always surprised by ... I'm always surprised.
By the way, today, while this show is going on, we're live on stage at the International Funk Exhibition. Oh my god, what's going on today? Yes, it's way too much. We really have to get back in there. Come down, Olga. Our old brains aren't used to it anymore, that we have to share so many different things at the same time. But I'm really happy, because now, on Sunday, you'll get it, Jan.
What is it? You'll get your cup.
Oh, from Sebastian Kuhn.
From Sebastian Kuhn. And he also wrote on it, greetings from Sebastian, thanks for the support, Jan. He didn't write it to me right away, but I also got a cup. I had two and I'll hand it over to you. And then I got hats. And they're from some hat maker. On one it says Fest and on the other it says Flauschig. That's crazy.
We look like the stupid Dalton Smith, but we will wear them on Sunday, so today.
If you hear that now and still want to experience something great tonight, then go to the KitKat Club and have a nice nacktchnäcke in your ass. If you want to experience something middle-class, then come to the International Funk Festival. Last time, when we were at the IFA, it was a few years ago, we ran out of the stage and chased Joko and Klaas, who were at the Samsung booth.
That's exactly why we tried to boycott Samsung.
You know, it was really dangerous that we ran through the IFA halls with 2,000 people and looked for Joko and Klaas.
But right after that they cashed in some money and left.
And we don't do it for the money, we do it to fill the deep hole in our hearts. One day it will be full. It's a reason that we can see each other again. If you feel like it, come by today. I think it starts at 7 p.m. There are still tickets at the cash register, I'll just say it like that. If there are no more tickets, then spend the money for something else.
Buy a few lottery tickets or, I don't know, play a lotto or something.
I think there are still a few tickets, it's a very, very big place. Jan, as always, makes Belgian waffles, has a Belgian waffle iron with him.
No, look what I have. I have the whole trunk from vacation. I always say before the holidays, I have some exotic travel destination. Then I link it on Instagram to all the... Faschos im Internet aufzuregen. Aber in Wirklichkeit bin ich natürlich ein Öko-Urlauber. Und fahr meistens nicht weit mit dem Auto drumherum um Deutschland.
Und hab mir diesmal aus dem Urlaub diese leckere Süßigkeit mitgebracht. Marabu Noblesse Alp Appelsin Crisp. Das schmeckt so ein bisschen wie Jaffa-Kacke. So Orangenkekse. Ganz lecker. Ganz lecker. Sieht gut aus.
Weiß mal rein. Wie so eine Oblate. Lecker. Einfach lecker.
Ist gut.
Is this the first one you've eaten? I've already eaten one, but I just got it out of the fridge because I want to snack a little bit. Also about the new people who are here now.
To get used to the fact that we snack every now and then. What does that mean every now and then? It's the snack podcast, exactly. Thank you. And if you're new to it now, dear people, and now think, I'll write an emotional email, how much it hurts in the ears when someone smacks into the microphone, yes, we're all through. We're all through.
Auch, dass ich vorhin einmal fett gesagt habe, statt mehrgewichtig. Und ihr mir jetzt kurz sagen, ich weiß nicht alles. Wir sind auch ein Podcast mit Fehlern. Der Podcast mit Fehlern könnte uns eigentlich... Das war der Arbeitstitel eigentlich am Anfang, als wir anfangen wollten.
Wir haben einen Fehler gemacht und haben uns dann doch Fest und Flauschig genannt.
Tell me, now I have to ask you one thing. I was sitting in front of my iPad with my mouth open last night, because several people played me a diss track from a rapper, San Diego. I don't even know if you know him, he's somehow from the Collega corner, I think he also wrote three records for Collega. At some point it turned out that Collega doesn't write everything himself, all these word games.
San Diego has a beef with a guy called Moiz, who is just, and that's really interesting.
Oh, the complete
Who is completely crazy and also told that his wife, he beat her, it was really, I have to say, a very deep gully abyss, what actually takes place. And he has a wife with two or three children and she has accused him of domestic violence and he has also confirmed that, but then somewhere said, at least I didn't kill her. So it's really completely crazy. But this guy was always a suspect to me.
I've only seen him a few times. He's not a rapper at all, but he was someone who went to all the rappers on YouTube and his platform and then started rapping at some point. He has a Chechen background, I think. And he's obviously losing his mind under the influence of drugs. And he has dealt with all kinds of people. San Diego, on the other hand, is now with his wife.
And then he did a 25-minute diss track, where at the beginning, as usual, everything is rolled up, everything is thrown forward, what happens there, ugly things. And then comes the last part, the last five minutes, where he then...
