From the diary of JJ Voskuil: the writer would rather be a farmer

Nowadays you fly the flag if you have managed to get a permanent jobsomewhere, but there has also been a different time, with other people. In anunforgettable scene from Dutch literature, ex-teacher Maarten Koning returnshome after a job interview at a scientific institute. His wife Nicolien turnsoff the vacuum cleaner and Maarten tells her that there is a good chance thathe will get the job in question. Nicolien reacts agitated and doesn’t likethat their lives will change like that. “I was so hoping you wouldn’t,” shesays. “I loved it so much together.” She calls the work ‘a compromise’ and hadhoped that Maarten would not be tempted. “I hoped we’d always stay togetherand die together.” ‘That is still possible,’ replies Maarten. Nicole: ‘No! Notif you’re at work all day! I hated it when you were a teacher!’ There may bequite a bit of pathos throughout the scene (Nicolien also sheds a tear), it isbeautiful and penetrating. Because of that unusual contradiction between loveand work, but also because it is so at odds with what just about everypolitical party or emancipatory movement will claim, namely that someone wouldby definition be wise to throw oneself fully into the labor market. That iswhere it can be found, that is where the realization takes place. It is alsovery strong that Nicolien and Maarten, as you will discover later, actuallyfind it a bit indecent to work. They are not the scum of the ledge, the scumof the ledge rolls up their sleeves.

Evaporated time

The above scene is, you probably already noticed it long and wide, from thebeginning of The desk , the 5000-page series by JJ Voskuil (1926-2008),about the troubled career of his alter ego Maarten Koning, published between1996 and 2000. Voskuil started writing to it after his retirement because henoticed that not only had his work been meaningless (as he had alwayssuspected), but also that the thirty years he had spent at the AmsterdamMeertens Institute in the Netherlands in no time at all. were evaporating; nosooner had he closed the door behind him than they had already forgotten himthere in the office. You’d The desk , which is written in a pure andmeasured, but extremely accurate Dutch, in that sense can be seen as a form ofrehabilitation, as a stylish revenge against the anonymization of the work: Imay not have really existed then, but here I am fully yes. Lousje, Voskuil’swife, was finally proud of her husband.

shot

After Voskuil’s death, a few more books by his hand were published. Striking(and spicy) was, for example Within the skin (2009), the novel that Voskuilhad already completed in the 1960s, but which was initially resolutelyrejected by his publisher Geert van Oorschot (‘A failure, annoying, nagging,lukewarm water on a filter with coffee already drawn off’).

But certainly in a quantitative sense, a work like Within the skin , inwhich Voskuil wrote about an existential crisis, revenge and adultery, just asmall harbinger of what was to come with the diaries. Voskuil considered ittoo painful to share it with the readers during his lifetime, and now hiswidow has given the green light. Voskuil kept a diary for a lifetime, and atotal of seven thick volumes will appear in the coming years – who knows theextent of The desk superlative.

At the start of almost a man , the first part just published, Voskuil is aboy of barely thirteen. Coincidentally or not, you soon read about activitiesthat seem to suit him a lot better than his future official work, namelyfarming. In the heart of the war, in 1943, he worked for a while on the landin Grolloo, Drenthe. He has to work (‘Saturday 7 August. Walked behind theharrow all day’), but he doesn’t complain, at least not on paper. And thememory of Voskuil who at the very end of his life said in an interview on TVthat he would rather have become a farmer immediately pops up in your head.

Good environment

Was not ‘someone like Voskuil’, someone with a good set of brains, coming froma good environment and with, for example, a father who was editor-in-chief ofa newspaper, more or less condemned to an existence as an intellectual, so aprisoner of his origin and his (or other people’s) expectations? Because thatintellectual ability, especially if he interferes in the Amsterdam studentlife, soon determines his identity and thus also his future. Enthusiastic (butjust as timid and capricious) he discusses with his friends, i.e. the peoplewho later became the cast of the On closer inspection (1963) would form.About writers, philosophers, about the meaning and nature of science and about– it was fashionable at that time for Du Perron and Ter Braak, among others,who died in the war – their ‘character’, that with which you relate to a worldin which you had to make the most difficult choices.

Had to make, because Voskuil is located in almost a man in the luxury of nothaving to choose, refuse, or be heroic at all. The diary covers a periodwhich, as with many young people, is mainly dominated by theory andorientation: you read, listen and watch, discuss this with others, are for oragainst the system or that war… and in the meantime you are faced with cornerof the working society to wait with angelic patience for the moment when youhave to participate.

Voskuil here blows up a balloon, filled with vain hope, before our very eyes.He almost exclusively writes down arguments against instead of for, measureshis friends but also himself psychologically very skillfully, saws at his ownchair legs, in fact reasoning himself incapacitated for the many years of workthat will take place after the award of the degree. follow. On the last pageshe has become a teacher in Groningen, something that is miles away from hispreviously noted ideal, namely that there is really nothing more decent thangetting drunk on your own.

damn dude

It is also remarkable how negatively he relates to the majority of literature.Hardly anyone is good (‘I can’t read Multatuli because I think he’s a rottenguy, right down to his punctuation’) and very seldom people really cheer.Literature to him was a grindstone, not a diamond to admire. But even Voskuil,a skeptic down to his punctuation marks, had to admit in the early 1950s that_The evenings_ is a fantastic book. He has to read it a few times to get thehang of it, but oh well. His strict attitude may have prevented him frombecoming a critic, for example, after his studies in Dutch language andliterature. Because also in a book like I am not me (2014), the posthumouslypublished collection of articles and critiques, Voskuil hardly takes anyone’sattention.

So he is almost a man here, but also almost a writer. Because he may be assharp as a knife, he clearly still has some big strides to make until he wasthe writer who a few years later On closer inspection could write, which canbe regarded as an undisputed masterpiece. Voskuil’s diary is, at least in thisearly period, something like a starter, a meccano box of which you cannot yetfully imagine what can be built with it. almost a man is usuallyentertaining, sometimes long-winded or impossible to follow and, especiallyfor Voskuilians, sometimes downright exciting, for example when you read thatthe writer already knew as a teenager where the boundaries of his ‘fiction’were. No, nothing not a highly fictional novel with fantastic figures andmythological references, not an ode to the imagination, but a novel ‘about aboy my age, his difficulties and problems’. Voskuil ‘could put everything init’. “As the idea matures, I’ll try to work it out, not to publish it, but formyself, because that seems like a great satisfaction to me.” Or if you readabout his declaration of love to ‘the anecdote’, in other words the insertionof purely descriptive text parts in a novel or story. It could be the key towhat we consider to be the most underrated parts of On closer inspection or_The desk_ to consider, namely the parts in which the frictions betweenfriends or colleagues do not predominate, but nature, walks and travels. As areader, you can do whatever you want with those parts, and you can interpretthem the way you want. Something like this may sound like a simple writinggrip (just as his friends react skeptically to something as accessible as theanecdote), but it is actually very difficult to do well. And besides, they area more than welcome change from the oxygen-poor Voskuilian scheming indoors,whether that was in the lecture hall, the pub, one’s own home or in theoffice. As a big cycling skeptic, I can remember descriptions of cycling tripsthrough the polder that made me think: I should go and have a look there. Andnot because of the lyricism. Shouldn’t those neutral passages be used to whatVoskuil so badly missed in the rest of (described) life: a total lack ofthreat, of direction?

There is, of course, an ironic limitation to a Voskuil diary, especially whenit is as extensive as this one. Because while the diary of another writermight shed new light on his respected oeuvre (oh, did he graft that characteronto that person, etc.), with a diary like this you (often) only have thecarcass of the novels in hand. Because Voskuil worked very autobiographicallyand promoted diaries (and for The desk also reports of Meertens meetings) tovery dramatic novels for the good listener. Who knows, the real answer can beread in a next part of the diary, but for the time being it seems that Voskuilfirst has to suffer, actually had to be weighed down in practice by the burdenof routine work, the bankruptcy of friendship or the desire for someone else’swife to pupate from a writer who didn’t want to be published to one who did.The already foreseen hell had become reality.

Also read: I have life at its wits ‘ end; Conversation with JJ Voskuil

With this provider you get an internet subscription with Netflix for 19 euros per month | My guide

mining coDo you like to watch linear TV and Netflix? With various providersyou can also activate a Netflix subscription with your televisionsubscription. Is that cheaper than paying for both services separately? Whichprovider are you best off with? And are there any cheaper alternatives?Mijntelco.be will find out.

In collaboration with Mijntelco 23-09-22, 13:05

Latest update: 13:28 Source: Mytelco.be

A basic Netflix subscription costs 8.99 euros per month. Combining such asubscription with an internet subscription is perfectly possible. The totalpackage is often cheaper. Below we list the options offered by providersOrange, Proximus and Telenet. To calculate the sum of the providersubscription and the streaming subscription, we assume bundles with internetand TV with decoder.

Also read: These are the cheapest subscriptions for internet and TV

Orange TV decoder including Netflix: 41.99 euros per month

Orange offers a Love Pack with fast internet (download speed 150 Mbps) andOrange TV for 59 euros per month. The 59 euro one-time start-up costs are notincluded in this. If you take GoPlus in the same formula, the subscriptioncosts less: 33 euros. With GoPlus you can text and call unlimited, and you get11 GB of data per month. With GoPlus, the start-up costs are also free. Thatmeans that you pay 26 euros less subscription and no 59 euros start-up costs.That formula with, for example, Netflix basic (8.99 euros) added, will costyou 41.99 euros per month.

Proximus TV decoder including Netflix: 58.98 euros per month

If we opt for a bundle with Internet and TV with a decoder at Proximus, theprovider proposes Flex as the cheapest solution. The first three months youpay 49.99 euros monthly, then 63.99 euros every month. With this formula youcan surf unlimited with a download speed of 100 Mbps, you have a TV with adecoder and you get My ePress. My ePress gives you unlimited access to HetLaatste Nieuws Digitaal or Le Soir. Because that offer is a promotion, you donot have to pay the 59 euro installation costs. If you take out a subscriptionto Netflix basic, you pay 58.98 euros for the first month.

Telenet TV decoder including Netflix: 53.99 euros per month

At Telenet, the Easy Internet bundle with Telenet TV Iconic is currently thecheapest formula for combining internet with TV with decoder. The price tag:the first three months 45 euros and the following months 60.85 euros permonth. The package offers a download volume of 150 GB with a maximum downloadspeed of 100 Mbps and digital TV. You get Play Sports Open and Streamz forfree for 14 days. The activation of 50 euros is free in that promotion. If youadd a Netflix basic subscription, it will cost you 53.99 euros for the firstmonth.

Cheaper alternative: streaming online

If you don’t want a TV with a decoder, but you do want to watch movies, seriesor documentaries from the streaming services, that’s also possible, read herehow you can replace your decoder with an app.