He raps about how he now has sex with Mois' ex-girlfriend, who also has three children, and how they have already shot 20 pornos, how she squirts during sex and all sorts of things. And it's really such an unpleasant thing. First of all, I'm not really interested in them, but it's a new dimension of asociality, I'll say, which has already got 4 million clicks or so.
Unbelievable how uncomfortable that is. So if you really want to see how far hip-hop has sunk, I think there is still little hip-hop. I heard the Jizzes record a few times in the summer, there were a few very funny songs on it, but otherwise ... German Hip-Hop has a lot of time, it's over.
Maybe it's because there's a new awareness, that it's not cool anymore when you're rapping women's shit all the time and you start all the time with the thickest tail. People are tired of it, there's definitely been a bit of a downfall. But that thing really has, I really have to say, respect.
I didn't even notice, I have to say.
No, it's also nothing that I think you have to see now, because I don't think that San Diego has a great voice or anything like that. But I'm reading right now, I just got an article from a dear colleague of mine, Jan Böhmermann. That's why I'm a little distracted right now. That was also a highlight of the summer. I think we got together for a short time, didn't we?
We got together for a short time. Anne Will is newly in love. And you know what? I hardly give anyone more than Anne Will. She did a lot for German television. Had a series for a long time, was a daily talk show speaker before, I mean, and is currently shining next to Bastian Pazdewka in a new cult series on Prime. No, that's Anke Engelke. Oh, crap, sorry, I'm getting everything mixed up again.
But Anne Will is newly in love.
I don't know if that's true, I don't know, I read the press release and Actually, it's really up to us to spread it further. But if I'm talking about this asocial diss track right now, we can talk about that topic right away. But do we really want to spread it further? Because I think that's actually, I just wanted to send it to you to remind me that this has also taken place.
And that it was kind of a full circle, half circle moment. How can that happen? No, come on, do we really want to spread it further?
No, we don't want that. But basically it's also there, it's also that more and more private things, so that media people think to bring more and more private things into the public. That's also a thing that sometimes irritates me.
Hazel Brugger and her husband have sued a construction company because they built their house shit and have somehow big, on all possible, on Instagram and against the construction company. So this is a private matter. I didn't even notice that.
What are they doing? Really? No, didn't notice at all.
They probably have, they're currently building a house somewhere, I don't even know where, somewhere in Hessen or something, I don't know where they live.
But not in Groß-Umstadt, in Groß-Umstadt, but not, right? It could be that it's a big deal.
Because you know, if you build there, it's difficult. Well, I mean, I think we all have problems in life. And I also have problems with things where I don't think that I share it on Instagram with my fan community to then direct even more storm against others or to put even more pressure. And I think that's so... It's interesting that people, that's also a comedy queen, right?
Hazel Brugger is one of the big comedy queens, you have to say that.
She's always with LOL.
But very briefly, now you're talking about his role, I think, a little bit small, because I have the feeling ... That's right, actually, it's just because of him, because of the man, I don't know his name right now, also Brugger, Thomas Brugger, I think, or something like that. Or? I don't know. Stefan Burger. Stefan Burger. The guy and you, so he's the maker behind the scenes.
Actually, he's the guy who leads her and probably also writes the jokes. In any case, he probably also persuaded her to bring this to the public, that you're building a house now and have problems with the construction. After that, the company reported and said, we'll sue you. It's just not possible that you write such a shit about us. And I really don't know if...
Would you also do something like that if you have such a problem with building a house?
I've had the experience that if you have a personal problem, especially in a private environment, that the best solution for these problems is actually always to discuss them in the podcast. If I learned one thing in 13 years, then it's public health heals all wounds. That's also a saying. That's what they say.
It's not like when you bring things to the public that you have 70,000 new fights and 80,000 new problems. No, when you discuss things in public and I mean, that's really a thing where you didn't even know how to react differently than just going to the public. What do you want to do there? Go to the lawyer or explain things like normal people? That's a bit too much.
And there's a lot of other work to be done. Then the tour has to be prepared. You don't have the time to take care of it. And that's why I think it's very good and very pragmatic to do it that way. And I honestly think that's great content. It's great content.
It's definitely something that the fanbase, I don't know, maybe there are people now, I'm sure they just did it so that someone writes, hey, I also have a construction company, I'll do it all for half the price. And probably, that's clear, that can also be.
Well, I just didn't know if you... If I were Netflix executive and would look back at the great success story of German media creators and construction projects on Netflix, I would actually get curious and would think, that's the next big thing. Couldn't you say, from the makers of the houseboat, now it's Hazel and Thomas? I just wanted to say, the houseboat 2.