In order to stream online, it is necessary that you have more than sufficientor unlimited surfing volume and that your download speed is sufficiently high,especially if you stream a lot or if several family members each stream theirfavorite movie or series at the same time.

Orange online streaming including Netflix: 18.99 euros per month

Love Duo with GO Light from Orange is currently the cheapest formula to streamonline. Due to a promotion, you pay a subscription fee of 10 euros for thefirst six months, then 46 euros monthly. There are no activation costs. Youenjoy unlimited internet at a download speed of 100 Mbps. In addition, youalso get 150 calling minutes, unlimited text messages and 2 GB data per SIMcard. With the Netflix basic subscription, it will cost you 18.99 euros forthe first month.

Billions in tax cuts and investment to help UK economy

The plans cost the Truss administration billions in both expenditure and lostrevenue: £45 billion from the tax cuts, for example, and £60 billion for aprice cap on energy costs. But the new prime minister is convinced that themoney can be earned back if the economy picks up.

Economic recovery was the most important file waiting for Truss when shesucceeded fellow party member Johnson at the beginning of this month. Costs ofliving and energy have soared, inflation shoots past 10 percent. In varioussectors, the British expressed their dissatisfaction through strikes.

Trickle-down Economy

With some delay due to the mourning period for Queen Elizabeth, the cabinetnow announces what it wants to do. It is striking that the choice has beenmade to help higher income groups in particular: the highest tax bracket of 45percent for incomes above 150,000 pounds will disappear, a bonus ceiling forbankers will be scrapped and the rich in particular will have more money leftover now that an increase in social charges is not going ahead. This groupbenefits even the most from the stop on energy costs.

Truss is fully committed to this trickle-down economy, the idea that if therich have more money, everyone benefits through their spending. For example,the cabinet argues that by removing the transfer tax for homes under £250,000,homeowners will spend more on a coat of paint or a new kitchen.

“There are too many obstacles for companies,” said Minister Kwarteng at thepresentation of his ‘mini-budget’ in the House of Commons. “We need a newapproach, focused on growth.”

UK correspondent Arjen van der Horst:

“Truss’ predecessor Boris Johnson was difficult to pigeonhole economically. Hewas in favor of tax cuts and deregulation, but also increased spending andleveling out by putting more money into the impoverished central and north ofEngland ( leveling up ).

At Truss, the economic course is crystal clear: these are all measures thatmainly benefit the very rich. But Truss has indicated that she has no problemwith that. Truss believes that her predecessors focused too much on wealthdistribution; she would rather grow the economy as a whole.”

Labor is disgraceful that the money mainly flows to the rich in society. Thattheir money would seep through to the rest of society, economy spokesmanReeves called an outdated idea. “The Prime Minister and Treasury Secretary aretwo desperate gamblers who continue to play a losing hand.”

Remarkably, there was also criticism from Truss’s own party that thegovernment has not calculated the plans to see what the effect will be on theeconomy. According to Truss, there was no time for that, but MP Mel Stride,chairman of the Treasury Committee, believes that in times of mistrust thereshould be more openness.

“If markets are nervous about government bonds and our currency is underpressure, it’s time for more transparency. It must be made clear that the taxcuts or other measures are fiscally justified.”

UK correspondent Arjen van der Horst:

“Prime Minister Truss has often portrayed herself as the next Thatcher, evenin the way she dressed. One aspect of her policies is not so Thatcherian: hermeasures create a huge hole in the budget in times of high inflation. Thatcherwas a fiscal conservative who prioritized lowering inflation and reducing thebudget deficit before cutting taxes.”

Critics warn that the bill for this package could fall on future generations.It is still unclear exactly how high this will be: Kwarteng gave few detailsabout how the cabinet wants to finance everything.

“Never before has a government borrowed so much and explained so little,”Reeves said of the plans. “What does the minister have to hide?”

The financial markets also reacted hesitantly. The British pound fell furtheragainst the dollar, to its lowest point in 37 years. The value of short-termgovernment bonds is “sinking like a brick,” Reuters news agency reported, withprobably the largest single-day loss in value since 2009.

Our son is going to be very important

Laurent Simons. Photo: Videoland

You’d only have one, a child prodigy like Laurent Simons. Your family is quiteupside down. That becomes clear when you watch the documentary Laurent, thechild prodigy on Videoland. It can be seen from today.

He is 12 years old, that Flemish-Dutch gifted boy with an IQ of 145+. Incomparison, the IQ of the historical scientist Albert Einstein is estimated at160. But whether that was also true when the born German was 12… Anyway,Laurent is blessed with an incredible brain. Brain that allowed him tocomplete groups 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 in eighteen months at primary school.

Subway watched the documentary Laurent, the child prodigy in advance Lookat the Tube. In this column Erik Jonk discusses new and striking TV programsfrom the regular broadcasters and streaming services.

Laurent quickly to gymnasium and university

At the age of six, the eloquent Laurent Simons started grammar school. An agewhen you and I just started writing ‘tree, rose and fish’. Laurent didn’t, healso raced through his secondary school days and had his master’s degree inphysics at the University of Antwerp two months ago.

Years ago, father Alexander and mother Lydia Simons did not realize that theirchild was special. They ran three thriving dental practices, which is whyLaurent grew up with his grandfather and grandmother. The grandparents saw:our grandchild has certain gifts. The dental practices have since been sold,giving Alexander and Lydia time to mentor Laurent – ​​who lives with themagain – and ‘manage his career’. Videoland was allowed to come and take anexclusive look at the family. That exclusive is not too bad, because numerousmedia were already let in by the Simons family. Anyway, for this documentarythere was no other camera available.

Parents pronounced on Videoland

Said parents do not mince words in the Videoland documentary about their son.”What Laurent has done so far is unprecedented, that has never happenedbefore,” says mother Lydia. And father Alexander, who by the way looks a lotlike the smart boy: “I think he will become very important for humanity.” Ajournalist from the Belgian The last news remembers a first phone call fromDad. “He phoned very excitedly that he wanted to tell us about his 6-year-oldson. I met two very proud parents.”

Laurent child prodigy documentaryVideolandAlexander,Laurent and Lydia Simons. Photo: Videoland

That might also be what rubs in a bit Laurent, the child prodigy. ‘Leavethat child’, you quickly remember. However, there have already been plenty ofpeople who have expressed their opinion of the family – without ever meetingthem – on social media. But more importantly: when it comes to studying,Laurent wants it, especially himself. If he has to exercise for the necessarymovement, he needs a push (and he doesn’t have the ball feeling, for example).To get up early? Not for him. Ten or eleven in the morning, he thinks that’sfine. Studying for three to four hours is also enough.

Giftedness in the Netherlands

More than 400,000 people live in the Netherlands with some form of giftedness.However, there are big differences, according to experts. There are many moregifted people who can achieve something than gifted people who actually do it.In the case of giftedness, science assumes an IQ of 130+.

Laurent doesn’t know why he is a child prodigy

We see in the documentary that Laurent is giving a master’s speech at Tel AvivUniversity. Despite his age, he is already getting offers from companies fromall over the world, as he is now known. Just a reminder, he is 12 years old.Laurent finds the term gifted, after he must have heard it thousands of times,but nothing. “I especially think I am unique, I am just myself.” And: “I don’tknow why I’m so smart. But I find it flattering to be associated with nameslike Einstein.”

Laurent child prodigyVideolandLaurentSimons. Photo: Robin Utrecht

It’s best within the family. A child that is smarter than the parents, muchsmarter, that is an unusual situation. He may take all the opportunities heneeds, but must not lose sight of the fact that there are other things aswell. For example, horseback riding, gaming and playing with grandpa, grandma,nephews and nieces.

What will the child prodigy do next?

Completing that physics degree at the age of 12 sounds wonderful. But whatwill Laurent actually do with it? Brace yourself: he wants to achieveimmortality. And if that doesn’t work, at least extend human lives. Beautiful:“That children no longer have to miss their grandfathers and grandmothers.”Did I mention this boy is 12 years old?

The documentary is not necessarily special, because this striking scientisthas been in the picture was standing. But it is all very interesting.

Laurent, the child prodigy can be seen on Videoland from today.

Number of cans out of 5: 3.5.

The future repeats itself in the Evoluon

The greatest crisis of the moment is: thinking that this time is a crisistime. Those who are seriously ready for lighter thoughts can go to Eindhoven,because the Evoluon will open again to the public – for the past more thanthirty years there have only been closed conferences.

An exhibition with an uplifting message marks the reopening. Title:RetroFuture. About: ‘The history of the future.’

But first, just go back to the past. The Evoluon has been an iconic buildingsince 1966. It stands like an immense UFO in the west of Eindhoven. It was agift to the Philips City of Light in honor of the company’s 75th anniversary.It would show how technology can make life ever lighter and more beautiful.

At the same time, Philips also turned the Evoluon into a showroom. In keepingwith the zeitgeist of the time, the company displayed a bright future full oftechnological progress here. Astronauts made one space trip after another;millions of people were glued to the television that had penetrated almostevery living room.

The Evoluon received millions of visitors who could already play with newtechnological discoveries for the home. Until Philips sank into a crisis inthe course of the 1980s; the Evoluon closed its doors to the general public in1989.

The new Evoluon, which will receive the public again from next Sunday, willcontinue where the previous one left off. “It is our duty to be optimisticabout the future,” says artist and philosopher Koert van Mensvoort, thedriving force behind the resurrection.

To be seen in RetroFuture (bottom right of the photo): the car annex timemachine from the film Back to the Future. Photo Jip Barth

The somewhat naive belief in progress from the sixties is now out of thequestion. In the exhibitions, the Evoluon wants to tell stories that aretimeless, that provoke thought.

Pessimism is paralyzing

To feed discussions, optimist Van Mensvoort gives some examples of pessimismthat later turned out to be unfounded: „Aristotle wrote 2,300 years ago: ‘Thecities are becoming too big, and therefore unmanageable.’ Church FatherTertullian already warned in the third century AD about the danger ofovercrowding. In 1968, Paul Ehrlich warned of mass starvation deaths, in hisbook The Population Bomb. What do we see now? Globally, overweight mortalityhas increased enormously and hunger has decreased.”

To which Van Mensvoort also adds a disclaimer: “Of course humanity hasenormous problems to overcome: climate change, pandemics, food shortages inparts of the world, wars. The point is: pessimism paralyzes and breeds fear.This undermines the development of new knowledge and creativity.”

The opening exhibition is therefore one with a mission, according to theaccompanying texts: ‘to make visitors future-proof’, because if the past showsone pattern, then this: ‘The future is constantly repeating itself.’ And aboveall: ‘It wasn’t better before!’

Simple, unambiguous stories are in RetroFuture not told. None: look howLeonardo da Vinci designed airplanes over 500 years ago! Da Vinci is notmissing in the new Evoluon, but it is placed in the context of many successesand failures in the history of aviation.