But now only without a boat and without a house. The house, just the house. And then maybe I'll come there again and tell you what they're doing wrong. Naja, wie auch immer. Alles Gute auf jeden Fall. Vielleicht werden wir mal eingeladen zum Grillen, wenn das Haus dann steht.
Ich hoffe sehr. Ich habe gehört, es soll ein großes Nachbarschaftsfest geben. Auch das wurde, glaube ich, schon im Podcast ausgewertet. Ich finde das sehr begrüßenswert und ich habe da wirklich große Empathie und weiß, wie anstrengend und wie belastend das auch sein kann, so eine Baustelle zu verwalten und so. Das ist wirklich... So hat off and everything done right, I would say.
Yes, everything done right. I have to get something going. When will you do name dropping in terms of Ozempic? Who kicks the syringe in the ass? Who can't get rid of it with a stepper? Who goes to school medicine so that he looks better on Instagram? Who is it, Olli? Pack up the names. Tell me. I don't even know that.
I don't know. I was on vacation in the supermarket. I wanted to tell you that because you just ate that cookie. And I also came across a new thing. I was shopping in the supermarket and suddenly there was a new chocolate. And my daughter said to me, which chocolate? Hey, we have to buy that. That's the Dubai chocolate. I heard from a lot of people that it should be really delicious.
And then I said, all right, we'll buy a plate of chocolate. We drove home. And then I ate this Dubai chocolate, which probably experienced a short hype on TikTok, I don't know. In any case, it tasted really sensational.
It has a pistachio cream filling in it, it's a bit crispy because there's such a thing in it, it's so rice-like and then surrounded with such a whole milk or such a tart bitter chocolate, really strong in taste. I think at the time when I still consumed a lot of marijuana, I would have covered myself with it without end. Well, in any case, I thought, maybe we don't have them.
I'm alone again in the supermarket to make my daughter happy and thought, I'll buy ten plates. And I bought ten plates of Dubai chocolate, go to the checkout. And then the cashier says, scan it and says 160 euros. And I'm like, what? And then she says, yes, that's such a hype right now, no idea, and looked at me like such a innovative wanker. And I'm like, sorry, please stop everything.
I gave back all 16 plates. Really, it wasn't clear to me at all. I hadn't seen it for the first time because I hadn't looked at the bank and had bought a lot of things in general. And then I noticed that it costs 15 euros, this fucked up Dubai chocolate. I googled it. On YouTube you can watch videos of people who like to cook and they just copied it. You can buy pistachio cream yourself.
Then you buy such a form, such a chocolate form and you can make the Dubai chocolate yourself for 3 euros. And it's really delicious.
15 euros for a plate of chocolate. They're crazy. After Dubai Art you have to pay it in black without paying taxes. Just black under the shop sign, handed over the money.
And the good thing was that there were people in the queue behind me who recognized me and thought at the moment, cool that Olli Schulz is not such a new rich wanker who is getting this Dubai chocolate for 150, 160 euros now. And I gave it back to you. But it was really a taste experience. And now I've already ordered everything on the internet.
For 7 euros I have this form, then I have pistachio cream and tomorrow I'll make my own Dubai chocolate. You know what?
And where we are now briefly with kitchen accessories. Also that is an important part of this show. I also added a new kitchen accessory during the holidays. I have an induction stove. I think I've already said that. I own an induction stove. That's my favorite way of cooking and also a new way of opening. I don't hate anything more than stoves that can be operated from above with a touchscreen.
Because you always boil water over it and beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep beep
It annoys me so much. It annoys me so much. So induction stove, but always with very important buttons at the front, no touchscreen. And I have for my induction stove, I think it cost 160, so really expensive, 160 euros. Inspired by my dear colleague and friend Olli Schulz, I got a stainless steel teppanyaki plate, teppan plate.
And it's as big as these two hard drives and you put it on top of the two hard drives, on both induction plates and then you turn both on at the same height and then you have a teppanyaki field. Sorry, I have to go back for a moment. And that there's a teppanyaki field and you can grill a lot. The only thing that came to mind is that nobody in my close private environment eats meat.
And I'm the only one who still does that. The ab and suma always want something. Ab and suma always want something. And you know what I did to win them? I fried meatballs.
But you don't need a teppanyaki plate for that. I wanted to fry something on it.
And I had the meatballs for years. I knew exactly how much minced meat you have to buy. I knew how much. But since I basically ... Nobody eats meat anymore. Nobody. Nobody really eats meat anymore. Nobody eats meat anymore. And first of all, I was ashamed of buying meat. And I was really so hungry for meatballs. I wanted to do it once. I wanted to try it out.
I wanted to make my delicious meatballs. And then I had to shrink the portion first. And only for me. I don't even know how to ... I made three meatballs. I didn't make ten frikadellen, I only made three frikadellen. And then I beat the egg, but only a third of the egg was in there. Yes, really, completely unpleasant, completely embarrassing.
And that's my teppanyaki opening cooking, a bit to such a sad, no one came into the kitchen either. No one wanted to look at it, no one wanted to try it, very sad. Very sad.
That's very sad, right? That's the fucking Vogue society that brings us to the flesh.
And that's why I'll vote for the AfD next year at the Bundestag election. Sizzling beef. Beef sizzles again with me on the tap handle.
But I'll tell you one thing. The teppanyaki plate is really great for shrimps, for example. And put them in, then you have to make a nice marinade. Make a cinnamon lime. I should have done that in your show. I got a lot of good feedback for the show. I was in a cooking show. I was also... And you can do that really well.
Nice, Jan, nice. I have one more thing on my note. I wanted to tell you briefly, I don't want to go into too much detail, but just a few meta-informations, because you might be interested in something like that.
So every few years I get sick of it and I really saved that long and opened a very long notebook because I thought one day I would like to tie these loose thoughts together again, at least roughly, and somehow have the fun of going forward with such a text as a performance. And I thought, okay, how ...
Then I tried it and I was very lucky, because at the time a guest car died and they needed someone to write something. And then I said, I'd like to do it, but I still have a text lying around here. And then I entered this text and it was with, so radically, I first met people that I only know from podcasts, namely Ijeoma Mangold, the top philharmonist of the time.
Andreas Lebert, the father of Benjamin Lebert, I didn't know that either. Do you know Benjamin Lebert from Crazy? Do you know him?
Yes, of course.
Robert Stadlober's huge debut and so on. And Benjamin Lebert's father is the head of the Feuilleton at the time. And then I threw in two or three more words into the text, because I knew, okay, this is a audience, a reader, who will miss it if there is not some weird word in it or a gymnastic formulation.
And I have to say, I was surprised by the feedback, so surprised in the sense of how hard it was to grasp it. So on Twitter there was really only hate.
But Twitter is also lost, isn't it?
You couldn't use Twitter at all, because it's just hate and very strange and unproductive hate, not even funny hate.
The problem is that everyone who hates you or thinks you're shit or says you're a system-funded puppet, that these people just think you're shit no matter what you do, because you pissed them off too often. And that's always the cool thing, that they all don't really bother anymore, but just write, that's supposed to be somehow progressive or something.
And then, and then, and then, and then, and then, and then, and then, and then, and then, and then, and then, That's always the best thing. Olli Schulz, you have to know him. When I say something against Rammstein, who is Olli Schulz? It doesn't hurt you anymore, but you think, okay, that's just the way it is.
But I have to say that I'm always of the opinion, I said that in a podcast ten years ago, that a large part of our society is just assholes and shit.
It's always been like that. But not at the time. No, not at the time. And also not our listeners. Some are assholes. There are definitely a few of them.
But what I want to say is, it's just that you don't raise your pulse anymore. Also people like that. And I have to say, very briefly about this text, I read it and found it pretty cheeky, but also good.
Pretty cheeky? Pretty cheeky?
No, because I can maybe criticize one thing, maybe. Please do. A friend of mine said, it's written great, I underline everything, but maybe it's written by someone who doesn't have such great existential fears, maybe other people.
And I would have two or three things, points that you... Oh God, but this category I have... No, because two or three things I would have... And in the end you have these points counted, which I think are all good. But where I necessarily... What I would have added... If you would have asked me, I would have said, Olli, read it, what would you add? that we invest money in education.
I think that's really something that has become very important. And that's just a point from which I thought, you should have added that.
But these points at the end, these 15, that was, I'll tell you, the blood pressure was already reading through. That was basically just the announced provocation. Basically, it doesn't matter which points you put in there, because it wasn't about what's exactly there, but in the end it's about what happens underneath it.
I also read the lyrics with my band. My bassist thought it was great, he thought it was really great. My drummer also thought it was great. He said, one or two points I also feel tapped or addressed. We discussed your lyrics in the bus in the Nightliner, by the way. But in a positive way, I think.
It can be a negative way. What I wanted to say, I'm doing this because I hope that you somehow ... that you come across reactions that somehow bring you on. Because that's the reason why you do it. And I missed it on Twitter. Where do you look now? I'm not in all these other networks at all. I had no idea.
And then until then, and I actually wanted to tell you that, until I found the Neue Zeit online app. And under the article all of a sudden, that was something ... There were 2,000 comments and they were as good as before. I read a few. I thought, no one is writing letters anymore. Where are they now? Of course, I would say that. Have you ever opened the Zeit Online app?
I really didn't know.