A few days before the opening, the exhibition is still under construction.Curator Mieke Gerritzen gives a tour. “This building is overwhelming,” shesays on the ground floor, in the middle of a circular structure, capped by animmense dome.

How do you show stories that are timeless in this futuristic building? Aboutfear of the future. About wild predictions, which more often than not havecome true. About crazy finds, which, in retrospect, turned out not to be socrazy.

Gerritzen: „The movie 2001: A Space Odyssey by Stanley Kubrick gave me theidea to build several tunnels under the dome of the Evoluon. They provideseparate worlds, different perspectives within the immense space of thebuilding as a whole.”

Click for full photo:

1968 advertisement for cleaning agent Lestoil: ‘Women of the future will makethe moon a cleaner place to live.’

Illustration from 1930: ‘Beeldbeelden’, in an album full of futuristicexpectations, published by the German margarine manufacturer Echte Wagner.

Kubrick’s tunnel is a classic scene from cinema history: astronaut Dave Bowman(played by Keir Dullea) travels through time, surrounded by hallucinatory raysthat travel faster than light. In her tunnels Gerritzen shows ‘eternal dreams’and ‘timeless challenges’.

For thousands of years, scientists and artists have allowed their imaginationsto express what Gerritzen has incorporated into the names of the tunnels. Theywant to ‘fly like a bird’, ‘never work again’, ‘establish a paradise onearth’, ‘know everything’, ‘live forever’.

The tunnel over the flying person is designed as a passenger plane, includinga screen in each seat. An entertaining selection of film fragments is shown,in which people move through the air like birds and/or rockets.

The mix of visual styles is especially fascinating: from clumsy cutting andpasting from films from a century ago to recent high-tech animations. In themeantime, if you look out of the small windows from your airplane seat, youwill see a colorful collection of flying objects flash past, including witcheson broomsticks.

Devil’s pact

The exhibition not only shows future images from the past, in photography,painting, design and film fragments, ten artists also show new work.

Ancient is the dream of knowledge that makes supreme. See the classic Fausttheme: a diabolical pact, a deadly attempt to know more than God. But new isthe depiction of this, by the American artist Michael Mandiberg, who hasprinted large parts of the English Wikipedia and compiled it in 7,471 books.

The Dutch artist Rob Schröder made a haunted house with historical film imagesof disasters on one wall and opposite life-size portraits of a powerfulcompany. Among them: Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Marine Le Pen and Kim Jong-un.Anyone looking at the images automatically joins dark circles.

This narrative exhibition is more than just looking and reading. Conflictingviews constantly provoke surprise and discussion. It is also a realexperience, especially on the highest ring under the dome of the Evoluon,which has been set up as a funfair. With laser tag, where you try to touchorgans in the body of a pig. Or in a time machine that lets visitors floatthrough the air, looking through VR glasses, and letting them get away fromspace and time.

For the time being, the exhibition is intended for six months. And then? Overthe next ten years, the Evoluon will serve as a breeding ground for NextNature center for research and events in the triangle of nature, technologyand design, headed by Koert van Mensvoort.

“The first two or three years we present starters,” he says. “The main coursewill follow in 2025. Then we will go on a journey with Spaceship Earth. Afterall, the big question at the moment is: how do we take our planet one stepfurther in a fascinating journey of discovery? Keeping in mind the wonderfulquote from Canadian philosopher and researcher Marshall McLuhan: There are nopassengers on Spaceship Earth. We are all crew. ‘ ”

Our 5 TV tips for the coming days (from Saturday 24/9/2022)

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Home __Tv __ Our 5 TV tips for the coming days (from Saturday24/9/2022)

Our 5 TV tips for the coming days (from Saturday 24/9/2022)

A guest in the monastery

TESTIMONY • Actor Thomas Cammaert, known for The Passion, Ramses and Wieis de Mol, is a guest of the Premonstratensians in the Abbey of Berne inHeeswijk Dinther for three days. It is the oldest surviving monastic order inthe Netherlands. The Flemish Thomas grew up in a Catholic family. When hediscovered that he liked men, he no longer felt welcome in the church. Howdoes he settle in monastic life in Brabant? In the garden of the abbey heenters into a conversation with Abbot Denis Hendrickx and asks whether thebrothers in his abbey can be openly gay.

Cloister guests, Saturday 24 September 2022, 4.03pm-4.30pm, NPO2

‘Remaining women’

DOCU • Many women in China are also ambitious. They study and have a greatcareer. But if they are still unmarried at 27, they no longer count.Filmmakers Shosh Shlam and Hilla Medalia follow three successful Chinese womenin Beijing: 34-year-old lawyer Qiu Hua Mei, 28-year-old radio host Xu Min and36-year-old assistant professor Gai Qi in Beijing. Despite their successfulcareers, these women are seen as ‘sheng nu’, a derogatory term for ‘leftover’women.

2Doc: Leftover women, Saturday September 24, 2022, 11:54 pm-1:18 am,NPO2

People with disabilities’

CONVERSATION • What does it mean to have a disability and what does thatsay about our humanity? Writer and researcher Jacqueline Kool deals with thesequestions. The outside world often has prejudices about people withdisabilities: they would have a difficult life, there is a lot that is notpossible. Jacqueline Kool takes a stand against these prejudices. She choosesto say yes to her life in an electric wheelchair, and everything that comeswith it. Of course it is sometimes difficult, but isn’t that true foreveryone? And what do we really know about the other?