Since I don't have Spiegel Online anymore, I use it.
You don't use Spiegel Online anymore? I can't stand it anymore. Sorry, but there are so many boulevard themes in it. I was really annoyed. I don't even feel like it, because you feel connected for a long time. But I can't stand it anymore, this kind of reporting they do. And I also find a few things that they wrote really shit lately. And then the same five reports come over and over again.
And then it's always a woman can have several lovers. A this can this and here. And then it comes over and over again. How do you have a good relationship with your children? And it's always pushed up again and again. There are so many boulevards in between. Taylor Swift is now also involved in the games of her boyfriend at American Football. And I think, you're still the mirror man.
You shouldn't do that. The others should do that. Don't do that. Really, that scares me.
I think that's shit. That's a very deep social democratic disappointment with you. That's how people talk.
Because, well, actually it's the case that I've said for years that there are a few things you can rely on, and that's a mirror. And it was a long mirror online for me. But I think in the last two, three years there's been a lot of shit that's been reported. And there's more and more of it. I'm of a completely different opinion.
The only thing I want to criticize is... Yeah, but you're also dependent on them.
In my case, every three years, Andreas Borcholdt writes about my record. Yeah, Auli Schulz has his... Why am I, very briefly, why am I dependent on the mirror?
You're stupid.
Well, because you're a media person and you need it.
What are you, man? What are you?
I'm an independent musician.
I'm independent.
You're number one artist, you're number one on this album chart this year. You always say that so gladly, I was number one. I had two television appearances, with Ina Müller and with you. My songs are never played on the radio, nowhere. You don't have a radio. But who wants to be on the radio? What's the point? No, but let's be honest, there's so much bullshit going on on the radio.
And the best thing I have to tell you, Robert Skopin called me. No, our old boss from Radio 1. Yes, our old boss from Radio 1. Robert Skopin, the program boss, great guy, we don't want to say anything. Greetings. again the story of the podcast and radio 1, some big event. I played a festival there.
They wanted to invite me to talk about how we both started back then at radio 1 with our podcast and tell a little bit of our success story. And then Robert Skopin personally called me and said, if you can't do it, I would send someone over. You record a little video and tell it. We'll let that run in the broadcasting room. It was an event of Radio 1.
And then I said to myself, Robert, I would love to do that, but as a long-time employee of yours, I miss that. But I put this card in my mouth, that a song is played by me. Because I mean, it's not like you only play great music. I listen to Radio 1 every morning. Really, for years. I'm a loyal Radio 1 listener. And when a record came out, I thought, yes, they can play a song once.
It's not that bad. I haven't heard a single song from me. And then I said to Robert, you know that I do everything for Radio 1, but without wanting to open up a fatherhood, but you could have played a song once, the record was always on the first place. And Robert said, yes, I agree with you, Olli, I'm also surprised, I'm also surprised, I can guess why that wasn't done.
Probably the new music director doesn't like me or something. I often have that with radio shows. So with radio stations. I only say 1Live or something, they don't want to do it, I don't give a shit. Have you never gotten the 1Live crown? Never. Me neither. I haven't, I will never get it either, I don't want to either. I don't give a shit. Put your 1Live crowns in your ass.
Put your 1Live crowns in your ass, deep in the ass of any new random artists who are addicted to drugs in two years and then somehow make them old on YouTube.
Olli has been drug-dependent for 10 years. 20 years. 20 years. But that's not a joke. We're not drug-dependent. That's not a joke.
Robert Kurz stopped briefly, but it wasn't meant to be that bad. I'm happy with everything the way it is.
Did you tell the story of how we asked for 250€ more per person and the ARD said we couldn't afford that. And we said we would like to earn 750€ as a number one podcast with 7 million listeners. And they were like, we have 500, it has to be enough. And then we said, okay, then we'll go to Spotify. And Spotify said, we'll pay 800. And that was the reason why we switched to Spotify.
And then Robert went through briefly. Just a few years. Just a few years. I have to say one more thing about the time text. Yes, please. I hoped that it would go off like that, because I didn't know what was going on. I called my dear friend Jochen Bittner, who used to run the dispute resort at the time. Then he is, but he has disputed. Really? I don't know.
He used to have one of my favorite categories, fight resource, where always a topic like, for example, shooting people for no reason, pro and contra. Or the earth is a disc. Or is it just a ball? That two people are just arguing with opposite positions, that's a great rubric, I think it still exists. It's called Streitressor and it was led by Jochen Bittner, who has been promoted in the meantime.
We were promoted to the United States of the United Kingdom and it's a correspondent time and I asked him via telepathic thought exchange to put out a sharp tweet in order to bring the article into circulation in certain circles that are not so inclined to the time. And that's what he did, and it worked really well.
But a lot of people believed, and I don't think they were wrong, that he just broke his cap and started a Twitter downfall. But that wasn't the case. I want to say that at this point and also take it into account. The whole thing was, of course, a previously discussed action. Really? Yes, of course. Everything else would be completely unaccountable.
We would also do something like that.
Unaccountable. Completely balabala. However, I have not yet received a reaction from Til Schweiger on my dick in time. I thought that our relationship would improve a little bit. But I think he has other concerns right now. He is currently in Til Schweiger's master class. He is currently doing acting lessons online. I think that's his current project. Sorry, I interrupted you.
No, no, no, you didn't interrupt me at all. Your text, I really read the whole impression with great joy. I only got it on Instagram, also online over time, that the people there really, what, ah. It's still going on with Germany, right? No, that's not what's going on. I also have two things on the note. First of all, we had a German punk band shortly before the summer break.
Also German punk is still a topic here. We're switching here. We're really in a very colorful show. German punk, I said that I like the Schleimkeim-Doku too much. Schleimkeim, the most interesting and best German punk band of the East, in my opinion. I haven't seen the documentary yet. Jan Heck is the director who made this documentary.
And he contacted me and sent me a link that I could watch the film. Schleimkeim Otze und die DDR von unten. A really great documentary. For everyone who is also interested in Deutschpunk. And maybe they also think East is all Nazis and so on. That's a great documentation with really hidden, interesting contemporaries from that time.
It's of course a very tragic story, what happened to Otze, who then murdered his father and came to the closed ones. It's a sad story too, but to see these people from that time.
show a completely different facet of the GDR and show what kind of great people lived there, what kind of, let's say, dreamers, day thieves, but also great artists were there and people with a great look and to hear these people talk, that's really great. Jan Heck also wrote to me that he really put his own private capital and everything in there to make this documentary.
You would also find them really great, I'm sure.
I would love to take a look. Thank you for the tip.
Yes, I can ask Jan if I can send you the link. It will definitely interest you. I'm also reading the book right now, I'm almost there, there's also a great book about it. And Orze und die DDR von unten by Jan Heck is already available for order as a DVD and it's worth watching the film. There is definitely also a streaming option or something. Support that.
He really put a lot of love into this documentary and told the story of Otze, who is a tragic figure, but I think he was also someone who really burned. And many thanks to Jan Heck again for allowing me to watch this film.
And when we're talking about culture tips, let me just add one that you'll also like. I heard it in the holidays, it was a big podcast summer anyway, and I have a lot of great podcast tips that I'll leave out here in the next few weeks, because I've heard a lot. And a podcast that is very interesting, very exciting, very thoughtful, is the podcast Eisernes Schweigen, Das Attentat meines Vaters.
A WDR podcast, you can hear it in the ARD Audiothek. I'll write it down for you. I think we're in between. Are we in the ARD Audiothek with Fest und Flausch? I think so, right? Yes, I'm sure. I can't imagine, so can the ARD Audiothek take us in there too? Probably. So our colleagues from the ARD, more precisely from the WDR, produced it.
Traudl Bünger is the author, a fantastic author, who I have funnily met at two or three events and have talked to for many years, ten years ago. And all of a sudden I look in the ARD Audiothek and think, Traudl Bünger, wait a minute, how? I've heard something from her for the first time in a long time. Ignorant, because of course she did a lot of other things that I just didn't notice.
But this podcast is about the fact that the father of Traudl Bünger, the author of this podcast, committed an attack in the 60s, a right-wing extreme bomb attack in South Tyrol with a dead man. And sat in prison for it.
The father had a very civil life and I think he worked in the Nobel Dynamite factory in Cologne, but was a right-wing extremist in a strong connection and his daughter, Traudl Bünger, Yes, this is where the family secret comes into play, because if something like this happens in the family, my father is a right-wing extremist and took a bomb attack as a young man and sat in prison for it.
That's not something you like to tell yourself at Christmas with a cut-up goose, especially not in a family that... Where there are otherwise not so many right-wing extremists, but the daughters can think straight. And a really very exciting podcast, which is both this committed crime, how it came to it, but also the processing and above all the relationship of Traudl, her sister ...
to her parents and especially to her father. And that's really, especially with regard to everyone somehow in the family, someone who is too dependent on Telegram and somehow a bit crazy. And that's really an exciting podcast. It's really. Oh, that sounds good. Iron Silence, the attack of my father by Traudl Bünger. Several parts can be heard directly.
And if you listen through it, it's already Sunday again and then we're back there.