The wonder, Sunday 25 September 2022, 8.32 am-9.02 am, NPO2

Inside the head of Caroline Pauwels

DOCU • The four seasons of Caroline Pauwels provides an insight into therich and full life of the late Caroline Pauwels during an eventful year inwhich she had to resign as rector of the VUB due to her illness, but in whichshe was also guest curator of Theater aan Zee. We follow her at random, butalso at selected moments throughout the summer, autumn, winter and spring ofthe year 2021-2022. We get to know her view of the world and see how itevolves through the seasons. How do the different atmospheres and moods enterher life? And how does she deal with the daily reality she is confronted with?Caroline Pauwels’ four seasons is an intimate portrait of an unusuallyfascinating and inspiring personality.

The four seasons of Caroline Pauwels, Monday September 26, 2022, 9.20 pm -10.20 pm, Canvas

The woman who wanted to be a billionaire

DOCU • In 2004, Elizabeth Holmes dropped out of college to start Theranos,a company that would revolutionize healthcare. Holmes was dubbed the new SteveJobs, but just two years later, she fell off her pedestal. This documentarytells the story of the rise and fall of the woman who thought she would becomethe youngest female billionaire in the world.

The inventor: out for blood in Silicon Valley, Wednesday September 28,2022, 10.50 pm-0.45 am, Canvas

‘They are making such progress’

The plot of land just behind the elephants and the savannah in Artis is stillquite a mess. The earth is plowed and strewn with stones and steel cables,bulldozers drive frantically back and forth, building materials are everywhereand men in orange vests are walking.

At the beginning of next year, an amazing lion enclosure should be built here,complete with a tunnel, cave, waterfalls and above all a lot of space. Intotal, the new residence will cover about 1800 square meters. Compared tothis, the current home of the lion trio, the Kerbert Terrace from 1928, withjust over 180 square meters, is rightly a tiny house to name.

“They are improving in such a way,” says a delighted Tjerk ter Meulen, who asmanager Animal and Plant is primarily responsible for all plants and animalsin Artis. The enclosure was designed by landscape architect Thijs de Zeeuw,who also designed the new space for the elephants, and it is somewhat similarto that. “They get grass, sand, water they can mess around in, high vantagepoints, rocks and all kinds of trees in which we will hang carcasses. Let’ssee if they play with that.”

Impression of the new lion enclosure, seen from the visitor's passage.Image Artist

Impression of the new lion enclosure, seen from the visitor’s passage.ImageArtist

Four lockdowns

They must have moved before the high season of next year. “That will be veryexciting, I have no idea how they will react. The females are ten and elevenyears old, the male about six years old. I hope they don’t get too shocked bysuddenly so much space around them.” There are no congeners for the timebeing. “Let’s see how they like it here.”

Last year, the future of the lions looked a lot less rosy, when a one-wayticket to France was booked for them. Artis was in enormous financial troubledue to the corona crisis – the zoo had to close its doors four times due to alockdown and ran into a million-dollar deficit – so there was no money leftfor the much-needed new stay.

It was decided that they would be better off in a French animal park. Whenthat deal fell through at the last minute, two anonymous benefactors, a fundand a private individual, decided to sponsor the complete renovation, so thatthe lions were allowed to stay in Amsterdam forever. There was a sigh ofrelief from the city. Artis wouldn’t be Artis without a bunch of big cats.

Palms with steel cables

The animals that had to make way for the new lion enclosure have meanwhilebeen spoiled with a very prominent new place, right in front of the entrance.Where visitors came across the camel field for the past eighty years, thereare now algazels, an extinct antelope species from North Africa.

They reside under two knoperds of Chilean honey palms (secured with steelcables, in case of storms). “The camels had died, the cattle were moved to thesavannah, the donkeys and reindeer went to other zoos. These are domesticatedanimals that you also find on, for example, petting zoos, so we think they areless important to show.” Later, meerkats are added, which, like the lions, arenow somewhat cramped.

Leaky aquarium

In the meantime, the most radical renovation of Artis is taking place on thesouth side of the zoo: at the aquarium, which had to close with immediateeffect at the beginning of last year. In 138 years, rising salt water hascompletely affected the structures and facades, making it no longer safe toenter the building. And the aquarium was also leaking.

“We found a puddle of water on the ground floor every morning,” says ElineDanker, Artis Programming & Development Manager. “It was in a really dramaticstate, the aquarium was just about to collapse.”

The fish have been moved to other zoos and aquariums, so that the building cannow be completely renovated. But where the lions have been helped out thanksto their philanthropists (in fact, the benefactors also raised their walletsfor the algazel enclosure and the new use of the Kerbert Terrace), the fishare still in financial difficulties.

“Because it is a national monument, we first have to restore everything to itsformer glory – for example, we constantly find ornaments behind suspendedceilings, which all need to be restored. This will not only cost a lot oftime, but also a lot of money.” In total, Artis takes into account a cost of46 million. “And we’ve only got half of it now. So exceeding that amount isreally not allowed.”

a fresh Star Wars breeze is blowing through Disney+

It’s finally here! The first three episodes of Andoro are now streaming onDisney+. But is the show worth checking out? The first reviews draw a strikingconclusion.

Don’t be scared, but it’s been three months since the final of Obi-WanKenobi came out.

Star Wars: from bad to good news

Since then, Star Wars fans have had to take in a fair share of bad news.Earlier this week, it was announced that Disney has canceled the only filmthat was still on the schedule.