Then we're back. Exactly. One last thing I would like to tell you. I played in Jamel last weekend, Rock den Förster, the festival, in the Nazi village, about which there are already some documentation that you can look at.
In Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. It's a small village and the story is told very briefly.
17 years ago, the Lohmeier family moved away from Hamburg. An artist couple. And she writes, he did different things, painted, made music. Very sympathetic people, but also very selfish people. That has to be said, who really... The second half of her life on the country wanted to live who have enough of St. Pauli have lived on St.
Pauli I have me with him with Horst Lohmeier top type really have me long talked about St.
Pauli and they are 17 years ago to Jamel pulled and wanted there the second half of her life in peace begin until they then had to determine that it is simply a Nazi village is what also at that time is growing more and more and they are surrounded by Nazis from folk groupings that also when you I think I showed you the entrance sign
The information box is really full of the worst right-wing extremist memes.
The worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst, worst. And then this festival came about, which is now by Umberto, who is also the manager of Turbostaat, KKT from the booking agency, I think he works there.
And he leads it with a lot of love, that's really his baby there. And the Lohmeyer family does it once a year in this village and it's really... It's the only family there. The only family that's not Nazis. You can say it so bluntly. And they're doing this festival for two days. Played a lot of bands.
But there were already, it was told to me by hand, so many artists who were there, where the Lohmeyers also said, no, we don't want you to play here. I'm not going to say names, but names of people you know where it's good to perform for the image. I didn't hesitate for a second and I also had a great performance. There were really great people there.
Above all, it's a small festival, 3,500 people have it in the garden. It's going to be in the garden of the Lohmeyers. They have a small house there and really fence to fence the sister of one of the Nazi leaders lives there.
Someone, a real evil neo-Nazi, who was already very angry in the 90s, I don't have to say his name now, who is now also 50 and all of them also have children and they then of course celebrate the summer festival at the same time. The rouleaux are all down from all the houses and you drive into a street, it's a dead end, this street. And that's where the Lohmeyers live.
And then this stage is set up for two days. We played together with the Fantastic Four. Adam Angst was there the next day. Who else played there? Querbeat was a band. From Cologne! Greetings! From Cologne, exactly, from Cologne. They played there too. They also did a mega show. And it was just so awesome. It reminded me of my early festivals. There was no commercial institution.
No fucking Red Bull stand. None of those things that belong to big festivals and probably have to belong to them. I also played in a highfield a week before. It was also very, very great. Oh, the burning ferris wheel in the highfield. Is that always true? Ey, I went to the stage, you know what I said, yesterday the huge wheel was on fire, today the stage is on fire here. How did that happen?
Like the stage manager, somehow the face fell down. But the people all thought it was funny. Fortunately, there were a few injured, yes, but no one died. And sometimes you have to see such bad things with violin humor. And he also had a great performance. But back to Jamel and then I talked to Birgit and Horst, so to speak, who talk to Lohmeiers. The backstage room is in their living room.
You're in the living room and sit around there and then really good people do it. I've met people I haven't seen in years. Ole von, he used to have the Rudogummi-Fraktion, which founded RGF Catering. Do you know Ole? I even know him, yes.
Yes, I know him.
Yes, a great guy too. And he mixed vegan whiskey sour. And then you just had a great evening, he played. And I'll tell you one thing, for a while, when I was 18, I also hung out in an antifa, because it's an important social thing.
And even if sometimes, now I have to say it briefly, sometimes I'm annoyed that people are attacked in the left scene, sometimes too early, because it's always just a bit of the curse of this ... On the left, an autonomous scene where you're first in your own line of sight and accuse people that they're not cool enough or that they don't gender well enough or something.
But I'll tell you one thing, then a guy came up to me and said, do you want to sign a poster at our stand, at our Antifa stand? They've already signed Deichkind. And then I went there with him. And then they showed me all the anti-war stickers and said, do you feel like having some of them? I said, yes, I want this and that.
And then a little punk came in and cut these stickers out of a folder made with love and gave them to me. And then they all stood there and I thought, that's just such an important thing for young people not to slip away. Also in such places and such villages where you are surrounded by Nazis and people who somehow...
have a limited horizon, I'll just say it now, and try to present themselves as something better with folk and racial doctrine. And I think, I also said that on stage, the poor children of these Nazis will hopefully realize at some point that they are growing up in an environment of hatred and at some point break through these chains and leave.
And it is so important that there is something like that. And that really moved me the way she gave me the stickers. I signed it and thought, man, even if you get older and maybe no longer conform to everything, it's still something that I stand for, which means a lot to me.
For young people who are orientated towards villages, it is so important that there is something like an Antifa, that there is a left-wing scene. Because you also have a great social community there. And that really moved me so much that I talked about it for a long time on the bus under my bed. How important it was that we did it now and so on and so forth.