Then we are talking about the dogfight movie by Wonder Woman directorPatty Jenkins. The concept was just so cool: Top Gun , but with X-Wings.Well, you don’t have to count on that anymore.

Where it remains silent on film level, Lucasfilm gives a lot of gas ifpossible in the series area. Kenya We’ve only just finished it, but from nowon you can already start on the next Star Wars series.

Disney+ drops Andor

Andoro has launched on Disney+! Starting today, the first three episodes ofthe show are available to stream. Andoro takes place five years ago RogueOne af, making it a prequel of a prequel. We follow Cassian Andor (DiegoLuna), who was instrumental in the early days of the Rebel Alliance.

Reviews are pouring in

So now the show is out. Is that a cause for celebration? Secure!

Recently, the first reactions appeared on Twitter. They were remarkablypositive, but well, that usually applies to such first takes of journalistswho still have to deal with an embargo.

Now that the show is out, critics can fling their reviews all over theinternet. Finally we can take stock, and the result is very cheerful.

Grim HBO show

Almost every review is very positive. Critics especially praise how different_Andoro_ has been compared to the previous Star Wars series. Instead of anendless barrage of references and cameos, we are presented with a grim storythat could have come straight from the stable of HBO, so they conclude.

It keeps coming back that Andoro finally diverges from Disney’s Star Warsmodel.

What about Rotten Tomatoes?

Better news you can die hard fans of the franchise almost do not give. It’sjust too early for a preliminary Rotten Tomatoes score, as there are only twoofficial reviews left at the time of writing.

So it’s just a matter of being patient until the reviews there are processed,but the preliminary impression is in any case very positive. Rotten Tomatoesmay already have an overview by the time you read this article. Then checkthis page.

First Andor reviews at a glance

Below we summarize the first reviews of the Disney+ Original for you. Preferto judge for yourself? Fortunately, that is already possible right away,because Andoro is now available to stream on Disney+.

Variety:

“A huge, huge welcome farewell to the quintessential ‘Star Wars model’ ofDisney+.”

paste:

“Amazingly, Gilroy manages to keep viewers intrigued through two methods thatare easy to conceive, but difficult to execute: building incredible worlds andlayering characters.”

The Hollywood Reporter:

“A Star Wars origin story not for the Baby Yoda audience.”

collider:

“Across the board feels Andoro like a Star Wars series for a more matureaudience.”

First reactions Star Wars AndorDisney+Andoro(Image: Disney)

Yahoo! Movies:

“Despite taking its name from a single character, it is Andoro a realensemble piece, just like the best Star Wars material.”

Heroic Hollywood:

“By far the most mature Star Wars story Lucasfilm has ever presented.”

Nerds and Beyond:

“The raw, grounded story that Star Wars has been needing for ages.”

paste:

“Amazingly, Gilroy manages to keep viewers intrigued through two methods thatare easy to conceive, but difficult to execute: building incredible worlds andlayering characters.”

Empire:

“With sharper edges than this franchise is used to, a formerly peripheralcharacter has delivered one of the most intriguing starts to a live-actionStar Wars project.”

Consequence:

“This series is brimming with that potential moment by moment. Hopefully itwill eventually remember that, like it or not, it’s also a TV show.”

Undiscovered pearl: a very cool festival is coming up in Enschede

Do you love gaming, art, movies and music? Then you can indulge yourself fromOctober 28 to November 4 during the festival The Overkill in Enschede. Onething is certain: you will not get bored at this festival because there is somuch to see, smell, taste, feel and hear.

The Overkill started in 2011 as a festival for indie games. These are computergames made by small, creative companies. This eleventh edition has now growninto a major festival that attracts international visitors. In addition togames, there are also films, music, art, lectures, performances andinteractive installations.

Theme: Healing

The theme of The Overkill this year is healing (‘Heal Royale’): on how we canmake the world a little better again, because there’s quite a bit going on. Inmany games you have something of a healer/healer, for example potions to makeyou strong or a person you have to visit to regain your strength. heal in aplayful way.

Also through workshops, music and lectures, themes such as modern wxtches ,spirituality and the power of nature in relation to digital culture. There is(digital) art, films, music, workshops and of course indie games, in whichinteractivity and interactions with each other are central.

For whom?

The Overkill is actually for everyone. Whether you want to try the latest coolgames from small startups, you will be amazed by the Dungeons and Dragons-presentation by Queer Arcana or want to watch cool films in the cinema of theevent: you are most welcome!

According to Niels, from the organization, all kinds of people are attractedto this: from yuppies to philosophy students and from artists to gamers. Hereyou can be who you are, without prejudice.

Hopeful

The Overkill invites you to discuss the shit of the world and how we candeal with it together. It’s not about solving all problems. By talking to eachother, you create new energy together, the organization hopes.

It’s hard to put into words what you can expect from The Overkill. One thingis certain: at this festival you will not get bored easily because there is alot to see, smell, taste, feel and hear.

Afterparty

Super cool: on the opening night on October 28 there is a cool afterpartycalled Sensomnia. This one multi sensory rave appeals to all your senseswith taste experiences, light, smell, music and even sign language dance. Coolfor everyone to experience, but especially great for the deaf and hard ofhearing.

You don’t have to go to the festival to buy a ticket for the afterparty,because they are available to everyone. Tickets for Sensomnia are 10 euros andthe rave is in Metropool at Willem Wilminkplein 2 from 11 p.m. to 4 a.m.