And a very warm greeting to the Lumayas. It was a mega evening. And I promised on stage, Jan, I said I would tell Jan about it in the show, and I think we'll get back together here. And everyone cheered. And I think, I don't know if the Lohmeyers want to talk about it, they decide that in the end. But I would say we have to get back together at some point.
Yes, maybe I'll discover one or the other opposing spot in my bourgeois heart and maybe it will still work out one day. You will like that, you will really like that.
That's a great thing.
So all the people who are new here have now also noticed how politically we stand. Olli is the left-wing extremist of the two of us and I am more of the bourgeois conservative. He's a bit like Hauser and Kienzle in the past. And in the end we meet in the middle, give each other our hair and say thank you Spotify for giving us this today. How long do we have now? Oh shit, four hours.
No, we have about 90 minutes left. Four hours, we'll cut it all down to 1.30.
That's right, yes.
We should now actually see this as a scale. But for the fact that we only do it once a week, we also give people a little more. So I still have a few topics on here right now. Me too. I still have animals that have made it. We still have to talk about the case El Hotzo, how he died shortly after the attack.
You have to tell me all that. That's really unbelievable. So we have next week on Sunday at Fest und Flausche to discuss a lot again. I can promise that a lot of media gossip will probably be collected in Cologne this week. Now they all come back from the holidays slowly. I really get a truck full of awesome gossip from Cologne every day.
One more thing, if someone knows how the current contract status of the Heavytones is, will they play Heavytones in the new broadcast of Stefan Raab or do they have to stay with Sebastian Puffpaff? And if they leave Sebastian Puffpaff and go back to Raab, which band will play with the Heavytones?
Does this have an effect on parts of the Rundfunk Tanzorchester or must Caroline Kebekos and her band fear? And what about Elton? Was ist mit Elton? Wer hat das Sorgerecht für Elton? Das sind alles Dinge, wo wird das denn sonst besprochen? Wenn nicht bei Fest und Flauschig nächste Woche hier. Bei Spotify und bei Apple Plus und bei Apple Music und bei RTL Plus und bei Podimo in der ARD Audiothek.
Im Arsch von Strichert, David Precht, sind wir wahrscheinlich auch verfügbar. Man weiß es nicht. Man weiß es nicht. Man weiß es nicht.
Guys, put a little nackt-snack under your foreskin, if you have one. Foreskin or nackt-snack? Yes, both. You have to have both. This is a really great experience. Thank you for listening. I would say that was the first show after the summer break.
It was a solid one plus, I would say. It was a very good show. You performed well today. It's always important that you praise yourself at the end of the show. This podcast was presented to you by... From two egomaniac freaks who have learned nothing else and have to do this professionally now. What's the name of the show now? You had a title before, unfortunately I forgot. Germany is Coming.
Germany is Coming. Or finally again podcast. The podcast with mistakes. I don't know if we should go out so transparent, because it's rather cool if we play the broad mass now, that we suggest errorlessness, like the pope. We don't make mistakes.
Lachschnecke under the foreskin.
Das ist vielleicht ein bisschen zu spitz, wenn Familien abschrecken. Und Nacktschnecke. Die Nacktschnecke kommt. It's a bit too sexual. I don't know exactly how to make an algorithm with Podimo. What is Podimo? I don't know. Podimo is actually a word that a proctologist says to you with a very serious face. That's Bavarian. It means, I like your butt. Podimo.
I like your butt. I like your butt. Yeah, the show is called... Deutschland kommt.
Die Nacktschnecke kommt. Die Nacktschnecken kommt zurück nach Deutschland. Die Nacktschnecken. Die Nacktschnecke. Zieht ihr was an, Nacktschnecke? Ricardo Simonetti.
Ihr werdet das sehen, wenn ihr die Sendung anklickt.
Genau. Fest und Flauschig. Jetzt immer sonntags. Powered by Spotify. Der coolste grüne Riese. All time forever Spotify. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Sogar Neil Young ist zurückgekommen. So geil ist Spotify. Genau, Jonny Mitchell auch. Aber auch alle anderen tun uns leid und deswegen sind wir jetzt auch überall anders. Und so ist es nun mal.
Das hier ist der größte Podcast Deutschlands mit den kleinsten, kleinsten Persönlichkeiten, die verfügbar waren. Die kleinste gemeinsame Nacktschnecke. Die kleinste gemeinsame Nacktschnecke.
Hiermit eingeloggt. Tschüss, bis nächste Woche. Habt eine schöne Woche und wir sind wieder da. Ab jetzt geht es wieder los, Leute. Tschüss.