Tickets

The Overkill takes place in the Sickhouse building at Stationsplein 1 inEnschede. Sickhouse is a research platform that aims to play a social rolethrough games, film, exhibitions and more. The Sickhouse bar is also openthroughout the festival for good coffee and tasty cocktails.

You can buy a weekend ticket for 30 euros, a ticket for the entire festivalfor 50 euros. For students, a weekend ticket costs 25 euros and a festivalticket 40 euros. All information can be found on the website of The Overkill.

Director KRO-NCRV wants Ongehoord Nederland immediately out of the system: “This is pure journalistic scum”

In fact, broadcasting director Peter Kuipers wants to talk about his own clubthis Wednesday, the KRO-NCRV. Anyone who tunes in to the programs of thismerger broadcaster can see: the broadcaster – with more than 400,000 members –has had a new identity since the beginning of September. The logo – a circlemade up of three colors – is accompanied by a new story.

For two years, the director asked friend and foe: why does society give usmore than 80 million euros every year? Do we actually deserve that? In theend, Kuipers arrived at three key words: the KRO-NCRV stands for a world thatcan be fairer, greener and nicer. The slogan: ‘Join tomorrow’. “In doing so,we remain in our hundred-year-old Christian-social tradition, but we also showthat we are focused on the future.” Does that mean anything to its members?”Sometimes not right away, but when I tell them we care about their childrenand grandchildren, then always.”

But while he explains how these terms return in the programming, currentevents seep in. Because since the broadcast of afternoon program Unheard ofNews , on Thursday September 15, it is almost nothing else in Hilversum.Presenter Raisa Blommestijn spoke in a provocative way about alleged”blankophobia” that would make it impossible to discuss “reverse racism”. Theviolence in the videos shown to support her argument did not appear to have aracist motive in any of the four cases. “This was apparent from research byour Pointer program,” says the director proudly.

Statements, no consequences

In her tirade, Blommestijn used the n-word several times and was notcontradicted by her guests, MP Pepijn van Houwelingen (FvD) and professor PaulCliteur (Leiden University).

The broadcast soon led to a series of condemnatory statements, the NPO spokeof a limit that would have been reached. However, the broadcast remainedwithout consequences for the time being.

State Secretary Gunay Uslu (D66, Media) insisted on a decision by the MediaCommission (CvdM) and the Ombudsman of the NPO, who reported at the end oflast weekend that they had already received almost 1,700 complaints. On theadvice of these authorities, it could issue a second sanction against thebroadcaster and eventually withdraw the broadcasting concession.

This broadcaster damages the NPO

Kuipers was also in all states when seeing the broadcast. And it has beengrinding in his head ever since. He now calls on the State Secretary not towait any longer and to revoke the broadcasting license of the aspiringbroadcaster with immediate effect. “What is now needed is what was lacking atthe entrance of Ongehoord Nederland: administrative courage, at the ministryand the management of the public broadcaster. We can wait for another report,demand apologies and rectifications or come up with another sanction. But ifwe are honest, then we know enough.”

He himself is also in the garden, he admits. “Minister Slob, the NPO, but alsowe as fellow directors thought: with two penetrating conversations in advanceand a signature of director Karskens under the journalistic code, we dare. Butnothing shows the intention to keep to agreements. In doing so, thisbroadcaster harms the NPO.”

Also read: Rain of complaints after broadcasting ON. Can everything besaid?

After the offending broadcast of September 15, Kuipers texted his fellowbroadcaster Karskens. “This is not an opinion, I told him, this isjournalistic rubbish. Pure dredge.” He then joined the indignant statements ofhis fellow directors. “But it cannot just be with words of disapproval, afterwhich we return to the order of the day. That’s how it goes within our ownorganization: if an employee breaks the rules here, I call him and he firstreceives a royal admonition. If someone does that again, they will be banned.”

Citizens in a pinch

KRO-NCRV is the first broadcaster to speak out in favor of an immediatedeparture of ON from the system. Is he calling on his colleagues to rallybehind him? “That’s up to them, I can’t make that decision for them.” Askedfor a response, Arnold Karskens sent a short message this Wednesday NRC :”We live in a democracy and broadcaster Ongehoord Nederland neatly interpretsthe opinion of many people.”

Incidentally, Kuipers emphasizes, if it comes from a departure from thesystem, that does not make him happy. “I had hoped that Ongehoord Nederlandwould be a success. That would mean that we as NPO would finally reach atarget group that we just don’t know how to reach at the moment.”

KRO-NCRV does try to do that, by the way. The ‘unheard of’ citizen is called’the citizen in the pinch’ on his broadcaster. “Our journalistic branch hasmade this a spearhead. For example, we are currently in Almelo for three weekswith a pop-up editor. Then we go to Heerlen.”

It turns out to be a personal matter for the former TROS director. “As someonewho originally comes from the Frisian countryside, I have a thing for farmersand their way of life. I understand them well. At the same time, I also see:things will have to change with agriculture. But we have to go there together.We do this, for example, by viewers of our most watched program farmer seekswife to seduce also to Inside out about sustainable living.”

If Ongehoord Nederland is out of the system, the system must be reformed, sothat no new broadcasters are ready to join in the future. Kuipers is notreassured: “After one report and two recommendations on this, the StateSecretary has already ordered a new report on new admission criteria thissummer. After that, both Chambers have to find something about it again.Before you know it, we’ll be late again and we’ll have to wait another fiveyears. While: the order is just full. It must remain manageable here.”

Supplement (September 22, 2022): After publication, this article has beensupplemented with the response of Arnold Karskens.